Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 113, Hammond, Lake County, 30 October 1906 — Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT. THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES Tuesday. October 30, 1906.

Good Clothes for the Boys

WILL BE II HOT FIIIISH

ail

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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.

Hughes and Hearst in New York State Will Have Whirlwind Wind-Up.

SHEARN DISCOVERS A SCHEME

the money resign." If Porter did cot do this hi such a cne Bryan 5a id: "I will ask the Democrats of the str.te to vote against him." Bryan accused Governor A. B. Cummins of receding from his position on tariff reform and censured him for his alleged support of LaFollette's enemies in Wisconsin.

LANGDON

13 Ii.lUUA1L

ED

CnALLFAGE FOR 8MOOT

Republicans to Hira Anarchists to Support the Democratic Leader.

THE MODEL Majestic Building.

Bo Hearst's Counsel Telia an Audience -Hughes' Definition of Hearst' Platform Appeal of the Ballot Case.

POOOOSCGOOOOOCOOOOOOOO (3 PHONS 9 LADY ASSISTANT O

First class IWery In Private ambulance C) connection. Night calls Offloe open night f

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promptly attended.

asd day

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NICHOLAS EMMERLINQ Successor tw rt 4k Eaunarlinz UNDERTAKER AND FUNERAL DIRECTOR PRACTICAL EM BALM ER. 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 most productive belt in the United States. An absolutely safe, sure and prof-table investment fax superior to a savings bank. Let us explain the plan to you. It is money in your pockat to know our method of doing business. TRENHOLM, MARVIN & CO. D, COS Baltimore Building, Chicago, UL

New York, Oct. 30 Refreshed by the over-Sunday lull the state candidates have pitched in for the final and hardest . week of the campaign. The Republican gubernatorial candidate spoke at Dansville and Syracuse, and the head of the Independence League and Democratic ticket made night addresses at Auburn and Syracuse. Chas.

E. Hughes pleaded before Republican mass meetings for sane judgment on big business interests, and urged Republicans and Democrats alike to vote for a sincere administration of public affairs. William It. Hearst assailed the corporations and bitterly arraigned the board of elections, before whom many League nominating contests were heard. He asked his audiences to free themselves of state officials controlled by money interests. Learns of a "Dastardly Scheme." At Auburn, after Hearst had spoken to a large audience, Clarence J. Shearn, Hearst's attorney, declared he had learned of "one dastardly scheme" that had come to light through a man high

in Republican circles. "It is planned," he said, "to employ . half dozen well-

known anarchists Co hold a series of

meetings in as many sections of the state late in the week, at which inflammatory speeches will be made denouncing President Roosevelt and calling upon anarchists to rally tr Mr Hearst. These speeches and resolutions are to be played up in a series of sensational articles all over the state, and offered to voters as proof of the charge made by the Republican candidate for governor that Mr. Ileast represents in this campaign the fanatics of the United States and the force? of indecency and mob violence. Says Woodruff Will Pay. "Just remember that the halls and! the speakers for these anarchist meetings will all be paid for by Tim Woodruff with money collected by Shipbuilding Trust Sheldon, with the active co-wpcnition of Cornelius Vnnderbllt, whose railroad has .just been fined $114,000 for rebating as a result of the 'pernicious activity'-of W. R. Hearst."

Ex-Senator Kearna Want film to Defend His Colleague's Assertions. Salt Lake City, Oct. 30. Ex-United Senator Thomas Kearns has issued a challenge to Senator Reed Smoot in which he says: "Lst Thursday night

your collengue (Senator Sutherland) in your presence attempted to convince the public that a dead president of your church (the Mormon church), the venerated Lorenzo Snow, sold a United States senatorship, and that I was the buyer of that exalted seat. In defense of that dead man's memory I hereby challenge you to divide time with me in your meeting tonight. "I offer to debate with you as to whether President Lorenzo Snow ever sold a senatorship to me or to any one else, and as to whether, as a senator or in any capacity in public Kf.e. I be traved the interests of my consistency

or injured Utah in the esteem of mankind." Kearns is one of the leaders of tue "American" party, an anti-Mormon organization. He was elected to the senate as a Republican.

lie Is Declared the Lie-jal District Attorney at San Francisco Defeat for Abraham Reuf. San Francisco, Get. 30.' As a result of the developments in the superior court District Attorney W. II. Langdon has been judicially recognized as the incumbent of the ofiice to which Abra

ham Ruef was last week appointed. Two members of the graud jury chosen last week were discharged because of failure to qualtt,v, and seven others are to be examined to determine wnether or not they are qualified to sit In Judgment upon the charges of malfeasance and corruption in office. On behalf of the Ruef faction an effort was made to obtain postponement of further proceedings involving the

examination of the grand Jury until

after next Friday, when Ruef, Acting

Mnvor Gallagher and the members of.

the board of supervisors are ordered

to show cause why they should not

be permanently enjoined from assert-

In? any claim to the office of district

attorney. Judge Graham, however, decided that there was no adequate rea

son for delay and ordered the examina

tion of the jury to proceed.

IiS'iS i - B . B B HllitiiliuglifUlg

3

Artistic Commercial Printing--Times Office

Lake County Title & Guaranty Company ABSTRACTERS 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.

PA kfJ

U

Home Made Candies.

Special Sal

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Seibert s

Bread

Waa- the first prize winner at the National Master Baker's convention at Philadelphia as the most gluten bread on the market.

ight and Porous

Highly recommrn-ed by physicians. Made by our own process. For sale evrry where. Tiis Hamrnand Baking Co. Incorporated HAMMOND, IND.

Tart Is In Illinois Now.

Columbus, Oct .10. Secretary of War Taft spoke afternoon and night at Logy.n and Lancaster, respectively,

making three speeches along with Representative Rurton, of Cleveland, and Albert Douglass, of Chillicothe, the latter the Republican candidate for congress in the Eleventh district.

which now is represented by General C. II. Orosvenor. Taft left Ohio for

Danville, 111. Vice President, Closes in Kentucky

Rowling Green, Ky., Oct. 30. Vice T resident Fairbanks ended a brief but

successful campaigning trip into Ken

tutky bere when he addressed a crowd

that tested the capacity of the opera

house, while other hundreds former!

an overflow meeting outside. En route

here he made four speeches. lie wil now return to Indiana.

HUGHES ATTACKS HEARST

Sbaw Is in Minnesota.

Minneapolis, Oct. F.0. Secretary of

the Treasury Shaw has arrived in Min

nesota to make several campaign

speeches in the Second congresslona

district, where Representative MeCleary is running. The' secretary's Hrst

address wns at Mankato In the after

noon while at night he spoke at Win

nebago.

Falls on November 29, This is Official. Commence Now 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 HIESCH GIVES YOU. A Complete Line of the most Tasty Patterns on the MarketYou are certain to get one that will please you. Suits to Order, $13.50 to $50

Pants to Order, $4 to $12

DAVE

Hammond Building

203 Fayette Street

Picked ITp in a Small Boat. Fort Huron, Mich., Oct. I'.O. Captain Youngs, of Port Huron, his wife andi

three sons, comprising the crew of the

schooner Westside, of Cleveland, were

picked up in a small boat on Lake Huron and brought home by the steamer Frank Feavey. The Westside foundered

twenty-five miles off Thunder Bay Island In .Saturday night's storm and the crew had a perilous experience In their small boat until sighted.

Illinois Soldiers l eave New Orleans. New Orleans, Oct. 30. The features of the entertainment of the First regiment of the Illinois National Guard were trolley rides for the iadies, officials and guards of the Illinois party, and a concert and dress parade at the city park. The day's- pro

gramme also included an inspection of

the harbor by the visiting officials. The Illinois visitors left for home at S p. m.

Engineer Dies a Horrible Death. Duluth, Oct. 30. Engineer Frank

Gaul, of the Great Northern, of St.

Fail, met a horrible death when his

locomotive was wrecked during r Minding storm. For rive "hours he lay

beneath his engine, conscious most of

the time, and suffering the most excruciating agony. At the end of five hours he was- released alive, but died a few hours later in the hospital.

JOS. VV. WEIS, R. Ph.

OR.

UQQ

1ST

State Street. Phone No. 1.

Fl)

HEW

Bailey Drnonnecs Hearst.

Dallas, Tex., Oct. 30. In his

speech at Iirownwood Senator Bailey excoriated ellarst. He called Hearst a "political Ishtiiaelite,"a "moral pervert and a political degenerate."

HIS HONOR LOST PATIENCE

Democratic Leader's Platform as It Looks to the Republican. At Uansvil'o Hughes paid his respects to Hearst's platform, no said:

"We have at times been perplexed to

know the platform upon which my opponent stood, whether It was the platform of the Independence League or the plntforra adopted at the Buffalo convention. He has said, I believe, that he stands on his own platform, and in that I think he is right, and he cannot got .mwmj from it. The platform upon which he must necessarily stand is the platform of the Journals which h.ive espoused his candidacy, and which are in his entire control. "It is a platform of reckless abuse; it Is a platform of assault upon our best men and upon our Institutions; it

is a platform of vituperation; it is a platform upon which we find indiscriminately levelled at those who have been honored by the citizens of this state the most reckless, the most abusive, the most disgraceful epithets which have ever disgraced any part of our press." Both candidates will continue cam

paigning in the western part of the

state until late in the week, when they return for a whirlwind wind-up in this

city. So far both have drawn large

Hud demonstrative audiences. Chief Judge Edgar M. Cullen has consented to call the court of appeals in session

at Albany this afternoon to bear an

appeal from tbe decision of the appellate division of the supreme court

which declared void the petitions upon which many League candidates in

New York county were nominated. ExSenator David B. Hill has been retained by the League to make the argument in behalf of the candidates excluded from the official ballot.

Then the Witness Stopped Evading and Answered a Question Asked by the Conrt. Chicago, Oet. 30. Albert G. Wheeler, president of the Illinois Tunnel company, while testifying in a civil suit in the superior court, was held in contempt of court by Judge Cbytraus. who ordered a deputy sheriff to take charge of the witness. It was Wheeler's refusal to answer a direct question asked by the court that caused the trouble. The same question was nsked fully a dozen times by Judge

t.rytraus. ana e:icn time an answer

wns evaded by the witness.

Finally the court lost patience and ordered the sheriff to take Wheeler in

charge. Wheeler then answered the

question, and his attorney offered an

apology, but the court ordered the tes

timony written up and presented to

him Wednesday morning when be will

decide in what way to punish Wheeler.

Death of Bishop Nicholson. Milwaukee. Oct. 30. Bishop Isaac Lea Nicholson, of the Milwaukee Episcopal diocese, is dead after a lingering illness. He was nearly 03 years old.

Llis successor is bishop Coadjutor Webb. DIDN'T STOP TO FIGURE.

Possibilities of Apparently Simple Bet Staggered Frenchman.

BRYAN TALKS TO IOWAS9

He Refer to the Sullivan Dispute Over in Illinois. Des Moines, la., Oct. 30. William J.

Bryan spoke at Grinnell, Ia.,at 1 p. m. to a large crowd and later came to this city, where he addressed another big crowd. He devoted himself to state politics, and referred to the Sullivan case in Illinois because a similar case had been alleged in Iowa. He said that If there was an Iowa Sullivan he 03ryan) would Insist that he should resign. Referring to the charge that the Democratic campaign in Iowa is being financed by the railroads he said: "If this is true, then Mr. Porter ought to demand that every dollar of such contribution be returned to the rallread

which gave it. and that member of the

; committee who received the money ret sigri, and that every member of the I committee who knew of the receipt of

To Champion Union Labor. San Frnncisco, Oct. 30. At a secret meeting of the boarel of supervisors it was decided to form an organization "to champion the cause of justice and fair play, refute the slanders of corporations and millionaires," and resist attacks on the union labor administration. Four thousand city employe have been called to assemble and bring five friends each, making the total strength of the organization about 24,000 men.

Amundsen Honored at Minneapolis, Minneapolis, Oct. 30. Capt. Amundsen, the daring Arctic explorer who successfully navigated the northwest passage, was a guest of honor here at a banquet given him by the Minneapo

lis Commercial club, although his train was late and be did not reach here until after 9 p. m.

A curious bet that partakes of the nature of a practical joke went to the courts in the town of Dole, France, In 1634. A citizen of the district offered to pay one of his countrymen 24 francs In advance if he would agree to furnish him with a number of grains of millet in proportion to the number of children born In the town within a year. One grain of millet was to be given for the first, two for the second, four for the third, eight for the fourth, and so on, doubliag the number for each child. Accepting th apparently generous offer, the unlucky Frenchman attempted to carry out the provisions;

but 66 children were born within the specified time. He was astonished at

the enormous quantities of grain re

quired to fulfill the contract, and ap

pealed to the courts for annulment

of the wager, on the ground that it

was founded on an Impossible condi tion.

The jujdges granted his appeal; but ordered him to return the 25 francs

ho had received and pay 24 in ad

dition. The Sunday Magazine.

Rebuke for Plagiarists.

It is a greater offense to steal dead

men's labors than their clothes.

Syneslus.

ELECTRICAL THEATER 252 East State Street.

Next to Minas' Department Store. Change every other day.

DQvinz pictures in the world and all the latest illustrated songs.

Admission Only 5c.

Fines

4

t

The

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mm

onfl

Distilling Co.

-Distillers of-

Hammond Bourbon Hammond Sourmash Hammond rtye Malt Gin Hammond Dry Gin Cologne Spirits Refined, Alcohol Daily Capacity. 25.000 Gallons

(Ministers Would End a Strike. Milwaukee, Oct. 30. The Milwaukee Ministers association has appointed a committee to confer with the state board of arbitration with a view of bringing about a settlement of the molders' strike, which has been on in Milwaukee for several months.

Jake Sohaefer Beat Hoppe. Baltimore, Oct. SO. Jack Schaefer won the first half of a vKK point 18-2 billiard match from Willie Hoppe, scoring his 500th point In his twenty-third inning. Hoppe's score was 325. Schaefer"s high run was 93; Hoppe's, 58.

Ex-Mayor of Omaha Dead. Quincy, ill., Oct. 30. George M. Roberts, attorney for the Big Four

mad, and one of the first mayors of

the city of Omaha, died of netiralgia of the heart at Lawreaeeburj, Ind. Lt was (ST. years old.

Hanoi

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nond. For sale Gostlin, Meyn & Co., on exceedingly liberal terms. A small payment down the balance oa T A .1- . .

naviiicuw uul siiscniiv in excess m reTix vrm are now navirw