Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 266, Hammond, Lake County, 29 April 1907 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
Telegraph News by Direct Wire from All Over Indiana. Lawrcncebur?, Ind., April 29. Joseph Sehilletto, an Italian laborer living in a Ti-crk camp, and omplDycl with his fello-vv-counfrymen by the aBltlmore and Ohio Southwestern Railway company, near this city, white taking clothing' from a wire stretchel between the cook house and a telegraph pole, to avoid an impendiuj; storm, was struck by lightning, which liit a pole some distance awav and was transmitted along the wire till it connected with his lriiid-s. Scbullotto was knocked down and rendered unconscious for some time, while hto laands and arms were painfully burned, together with his. breast. Has a Picture on Ilia Breast. Dr. John W. Gage was called and When he bared the skin he discovered that the electric bolt had printed upon the Italian's breast a striking view of the scene where he was injured. The cook house with its old smokestack etood out in bold relief, while in tho background were other siiacks and tents, as well as trees and shrubbery. Dr. Gage expresses the belief that the Imprint Is indelible. Sehilletto was suffering from an acute attack of rheumatism, but the electricity dissipated the disease, and as soon as he recovers from his injuries he will return to work. Goes to Her Death Singing. Lawrencehurg, Inch, April 20, Mrs. Margaret C. Schneider, age I GCt, widow of W. A. (1. Schneider, committed suicide by drowning herself in a shallow pool of water. Mrs. Schneider had been In ill health for some time and despondent. At the time of the tub cide Stephen Liddle, foreman of tha roller mills, was attracted by the sound of a woman's voice singing a religious hymn and he glanced out and saw Mrs. Snhneidcr in the act of wading into the water. He sounded an alarm, and, with friends and neighbors, ran to the pool, but the woman was dead before she could be rescued. OUTRAGE nY WIIITECArS SThey Shoot Their Intended Victim IVhea He Uesists Kef uses to Talk About the Crime. Spencer, Ind., April 29. After cutting the telephone wires so that aid could not be summoned, eight masked men went to the home of John Laymon, a farmer living three miles west of this city, and at Unlght aroused ill in by beating on the door. Laymon responded to the summons. As he opened the door ho scented danger because of the masks worn by his vis t ors, and he put up a stout resistance. WhLle the struggle to overpower him was raging inside the door, and again in the yard, two shots were fired by ills assailants, one of the bullets striking Laymon in the breast, passing through his bodj-, and coming out near the spine. Laymon. was then overpowered and tied to a tree, his captors bcingdetermined to administer a whipping with withes, already at hand. They finally yielded to his entreatlea and went away. Laymon refuses to assign any cause for the attack or to say whether he recognized any of tha assailants. Auto "Worse Than Railway. Fortland, Ind.. April 20. A train on the Grand Rapids and Indiana railroad was wrecked at Collett, four miles south of here, and about a dozen passengers, were injured. Only two were seriously hurt. While going to the scene of the wreck in an automobile Frank Ken worthy and a party of four, of Winchester, Ind., ran into a fence and were thrown out Kenworthy landed against a telegraph pole and had his reck broken, dyin? a few minutes later. George Edwards, another of the automobile party, was seriously hurt. Young Farmer In Jail for Murder. Anderson, Ind., April 20. Jame3 Anderson, a young farmer living seven miles northeatof -Elwood. was brought to this city and placed in jail by Sheriff Smelser, charged with the murder of Jacob Deihl, a glass worker, at Elwood. Anderson, according to the sheriff, admits the crime, but alleges selfdefense. The killing occurred during a saloon brawl. First Indiana Woman Lawyer. Eyansville, Ind., April 20. Miss Tamar Althouse, of this city, who was recently admitted to the bar here, is the only won; an attorney in this section of the state. She is a graduate of one of the leading law schools of the state. At present Miss Althouse is serving as court stenographer in the circuit court. Saw His Baby Daughter Rilled. KokomcK Ind., April 29. David Martin, aged 05 years, was killed by a freight train, and Mabel Martin, aged 18 months, a granddaughter, met death under a traction car. The baby's father, John Martin, an engineer, saw her killed while he eat in the cab of a locomotive on a side track near the accident. . Try au. l in. THE TIMES. It pay.
M0RETHAHRECEPT1VE
Secretary Taft Practically an Ac tive Candidate to Succeed President Roosevelt. CAN'T GO BACK ON HIS FEIENDS Statement of the Man Who Looks After His Political Interests. Straight from the Ohio Heavyweight Grant Hay Sentiments, Political and Otherwise Fairbanks lischews Politics. Columbus, O., April 20. That William II. Taft. secretary of Mar, is in the cauvass for the Republican nom ination for president to stay is, in effect, the announcement made by A. I. Yorys, statecommissimer of insurance1, who is managing the Taft canvass in Ohio. Yorys went to Cincinnati and had a conference there with Secretary Taft, nt which Vorys outlined what had already been done toward promoting t'hesecretary's candidacy, and gave his views on the sentiment of the people of Ohio regarding it. Vorys returned to Columbus and upon his arrival here gave out the following statement: Will Accept What Is Offered. "I have talked with Secretary Taft and submitted to him convincing evidence that the Republicans of Ohio favor him as the Republican candidate for the presidency. He was gratified at the Information. He said that some months ago he had announced that while his ambition was not political he would accept the nomination if it came to him, and added that now that In view of his announcement his name had been used, and support for him had been Invoked by his friends, good faith to them requires that he should not alter his position or take any action which will expressly, or in effect, withdraw his name until the question of his nomination is settled." Secretary Eschews Politics. The secretary spoke Saturday at Cincinnati to the convention of Associated Western Yale Clubs, and the Yale men present gave him an ovation. His speech was absolutely dovoid of politics, his speech being a dlscussiqn of college life and of Y'ale matters in general. His college mates were not so reticent At the business meeting of the association at the mention of Taft for president of the United States there was a yell of vast pro portions, and at-the banquet such sugostions were frequent. In an inter view he declared that Uncle Sam would withdraw from Cuba sooner than anybody expected. The secretary was at Dayton yesterday, where he addressed the Y. M. C. A., which laid the corner stone of a new society building. His address was devoted to Y. M. C. A. matters, especially in our In sular possessions and Panama, and the settlement of the friar land question In the Philippines. FAIRBANKS AND OTHERS Vice President Speaks No Politics Beveridge and Depew. Des Moines. Ia., April 29. Vice President Fairbanks was in Iowa Sat urday and madeone important addres3 and several minor speeches, but at no time did he touch upon matters politi cal, not even in private conversation or interviews; he ventured no opinion upon political Issues, or upon possibili ty of his being a candidate for the presidency. lie said that he had come to Iowa to speak to the Grant club of Des Moines on General Grant, and that his mission was in no wise political. He had. however, an enthusiastic welcome. During his speech he lauded President Roosevelt, both as man and as president. Galena, 111.. April 29. The birthday of General Grant was celebrated fr the seventeenth time by the people of Galena and vicinity. Businss was gen erally suspended, the corner stone of the Carnegie-Foyt?r0,C00 library build ing was laid, and there was an oration by United States Senator Reveridg of Indiana. lie entwined with hi; words of praise for the great war lead er soiumn warnings ag:iint th3 danger of state right, child labor, and corporation supremacy. He also took occasion to defend President Roosevelt at some length. New ork. April 29. Senator Depew w?.s dined ny the Mohawk club, of P.rooklyn, on the occasion of his 73d birthday anniversary. His most notable statements were that "We have a centralization of power an 1 effective authority beyond the dream of Ham Ilton, and it is popular will." and that congress, the people believe, i there fo ratify the president's ideas, and in this connection he remarked that Andrew Johnson escaped impeachment by only one vote for antagonizing congress. Roston, April 29. Attorney General Honaparte was the principal guest at the annual banquet of the FrancoAmerican Republican club, of Massachusetts, at the American House. Praise of the aims and accomplishments of the Republican party and denunciation of the Democratic party was the keynote of Bonaparte's address. Pittsburg, April 29. The annual banquet of the Americns club, of Pittsburg, In honor of the birthday 1 Ul SchenleF with Secretary of Agrl-
c?r! tore Jamea Wilson, Representative Grant Mouser, of Ohio, and Washington Gardner, of Michigan, as the chief speakers. Grant was the subject of Mouser and Gardner, while Secretary Wilson talked agriculture.
SAYS IT MUST BE ROOSEVELT California Statesman Advocates tho President for lOOS. Los Angeles, Cah, April 20. Unite! States Senator Frank P. Flint, who has returned here from Washington, gave out an interview in which ho strongly advocated the renomination of President Roosevelt, Senator Flint, speaking of a recently interview with the president, said: "I told President Roosevelt that the sentiment of this country at the present time seems almost unanimous that he sboaild acept a renomination. "Personally his attitude docs not seem to have changed since lie announced that he would not again le a candidate. Rut the situation has chanced since he made that announce ment and I told him that he should not be ixmnd tr it now. Every day he Is receiving delegations and letters urgng him fu take the nomination." San Francisco, April 29. United States Senator LaFollctte, of Wisconsin, who has arrived here, gave it as his opinion that President IieoevelC will be renominated by acclamation at the next Republican convention. NO DROUGHT FOR FORT WORTH Local Option Badly Defeated in That Ijone Star State Town. Fort Worth, Tex., April 29. In a saloon option election in Tarrant coun ty, of which Fort Worth is the county seat, the ant is defeated the pros by a vote of G.207 to r.,214. The vote iu the city was 3,7.j4 anti to 798 pro. The Prohibitionists were asked by citizens here to give the new saloon laws trial before making the fight, but they thought they saw an opportunity' to win, and led by several minist3r.? refused all overtures, forcing the fight which resulted in their overwhelming defeat. The assassination of County Attor ney McLean opened the fight. The feature of the campaign was the de termined stand Judge W. J. McLean, father of the murdered officer, took against prohibition. The election was orderly and quiet. MAY DAY TO BE QUIET So Far as Labor Strikes Are Con cerned They Will Be Fewer Than Usual. Chicago, April 29. May Day, aa viewed from a labor standpoint, gives promise to be very quiet and unevent ful. In St. Louis and the southwest there is small prospect for labor troubles, as the scales for the year are nearly all signed. No trouble is antic ipated at Philadelphia, New York, Bos ton and Pittsburg. In New England there is unrest in the cotton mill towns. San Francisco, however, is facing serious labor troubles and pretty much all organized labor is preparing to strike for higher wages. At Salt Lake City a strike of street railway em ployes Is "on," and the riot is "on" also the moment the company trieo to run a car. Willcox Not Troubled About Money, New York, April 29. David Will cox, who shot himself while returning from Italy on board the steamer Bar barossa, was not in straightened finan cial condition, according to his cousin, W . S. Willcox. Although he lost some during the recent flurries in Wall street he was still a millionaire. Operation for John Mitchell. Spring Valley, 111., April 29.-John Mitchell, president of the United Mine Workers, has arrived at his home here and been at once taken to St. Mar garet's hospital, where he will undergo an operation today for hernia. No se rious results are anticipated. Daughter of the King Dead. New Haven, Conn., April 29. Mrs, Frances Peck Is dead at her home in this city, aged 70 years. She was hon orary president for the United States of the order of Daughters of the King and had organized many chapters throughout the country. HE LANDED IN ILLINOIS Balloonist Who Started from St. Ixmia Comes Down in a Herd of Cattle. St. Louis, April 29. Aeronaut Allen K. Hawley. of New York city, made an ascension here in the balloon Orient and was carried s-ixty-seven miles before coming to earth. lie landed in safety seven miles east of Carrolltcn. 111., after being up for one hour and fifty-five minutes. The balloon came down in the midst of a herd of cattle In a meadow on the farm of Robert Hardcastle. Just before the basket touched the ground it missed a barbed wire fence, barely clearing the barbs, and sank down among the cattle, stampeding the herd. A team being worked in a field adjoining tok fright and ran away. Farmers hurried to the spot and assisted the aeronaut to pack up the deflated balloon. Haywood's Devoted Wife. Denver, April 29. Mrs. William D. naywood, wife of the secretary treasurer of the Western Federation of Miners, has left here for Boise to attend the trial of her husband on tho charge of murdering ex-Governor Steunenberg. She has been a helpless invalid for many years, but sdie declares she -will sit beside her husband thmnchant Mia trial t tha ftnirf clals do not deny hex this privilege,
THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES
FATE IS KIIID TO THEM More Than 150 Persons Misa Death or Woundsby a Close Margin. AWFUL PLUNGE OFF A TEESTLE Locomotive and First Coach Tako the Terrible Leap. Cars Carrying lOO Passengers Stay on the Tracks None Aboard the First Coach, and WhyOther Accidents. Pittsburg. April 29. Two men were killed and 100 passengers had a thrilling escape from a like fate in a wreck on the Wabash railroad when the engine and one passenger coach, of a west-bound train left the tracks half a mile west of the Bridgeville station. near here, and plunged Into Chartier'ti creek, forty feet below. Scores of peo ple missed death or injury through a circumstance which is now regarded as providential. The dead are: Ma rion Boyd, engineer, of Rook Station, and Frank Mclsaacs, fireman, of Barberton, O. Plunge of Engine and Coach. The train was crossing a trestle over Chartier's creek when the engine suddenly leaped from the rails and shot to the stream underneath, taking the first coach with it. The fore part of the engine sank several feet into the mud of the creek bed. The coach was smashed to splinters by its terrific im pact with the locomotive. By what railroad men regai-d as little more than mere chance there were no passengers In the front coach. The coupling between it and the second coach was wrenched in two when it was t:rn from the trestle by the engine. Why the Death Roll Is Short. None of those in the three rear coaches knew of the accident or realized how close they had come to death until several minutes afterward, when the cars, deprived of motive power slackened their speed and came to a stop. A new schedule had just gone Into effect on the road, and to this fact many owe their lives. Under the new schedule the train left this city forty-five minutes earlier, and over fifty persons missed the train for this reason. On account of the reduced number of passenger all were placed in the three rear coaches, while the front coach was unoccupied. TUI1EE DEAD A NT) FIVE MISSIXO One Loses His Life While Trying to Save the Others. Johnstown, Pa., April 29. Seven miners have been imprisoned in mine No. 38, of the Berwind-Whlte Coal company, at Foustwell, near this city, since Thursday afternoon, by a flood of water caused by an inflow from an abandoned working. It was supposed that the entire party had perished, but signals have been exchanged between the entombed men and the rescuers by mans of rapping on a water pipe. The dead are: Howard L. Ellender, civil engineer; Robert Sweetman, carpenter; Antone Woelffel, elevator erector. The missing, believed to be dead Jacob Windenburger, labcrer; Harry Ward, elevator workman; William W. Vaughn, George B. Montgomery and Buddy Johnson, colored, whitewashers. Ellender lost his life trying to warn the men of their danger, ho having heard some ominous sounds of breaking timbers. SEVEN MINERS IMPRISONED Caught by Inundation, but All Seem Alive Yet. Baltimore, April 29. With a roar that terrified thousands, and a ruh that drove a wave six feet high to distant parts of the inner harbor of Baltimore nearly half of a nrw pier under construction at Locust Point broke away from the shore end and plunged into the water. Out of the wreckage three dead bodies have been taken, five men are missing and t?lieir bodies iare almost certainly beneath the ruins, and eighteen men are suffering from injuries more or less severe. Later, however, the rapping from within the mine ceased. Then it began again and has continued. The rescuing party is greatly puzzled over the manner in which these taps are given. Invariably the number Is seven. Whether the miners on the other side cf the flooded headings mean that they are in No. 7 heading south of! second right heading, or whether they mean that seven men are living is merely a matter of conjecture. Twelve large pumps are In operation but the head against the flood is very slight. FATAL WIND IN TEXAS Five Persons Killed at One PlaceThree at Another. Fort Worth Tex., April 29. Ono village is totally destroyed, extensive damage done to property and crops at other points, and eight lives are known to have been lost as a result of a storm which was general over this btate, and which at several points as hamed theproportions of a tornado, according to meager reports received here. The little village of Hemming. In Cook county, was practically wiped out, and five persons are known to have been killed at this point The flead are: Will Alexander, young child named Wilkinson, two unknown men, and a little girl
j At Valley Vlew-vjwsjnber of h.ouseaJLe5-
was blown down and Bob Nickels, on a of the pioneer settlers of the county, was killed when his homo nvas destroyed. Two other men were killed in the same neighborhood, but their names cannot be learned. At Sulphur Springs hall banked In drifts from a foot and a half to two feet deep, and stalled all trains. At Celeste a big cotton mill was blown down, but no one was hurt
Two Killed Fight Badly Hurt. St. Louis, April 29. Albert Zimmerman and John Becker were killed and eight men were injured at Luxemburg, a suburb of St Louis, by an explosion cf dynamite while they Mere attempTing to extinguish a fire in a small building. Several of the injured are in a serious condition. Those seriously injured are Henry Funke, Ixuis Helberger, Christ Buehler. Henry Planning, Joseph Hunt, Casper Wame, Thomas Stocker and Frank Prazak. SINGER GETS HER DIVORCE Emma Fames Is No Longer the WiHy of Julian Story, the Artist Much Testimony Taken. New York, April 29. Supreme Court Justice Arthur S. Thompkins at White Plains has signed an interlocutory de cree granting an absolute divorce to r. tiro-"? 3 . TV ill EMMA EAMES, Mme. Emma Karnes, the opera singer, against her husband, Julian Story, the artist. It is known that Justice Tompkins examined seventy pages of testimony (which has been sealed and filed), and that he found sufficient testimony to grant the decree to the opera singer on statutory grounds. Every effort to learn the name of the co-respondent failed. MR. TATE IS IN DEMAND Two Lawyers and a Chief of Police All Want the Peoria Safe Blower Money for Silence. Chicago, April 29. Efforts to secure the release of "Eddie" Tate, who was arrested here after having escaped from the police at Peoria, where he was held on a charge of having dynamited a safe and stolen evidence mplicating Newton C. Dougherty in the theft of school funds, will be made by Attorney Erbstein, representing Tate, and by State's Attorney Sholes, of Teoria. The two .men will act independently of each other, Erbstein making a formal ' demand on Chief of Police Shippy for tho release of Tate on the grounds that he is being held without a warrant, while the Peoria official will resort to habeas corpus proceedings. Chief of Police Shippy declared that he would hold Tate in Chicago until persons who are alleged to have been robbed by him may have a chance to identify him. Tate has told the police that he was to have been paid $5,009 by a Peoria banker as the price of his silence regarding details of the safe robbery. He said that the money was to have been paid over to him Saturday night at a downtown hotel on condition that he (Tate) would leave the country. Were Fixed for Kaulbars. Odessa, April 29. Sixteen bombs were discovered in a villa which Governor Kaulbars had rented for a summer residence. NEWS FACTS IN OUTLINE Weather report, April 29. Heavy snow in South Dakota, blinding snowstorm at Minneapolis; blizzard at New Richmond, Wis. The parliament of Canada has been prorogued by Lord Grey. A dispatch received from Tiflis says that famine Is acute in Turkish Armenia. The general conference of Friends will be held at Richmond, Ind., opening on Oct. 15. A drop of 20 degrees, from 64 above, occurred at Omaha between 6 and 7 p. m. Senator Foraker will be one of the speakers at the Kansas G. A. R. encampment May 7, 8 and 9. Editor Stead is visiting Chicago on his world-peace mission, and to see if the town has improved since he wrote a book about what would happen in a certain unthinkable event The Cleveland (O.) Window Glass! company is in bankruptcy, witlrtke lia- J Excise Commissioner Mulvihill has announced his intention To proceed immediately to close 200 saloons located near public parks in St Louis. An agitation for a special Icelandic flag is being strongly pressed in Heland. The Independent cigar manufacturers at Havana have decided to clos? their factories today in sympathy with the strikers of the tobacco combine. The official statement of the Jamestown exposition opening attendanco shows that there were 54,000 people within the grounds during the day and
4r
MEXICO'S "BIG STICK"
Shook It at Guatemala and Thera Is Old Nick to Pay Right Away. GRAVE SITUATION IS REPORTED United States and MexicanJLegaticns Attacked by a Mob. Diaz Wants Gen. Lima, and Demanda Him of President Cabrera, Without Treaty Warrant. San Antonio, Tex., April 29. A special to The Express from the City of Mexico says: "The most extreme indignation and wild excitement have been caused here by the report that the American and Mexico legations in Guatemaala City have been stoned by a mob of several hundred men instigated to the act by agents of President Manuel Estrada Cabrera, of Guatemala. There is evident a strong in clination to give credence to the report, and no official denial has been made, though the federal itboritieu refuse to confirm it. ! Would Could Handy, Anyhow. "Mexican troops are being mobilized on the Guatemala frontier, which is believed to be highly significant, though the war department has staled that the mobilization of troop is nothing more than a move to insure strict neutrality and to protect Mexican Interests against any remote danger from irresponsible, marauding bands. The mobilized forces in the south wili be under the command of Brigadier General Antonio It. Flore, directly assigned to the duty by the war department. He will be aided by Cnptanl of Engineers Salaa, who has already left here for the isthmus of Tehauntepec. Diplomats Quit Their Posts. "Reports are also cureut here that Minister Gamboa, representing Mexico in Guatemala, has left that coun try and crossed Into Mexican territory as ihe result of friction with Cabrera's government growing out of telegrams sent from this country to Guatemala relative to the assassination of Gen eral Manuel Barillas. Passports are said to be in preparation for Minister Manuel Giron, Guatemala's representative in this country for his re"rn to bin own country." CAUSE OF THE ALLEGED RIOT Mexico Makes a Dnand on Gutemala Unsupported by Treaty. City of Mexico, April 29. Minister of Foreign Affairs Mariscal has issued The Hammond I Daily Capacity,
Lake County Title & Guaranty Company ABSTRACTERS F. R. MOTT, President, J. S. BLACKMUN, Secretary, FRANK HAMMOND, Vice-Pres. A. H. TAPPER. Treasurer. S. A. CULVER, Manager. Hammond and Crown Point, Indiana, Secretary's office in Majestic Bids., Hammond. Abstracts furnished promptly at current rates.
(ff
It In nM frmnnllu Wnruin that one-half il 15 &5IIGIUIJ R.iun.1 borrowed
r n t
Pianos, and oth;r personal Droiierty. without removal in last the eame way a man
M
borrows money on his real estate. You can get an amount from $.0 to 1,000 to a tew hours after maklnsr application. Yon repay ia small we kly or monthly payroeaia to Buit your purse and at a very low cost. Positively no Inquiries made, which insures against publicity. Our contract are drawn for from one month to one year and a rebate is allowed i paid before contract expires. If you cannot call, write or phone for oar representative. THE CHICAGO DISCOUNT CO. Room 200 9138-40 Commercial Ave. South Chicago
Telephone South Chicago K
Mon Thurs. and Sat. evenings until Or Address Lock: Box LATEST SPRING PATTERNS IN
AT THE LEADING JEWELERS
Don't forget us when you want a fine Diamond or Watch at the right price. l - 175 SOUTH HOHMAN ST. HAMMOND.
Monday, April 29, 1907.
a statement in which he gays that tha Mexican government has, made a demand on Guatemala that General Josa Maria Lima, of the Guatemala army, be held on the charge of murder of General P.arrillas until extradition papers reach the Guatemala capital. Ia his statement the minister says that the Central American republic is not . bound by a treaty to acquiee in Mex -ieo's demand. He adds, however, that unless Guatemala aeeeJes to Mexi co's request on the grounds of courtesy diplomatic relations between the countries will be severed. This the document odds win not necessarily lead tj a further or more serious breach. This is the result of the statements of Morales and Mora, the two assassins of General Barillas, implicating General Jose Lima in the murder of General Barillas, the Mexican government has asked the Guatemalan government for the extradition of General Lima in order that he may be brought here and confronted with the accusations made. Requisition has also been made for Onofra Bone, commandant of the Guatemala port of San Jose, the man who in the confession and statements made to the police here is named as the one who assisted the assassins A in leaving San Jose for Mexico. In unofficial circles here it Is con sidered highly improbable that President Cabrera will hand over-General Lima. How he will Ret out of this without seriously offending Mexico Ij a question that is causing no little discussion. Costly Blaze as Milwaukee. Milwaukee. April 29. BlumenfehT, Locher & Brown, wholesale milliners, 372 Broadway, sustained a loss to-their stock caused by smoke and water estimate,! at $100,000, fully covered by insurance. Kaufer, Smithlne & Co. auction warerooms, 370 to 37S Broad way, were gutted by fire, entailing a loss estimated at $"0,000, of which! $30,000 was on furniture and f 20, 000 on building, also covered by insurance. Lumpy-Jawed Beef Wholesome. Chicago, April 29. Lumpyjawtvl cattle will continue to be slaughtered at Chicago, according to a statement made by Commissioner of Health Evans. According to Dr. Evans the entire scientific world Is sure that no dlseas can be transmitted through litmpyjawed cattle to the consumer, i Town Marshal's Case Is Serious. Louisville, April 29. William E. Cummins, town marshal of English, Ind., who was shot while attempting to arrest two men charged with firing a bridge on the Southern railway near that place, has been brought to St Joseph's infirmary in this city, jit Is understood that Cummins' condition is serious. ? Senator Foraker's Brother's De Cincinnati, April 29. James R.l-'or-nker, borther of United States Serrate? Foraker, died at his home in this city of cancer, of which he had suffered c long time. Z I Distilling Co, 25,000 Gallons! of the buslne of the world is done on money. Wtf LOAN MONEY on Furaitare 9 P. M. We clce oiher ereninjrs at 6 P.M. 233. HAMMOND. IND. JEWELRY
m
mm
to ' '
f f i f
