Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 265, Hammond, Lake County, 27 April 1907 — Page 5

Saturday, April 27, 1907.

Railway Time Table. Lve. Ar. Roads Hmd. Chi. A.M. A.M. Erie...6.45r 42 Penn..6.50x .45 Mon'n...10 7.10 Erie... $.12 7.12 J 6.09x 7.12 Vab'h.6.16 7.15 M. C..6.20 7.10 Penn. G. 16 7.25 L. S 6.21x1 7.38 N. P.... 6.40 7.40 M. C....6.40 7.30 Perm. ..6.42 7.45 L. 3 7.08x1 8.22 Erie. ..7.30 8.80 Penn...8.00x 9.00 Erie. ..9.C6 10.05 I.. S 8.48 9.45 Vab'h.9.84 10.22 Mon'n. .9.28 10.35 M. C...9.65X 10.45 Erie.. 10.05 11.00 I S.. 10.141 11.35 Perm. .10. lis 11.10 Mon'n 11.11 12.00 M. C..11.53X 12.35 P.M. P.M. Penn..l2.38x 1.35 Jj. S... 12.58 1.55 M. C...2.06 2.55 Penn...2.188 3.15 Wab'h.3.03 3.50 Perm. .3.31x 4.30 Erle...3.50x 4.50 N. P...4.02 4.53 M. C...4.08x 4.50 Mon'n. .4. 393 5.35 Erie.. .4.43 5.40 E. H 4.4SxI 6.04 MoiVn.-5.02 5.55 M. C...5.12X 6.00 Penn.. .5.22 C.30 L. H 5.28x 6.27 L S 6.41 8.05 K S..-6.32 7.33 Pnn..7.00x 8.00 M. C. . .7.05x 7.55 Monfn..7.49x 8.40 N. P S.16 9.15 Wab'h.8.40 9.30 M. C... 9.13s 9.55 Erie.. 10.10 11.10 L. S... 12.66 1.55 1 Via Indiana Harbor Lve. Ar. Roads ChL Hmd. A.M. A.M. Erie.. 12. 35 1.25 t-enn. ..B.20 Perm. ..6.30 L. 8 5.20x Penn. ..6.00 L. S....8.05x M. C.T.lOx Erie. ..7.10x 6.16 6.42 6.21 e.59 7.08 7.58 8.10 E. S 7.281 8.48 I'enn . ..8.00x 8.68 Mon'n. .8.30 9.19 Penn.. .8. 50s 10.11 L. S....9.20 10.14 N. P. .10.35 11.25 Erie.. 11. 00 11.53 Wab'h 11.00 11.48 Penn..ll.20x 12.38 P.M. P.M. Mon'n 12.00 12.50 I- S.. .11.431 12.58 Penn.. .1.00 2.18 M. C. . .1.15x Perm. .2.10x Erie. . .2.30 N. P...2.30 Wab'h. 8.00 Mon'n. .3. 05 M. C...3.15x 1.64 3.31 3.25 3.25 3.4 8 3.55 3.53 4.48 5.32 I S.. I'enn. . K S.. Penn. . Erie. . M. C. E. H . . Penn . . i:rie. . L. 8... Erie. . ..3.50X ,.4.15 ..4.12x1 6.28 .4.30 6.32 .5.10 .5.30x .5.17 .5.40 .5.15 ,.5.6o .5.5Kx 6.02 6.09 6.32 6.42 6.15 6.48 .55 7.17 9.50 10.08 10.26 10.47 I'enn. .6.15 -Mon'n. .9. 00 N. P...9.15 Erie. ..9.30 M. C.10.00 Wab'hl0.30x Penn. .11.353 11.20 12.32 K S. ..11.37 12.58 M. C. 11.65 12.49 Mon'n 11. lOf 11.58 x Dally except Sunday. Daily f Dally except Monday. Sun DON'T FAIL TO SEE OUR LINE OF Before you buy. Each machine the best of its class. THE C, F. CAR Touring Car, 5 passenger, 4 cylinder, 30 borso power, Shalt drive. Mechanical oiler, 9 feeds. Price $1750 nnNlRDTlT. unmo RTWriflfttntic Price $1750 I THE AEROCAR Model F. Touring Car, 5 passenger, 4 cylinder, 40 horse power. Price $2750 Model D. Touring Car, 5 passenger, 4 cylinder, 30 horse power. Price $2000 1 THE GALE One cylinder Runabout, 8 horsepower: the most powerful little car. Price $600 Two cylinder Runabout, 16 horee power, shaft drive, etc. Price $900 Two cylinder Touring Car, 26 horsepower, 5 passenger. Price $1250 WRITE FOR CATALOGUE AGENTS WANTED C0RNISK-FRIEDSER3 MOTOR CAR COMPANY, 1233 Michigan Ara.,CHICAGO THE CITIZENS' GERMAN NATIONAL BANK bt Hammond. A comparative tat&. tn.at mt depocttta bIbc our opesine dayi May 13, 1003 9 Jan 12, 1000 .....,).. Julr 12, 1006 August 11, 1903 September 12, 103(1 October 12, 190G &'oTHibr 12. 1IV1 December 12, 19U3 JtuiutLTT 12, 1W7 ... C3.S12.0I 68,975.18 147,433.73 J7?.TV 172,43 224,153.43 January 23, 1907 236,543.43 ;No County, City or Scbool Fund la eluded In the above. We ar th yoaniceat bank In Hammond. Oar first birthday will be en May 8, 1907. TnRED PER CENT. PAID ON SAVINGS AND TIME DEPOSITS. Olva ni a trial and be convinced el ur falf treatment. Mlresses Renovate OU Hair and Moss Mattresses and all other Expensive Mattresses made like new at small cost. H. EVANS Tel. 1784. 54 Plummer Ave. HAMMOND MP Trade Mark VL LaiaomU'rllM(VArtft.7S!UUoa9t.X.Y. The Shine That Won't Explode Every Wmm is iiitt'resu-d and tUouUt know about the wonderful MARVELYVhirlingSpray The lie W Vairinul tyrlnrc. litst M f6t conven ient. It cleimws Instantly. Amc Tonr drncalfft for It. It be cannot uvriy the M4UYEL, aoi.pt no nthr Hut fUMia KLauiT fur Jlliitrvtcl book Skilled. It f-res full i. ardent am ma inrectn.m invaluable t' ladies. 31 A.K V r L . aa lut 834 Street. SEW OKK. ADVGRTISINU IIIXTS. The ahrevrd merchant meem to It tliat bis newipaper aunounceranti are bright and attractive, that the copy ta i hanffed rcgrularlr ami that the printer hj hia display atU in time to 1 vr ihest ilia atteatioflt taey djva.

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BY DAVID C0PriGnrO - - i iii - Wtjwr in 1 1 (Continued from jesteriiay.) "Nowf I've known for years," I went on, "that you were In love with that other man when I asked you to marry me. I might have taunted you with it, might have told ycu how I've Saved him from going to jail for passing worthless checks." This deiighted her this Jealousy so long and ko carefully hidden. Under cover of her delight I escaped from tha witness stand. And the dis covery that evening by Doc Woodruff that my Bon'a ensnarer had a husband living put her in high good humor. "If he'd only come home," said she. adding: "Though, now I feel that he's perfectly safe with her." "Ye3 let them alone," I replied. "He has at least one kind of sense a sense of honor. And I suspect and hope that he has at bottom common sense, too. Let him find her out for himself. Then he'll be done with her, and her kind, for good." "I must marry him off as soon as possible," said Carlotta. "I'll look about for some nice, quiet young girl with character and looks and domestic tastes." She laughed a little bitterly. "You men can profit by experience and it ruins us women." "Unjust," said I, "but injustice and stupidity are the ground plan cf life." We had not long to wait. Tho lady, i a3 soon as Junior reached the end cf his cash, tried to open negotiations. Failing and becoming convinced that he had been cast ofT by his parents, she threw aside her mask. One straight look Into her real countenance was enough for the boy. He fled shuddering but not to me as I had expected. Instead, he got a place as a clerk in Chicago. "Why not let him shift for himself for awhile?" suggested Woodruff, who couldn't have taken more trouble about the affair If the boy had been his own. "A man never knows whether hi3 feet were made to stand on and walk with, unless he's been down to his uppers." "I think the boy's got his grandmother in him," said I. "Let's give him a chance." "He'll make a career for himself yet like his father's," said Woodruff. That, with the sincerest enthusiasm. But instinctively I looked at him for signs of sarcasm. And then I wondered how many "successful" men would, in the same circumstances, have had the same curiously significant instinct. CHAPTER XXVIlt. Under a Crayon Portrait It was not less than a month before Inauguration Daily the papers gave probable selections for the high posts under the approaching adninlstra- i tion; and, while many of them were ) attributed to my Influence, Roebuck'3 son as ambassador to Russia was the only one I ever approved of. A3 payments for the services of the plutocracy they were unnecessary and foolishly lavish; as preparations for a renomination and reelection, the two guiding- factors in every plan of a president-elect, they were preposterous. They were first steps toward an administration that would make Scarborough's triumph Inevitable, in spite of his handicap of idealism. I sent Woodruff west to find out what Burbank was doing about the places I had pledged all of them less "honorable," but more lucrative offices which party workers covet. He returned with the news that, according to the best Information he could get through his spies in Burbank's entourage, all our pledges would be broken; the Sayler-Burbank machine was to be mada over into a Goodrieh-Bur-bank. I saw that I could not much longer delay action. But I resolved to put it off until the very last minute, meanwhile trying to force Burbank to send for me. My cannonade upon Goodrich in 6,000 newspapers, great and small, throughout the west and south, had been reenforced by the bulk of the opposition press. I could not believe it was to be witBout influence upon the timid Burbank, even though he knew who was back of the attack, and precisely how I was directing it. I was relying as I afterward learned, : not in vain upon my faithful De Milt I to bring to ''Cousin James attention ' the outburst of public sentiment j against his suide. rshilosonher and i friend, the Wall street fetch-and-carry. I had fixed cn February 15 as the uaiw uu wmcn i would telegrapn a formal demand for an interview. On February 11 he surrendered he wired asking me to come. I took a chance; I wired back a polite request to be excused as I had urgent business in Chicago. And 24 hours later I passed within SO miles of Rivington on my way to Chicago with Carlotta we were going to see Junior, hugely proud of himself and hi3 $27 a week. At the Auditorium a telegram waited from Burbank: He hoped I would come as ! soon as I could; the matters he wish- i ed to discuss were most important. Toward noon of the third day there$4tex we were---.gr tins each. cthe&

Almost or

77fCOST. tSOO Of r Humetc he with an attempt at his old-time cordiality, I without concealment of at least the coldness I felt. But my manner apparently, and probably, escaped his notice. He was now blind and drunk with the incense that had been whirling about him in dense clouds for three months; he was incapable of doubting the bliss of any human being he was gracious to. He shut me in with him and began confiding the plans he and Goodich had made cabinet places, foreign posts, and so forth. His voice, lingering and luxuriating upon the titles "my ambassador to his Brittanic majesty," "my ambassador to theGer- ! man emperor," and so on amused and I a little, but only a little, astonished I me; I had always known that he wa3 i a through-and-through snob. For nearly an hour I watched his Ingenious, childish delight in bathing himself in I himself, the wonderful fountain of all these honors. At last he finished, laid down his list, took off his noseglasses. "Well, Harvey, what do you think?" he asked, and waited with ; sparkling eyes for my enthusiastic apI proval. , "I see Goodrich drove a hard bar- ; gain," said I. "Yet he came on hia knees, if you had but realized it." j Burbank's color mounted. "What do ! you mean, Sayler?" he inquired, the faint beginnings of the insulted god in his tone and manner. "You asked my opinion," I answered, "I'm giving it. I don't recall a single name that isn't obviously a Goodrich suggestion. Even the Roebuck appointment " "Sayler," he interrupted, in a for bearing tone, "I wish you would not remind me so often of your prejudice against Senator Goodrich. It is unworthy of you. But for my tact pardon my frankness your prejudice would have driven him away, and with him a support he controls " I showed my amusement. "Don't smile, Sayler," he protested, with some anger in his smooth, heavy voice. "You are not the only strong man fn the party, and I venture to take advantage of our long friendship to speak plainly to you. I wish to see a united party. One of my reasons for sending for you was to tell you how greatly I am distressed and chagrined by the attacks on Senator Goodrich in our papers." "Did you have any other reason for sending for me?" said I very quietly. "That was the principal one," he confessed. "Oh!" I exclaimed. "What do you mean, Sayler?" "I thought possibly you might also have wished to tell me how unjust you thought the attacks on me in. the eastern papers, and to assure me that they had only strengthened your friendship. He was silent. I rose, threw my overcoat on my arm, took up my hat. "Wait a moment, please," he. said. "I have always found you very impartial in your judgments your clear judgment has been of the highest usefulness to me many times." "Thank you," I said. "You are most kind most generous." "So," he went on, not dreaming that he might find sarcasm if he searched for it, "I hope you appreciate why I have refrained from seeing you, as I wished. I know, senator, your friendship was loyal. I know you did during the campaign what you thought j wisest and best. But I feel that you j riuist see now what a grave mistake ':u male. Don't misunderstand me. Harvey. I do not hold it against you. But you must see, no doubt you do see, that it would not be fair for me, It would not be in keeping with the dignity of the great office with which the people have intrusted me, to seem to lend my aprpoval." I looked straight at him until his gaze fell. Then I said, my voice even lower than usual: "If you will look; at the election figures carefully you ! will find written upon them a very in-! teresting fact. That fact is: In all the doubtful states the ones that j elected you Scarborough swept i everything where our party has here-; tofore been strongest; you were elect-1 ed by carrying districts where our j party has always been weakest. And j in those districts, James, our money j was spent as you well know." j I waited for this to cut through his ; enswaddlmgs of self-complacence, j waited until I saw its acid eating into him Then T wpnt fin: I nODfl VOU i will never again deceive yourself, or ' let your enemies deceive you. As to ! your plans the plans for Goodrich J and his crowd I have nothing to say. j My concern is to have Woodruff's j matters his . pledges attended to. j That I must Insist upon. ) He lowered his brows with a heavy j frown. "I have your assent?" I insisted. "Really, Harvey" there was an I astonishing change from his compla-

cent, superior voice of a few minutes j -Xot so serious as to offend the before "I'll do what I can but the J party itself," I replied. "Money is a impossibilities the duties cf of my j great power in politics, but partfzanposition " ship is a greater." "You ai fiQicj; to ta&9 ttl oLce,i tTo Be Continued;.

THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES

James," said I. "You can't cheat the men who gave it to you." He did not answer. , "I pledged my word," I went on. "You gave the promises. I indorsed for you. The debts must be met." Never before had I enjoyed using that ugliest of words. "You ask me to bring myself into unpopularity with the entire country," he pleaded. "Several of the men on your list are ex-convicts. Others are about to be indicted for election frauds. Many are men utterly without character " "They did your work, James," said I. "I guarantee that in no case will the unpleasant consequences to you be more than a few disagreeable but soon forgotten newspaper articles. You haggle over these trifles, and why, look at your cabinet list! There ar two names on It two of the four Goodrich men that will cost you blasts of public anger perhaps the renomination." "Is this my friend Harvey Sayler?" he exclaimed, grief and pain in that face which had been used by him for 30 years as the sculptor uses the molding clay. "It is," I answered calmly. "And never mere your friend than now, when you have ceasel to be a friend to him and to yourself." "Then do you ask me to share the infamy of those wretches," he pleaded. "They are our allies and helpers," I said, "wretches only as I and all of us in practical politics are wretches. Difference of degree, perhaps; but not of kind. And, James, if our promises to these invaluable fellow workers of ours are not kept, kept to the uttermost, you will compel me and my group of senators to oppose and defeat your most important nomina tions. And I shall myself, publicly, from the floor of the senate, show up these Goodrich nominees of yours as ereatures of corrupt corporations and monopolists. I said this without heat; every word of it fell cold as arc tic ice upon his passion. A long pause, then: "Your promises shall be kept," he assented with great dignity of manner; "not because you threaten, Harvey, but because I value your friendship beyond anything and everything. And I may add I am sorry, profoundly sorry, my selections for the important places do not please you." "I think of your future," I said. "You talk of friendship " "No, no, Harvey," he protested, with a vehemance of reassurance that struck me as amusing. "And," I went on, "it is in friendship, James, that I warn you not to fill all your crucial places with creatures of the Goodrich crowd. They will rule your administration, they will drive you, in spite of yourself, on and on, from excess to excess. You will put the middle west irrevocably against you. You will make even the east doubtful. You are paying, pay ing with your whole future, for that which is already yours. If you lose your hold on the people, the money crowd will have none of you. If you keep the people, the money-crowd will be your very humble servant." I happened just then to glanoe past him at a picture on the wall over his chair. It was a crayon portrait of hia "iff rn-ul from an enlarged photo graph a poor piece of work, almost ludicrous in its distortions of propor tion and perspective. But it touched me the more because it was such a humble thing, reminiscent of her and his and my lowly beginnings. And an appeal seemed to go straight to my heart from those eyes that had so often been raised from the sewing in sympathetic understanding of the things I was struggling to make her husband see. I pointed to the picture; he slowly turned round in his chair until he, too, looked at it. What would she say, Burbank," I asked, "if she were with us now?" And then I went on to analyze his outlined administration, to show him in detail why I thought it would ruin him, to suggest men who were as good party men as the Goodrich crowd and would be a credit to him and a help. And he listened with his oldtime expression, looking up at his dead wife's picture all the while, "You must be popular, at any cost," I end ed. "The industrial crowd will stay with the party, no matter what we do, As long as Scarborough is in control on the other side, we are their only hope. And so, we are free to seek popularity and we must regain it or we're done for. Money won't save us j ana gie The presidency can't be bought again for you. If it must be bought next time, another figure-head will have to be used." "I can't tell you how grateful I am," was hi3 conclusion after I had put my whole mind before him and he had discussed it. "But there are certain pledges to Goodrich " "Break them," said I. "To keep them Is catastrophe." I knew the pledges he had in the foreground a St. Louis understrapper of the New York financial crowd for secretary of the treasury; for ati torney general a lawyer who knew nothing of politics or public sentiment or Indeed anything but how to instruct corporations in law-breaking and law-dodging. He thought a long time. When he answered it was with a shake of the head. "Too late, I'm afraid, Harvey. I've asked the men and theyve accepted. That was a most untimely illness of yours. I'll see what can ba done. It's a grave step to offend several of the most conspicuous men in the party."

l IIUIII UJ an 11

Telegraph News by Direct Wire from All Over Indiana. YmcCanes Ind., April 27. Miss Josephine Halter, who had her scalp and luxuriant growth of hair torn fvom her head, about two years ago. by a nut on the shafting at tko Yinoennes pearl button factory, where she was em ployed, is well on tlie way toward, re covery, despite the fact that she alsa had a severe attack of pneumonia. Drs. John Anderson and J. F. Ramsey, who undertook to grow a new sculp on her head, are successfully grafting skin upon the injured parts, and now there is about a fourth of the head still uncovered. She Has Some Good Friends. They are jubilant over their success so far. as they are working contrary to the practice of other physicians who have had similar cases. At first they attempted to graft the outer layer of the skin from the bodies of other persons, but met with no success. The .skin -which has grown on the unfortunate girl's head has been the entire thickness of skin taken from the legs and arms of those of her friends who were not averse to big ugly scars. Young women on four different occasoius took chloroform to allow the re moval of sufficient patches of their skin. Very Patient Sufferer. Regularly once a day Miss nalter has her head dressed by Dr. Anderson, ns there must be no pus formation allowed, and never was there a more patient sufferer than she. At all times she has had the fullest confidence in the attending physicians, as she ha been led that she would recover, and she has grown to love them like a fa ther. She expects to be able to be out and around like other young women before many months. Will Have to Wear a Wig. She expects no more hair, and will use a wig when her health is returned. The young women who have contrib uted to the new scalp have sworn the physicians to secrecy, though the names of a few have become known. CAN'T ACT AS FIREMEN Train Crews Must Pusli on with the Train, Says a Supreme Court Decision. Indianapolis, April 27. The supreme court holds that when the crew of a railway train discovers a fire beside the track, it is not bound to stop the train and put out the fire to protect property adjoining, and that if the company is held liable It must be for negligence in starting the fire or for negligence in not having some one else than the trainmen put It out. "The primary duty of a railroad company is to the state," said Judge Monks, speaking for the court. "It is to operate its railroad with reasonable speed, at regular times to accommo date passengers and shippers. It owes this duty to the state, and its obliga tion to discharge it is the considera tion for its charter. Stopping or delay ing a train to put out a fire which may have been set by a locomotive engine of the company might throw the train out of Its schedule time, and thus In terfere with the schedule of other trains and greatly incommode and even endanger the lives of passengers on such trains." Not Attempted Train-Wrecking. Evansville, Ind., April 27. Special Agent Peck, of the Southern railway. In a statement to the Associated Pres denies that an attempt was made to wreck a Southern railway train near Temple, Inc He said that a pile of waste caught fire on the right of way, and alter being extingmsned was fanned into flames again by passing trains. The man arrested by a section foreman in company with the man who s-hot the marshal refuses to talk. He carried a new Coifs revolver and had sixty-nine rounds of ammunitian on his person. He Numbers His Kids. Evansville, Ind., April 27. Peter Aschoff, a business man of this city, has so many children that he gets mixed up sometimes and forgets their names, and he therefore calls them by numbers. He is the father of sixteen children. "Of course, I know the names of all my children," said Aschoff, "but I get mixed up, especially on the names of the girls, and when I go to call one that I want I invariably call the wrong one. So, to do away with the mistakes, I just call them by numbers." Letter Carrier Bitten by a Dog. Wabash, Ind., April 27. Jack Mills, a local letter carrier, was badly bitten at the home of Fred Carpolc, where he called to deliver mail. Mills opened the door to leave a letter, when the dog sprang at him, tearing his breast, face and hands. A terrific struggle followed, in which Mills killed the dog. The postoffice authorities will take up the matter. Child Killed by a Train. Terre Haute. Ind., April 27. Hen rietta Schwartz, 9 years old. was killed by a freight train here while an elder pister htTd her hands trying to drag her to safety. Try na ad In TUB TIMES. It pr

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