Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 144, Hammond, Lake County, 5 December 1906 — Page 6

PAGE SIX.

THE LAKH COUNTY TIMES Wednesdav, Dec. 5, 190G. if

GUILTY OF A CRUEL MUEDER

Chester Gillette Killed Grace Brown, His ACianceil Wife, the Jury Says. Herkimer, N. Y., Doc. 5. The Jury In the trial of Chester E. Gillette for the murder of his affianced, Grace Brown, at Ills Moo?e lake on July 11 last, rendert-d a verdict of guilty in the first decree. Sentence will lie pro nounced tomorrow morning, and at that time Gillette's conneel will more that the verdict be pet aside. Gillette showed no emotion w hen he heard the ver- '" diet of the Jury; he has showed Chester Gillette. nonp during all of the trial. As the last man of the Jury was polled Gillette leaned over a nearby table, drew towards him a bit of white paper, and taking a pencil from his pocket wrote deliberately this message: "Father I am convicted. Chester." This was one of the earliest dispatches carrying the news of Gillette's doom beyond the walls of the court house, and went to Denver. According to the testimony upon which Gillette was convicted he seduced Grace ltrown after promising to marry her, and after repeated resistnnee on her part; then lie took her on e Fhort trip to P.lg Moose lake, took her out on the lake in a boat, threw her overboard, and drowned her, at the same time causing the death of tier own unborn child. His defense jwas that the girl's condition and her onhappiness because he did not marry her caused her to commit suicide by Jumping into the lake before ho could stop her. CALLED THE BOSS TRUST United States Court of Appeals Says the Continental Wall Paper Co. Goes the Jjinitt, Cincinnati, Dec. ,r. The United Etates circuit court of appeals has declared the Continental Wall Paper company "the most complete and ingeniously organized trust that has come to the knowledge of the court." The vall paper company brought suit before Judgo Thompson, of the district court, to recover $57,000 from Louis Voight '& Sons, of Cincinnati, for goods sold to them. Voight & Sons resisted on the grounds that the Continental was a trust and that it had compelled them to buy all of their goods of the trust. Judge Thompson found for Voight & Eons, The court of appeals, to which, an ,rpneal-was taken, held that the evidence showed a perfect Instance of a trust ns denned In the statutes. It held the trust to be an Illegal organization and as such not entitled to the aid of the court in support of its claim. New York's Big Import Business. New York, Dec. 5. The volume of business done by importers In New York city, according to the records In the office of the collector of customs, during 1W0 will far exceed all previous records. For the year ending Dec. 31, 1!X-, there were 2U4.127 importations recorded. Up to yesterday the present year there were oOO,270 recorded. Stahl to Manage the Boston. Boston, Dec. 5. It Is announced that President John I. Taylor, of the Boston American base ball club, has nrranged with Charles S. Stahl, of Fort Wayne, Iml., center Holder of the team, to be manager and captain next season. 'Lont; Ilange Wireless Messages. San Diego, Cal., Dec. 5. Messages Imve been exchanged by the government wireless station at Point I.onia with the government station at Puget found, l,2tK miles away. NEWS FACTS IN OUTLINE Dr. Algernon S. Crapsey has been duly deposed as a priest in the ProtestOnt Episcopal chr.rch for denying the Virgin birth of Christ. A new ministry has been organized for Spain, the premier being Marquis de A nr. 1 Jo. William W. Russell, the United States minister to Venezuela, and Mrs. Russell have arrived at New York . from Caracas. Two children, a boy and a girl belonging to Alfred Small, were burned to death in their home at Pittston, Pa, The health of the shah of Perisia. it is said, shows considerable Improvement. Up to Monday night ten inches of water had fallen in Colon, Panama, during twenty-four hours. A fire entailing $100,000 loss broke out in the Arcade block at Home'!, N. Y., and that block is a mass of ruins. Miss Cora Wllburn, well-known throughout the Jewish press as a poet, is dead in her home at North Duxbury, Mass., aged 7 years. The Persian parliament has received a petition from a number of Persian women asking the legislators to facilitate the education of females. M. Jules Cambon, the French ambnssndor, and Senator Cabaliero, the Spanish foreign minister, have concluded an agreement on the subject of MoThe National Good Roads association i? in session at Mnskogee, I. T., to continue three days. Fire at Conneaut Lake, Pa., destroyed three of the largest summer I'otels and several frame buildings. Loss, SCO.C0Q

Woman's World Women Who Belittle Their Husbands ,In Public Fido and the Married Man The New Type of Woman :: :: :: :: :: ::

"Funny how some women don't seem to realize that in belittling their husbands they belittle their own selves," remarked the observing woman. "I have heard foolish persons of my own sex make their husbands out to be the weakest and the laziest of their kind or else the most dissipated and unreliable, and then they have wondered at the contemptuous pity of their acquaintances; also they have been surprised that their husbands did not get along more rapidly In the world. "I have known married women who were worth a little money let it be known that they paid the household bills and in this way made their husbands occupy a secondary position. The husband has gradually become brutalized by this sort of thing until he has been content to allow his wife to wear the trousers and in many cases actually to hustle for the cash while he lay back and took it easy. "What a goose a woman is not to realize that in marriago her own achievements count for nothing alongside those of her husband; that her position in the world depends exactly on how much ho Is esteemed by hl3 fellow men! "Lots of clever women realize this and actually advertise their own husbands (carefully hiding shortcomings) In order to help themselves along In the world, and that's a good stunt for any woman to do." "Love Me, Love My Dog." "Of all the crimes against good sense and reason keeping a dog in a city apartment is the worst," commented the bachelor. "By, Jove, it's enough to keep a man out of matrimony the thought that his wife may take the dog craze! And who does the burA BRACE OF LITTLE WniTE TOODLES. den fall on, I'd like to know, but the poor unfortunate husband? He has to air the pup, and, say, if that Isn't enough to take the pride out of any self respecting man I never that's all! "I knew a man a fine specimen he was and his wife started In with a St. Bernard. Well, that's sort of a man's dog, and it wasn't so bad for the poor fellow to go out with him. But the lady went on worse and worse In her tastes, and tho other morning (it was a nice drizzle out, too) I met that chap sneaking In the front door leading a brace of little white poodles. Honest, I turned away so I wouldn't humiliate him by letting on I saw him! And he looked seedy, too, poor chap, as If associating with poodles had taken all the spirit out of him. "No, sir; no wife with 'doggy' tastes for me!" No Fragile Flower. The day has gone by when a man admired a delicate woman. The time has also disappeared (If it ever existed) when he loved a mannish one. The woman of today in order to be admired must be full of nervous force without being nervous. She must be one bundle of energy, dispatch and unfailing good nature. She is a wiry type, strong, but not substantial, capable of getting over illness at the shortest notice and In the most wonderful way, rebounding from the most unpleasant or painful situation with the elasticity of a rubber ball and always capable and full of interest in life and a good time, no matter how tired or really overworked she is. It is a type which has sprung up in response to the up to date man, who is himself highly active and exacting In his tastes as man never was before. MAUD ROBINSON. A Hotel For working Girls. One set of clubwomen Is trying to do something useful. The New York city federation is preparing to establish a hotel for working girls whose jjvage la no more than $3 a week

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THE BABY.

A Few ITlnts For the Benefit of Ike Youns Motber. Don't keep the baby too warm. A great many mothers seem to act on the i supposition that a young child is a hot- j house plant. They cover It with clothes and blankets so that it becomes delicate and most susceptible to cold. Take the baby out every day, sunshiny or otherwise, ercept when it actually rains. If for some reason it is Impossible to take the child out, draw tho crib up close to the open window, first covering the little one carefully, and let It stay there for half ah hour or so. Don't run to the baby every time It cries. By so doing you are making a DON X I!fN TO THE BABY WHENEVER IX CISLE3. slave of yourself and ruining tho child's disposition. After you have found out there is nothing the matter with the infant let it cry itself out, and the occurrence is not likely to be repeated often. Teach the child to do without feeding as much as possible during the night. After the first few weeks one meal between 10 and 0 is all that should be required. Night feeding is one of the greatest causes of wakeful- j ness. Don't leave the bottle in the crib with the baby in order to keep it quiet. This Is a most pernicious habit, leading to sore mouth, Indigestion and general fretfulness. If the baby Is delicate, give it an alcohol rub after its bath. Remember that regularity in feeding and sleeping not only insures the health of the child, but your own peace and comfort as well. HELEN MARTIN. THE COZY WINDOW SEAT. One of the Telling Fenturei In Enclisli Country Houses. American visitors to England who have been, entertained at country WvUlC CO d&t j

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J5 KS S3 E5 23 P4. 2:12jrs. . . 11 13'iS03. Telfurrlas, Texas.' 13 0. E. Epleligen, 3 West ICth St., X. C. Ho. Sharp vsr.t sell eitytMng lees tiar. eaall treat prless. Prices LtSicrla tTer.ty dollars. Said every rsr.. Rlsg. rerty.seles fivo fcia-.irod r.ir.sty-riTo acres LeSHcrla, -or.e fcwr.ired sixty acres Ccplta. Gejrlfir.d 2. vmc".

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to say concerning the treatment of ! windows in these charming hablta- j tions. The casement blind and the window seat are as constituent a part ( of the scheme of an English cottage or i even of the most pretentious rural t

dwelling as is the veranda m this A gt0ck joke dear to the hearts of all country. It is a marvel that they are j players Is the regular thing to be lnnot more popular in American subur-s gieted upon a beginner in the first act ban homes. j of "Richard III." It is in the scene For those who have a taste for such j -where the coffin of Henry VI. is borne things the cut will show how it may be ; across the stage. One of the men who accomplished with very little trouble j carry it has been raised from the posiand at slight expense. The casement j tlon of supernumerary to his first curtains are of swiss. either figured or speaking part, which consists of a sinplain. For those who prefer a richer gle line. Before the performance it is material some one of the small figured i usual for some older actor to take him window nets will be satisfactory. The! aside and impress him with the enorI mous difficulties of delivering that sen-

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A WINDOW SEAT. cushions and pillows of the seat should be made of cretonne which Is In accord with the color scheme of the room. The curtains, which are hung on a brass rod, should also agree In color and design with the Immediate surroundings. There la no reason why any woman j of ordinary intelligence should not uni dertake the selection and the hanging ' of these draperies with the fullest cooi fidence of success. In these days of i sloyd and manual dexterity she should ; be able also to manage the trifling amount of carpentry required. R. DE LA BAUME. Sputtering of Clubwomen. If there is one tiling more amusing than another it is the quarrels of clubwomen, their futile sputterings, their teapot tempest, emotional ebullitions. The Game of Craps. The game of "craps" is an old one. Is the word Itself a corruption of the French "creps," a favorite game in the gambling halls of tho Talals Royal In the eighteenth century? Bescherelle says it was a game played with dico and of English origin; that the name was sometimes written "krabs" and the word wa3 spoken when one succeeded in throwing 2, 3, 11 or 12 at the first cast. English dictionaries shed little light on the subject, and we do not remember any allnsion to the game in novels or plays of the eighteenth century. Boston Herald.

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Yours very

A Trick of Actors.

Most people know that the memory may be easilv confu?ed by learning a passage in t0 or three different ways or by naving once heard an incorrect form of o-jvinz it. Workinsr on this principle actors are fond of puttin: stumbling blocks in one another's wav.

I tence correctly. The victim listens j nervously.

"Now, most actors," says his tormentor gravely, "make this mistake the first time they play the part: Instead of saying, as it is, "My lord, stand back and let the colli n pass,' they give it this way, 'My lord, stand back and let the parson cough.' " And after he has heard the latter version, absurd though it Is, the chances are that the poor supernumerary will give that to the audience on the first night, Thomas Moore. Measured by the popularity and market value of his poems when they were written, Thomas Moore has no rival among the poets of Ireland. While engaged at his Irish melodies, in which he was at his best for they called forth the powers in which he most excelled he was paid 500 a year by his publishers. Their immense and well merited success induced Longman to give Moore 3,000 guineas the highest price that had up to that time been paid for a poem for "Lalla Rookh," the gorgeous eastern romance which dazzled and delighted readers of that day, but is now rarely read. As a lyric poet Moore was, like Burns, one of the best writers we have ever had of "words for music," and, In his case at least, the words are Inseparable from the music. Goldsmith, a poet of a different order and with a wholly different ex perience, got little popularity and less money for bis poetry, but In "The Traveller" and "The Deserted Village" he has a better chance of Immortality than his compatriot. Loudon Tit-Bits. A Famous Old Building. Evensong was held the other day on the site of the ancient oratory of St. Gwithian, one of the many Irish saints who descended upon Cornwall In the fifth and sixth centuries. In a waste of sand near the Godrevy lighthouse, which marks the eastern horn of St. Ives bay, lie what are regarded as the remains of the oldest Christian building in England. The nave bulges with sand to the level of the plain and through a grass covered hillock over the demolished altar protrude a few rough stones. During a stormy night of 1S23 the sand shifted and revealed the lines of a structure about fortyeight feet long by twelve feet wide, with a priest's doorway, a small window, traces of stone benches and an altar of masonry now gone as tho rej suit of the building being forthwith I used as a cowshed. London Globe. 0 t icorr. fST. 16, 19C2 yoeterley frcn Falfirrriaa ar.l a cour.-.ry, en a giaa to nors XT.&ri evsr pleas;! with naya r.o co-X3t r.aari cy tra tlrA slr.oereiy

As the tea kettle was the beginning of the steam engine, so the ordinary soda cracker was merely the first step in the development of the perfect world food Uneeda Biscuit. A food that gives to the worker more energy of mind and musclethat gives to the child the sustenance upon which to grow robust that gives to the invalid the nourishment on which to regain the vigor of good health.

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NATIONAL" BISCUIT. COMPANY

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Artistic Commercial Printing Times Office

IBUSIIESS OIREGTORYl OF LAKE COUNTY 4 4 A D V KRTI SING HINTS. The shrewd merchant ee to It that bla newspaper announcements are bright and attractive, that the copy Is changed regularly and that the printer has his display ads In time to 1t them the attention they deserve, DR. WILLIAM D. VEIS PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Duetscher Arzt. Of3ce and residence 145 Hohnaan Et, Pkon 20 (private wire) daj and night service. Phone 21S3. DE. W. H. DAVIS DENTIST Rooms 1-3, Majestic BIdar. Special Notice Do not confuso this offlco with the Harvard Dentists, for I am In no way connected with them, never have been. Best Equipped Repair Shop in the Stat G. W. HUNTER AUTOMOBILE GARAGE Compressed Air FREE I3owser Gasoline System 1 S. 1IOHMAN STREET Phone 122. Iluehn Block, Hammond, lad W. F. MASHINO FIRE INSUHANCZ, Office In First National Bank Blflg. If you want every Encllsh speak lna; person In Lake County to read your advertisement put It la TI1E LAKE COUXTT TIMES. HAMMOND REALTY CO. Owners of choice lota In Mcllle'a Sub-division. Hammond, Bldg. Hammond, lad. ASK FOR CHAS. MARTIN'S lEW ENGLAND BREAD Wholesome and nutrlcloua. Try our Bohemian Rye and Home-made bread. AT ALL GROCERS. Accuracy, Promptness and Reasonable Ratea Guaranteed. MRS. L. A. ailNARD, PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER OfSce, 331 So, Hohman St., Room 6, Telephone 1S02. Hammond, lad. . SEE WM, KLEIHEGE FOR PLUMBING 152 SOUTH HOHMAN STREET. TELEPHONE 61. Tel. 2261. Chung Maw, Mgr. CHUNG KEE LO. Chinese Chop Suey and American Restaurant. CHINESE AND JAPANESE GOODS. 91 State St. Hammond, Ind, Open from 10 a. m. to 1 a. m. h1 a n t. . a . .m. -M m. 1 a a ; " J s

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THE CITIZENS' GERMAN NATIONAL BANK of Hammond. A comparative statemeat of deposits slaoe our opentns dayt May 12, 1009 14,080.01 June 12, 1006 . 03,312.03 July 12, 1006 CS.075.1S Augiint 11, 1006 .,.., 12,078.79 September 12, 1003 147,433.73 October 12, 1006 1C2,1S53 November 12, 1006 172.7SS.S4 No County, City or School Funds ln eluded In the above. We are the) youngest bank In Hammond. Our first birthday vrl.'l be on May 8, 1907. THREE PER CENT. PAID ON SAVINGS AND TIME DEPOSITS. Give us a trial and be convinced of our fair treatment. Fine Residence and Brie Flat Building & specialty. Estimates on short notice. Plans free. J. H. Kolling. 411 Sohl Street. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS DIAMOND BRAND LADISS I Ask your rnRgtst for CHI-CHES-TER'S Gold metallic boxes, Ribbon. Take jo othi Tvi.wttio ortA mlr fnr C Tll.nl I vvenan Il I T k. DIAMOND BRAND, for twenty-five years known as Best, Safest, Always Reliable. SoM by Druggists every wnere. CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO., PHI LA., PA. Ail U'Jr Trade Mirk ftr it Ilatre. tuolly tpplil.iiat neun-PcnnomicHi-rort iwioe fnr a other polishes. FREE SAMPLE Address Dept. a. IJHnont.Cor11s A Co. . a pt..7 Hudwin St.,N.T. l CAN SELL Your Real Estate cr Business No matter where located. Properties and Business of all kinds sold quickly for cash in all part3 of the united States. Don't wait. Write today describing what you have to sell and giro cash price on same. If You Want to Buy Any kind of business or real estate any where at any price, write me your requirements. I can save you tlra acjj money. DAVID P. TAFF, THE LAND MAN 41S Kansas Ave., Topeka, Kaa. Palace of Sweets CANDIES AND ICE CREAM Subscribe for The Lake County Times,

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