Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 178, Hammond, Lake County, 16 January 1907 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES AYednesday, Jan. 16. 1907.
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HEGEWISCH NEWS
John Ilohroy ts in Michigan City, and vicinity for the week on business. G. J. Bader of "Whiting. Ind., was In Jlegewisch Tuesday "on business. Miss Ella Ilohroy was the guest of friends at East Side Tuesday evening. FOUND -A watch. Owner can have same by calling at 13331 Superior avenue and proving property. The Chicago Telephone company ia making preparations for a large switch board as their business is increasing rapidly. Mr. Eben of New York City, promoter of the Mechanic's National bank of Hegewisch, was in town Monday on business. Frank Bristol and son, Robert, were In Joliet last Sunday looking over the Western Steel Car & Foundry company's plant at that place. Henry Wuerffel, agent for the Chicago Canal and Dock company, was in town yesterday looking after the company's interest. Miss Geraldlne Renbarger was greatly surprised last Monday evening when she came last Monday evening when a beautiful piano waiting for her. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kronwelter were the guests of Mrs. G. Mills at dinner yesterday. The couple came to Ham mond from the east a few days ago and were married Tuesday morning. STONY ISLAND NEWS Mrs. Walter Neath is on the sick list. Miss Fern McMullen list. is on the sick Mrs. Glaver visited Mrs. Tuesday afternoon. Conway, Mrs. O. J. Austin made a shopping tour down town Tuesday. Charles Leahy made a business trip to South Chicago Tuesday. Christ Deagon, who has been away on a vacation, has returned. Mrs. Anna Beglay of Burnslde visit ed her mother, Mrs. Hogan Monday. O. G. Neath who went under an op eration for appenditicls, is slowing re covering. Mrs. Geo. Hall and Margaret Leahey visited Mrs. Hall's sister-in-law in South Chicago Monday night. The Gas company is thinking of lay' lng gas pipes through Stony Island in th sDrine. If they do. it will be a great improvement to this place. , HOBART NEWS Druesdst Peterson transacted busi ness In Chicago yesterday. Mrs. Robert Randham visited friends in the city yesterday. George Stocker was few hours Tuesday. in Toleston a John Earle and son of Chicago were In town Tuosday. S Mrs. Harrison Scholler returned yestterday from a visit with friends at Val paraiso. Mrs. Howard Gordon left Chicago vesterdav to visit friends for a few days. The E. J. & E. employes were made happy yesterday, it being their pay day. Jos. Vague-, who has been quite sick for the past two weeks, is still con fined to the house. Several Inches of snow fell Monday night, making sleighing fine in town but in the country most of it has blown off the roads. Chas. Klassen, who has been working In Chicago for several months, purch ased the Borman bowling alley yester day. Rev. Berg of Princeton, 111., formerly pastor of the Swedish Lutheran church here, was in town a few days this week PULLMAN NEWS John Heath returned to work Monday after a week of illness. The mask ball given by Oleson Mon day r.lght was well attended. Charles Rust has taken n position with Lathey's market at Burnside. J. F. Sechlst or 306 Morse avenue will leave this week for Ottawa, 111. The Schlltz Brewing company has started another new Hat in South Park . avenue. J. Spanlrr of the Banner market won a very handsome prize at Oleson's mask ball Monday night. William Heath or Prairie avenue srient Monday and Tuesday with friends on the north side. Mrs. Macy, who haa been visiting Mrs. Slater of SOI Cottage Grove ave nue, left Sunday for her home in Montreal, Canada. E. O. Boe of 403 Watt avenue lias resigned his position with the Pullman company and will take one with the Knickerbocker Ice company in their Chicago offices.
BRIBERY ATNEW YORK
Alleged Attempt to Buy Eleven Aldermen to Elect a New Recorder. PEICE WAS $500 FOR A VOTE Chosen Man "Was J udge Cowing, but lie Is Not Aceuswi Detectives See the Whole Proceeding. New York, Jan. 1G. In the arrest of Alderman William S. Clifford and Da vid Mann, foreman of a stone yard. on charges of bribery in connection with the election of a recorder of the general sessions court the district attorney's office alleges that it has un covered a plot by which eleven alder men have been approached to sell their votes for recorder for S500 each. Ac cording to the district attorney's office, $G,(XX) in marked bills was found on Mann, who is accused of being the go - Detween. it Is alleged that Clifford accepted a bribe of $G,000, in return for which he was to deliver the votes of himself and ten other alderratm for ex-Judge Iiufus B. Cowing for recorder. Judge Cowing Is Exonerated. The district attorney's office declares that Judge Cowing knew nothing of tho attempt that would be made to in duce aldermen to support him. It ia charged that a man named Earl Harding met Clifford and Mann at a hotel yesterday. It was agreed, it is alleged, that Mann hold the $6,000 bribe money which Harding had for the purchase of tne votes until Clifford and his col leagues "delivered the goods" at the meeting of the board of aldermen, who have been balloting for several days for a recorder. Sleuths See the Whole Game Detectives from the district attor ney's office saw and heard the whole transaction, they allege, from a place of concealment. Shortly after this meeting Mann was placed under ar rest. He professed ijmorance of in side information concerning the transaction and offered to aid the officers in making further arrests. According to the district attorney's office, Clifford met Mann at another place later in the day and took the $6,000 for payment to the aldermen whom Clifford paid had dellv?red the bargained votes. Johnny on the Spot Again. The detectives again were witnesses, they say, and promptly arrested Alder man Clifford. Clifford later was ar raigned and held in $10,000 for fur ther examination. It is alleged that Earl narding, a newspaper reporter, charged that the vot3s of certain aldermen could be bought, and laid the mutter before the district attorney. Harding was given the marked money to carry the deal through. WAS SORT OF 'PRESTO, CHANGE' Way the Cosh in St. Louis Sub-Treas ury Was Handled. St. Louis, Jan. 16. The trial of Teller Dyer, of the sub-treasury here for being short 61,600 in his cash, has begun. His father and brother, both United States officers', are defending him, having been granted leave of ab sence for that purpose. They all in sist that it was a mistake in the accounting of the office. Ralph P. Johnson, cashier in the local sub-treasury, gave the following testimony regarding the discovery of the alleged short age: "I went to Dyer's cage and told him I Intended to examine his cash. He was about to come out. He went back and received through a revolving basket between the receiving and paying teller's cages a small package of money from Paying Teller M. B. Ferguson. After counting up his cash and checking his books I found that the cash balanced. I then O. K'd his daily settlement book in lead pencil. "I was called to my desk, and looking up saw Dyer come out of his cage aud go into Ferguson's cage with a handful of money. Dyer went outside, and when he came back I told him I was going to count his cash again. 1 then found the discrepancy of $61,500. I asked him when the shortage occurred, and he said Sept. 27. I asked him why he had not reported It to me, and he said the amount was so large he was frightened, and hoped the money would turn up." Charles Coghlan's Body Found. Galveston. Tex.. Jan. 10 The body of Charles Coghlan.the piny wright and actor, which has been lost since the storm of Sept. 8, 1900, has been found In Its metal coffin on the mainland in an out of the way place. Hunters came upon the coffin almost buried in a marsh, hidden by the weeds. It had been lifted in the flood and carried nine miles from the cemetery. Has Found a Xew Anaesthetic. St. Louis, Jan. 1G. Dr. Hall W. Foster, of Kansas City, using a local anaesthetic of his own, has performed four operations at the City hospital, which bid fair to work a revolution In surgical science. In all of the operations the patients were perfectly conscious during the ordeal, talked to the operator and watched his movements. Two Men Responsible. Alma, Kan., Jan. 1G. J. U. Shoemaker, the dispatcher at Topeka. and John Lynes, the operator in Volland, Kan., are both held in a measure responsible for the Rock Island wreck near Volland Jan. 7, in which thirtytwo persons were killed, by the coroner's Jury.
THE
By KATHERINE CECIL THURSTON, Author of "The Circle." Etc
Copyright. 1905. 1004. CHAPTER. XXVIII. ODER'S plan of action was arrived at before he reached Trafalgar square. The facts of the case were simple. ChilL cote had left an incriminating telegram on the bureau In the morning room at Grosveuor square. By an unlucky chance Lillian Astrupp had been shown up into that room, where she had remained alone until the moment that Eve, either by request or by accident, had found her there. The facts resolved themselves Into one, question: What use had Lillian made of those solitary moments? Without deviation, Loder's mind turned toward one answer. Lillian was not the woman to lose an opportunity, whether the space at her command was long or short. So convinced was he that, reaching Trafalgar square, he stopped and hailed a hansom. "Cadogau gardens!" he called. "No. 33." The moments seemed very few before the cab drew up beside the curb and he caught his second glimpse of the -enameled door with. its silver fittings. Instantly he pressed the bell the door was opened by Lillian's discreet, deferential manservant. "Is Lady Astrupp at home?" ha asked. The man looked thoughtful, "ner ladyship lunched at home, sir" he began cautiously. But Loder Interrupted him. "Ask her to see me," he said laconically. The servant expressed no surprise. His only comment was to throw the door wide. "If you'll wait in the white room, sir," he said, "I'll inform her ladyship." Chilcote was evidently a frequent and a favored visitor. In this manner Loder for the second time entered the house so unfamiliar and yet so familiar in all that it suggested. Entering the drawing room, he had leisure to look about him. It was a beautiful room, large and lofty. Luxury was evident on every hand, but it was not the luxury that palls or offends. Each object was graceful and possessed its own intrinsic value. The J atmosphere was too effeminate to ap-! peal to him, but he acknowledged the taste and artistic delicacy it conveyed. Almost at the moment of acknowledgment the door opened to admit Lillian. "I thought it would be you," she said enigmatically. Loder came forward. "You expected me?" he said guardedly. A sudden coHvictioo fillet! him that' it was not the evidence of her eyes, but something at once subtler and more definite that prompted her recognition of him. She smiled. "Why should I expect you? On the contrary, I'm waiting to know why you're here?" He was silent for an instant. Then he answered in her own light tone. "As far as that goes," he said, "let's make it my duty call having dined with you. I'm an old fashioned person." For a full second she surveyed him amusedly. Then at last she spoke. "My dear Jack" she laid particular stress on the name "I never Imagined you punctilious. I should have thought bohemian would have been more the word." Loder felt disconcerted and annoyed. Either, like him?elf, she was fishing for Information or she was deliberately playing with him. In his perplexity he glanced across the room toward the fireplace. Lillian saw the look. "Won't you sit down?" she said, indicating the couch. "I promise not to make you smoke. I shan't even ask you to take off your gloves!" Loder made no movement. His mind was unpleasantly upset. It was nearly a fortnight since he had seen Lillian, and in the Interval her attitude had changed, and the change puzzled him. It might mean the philosophy of a woman who, knowing herself without ade quate weapons, withdraws from a combat that has proved fruitless, or it might imply the merely catlike desire to toy with a certainty. He looked quickly at the delicate face, the green eyes somewhat obliquely set, the unreliable month, nnd instnntir he Inclined to the latter theory. The conviction that she possessed tha telegram filled him suddenly, and with It came the desire to put his belief to the test to know beyond question whether her smiling unconcern meant malice or mere entertainment "When you first came into the room," he said quietly, "you said 'I thought It would be you.' Why did you say that? Again she smiled the smile that might be malicious or might be merely amused. "Oh," she answered at last, "I only meant that though I had been told Jack Chilcote wanted me, it wasn't Jack Chilcote I expected to see!" After her statement there was a pause. Loder's position was difficult. Instinctively convinced that, strong in the possession of her proof, she was enjoying his tantalized discomfort, he yet craved the actual evidence that should set his suspicions to rest. Acting upon the desire, he made a new beginning. "Do yon know why I came?" be asked. Lillian looked up innocently. "It's so hard to be certain of aa-vtbinz in this
by Harper I Brothers
world," she said. "But one is always at. liberty to guess." Again he was perplexed. Her attitude was not quite the attitude of one who controls the game, and yet He looked at her with a puzzled scrutiny. Women for him had always spelled the incomprehensible. He was at his best, his strongest, his surest, In the presence of men. Feeling his disadvantage, yet determined to gain his end, he made a last attempt. "How did you amuse yourself at Grosvenor square this morning before Eve came to you?" he asked. The ef fort was awkwardly blunt, but It was direct. Lillian was buttoning her glove. She did not raise her head as he Bpoke, but her fingers paused In their task. .For a second she remained motionless; then she looked up slowly. "Oh," she said sweetly, "so I was right in my guess? You did come to find out whether I sat in the morning room with my hands in my lap or wandered about In search of entertainment?" Loder colored with annoyance and apprehension. Every look, every tone, of Lillian's was distasteful to him. No microscope could have revealed her more fully to him than did his own eyesight. But it was not the moment for personal antipathies; there were other interests than his own at stake. With new resolution he returned her glance. "Then I must still ask my first question, Why did you say, T thought it would be you?' " nis gaze was directso direct that it disconcerted her. She laughed a little uneasily. "Because I knew." "How did you know?" "Because" she began; then again she laughed. "Because," she added quickly, as If moved by a fresh Impulse, "Jack Chilcote made It very obvious to any one who was in his morning room at 12 o'clock today that It would be you and not he who would be found filling his place this afternoon. It's all very well to talk about honor, but when one walks into an empty room and sees a telegram as long as a letter open on a bureau" But her sentence was never finished. Loder had heard what he came to hear. Any confession she might have to offer was of no moment in his eyes. "My dear girl," he broke In brusquely, "don't trouble. I should make a most unsatisfactory father confessor." He spoke quickly. His color was still high, but not of annoyance. Ills sus pense was transformed into unpleasant certainty, but the exchange left him surer of himself. His perplexity had dropped to a quiet sense of self re liance. His paramount desire was for solitude In which to prepare for the task that lay before him the most con genial task the world possessed the unraveling of Chilcote's tangled skeins Looking Into Lillian's eyes, he smiled "Goodby," he said, holding out his hand. "I think we've finished for to day." She slowly extended her fingers. Her expression and attitude were slightly puzzled a puzzlement that was either spontaneous or singularly well assumed. As their hands touched she smiled again. ' "Will you drop In at the Arcadian tonight?" she asked. "It's the dramatized version of 'Other Men's Shoes" The temptation to make you see it wa3 too irresistible as you know." There was a pause while she waited for his answer, her head inclined to one side, her green eyes gleaming. Loder, conscious of her regard, hesitated for a moment. Then his face cleared. "Right!" he said slowly. "The Arcadian tonight!" CHAPTER XXIX. ODER'S frame of mind as ha left Cadogan gardens was peculiar. Once more he was liv. ins in the present the forceL ful. exhilarating present, and the knowledge braced him. Upon one point his mind was satisfied. Lillian Astrupp had found the telegram, and it remained to him to render her find valueless. How he proposed to da this, how he proposed to come out tri- ! umphant in face of such a situation, 1 was a matter that as yet was shapeless In his mind; nevertheless the dan ger, the sense of impending conflict. had a savor of life after the inaction of the day and night just passed. Chilcote In his weakness and his entanglement had turned to him, and he in his strength and capacity had responded : to the appeal. His step was firm and his bearing asi sured as he turned into Grosvenor j square and walked toward the familiar I house. The habit of self deceit is as insidi- ! A : : moment on the night of his great speech as he leaned out of Chilcote's carriage and met Chilcote's eyes Loder had seen himself and under the shock of revelation had taken decisive action. But in the hours subsequent to that action the plausible, inner voice had whispered unceasingly, soothing hl3 wounded self esteem, rebuilding stone by 6tone the temple of his egotism, until at last when Chilcote, panic stricken at his own action, had burst into his rooms ready to plead or to coerce he had found no nesd for either coercion
or entreaty. By a power more subtle j and effective than any at his command j Loder had been prepared for his comingunconsciously ready with an acquiescence, before his appeal had been made. It was the fruit of thl3 preparation, the Inevitable outcome of it, that strengthened his step and steadied his hand as he mounted the steps and opened the hall door of Chilcote's house on that eventful afternoon. The dignity, the air of quiet solidity. Impressed him as It never failed to do, as he crossed the large hall wid ascended the stairs the same stairs that he had passed down almost as an outcast not so many hours before. He was filled with the seose of things regained. Belief In his own star lifted him, as it had done a hundred times before In these same surroundings. He quickened his steps as the sensation came to him. Then, reaching the head of the stairs, he turned directly toward Eve's sitting room and, gaining the door, knocked. The strength of his eagerness, the qxiick beating of his pulse as he waited for a response, surprised him. He had told himself many times that his passion, however strong, would never again conquer as it had done two nights ago, and the fact that
he had come thus candidly to Eve's room was to his mind a proof that temptation could be dared. Nevertheless there was sorpethlng disconcerting to a strong man in this merely physical perturbation, and when Eve's voice came to him. giving permission to en ter, he paused for an instant to steady himself. Then, with sudden decision, he opened the door and walked Into the room. The blind.1? were partly drawn, there was a scent of violets in the air, and a fire glowed warmly In the grate. He noted- these things carefully, telling himself that a man should always be alertly sensible of " his surroundings. Then all at once the nice balancing of detail suddenly gave waj-. He forgot everything but the oneeircumstancethat Eve was standing in the window, her back-to the light, her face toward him. With his pulses beating faster and an unsteady sensation in his brain, he moved forward, holding out his hand. "Eve" he said below his breath. But Eve remained motionless. As he came Into the room she had glanced at him a glance of quick, searching question, then with equal suddenness she had averted her eyes. As he drew close to her now she remained Immovable. "Eve" he said again. "I wanted to see you I wanted to explain about yes terday and about this morning." He paused, suddenly disturbed. The full remembrance of the scene In the brougham had surged up at sight of her had risen a fierce, unquenchable recollection. "Eve" he began again in a 'new, abrupt tone. And then It was that Eve showed herself in a fresh light. From his en trance into the room she had stayed motionless, save for her first glance of acute inquiry, but now her demeanor changed. For almost the first time In Lcder's knowledge of her the vitality and force that he had vaguely apprehended below her quiet, serene exterior sprang up like a flame within whose radius things are illuminated With a quick gesture, she turned to ward him, her warm color deepening, her eye3 suddenly alight. "I understand," she said "I under stand. Don't try to explain. Can't you see that It's enough to to see you as you are" ' Loder was surprised. Remembering their last passionate scene and the damper Chilcote's subsequent presence must inevitably have cast upon it, he had expected to be doubtfully received, but the reality of the reception left him bewildered. Eve's manner was not that of the 111 used wife. It3 vehemence, it3 note of desire and depreciation, were more suggestive of his own ardent seizing of the present as distlnguished from- past or future. With an odd sense of confusion he turned to her afresh. "Then I am forgiven?" be said. And unconsciously as he moved nearer he touched her arm. At his touch she started. All the yielding sweetness, all the submission, that had marked her two nights ago was gone. In its place she was possessed by a curious excitement that stirred while it perplexed. Loder, moved by the sensation, took another step forward. "Then I am forgiven?" he repeated more softly. Her face was averted as he spoke, but he felt her arm quiver, and when at last she lifted her head their eyes met. Neither spoke, but in an instant Loder's arms were around ber. For a long silent space they stood holding each other closely. Then, with a sharp movement. Eve freed herself. Her color was still high, ber eyes still peculiarly bright, but the bunch of vio lets she had worn in her belt had fallen to the ground. "John," she said quickly, but on the word her breath cauffht. With a touch ; of nervousness she stooped to pick up j the flowers. j Loder noticed both voice and gesture. 1 "What Is if' he said. "What were you going to say?" But she made no answer. For a sec ond longer she searched for the violets. then as he bent to assist her she stood up quickly and laughed a short, embarrassed laugh. "How absurd and nervous I ami" she exclaimed. "Like a schoolgirl instead of a woman or twenty -r our. iou musi help me to be sensible." Her cheeks still bned, her manner was still excited, like one who holds an emotion or an Impulse at bay. Loder looked at her uncertainly. "Eve" he began afresh with his odd, characteristic perseverance, but she instantly checked him. There was a finality, a faint suggestion of fear, In ber protest. "Don't!" she said. "Don't! I don't want explanations,' I want to to en the naameflut yitbout having jthlojrs
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"Then 1 am forgiven?" he said. analyzed or smoothed away. Can't you understand? Can't you see that I'm wonderfully, terribly happy to to have you as you are!" Again her voice broke a break that might have been a laugh or a sob. The sound was an emotional crisis. as such a sound invariably is. It ar rested and steadied her. For a moment she stood absolutely still, then with something very closely resembling her old repose of manner she stooped again and quietly picked up the flowers still lying at her feet. "Now," she said quietly, "I must say what I've wanted to say all along. How does it feel to be a great man?" Her manner was controlled, she looked at him evenly and directly; save for the faint vibration in her voice there was nothing to indicate the tumult of a moment ago. But Loder was still uncertain. He caught her hand, his eyes searching hers. "But Ere" he besran. Then Eve played the last card In her j mysterious game. Laughing quickly and nervously, she freed her hand and laid it over his mouth. "No!" she said. "Not one word! All this past fortnight has belonged to you; now it's my turn. Today Is mine. t'l'o Be coniinueaj, Ideas on Elections. "Some men," said Uncle Eben, "takes an election serious; an' Eoma men je3' likes to guess who's gwlnetcr run fust, same as at a hoss race." A Daily Thouflht. m Hope is our privilege and duty, foi hope is the sweet content that grows out of trust and perfect happiness. HJea Keller
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