Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 175, Hammond, Lake County, 11 January 1907 — Page 4

PAGR FOUR. Friday, Jan. 11, 1907.

THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES

3 1

THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES

AN EVENING NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING AND PUBLISHING COMPANY.. .

"Entered as second-class matter June, SS, 1908. at the postofflce at Hammond, Indiana, under tn Act of Congress, March 8, 1S7I." Offices In Hammond building. Hamsnond. Ind. Telephone. 111.

Cfcleaco Office. Room 1502 Tribune Building. Hugh W. Montgomery, representatlve-

Terms of Sabacrlytleau Yearly Half Yearly - Single Copies

Larger Paid

.,83.09 . .$1.50 1 cent up

Circulation than

lying and stealing or any other crime are permissible if they minister to an individual's happiness. New York Globe.

II? THE RUSSIAN WAY

any other News paper in Northern Indiana.

is

CIRCUtATTO-V BOOKS OFTEN TO THE PUBLIC FOR INSPECTION AT ALL. TIMES.

To fabscribers. Beadera of the Times are requested to favor the management by reporting any irregularities in delivering. Communicate with the circulation department, or Tekphone 111.

REDUCED TO FIGURES. In printing the story .of President Roosevelt'a backdown in the aentence Cf the Fort Brown soldiers, a careful review of the representative republican papers of the country show the following to be the mean proportions in which the Ingredients are mixed. Fact of backdown '. v. 1 part Reasons for backdown........ 9 parts Eulogy of president for characteristic frankness and readiness to acknowledge an error" SO parts Points of sentence in which president was upheld and reasons therefore 50 parts Interviews with eminent law

yers, statesmen, etc 10 parts

The proportions used by the demo cratio papers were as follows: All the facta concerning sen

tence and backdown 10 parts Gloat 90 parts

Newspapers and Men. A curious Individual who publishes a newspaper asked the Lake City Index a number of questions relative to its ownership and control. The Index replied to the questions, answering all the specifications. This the Index had a perfect right to do. But to all of these questions and all questions of a similar character asked of any newspaper, a perfectly proper reply would be, "None of your business." It is nobody's business who owns or controls a newspaper, the only exception that we can now think of being in that the newspaper has Injured him. If the paper Itself is not incorporated or is not Insolvent, in this case the individual who claims to have sustained damage has a right to know who inflicted it.

But in other cases what does it mat

ter who owns a newspaper? "What a

ewspaper pays, it says before all

men. In a tree country, such as this

supposed to be, an opinion is not

rnportant, because It is the opinion of

this man or of that man. Its acceptance depends on whether it is right or wrong, and of this each man must

udgo. The character of a newspaper

must be fixed by Its conduct, not by

ts ownership. Does it uphold the

lght and condemn the wrong? If so

is worthy of respect; but even then

its opinion on any subject should not be accepted unless the Judgment of the Individual considering it approves

A paper that is generally right is

not always right.

The man who magnifies the ques

tion of tho ownership of a paper in-

ulls tins people. He presumes that

tha people flo not think for themselves, but obey the orders of one master or

another. "What matters it to a self-reliant, a thinking man, who gives him advice? Does he not decide for himself whether It is sound? Is the advice effected to any extent by the per

sonality of the man who gives It?

Certainly not if the man who receives

t himself and acts on his own judg

ment.

If a newspaper is clean it is fit to

go Into the homes of tho people, even

if It is owned by a debaucher. If it Is

unclean it is not fit if it were owned by a saint. If a newspaper espouses the right, it is a good influence no matter whether the man who owns it be good or bad.

If a netwspaper works to build up a

community it Is a friend of the people

of that community. If It works to add to the prosperity of all parts of

the state, it is the friend of the people

of the state and he is their enemy who

would seek to impair its usefulness. Exchange.

it

WITH THE EDITORS. Passing of the Home.

Harper's "Weekly says the passing of the home began when people ceased

to have a little land around their

houses: and it continued by successive

steps a3 married people began to live in hotels and boarding houses; as peo

ple built smaller and smaller houses.

dispensing with rooms not deemed es

sential in the house, especially to Its child life; as people began to build in

blocks, leaving half the rooms damp

and dark, when apartment houses

went up all over our cities. "It meant that the home, the old-fashioned fam

ily life, the privacy, the dignity, the

close and sacred relations, were loos

ening, and that people were more and more living in tho world and less in

the family."

Governor and Speaker. The choice of the republican mem

tim vera ot the legislature, in caucus as

sembled, has fallen to Emmett Branch of Martinsville for speaker.

Mr. Branch had already been chosen

for the speakership by Governor Han

ly. The legislature has merely ratified

th governor's selection.

In these circumstances the attention

of all thoughtful citizens of Indiana

will be directed toward Mr. Branch's

conduct of the speaker's office. Will

ha serve the governor who selected

him or the house that indorsed him?

The people regard Governor Hanly's

selection of Speaker Branch much ns

they would regard the selection of

tpeaxer or tne national nouse or rep

resentatlves by the president of th United States.

It will be Incumbent on Mr. Branch

to remember, and to show by his con

duct that he remembers, that his real

accountability is not to the governor

but to the people. It will be incumb

I nt on Governor Itanly to remembe

that the function of the executive de.

partment and the function of the legislative department are sharply delimited by the constitution. Indianapolis Star.

Two Persons Catch Smallpox While Visiting at a Hospital at St. Petersburg. St Petersburg, Jan. 11. Two citizens of the United States, Mrs. A. L.. Lawsori, of Montana, and Albert A. J. Clement, of Washington, D. C, have Just died here, the victims of Russian hospital regulations. Mrs. Lawson'g husband and Clement's wife were taken sick with uieasels and removed to the government hospital for contagious diseases. When they went to the hospital to visit the patients Mrs. Lawson and Clement wore forced to wrap themselves up in hospital sheets, which had

been used for smallpox patients and had not been disinfected. As a result both contracted smallpox. Clement died a few days ago, and Mrs. Lawson later. Both Lawson and Clement came hero in pursuit of their profession of mining engineers. BELLIGERENCE IN COURT

Stocks

G

ram an

d

P

revisions

Latest Movements in Industrial Centers, by Exclusive Wire to Lake County Times.

of. In conrket opened L'ennsylvania ;he greatest on the list.

Between Trains

It Is called the Ohio river, but it

spends considerable time in Indiana at certain seasons of the year. Toledo Blade.

Um-m-m, yes; in and on.

Existence in Colorado.

Ling Kling, the Chinese laundryman, has subscribed to this paper; he can

not read it. but he says he needs it

to wrap clothes up in.

will Harrison attempted to milk a cow while drunk Saturday, and the

jolt he got in the neck from her hoof made , him swear off on fighting the

booze.

George Lillis ha3 written a song called, "I Love you. Little Mamie," and

he expects to make a fortune out of it. Wh-n he does we hope he'll drop

in and pay his back subscription to this paper. Somebody down In Heck's store last night said Uncle Ezra Hanks, with his wooden leg, was getting feeble, and now Uncle Ezra is out with' a challenge to run a foot race with any d n man in the country. Quite a number of the boys are hanging around Martin Cooley's house these evenings. He has a new goodlooking hired girl there, ehe being the cause. Kelton (Colo.) Gazette.

Assistant District Attorney Ileney and Another Legal Light Have a Warm Dispute at 'Frisco. an Francisco, Jan. 11. During a colloquy in court in the Mayor Ncnmltz case Assistant District Attorney Ho

ney replied, with some warmtn, to a remark by Attorney Fairall, the mayor's counsel: "Well, I don't see what

right to have, ns tho attorney for the

defendant, to offr advice to the district attorney. We don't need it."

This caused Fairall to lose his tem

per, and he shouted: "Who, are you, anyhow? I will pull your nose and

slap your face."

"No, you won't," answered Ileney,

advancing toward him 'with, clenched

fists. "I am enough to take care of

you or a dozen like you." Other attorneys rushed between them and pre

vented any further trouble.

HE LOVED AN ACTRESS

Base Kail Player Arranges Her Pio ture So That It AVill lie the Last Thing He Sees. Louisville, Jan. 11. Sitting before a mirror and gazing on the photograph of a young actress, which he had so arranged that he might behold It with his dying glance, Bob Lankswert, one of the best known ball players Louisville' ever produced, drank an ounce of carbolic acid and died just as he was being taken into the city hospital. Thephotograph was that of Miss Elsie Crescy, who appeared at the Avenue theater two seasons ago with tho "To Die nt Dawn" company. Lankswert had played In several leagues.

NEW YORK LETTER. Xew York. Jan. 11. The announcement that the Pennsylvania company would issue about two hundred million dollars worth of additional securities was a thunderbolt which the trade in

general had no inklingsequence the stock m: weak and panicky with the feature. It showed weakness of any stock

opening off three points and declining another point after the opening flurry. The inherent weakness in this issue had a depressing Influence throughout the list. There were declines ranging all the way from one to three points

at the oreninsr.

Reading opened off about a point

and a half but the Frick contingent

quickly came to the support of their

favorite specialty and prevented any further decline until the market on the whole had become more normal.

The Standard Oil favorites, St. Paul

and Copper were about the only two

active stocks on the list which did not display the weakness that was so ap

parent in other quarters. In fact, St. Paul after the opening flurry continued its stubborn resistance to any attempt to break the Drice below yesterday's

low figures.

The Harriman stocks. Union . and

Southern Pacific showed a loss of about a point and a half for the former and

about a point for the latter. There seems to be likuidatlon going on

in both of these stocks. As has been

noted heretofore the selling appears

much better than the buying.

The call loan( money market ruled

easy, loans being made at nve per cent early in the session and four per cent at the close.

The market closed feverish and ir

regular with a portion of the losses throughout the list regained In the last

hour.

Coal Situation Is Desperate. Minot Nev., Jan. 11. The coal sit

uatlon in the country is most serious.

A traveler going through the country

on skis says that it Is impossible that

all the claim holdars can live through

It. They have no way to get out and

there is no way to get coal. The situation is especially serious to women

claim holders who are alone.

Ex-Official from Iowa Dead.

Washington, Jan. 11. Information has been received here of the death at

St. Catherines, Ont., of General It. V

Patterson, formerly of the Fourth Iowa

cavalry and Twenty-ninth Iowa in

fantry, and more recently consul gen eral nt Calcutta. ,

Not From Him. "I always differ with the president." "Isn't that risky?" "On the contrary. Observe, I always differ with him." Washington Herald.

Corrupting Babe?. The last time Emm Ooldmnn was arrested, when she was holding a memorial meeting in honor of Csolgosa, a fourteen-year-old girl was gathered in with her. Yesterday a Seventeen-year-old boy was one of her jail companions. "Why can't this anarchistic agitator, when she goes out to proselyte, tackle people of her own age? "Why is It necessary for her to beat up an audience of school children? Granting that her anarchy is "philosophic," and does not incite to murder, can she trust soft brains to discriminate oetween red theory and red practice? Are immature minds capable of reallv

understanding a philosophy that teaches that "liberty" is restrained and an immoral ideal set up whenever obligations to parents, relatives, friends or society are recognized? Are not minors at an anarchistic meeting, especially of the dynamitic variety, likely only to get the Idea that it is glorious to kill? "Whatever may be the police attitude toward anarchistic meetings where adults are present they should lose no time in promptly Suppressing tha attendance of children. Aside from the possible Incitement to assassination boys and girls should be protected from heating free love exploited, or that other favorite doctrine of the "philosophic" anarchists that

As a Redeeming Feature. "That young woman Is not intelligent, amiable or even decently courteous." "Oh, but her father is worth a million dollars."

"Then I think she should be required

to display a notice to that effect."Loulsville Courier-Journal.

The Name Is Enough. The St. Cloud Journal-A'ress aptly

remarks that soma men are born great,

soma achieve greatness, while others

are simply named Johnson.

He Knows Enough.

I never carry an umbrella. The

Hon. Albert Jeremiah Beverldge.

The Grand Young Man is a child of

Nature. He scorns to screen his laur

elled head from the storm. He glories in the tempest. Ho Invites the lightning. Besides, he knows enough to go In when it rains. Xew York Sun.

Will Fight a Prison Plant. Minneapolis, Jan. 11. The imple

ment dealers of the state, now in con vention at the Nicollet hotel, are f omu

Iating a fight against the establishment at the state prison of a plant for the

manufacture of farm machinery.

were light, shipping demand fair. The market closed fairly strong with a slight advance for the dav.

OATS Weak early, but later re

gained all the losses and closed strong at the high prices of the dav. Ship

ping demand is excellent but Inability to get cars has retarded new business. The market closed strong with a firm

undertr-P'-

NEW YORK STOCK MARKET

Descpt.

Atchison

Do pfd

Open . .105 . .101

. 4 3 4; .118 151i

86 3

73

Am. tMjgar

Am. Car .

Am. Ciq Am. Smelt

Am. lee Scs Am. Locom

Am. Tob. pfd 96

Am. Wool ..34x

B. & O. ...118?4 Biscuit 83 Brook II. T. 81 C. & G. W.. . 1 7 Vi dies. & O.. 5434 C. & A. com 26 C. F. & I.. . . 1.58 Col. South 37 Va Corn Pdts . 23 Do pfd .. 85 Cotton Oil . SIV3 Canad Pac. 190 Coast Line 130 Cent. Leath 354 Denver com 41 Do pfd .. 82 Det. U. Ry. 80 Distillers ... 72 Erie com .. 42 Erie 1st 75 Interboro . . 36 K. C. S. com 29 Do pfd .. 60 L. & X. ...143V4 Mex. Cent . 26?-8 Great Xor .182 Gt. Nor. Ore 81"4 Nor. Pac . .169 3i M K & T cm 3 9 "'4 Do pfd . . 72 Mis. Pac 88 Nat. Lead .. 74 N. Y. Cent .132 Nor. & AY... 91 Ont. & W... 47

1'aciiic: iuaii oars

Peoples Gas Penn Press Steel Reading . . II. I. & S.. Do pfd . R. Is. com Do pfd . Rubber South. Pac

So. lly. com

St. Paul

Short Shrift for the Assassin. St. Petersburg, Jan. 11. The murderer of Lieutenant General Vladimir Pavloff, the military procurator who was killed, was tried by court maTtial and sentenced to death. He was executed by hanging last night.

NEWS FACTS IN OUTLINE

Up-to-Dats "Chain Gang. A novel experiment is about to be

tried by the government of Victoria, i

Australia. A sum of $25,000 ha3 been placed in the administration's estimate for the making of roads by prisoners through the "bush" in unsettled parts of the state. Each prisoner tvho does his work well will be paid a regular daily wage, the amount to accumulate until his release, when, as the premier says, he "will have a respectable gum with which to make a new start in life." Tho labor party is expected to oppose the use of bond for free labor.

Rain torrents are playing havoc with property In California. San Franlisco now is in urgent need of coal. Ellen Terry will sail for the "United States tomorrow to make her farewell tour. The senate has passed a bill requiring the licensing of the master, chief, second and third mates, of vessels of 700 tons carrying passengers', and steamships of 1.000 tons or over. Colonel Patko Andrieff, chief of the gen d'armes of the Lodz district, Russian Poland. Avas shot and killed by an assassin, who escaped. Directors of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad company have declared a regular semi-annual dividend of 2 rer cent, on the preferred stock and 3 per cent, on the common stock. The new Russian budget w'11 contain

continuing appropriations fc two 21,-

OOO-ton warships and ten 12.000-ton war vessels. The crter on the summit of the vol

cano of Mauna Loa, Hawaii, broke out at midnight. The eruption forms a magnificent spectacle.

Archbishop Montgomery, of the Roman Catholic church, is dead at San Francisco. He was r9 years old. The heavy rains for the past week will cause a loss of thousands of dollars to the mine owners near Willston, Ohio. The Boston and Maine railroad ha3 completed arrangements to raise 3,000,000 cash for improvements. Two suits have been started in court at Trenton. X. J., to restrain the pro-

; posed merger of the United States Leather company and the Central j Leather company.

96

136 &4 136 39 9 9 29 63 51 92 s.

31

.151

St. L&SW.pfd 55

St L&SF2dpf 47

Texas Pac . 34

Tol Ry & L. 29

Union Pac -17S U. S. Steel 4 8"3

Do pfd ..10t

Va Chem .. 37

Wabash ... 18 Do pfd .. 36

West. Union 84

Total

T. C.

dend.

sales 1,113,000. & Iron 1 per cent

ligh Low Close 106 104 si 106 101 1008 101 135 134 184 44 43 44 119 117 119 151 150 151 86 73 73 73 97 96 97 33 34 35 119 118 119 83 82 83 81 80 80 17 17 17 54 53 54 26 55 54 65 38 37 38 23 22 22 85 85 85 31 30 80 191 187 190 130 129 129 35 35 35 41 38 39 82 82 82 80 72 71 72 42 42 42 75 74 74 36 36 36 29 60 60 60 143 142 143 268 26 26 185 182 183 81 79 81 160 158 160 39 39 39 72 71 71 89 87 88 74 73 73 133 131 132 91 90 90 47 45 . 45 38 37 38 96 95 96 136 135 136 5 5 5 4 5 5 137 135 136 39 38 39 99 98 98 29 28 28 .63 62 62 51 60 61 92 92 92 31 31 31 154 151 154 58 47 47 47 35 34 35 29 28 2S 17 9 177 179 49 48 4S 106 106 106 37 18 18 18 36 36 36 84 83 83

SOUTH WATER STREET MAHKETS. Chicago, Jan. 11. The market for live chickens was In an unsettled state. Arrivals fairly swamped the market and the demand, although improved was not of sufficient volume to absorb the offerings. Prices were off c on springs, but hens were unchanged. The butter market developed an easier tendency. The demand was low with offerings moderate. Decreasing supplies and Increasing requirements niade a firm undertone in the egg market. Quotations on round lots ranged: Lutter Receipts, 3,724 tubs. Extra creamery. Jobbing, 3lc; price to retailers. 33c; prints, 34c; firsts. 27 29c; seconds, 2224c; June extras. 29e; dairies, CooIpvs, 27c; firsts. 24?25c: 19U0cVated' 23c; PacklnS stock. 19 Eggs Receipts, 3,423 cases. Fresh stock at mark, new cases Included or cases returned, 21C?23c; firsts, 23c; prime firsts packed in whitewood cases grading 60 ner cent fresh stock. 24c:

extra, 80 per cent fresh, packed for city

.iuf, .'dc; storage stock, lSKtfZOc. Potatoes Receiots. 18 cars.

consjn, Minnesota, white stock, choice, 41tfi;42c; choice to fancy. Michigan, 41 (n 42c; red, fair to good. 37 38c; mixed, red and white, 37at3Sc; common, small.

icu ana white. 34fif35c.

Sweet Potatoes Illinois, $2.25 (2.65

per on .No. 2. S1.25fP1.50 ner brl.

veal Quotations for calves in crood

order were as follows: 50 to 85 lbs.

5S7c; 80 to 85 lbs. 7(a9c: 85

to 100 lbs, fancy. 10f?10c; 150 to 175

lbs, good, meaty, 5(Li5c.

Dressed Beef No. 1 ribs. 13 c; No.

loins. 16c: No. 1 round. 7c: No.

chuck, 6c; No. 1 nlate. 4c.

l-lve Poultrv Turkevs. ner lb. 11c:

chickens, fowls. 11c: SDrlnsrs. 10c:

roosters. 6c: ceeae. $5.00-H 7.00:

UUCKS. lie.

Fruits Annies. $1.0003.50 per brl:

bananas, jumbo, per bunch, $1,40$? 1.50; straight, $1.101.25; lemons, California, $3.00?13.75: oranges. California.

J2. 25(0-2. 15.

ureen vegetables Beets. 40w o0c per

sack; cabbage, sa.oora 11.00 per ton

carrots, 4060c per sack; onions, 40

75c per u; parsnips. 76c per tub

spinach. 75c per tub; turnips, 4065c

per sack.

er tonight; rain south and snow north Saturday. .Wisconsin Cloudy and warmer to-

"'sm, snow Saturday north; rain or snow south: warmer

Iowa llain or n.v- nn,1 warmer tr-

night; rain or snow Saturday.

MiSSOUri lialn an.l -n-ormr it I rrl, f

rain or snow Snturriv

Dakotas Snow and "warmer tonight:

Snow and colder v. ntiir.1v

Nebraska Rain or snow and' "warm

er toniarllt: Snow r.iin Uot.ir.lov

colder west.

Kansas Rain in,i n- 5 i i, .

rain or snow and rnMer ot!i,ir

Montana Snow tonisrht- wiarmt

east; enow east Saturday; fair west and colder.

Wis.

HEARD ON THE BOURSE

New York, Jan. 11. Politics and

nothing else was the mattr with th

market. The young man who is attorney general for Missouri and who Is trying to knock a hole in the Oould

millions, incidentally knocked a few

points off the whole market. Too much

bl? stick and too much investigation

with no object except to meddle, makes them all feel sick.

Take profits on bulge of a couple of points If you have any; this Is only a scalping- market. Don't buy back except on reactions. You will bo Kure to get them. This is a time for cau-

i.y, umu i. ie too apgreslve. The UIUHarrlman fight is sUll on In the nortU

west ana will break out most any time.

The market is entirely prof.lrtr,.t

and is really not good except for calp on either side. Brooklyn is always a sale on any bulge. The public is out A . V ... . . . "

oi me marnei except in Conner

it is trying to gret out of that.

and

Treasury postponed the return of

Government deposits today on account of the large excess of the revenues over the expenditures. One would

think the Government was a factory.

They are trying to make so much mon

ey out of running it they can soon tie up all the money in the country in the , Treasury vaults.

Chicago & Northwestern went off five points today. They are going to Issue 125,000,000 new stock at par at the next meeting of the board. PAGE FINDS THE IlUZZElt"

Senator Pettu Has a Machine That Annoys the Senate. Washington, Jan. 11. Much annoyance was caused in the United States senate Wednesday by a bur.zinsr sound, which kept the engineers at the Capitol on a still-hunt all day. Several nervous senators protested against tho

noise, which became stronger, and

Aioney was cneap and in plentiful

suppty at reasonaDta rates both for

time and call. The Bank of England continued throughout the night, dofv-

came out or tiie nouaays in fine ihn. Inrf Wrintnn. ni.imK.,

- t , w v i' mmv iuii.- tutu I'ltiiiiui i IK' r.

normal ntrures omin

tcrious buzzing, which seemed to come

from everywhere, but from no particu

lar spot. Yesterday morning the noise

still continued until a sharp-eared pag

finally decided that It was emerging5

from Senator Pott us' desk.

A search showed that a new devlc

got its reserve up to

and will probably reduce the rate next week.

Steel was in good demand, especially from the shorts on the big earnings and the story that N. 13. Ream has ar

ranged that the Pennsylvania holdings

of Cambria Steel will go to the United

States steel company as soon as the which the Alabama senator has to en-

Pennsyivania lets go, wiucn it has to hP ,(, fn ,,on, ,tl4 .n A

..u ... m a, J i V v . m - I . V-

do some time this year.

trying to

In It cov-

up some.

Pennsylvania was bid up make the big short Interest

er and to push the stock

what higher before tho new $50,000,-

000 loan they want to put out ia floated.

as It can be done in better shape If the pnratus away in hJs lp?k PcttUtf placed

stocks is around 150.

senate was the cause of the disturb

ance. The senator's ear equipment resembles the head-gear worn by telephone girls, and is connected "with a

small storage battery which fastens

Under the coat. In Li vine the nn-

C. H. WANZER

Copper was bulled by the outsiders, but they got so much stock out of 26

Broadway they had to give it up. It is estimated that crowd had to sell not less than 134,000 shares to keep

the market fromrunning away at 121

and they will not replace until the

stock is around 115.

the ear piece and the battery in con

tact, and the result was the buzzing sound.

STOCK AND BOND BROKER.

Stocks Carried on 3 to 5 Point Margin. Nominal Rates of Interest.

Missouri Pacific was sold by every

body and dragged down the market

with it. It looks as if all the Gould stocks will have to go lower; they

have been no good for a long time and

now they have not a leg to stand on.

333 Rookery Bldff., Chicago. Tf!PpwfJE FAPRISOX, 3405.

JOHN DICKINSON & CO,

Colorado Fuel ought to sell below 50

and will in all probability before the

end of this campaign against Gould.

I They are going to make it hot for

him and he has no Russell Sage this

time behind him to help him out. It

Is supposed that Harriman and the Standard Oil are after him with a big

knife.

STOCKS, BONDS, GRAIN, PROVISIONS. 171 La Sails SL, Chicago. New York Office, 42 Baoadway. Members Chicago Board of Trade.

Mew York consolidated Stock Exchange.

Direct Private Telephone, Central 5551 Wires East. Automatic 4058. Central 5551

Denver will have a hard time of it

along with Gould as he dominates it.

It looks like 3u or 37 for the common

I stock and the road may be taken away

from Gould. If it does, it will be a

good thing for the stock.

LIVERPOOL MARKETS.

Union Pacific was well bought and

was in tor a good rise until tne jolt

i in the Gould stocks. The earnings that

came out today in the informal state

ment showed the wonderful earnings of

the system. The net must be over 20 per cent, on the common stock and the

liquidation by this time must be over.

Liverpool, Jan. 11. Wheat unchanged; corn unchanged. Liverpool, Jan. 11. Wheat, unchanged; corn, unchanged.

opened

closed

GRAIN MARKET.

Chicago, Jan. 11. Car 45; corn, 283; oats, 138.

lots. Wheat,

Railway Springs took up ita long

expected spurt today on the story of

the advance in dividend to 5 per cent, and the advent of the Moores into the stock. This is supposed to be worth

at least ten points to the stock, but

I am told the company is not doing every well at all.

extra dlvl-

XEW YORK COTTON MARKET.

Month

Jan.

Men. .

May . July . Aug. .

Open ..952 ..975 . .986 . .993 ,.9S2b

Ilierh Low Close 962 931 960-61 980 969 977-78 992 982 989-90 993 988 996-97 9S4 9S3 987-89

GRAIN AND PROVISION MARKET

Month Wheat. May . July . Corn. Mav . July . Oati. May . July . Lard. Jan. Mav . July . fork. May . July . nibs.

May July

High

76 U 76ig

.43"

.33s 1592 .'1650 .1660 .945 .950 .905 .917

Low 7 6 14 ?s 434 Va 43 36 g 3 3 V- 51

1392 1655 1665 947 952 905 917

Open Close

Estimates tor Tomorrow. Wheat. 41 cars; corn, 211 cars; 10S cars; hogs, 20,000 head.

Total Clearance. Wheat and flour equal. 593000 els; corn, 31,000 bushels; oats, bushels.

oats.

bush-12,000

Bt. Paul was bid up by the old crowd,

Including the Armours. They eay at

160 it lo,oks cheap for a 7 per cent.

trans-continental, too, and that It will catch up on its rights in a shorter time

than any other ex-right stocks. It is also claimed that the statement will j show a big Increase in net earning.

RAILWAY WOUK-L1MIT BILL

Took a Whole Session to Pass, bat It

Cot There All Right. Washington, Jan. 11. The entira-

day in the senate, practically, was devoted to the debate and passage of the

railway train work-limit bill, which provides that no train hand shall be

required or permitted to work more

than sixteen hours at a stretch, and must have ten hours' sleep between

duties. The parliamentary situation

was confused during the entire time.

caused by forty pending amendments

and three substitute for the original bill, all of which had to be disposed of.

The bill which was finally passed was a substitute offered yesterday by LaFollette, and not in print. It was amended in several respects by the senate. The bill provides that under certain contingencies, and in case of accident, the time fixed may be exceeded. The enforcement of the law is placed in the hands of the interstato commerce commiKfion and the federal courts, the penalty provided being a fine of not less than $100 nor more than $1,000. The act is to apply to trains doing an Interstate or foreign commerce business.

XOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT.

THE STATE OF INDIANA LAKE COUNTY. IN THE LAKH SUPERIOR COURT, DECEMBER TERM, 1906. MARY K. GRADY VS. BENJAMIN F. GOODRICH. ET AI

CAUSE NO. 3703. Action to Civil. Now comes tli plaintiff by Ilauahman

& Williams attorneys and hies ner

complaint herein, together with an affi

davit or a competent person, nunwing that the defendants Benjamin F. Goodrich, and Goodrich, his wife, and

(.iooarion, wiaow 01 fhui iku-

jamin F. Goodrich; B. F. Goortricn ana

uooaricn, nis wiie. anu

- Goodrich, widow of said ii. ? .

Argentine Shipments. Last Previous Week Week Wheat .... 736,000 860,000 Corn 1,138,000 1,324,000

76 V, 757s-7( 434 438 36 U 33 1590 1642

1660 945 947-50 900

912

76Hb I 76Viax 36a8ax 33iv:ax 1590 1642b 1660

945ax 947-50ax

900 912ax

CHICAGO LETTER.

Korthweat Today Duluth 5S

Minneapolis 162

Chicago 4

Car. Last Week 78 356 50

Last

Year

752,000 601,000

Last

Year

10:

327 14

New York Central is now wanted by

i Harriman. He wants to shine as the

owner of a real trunk line and if he

gets it he wrlll have enough stock in the open market to make himself secure and that will mean 180 or more at the least.

Southwestern

Minneapolis

iast year St. Louis Last year

Kansas City

Last year 20,000

Receipts and Shipments

heut.

Today Shpmts

, 173,000 7X.000

.327.000 56.000

. 23.100 33,000 . 66,000 31,000

66,000 110,000

73,000

Atchison was held steady today by

the pool. At one time it looked like going up as a leader, but too much stock was thrown on the market and the bear raid In Gould stock stopped

It fiat. The pool is still intact and

Berwynd is simply waiting a while.

Wheat today Last week . , Last year . , Corn, today Last week ., Last year . ,

Primary Movement. Receipts

...378,000 759.000 ...640.000 695,000 940,000 593,000

Shpmnts 234,000

275.000 193,000 470,000

561.000

452,000

Reading put on a bold front against

the shorts and some of them ran in. Wasserman bought over 20,000 shares and Gates about 10,000, and they

rushed it above 138, but the weight

was too much. Every other stocK was

sloppy and the good work Etopped.

Chicago, Jan. 11. WHEAT Dull and featureless although prices showed a firm undertone. Reports from the northwest were very bullish on the cash situation, a message received from

that quarter reported number one northern wheat one or two cents higher than yesterday. Foreign cables this morning were disappointing as they did not reflect our slight advance of yesterday. In consequence pit traders were inclined to sell wheat at the opening. The trade, however, was so narrow that prices did not move far each way. The close was steady, practically unchanged from yesterday's final sales. CORN Showed a strong undertone. Eastern exporters were in the market for the cash article at slightly higher prices than they bid yesterday. The car situation remains about a3 prevln;iiv Tpnorted. this nrevents any arreat

I activity in the cash market. Receipts

LIVE STOCK MARKET.

Lmon Stock Yards. Jan. 11 Hog receipts, 30,000; market 5 cents lower;

icit uvtr, 0,0'ju.

pistil, t.zo to 6.47; mixed. $6.25 to 6-5a; heavy, $6.20 to 6.55; rough, $6.20

raiue receipts. 3,ono; market steadv. Sheep receipts, 7,000; market steady.

Lnion Stock Yards, Jan. 11. Hogs

ngni. t.zo 10 6.47; mixed, $6.25 to

u.jj, litsi), 10 t).3o; rough, $6.20

IO Cattle closed steadv. Sheep closed steady.

Undertone in market was fairly good

and some good buying in neaums, 01.

Paul and Union Pacific, but trading

was dull and professional. Money was

.lor and it really looks as U we wm

have easier money from now on which

may help the situation in general ana

make the market more active.

T.-i v hnver of St. Paul

about 23,000 shares being taken. Lon dan was also a good buyer. Wasser

.r,r'ht 10.000 shares but sold

most of it at a decline

and Gates were both Union and Reading.

Wasserman

large buyers of

Hogs Cattle Omaha .... 7,0u0 3 noo Kansas City 9,000 2 00o St. Loui3 ..11,000 2.S00

Sheep 4,000 4.000 1,000

WEATHER FORECAST. Illinois and Indiana Rain and warmer tonight and Saturday. Lower Michigan Cloudy auJ warm-

ilarshall says it i3 impossible to have a bull market. We get a rally once In a while, but that it all; too mnnxr npncle hurt and too timid to

hold on and money not in good shape

but we can perhaps have an active market in Steel and Copper, but buy

only on recessions

Goodrich; Benjamin Franklin Goodrich

an(j Goodrich, his wire, ana

Goodrich, widow or saia jtpn-

iamin Franklin Goodrich; lioDeri McGregor, and McGregor, his wife, and McGregor, widow of said

Robert McGregor; Jesse hmoree, ana Mary Ann Kmbree, his wife and Mary Ann Embree, widow of said Jesse Em-

bree, and r;moree wiie 01 sum Jesse Embree, and Embree

widow of said Jesse ii.mDree-, amu

F, Summers, and Margaret m. summers, v, .ifo nnrt Martraret M. Summers,

widow of said Zarah F. Summers, and

Summers, wiie 01 aiu '"'r:

tt a,,-..r-o on.i rummT. wiu-

ow""of said Zarah F. Summers; John W.

Hughes, and Julia A. nus"'s. and Julia A. Hughes, widow of said

John W. HuglH-s. ana uusuw.

wife of said Jonn v

Hughes, wiiiow 01 Bdiu jlmiii .

Hutrhes; John Strun. n --

Strunk his wife, ana .-iruntt, widow, of said John Strunk; William

1-. Strunk, ana .-nuiin., m vn

an3 iStruntc, wiaow 01 Baia William F. Strunk; George Mason, and Lucie J. Mason, his wife, and Lucie J.

Mason, widow or sain ueorge iiason,

and - iiaon, wiib 01 sam ucorga

Mason, and Mason, widow of aid

George Mason; w imam i waiiace, . 1 " IT'r. IlinA Wilis n-l f a r .1

ana Hilary Ij- , anav:, ...it-, anu Marv E. Wallace, widow of said William P. Wallace, and Wallace, wife of paid William P. Wallace, and . . , . . . 1 . XT 1,1.

Wallace, wioow 01 phi w imam

p Wallace; John Brown, jonn tu. castor, and all of the unknown heirs, devi

sees, leeaiees. eranicf.i, auiimusiraiurs,

executors, guardians, successors and as

signs, and all or tne unanown neir. devisees, leeatees, grantees, adminis

trators, executors, guardians, successor

and assigns of tne unnnown neirs, aevisces. legatees, grantees, administrators.

executors, guardians, successors and as

signs of each ana every 01 tne above named defendants are not residents of th State of Indiana. Said defendants are therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said action and that the same will stand for trial at the next term of said Court, and that unless they appear and answer or demur therein, at the calling of said cause, on the lbth day of March. A. D. 1907. the same being the 7th day of the next term of said Court to be bfgua and held in the Court House at Hammond in said County and State on the 2nd Monday of March A. D. 1907 said action will be heard and determined in their absence. In witness whereof. 1 hereunto set my hand and affix the Seal of said Court, at Hammond, this 9th day of January A. D. 1907. 1 1 SEAL. HAROLD IL WHEELER. Ejc CarrU Ii. mum. D.SS

I

'T