Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 303, Hammond, Lake County, 12 June 1907 — Page 4

r AGE FOUR.

THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES. Wednesday, June 12, 1907.

The Lake County Times

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

3 NAP F Y sssz

SUMMARIES

Al GIL

"Entered as second class matter June 2S, 1906, at the postoffice at Hammond, Indiana, under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1S79."

r

TpE HOPKINS WEEKLY

TIT

HAY PRESS T5

&i!aKMt t&tci ia Starch ml

STANDING OF TEE CLUES.

LOCAL OFFICES HAMMOXD BlILDIXG. Teleplmne 111. frOLTH CHICAGO OFFICE SM41 BUFFALO AVE.M'E.

XATIOXAL I.RAUl'E.

W.

. . . . 33 31

YEAR HALF YHAR h INGLE COPIES.

...ONE

. .$3.00 . .$1.50 CENT

Cblenjro ....

New York ..

t'uiiaaeipnia it

Pittsburg 23

Boston Is

Cincinnati 18

Brooklyn 15 St. Louis 13

L.

10 14 17 IS 21 2S 30 35

Larger Paid Up Circulation Than Any Other Newspaper in Northern Indiana.

AMEKICAX LEAGUE.

CIRCULATION fC p p YESTERDAY & LJ? li LJJ

Chicago . . . Cleveland

Detroit

Philadelphia Nt-w York .

V. 30 30 25 24 20

St. Louis ltf

Washington 14 Boston 15

L. 15 17 17 21 2 2 2i 27 30

Pot. 778 6S9 .614 .561 .400 .3ai .333 .265

Pet. .07 .63S .55 .533 U76 .404 .341 .333

CIRCULATION HOOKS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC FOR INSPECTION AT ALL TIMES.

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION.

TO SUBSCRIBERS Reader ot The Times are requeued to favor the management Lr reporting any Irregularities in delivering. Coinniunlcute with the Circulation Department, or telephone HI.

W.

Columbus 29 Minneapolis 24

loledo 2

Kansas City 22

Indianapolis 2t

Milwaukee 23

Louisville 20

St. Paul 19

L.

17 20 2 2 2 6 2 25 0

WHERE THE ORDINARY CITIZEN GETS OFF.

The Stockyards Teamsters are about to strike for a 15 percent, raise. They

base their demands upon the fact that the price of meats has gone up on an

average of 25 percent in the past two years. They figure it out that at that

rate of increase they are entitled to a share of the greater profits, which ac cording to their mathematical reasoning must accrue to the packers.

Stephen Conway, the superintendent for Armour and company has admitted

to George P. Golden, business agent of the union, that all meats have suffered

an advance in price to the consumer, and Mr. Golden has compiled a schedule of prices for the years 1905 and 1907, the deadly parallel showing an Increase

. In different cuts of beef, pork, etc., of from 2 to 9 cents a pound. Sirloin steak has according to these figures, gone up from 14 to 20 cents per pound, porterhouse has increased from 18 to 22 cents, rib roasts from 14 to IS cents, bacon

from 12 to 14 and other things in proportion. Figuring on this basis the team eters seem Justified in asking for an Increase in wages.

The difficulty, however, seems to be that with teamsters enjoying a raise, will come a still further advance in the price of beef and pork and mutton.

There Is not much doubt but what tho packing companies can be brought to see

matters in the same light aa does the union, after the usual amount of prelim

inary and perfunctory chewing of the festive rag. It la easy to increase wages when the parties who are paying for the labor have the power of dictating both the buying and tho selling prices of their commodities exclusive of the labor Itself. The result of a successful termination to this strike, from the standpoint of the strikers, they will be that while the teamsters themselves will gain somewhat, they will hot gain in proportion to their increase in pay and tho community at large, of which a goodly proportion is represented by

unionism, will bear the burden of the increase.

Higher wages nowadays do' not mean what they did before a handful of men controlled the markets as they do now. Under the present regime when

combinations rule the world, it matters little what "a man gets for his labor.

All that he earns finds Its way eventually into the capacious maw of the com

binatlons, bo they those of capital or labor. The unions ask their price

for what they do for unionism. When one set of men is on strike they pay for their own strike or some other unions pays for it. Tho public at large comes

to tho rescue of the corporations and trusts so their loss on account of labor

difficulties is reduced to

in the end tho real sufferer is the middle man who occupies a position between labor and capital where his salary, if be la fortunate enough to hold his job,

sometimes gets lower but seldom gets higher, and who shoulders this load

shifted from unionism to capital and from capital to the inevitable "fall guy

The result of all these conditions is that In the widest of prosperity the citizens of this enlighted land aro paying famine prices for the necessities of life. Had tho crops not been bountiful, had not the country yielded generously in all of its fruits there would be a legitimate reason for all this, but under the

circumstances it seems a sad commentary on the system now in vogue, that con

ditions are as they are. THE WIDENING OF STATE STREET.

THREE EYE LEAGUE.

Rock Island Decatur

Springfield .

Peoria

W.

.20 .22 .19 .19

Cedar Rapids 20

Clinton It

Bloomington 10

Dubuque 5

L.

11 12 14 15 16 19 22 29

WESTERN LEAGUE.

Des Moines Omaha .

Lincoln ...

Denver Sioux City .

Pueblo ....

W.

.25 .28 24 .20 .21 .13

L

17 20 20 19 22 33

CENTRAL LEAGUE.

L. 15 16 16 IS 20 20 23 23

W

Wheeling 22

Snnnsrheld "

Canton 19

Evansville 1

Dayton 19 South Bend 17

Grand Rapids 16

Terre Haute io

Pet. .630 .545 .522 .500

.5u0 .479 .444

.3SS

Pet

.703

.64

.5(6 .559 .556

.47

.313

.14

Pet.

.595 .583 .545 .513 .488 .283

Pet. .595 .579 .543 .538 .4S7 .459 .410 .395

from them by a score of 2 to 0. The

fans in Washington are impressed with j the team play of the Sox and say that no other team Dlavs the game for all

it is worth like the Chicago boys.

Smith or Patterson will probably pitch the next game, as Jones thinks that the Nationals take kindly to the south- ; paw artists.

It was a battle of jockeys as well as

horses yesterday at Gravesend in the

Standard stakes and Peter 1'an with Mountain up, won the race from Electioneer. Koernor who rode the place

hor6e was not as skillful as Mountain and, as both horses came into the stretch leg weary from the pace of the

first mile, the men plying the whip, it

seemed as though Peter Pan would be esting lecture on astronomy

Society in a Flatter. Local society was in a flutter last

week because the Hay Press fashion plates failed to arrive in time for publication. The social leaders were upstt for they had depended on our fashion plates to guide them in preparing gowns for the coming fat stock show. Mrs. Ernest Muf unjustly commented: ""If the Hay Prt-ss would pay more attention to social matters and give less space to municipal affairs, scandal and quarrels with tho Weekly Sandbur over comparative circulations, the paper would bo more readable." A I)iruated Scientist.

Prof. Proudfeet, tendent, delivered

in the

will play Romeo, and Mrs. Carl Kastoff. wife of our popular hog buyer, will play Juliet. After the tragedy is rendered the guests will waltz, two step and side step in the dancing pavilion. The dancing restrictions will be unique. The fat gentlement present will be restricted to dancing with lean ladies, and the fat ladies with the lean gents. The middleweights will be in a class by themselves. On with tho dance; let joy be unrefined.

TrIE STATE

beaten, Koerner let up on the bit to high school assembly room lueaday give his mount his head, when he evening, which the Hay Press pave a swerved across the track and was beat- quarter column synopsis of. Unfor-

en by a nose. I tur.ately it was chucked Into the sport

ing columns, where it was neither seen

The boxing carnival to be held next nor read by thoughtful people. Prof.

Friday evening at the Bonath opera Proudfeet was disgusted, but no more house, Chicago Heights, promises to be so than the baseball fans and other of great interest to the sports here- sports were.

abouts, and many will leave South Chi- (;0t iIU t;0Suir or Cominir.

Soap as a Mediolnti. "When. I was a boy," said tho old man, "they often made me take a little soap as a medicine. It did me good. "Soap was prescribed in the village for cramps, for sick headache, for a half dozen complaints. The people admitted that It was a nauseous dose, but

the school superin- on the other hand they pointed to its

a protounaiy niter- enicacY.

"When i was taken down my mother would cut from the cake of yellow soap In the kitchen a chunk about as big as a chestnut ' 'Now, sonny.' she would say, swaller this and she'd hold the yellow morsel In thumb and forefinger close to my lips.

"I'd begin to whimper. The smell of it and the Idea of the lather that would

cago and Hammond In automobiles. The Shad Shelby, our popular coal and form In my mouth the lather I'd have

i bill is a good one and the boys entered ioe aeaier coal in winter and ice in to swallow would fill me with despair.

are working hard to get Into shape.

The principal go will be between Young

Sharkey and George Kirby, and ought to be a corker. Young Kirby has been

training with Tony Caponl who will

! look after his interests during the bout.

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Boston, 2; Cleveland, 0. Detroit, 10; New York, 2. St. Louis, 3; Philadelphia, 0.

Packy McFarland has neatly called

Charlie Neary on his fight proposition and offers, to match up with the latter

in Milwaukee on June 2S. Neary has been saying all along that McFarland was welching out of a match with him and that he could beat the stock yards artist with ease, McFarland intended

to go east but was goaded by the remarks and made an offer to right, winner take all. This will now put it up

to Neary and it is expected that he

will not want to look at the purse from

that light.

summer has commenced his summer deliveries of ice. Dan Dexter, son of Dr. Point Dexter, has returned from the county seat where he graduated in undertaking and embalming. The Dexters now have Hopkins people going or coming. If tho doctor don't euro his patients, his son will bury them. Dr. Dexter's second son contemplates starting a

gravestone establishment. If he does my boyhood."

the Dexter family combine will be complete.

A SwaybaoUeil Hore. Jim Jiggers' swaybacked horse was sold at auction Saturday on a chattel mortgage held by Vic Brassard of Momence, who has liens on most of the old nags and pelters in Pembroke township. Vic held the third mort-

Telegraph News by Direct

Wiro from All Over Indiana.

But my mother was inexorable. With still lips I'd take the soap into my mouth, I'd chew the soft and slippery stuff a little and then, with a groan afid a dreadful gulp, I'd swallow it Horrors ! "Horrors!" said the old man, smiling. "I can still taste those doses of 6oap that were, so common in the village ia

Jewish Thrift. The Allgemelne Rundscau, Vienna, in an article on the Jewish question and anti-Semitism, has this to say as

to Jewish thrift: "If we could only induce our own lower class to acquire the Jew's thrift, his industry, his sense

NATIONAL LEAGUE. Philadelphia, 6; Chicago, S.

nings).

New York, 8; St. Louis, 7. Pittsburg, 7; Brooklyn, 4. Boston, 2; Cincinnati, 1. Cincinnati, 7; Boston, 3.

game).

The English turf officials are deter

mined to oust Croker from their meet

ing, and in an unsportsmanlike man

ner, for wnicli tney are noteu, imposed

an impossible weight for Orby in the demonstrated lhis Week when Mrs. Jay

lo place 12 1

Royal Hunting cup

(Ten in-I pounds on the three-year-old is laugh

able, but that is just what they did. The Irish sportsmen are up in arms at the

insult and a fight will be the result.

I . . ...

gage. When spectators learned that of order, His scrupulous exactitude, ms the horse was burdened down with religious loyalty and love for his fain-

three chattel mortgages they no longer y the Jew on his darker side would wondered that it was swaybacked. appear far less dangerous to them than

Lost Uiubreiin Found. u at present the case. If one Sunday,

The value of a Hay Press ad was DV war of Interestinsr experiment, one

were to conduct an inquiry into the

(Seoond

Jimson advertised in our lost and found column for a missing umbrella. The rain protector was returned the same evening to the Jimson homo that the Hay Press apcarod, by Phil Fuller, bartender at the Gav Galoot saloon.

where Mr. Jiggers had left and forgot- than spend their money in alcoholic re-

ten it. Mrs. Jimson was much embar- freshments, gaming and tobacco. There

station, wealth and religion of visitors

to the various publie houses, the fol

lowing result would transpire: A large

number of the guests would be Chris

tians who would do far better to save

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Columbus, 6; Minneapolis, 1. Milwaukee, 3; Indianapolis, 2.

Indianapolis, 3; Milwaukee, 2.

minimum; indeed, the entire loss is not made up and I ond game).

Louisville, 4; Kansas City, 3.

Patsey Foley, the well known South

Chicago mit artist, is looking for a

match at 105 pounds with any boy rassed, for her husband had pretended might be a few Jews, but at tho most hereabouts. He can be reached by ad- tnat no never visited drinking places, they would content themselves With a

dressing i. l-air, siu isuiiaio avenue, At ieast so he pretended w hen lie ran ,,,, nf mffP(.

South Chicago. care of The Lake on th m-ohibition ticket for alderman

(Sec- I county Times sportin

(Ten

department.

innings).

Louisville, 4; Kansas City, 1.

Toledo. 3; St. Paul, 0. (Six innings).

THREE EVE LEAGUE. Rock Island, 2; Bloomington, 1. Cedar Rapids, 7; Springfield, 6. Dubuque-Decatur Rain. Peoria, 5; Clinton, 2.

The South Chicago sports are plan

ning an invasion of Chicago Heights next Friday evening and will go over

the road in automobiles. The list of bouts includes some good boys and there ought to be lots of fun.

of the Fourth last spring.

Drmuudx Truck F.lfvatlon. Pete Pogue has petitioned the coun

cil to have the C. & E. I. elevate its

track. The council is In a receptive state of mind and may use the petition as a club to compel the railroad

company to build a new depot.

An Ancient Hebrew Bible.

The highest amount ever offered for

a eiugle volume was tendered by a

number of wealthy Jewish rQ.ercb.ant3

of Venice to Pope Julius II. for a very

ancient Ilebrew Bible. It was then be-

Indianapolis, June 12. Two- wmea are dead and three oilier persons were seriously hurt in an aiuomobilo accident in the northern part of tho city when a Broad Kippletraetioti car struck and wrecked the automobile of J. F. Illmes at Thirty-eighth street nnJ College avenue. The dead are: Mrs. Thomas V. Love, aged 5S years, anil Mrs. I'm ma (Gordon, an aged woman, of Indianapolis. Seriously injured J. F. II hues, of Broad Hippie, suburb of Indianapolis; Miss Fay II hues, hia

daughter; Mrs. B. K ester, of ludlau-cpolis.

Didn't See. the Other Car. The accident happened on the Indl

ana Uulon Traction lino at Thirty-

eighth street and College, avenue. Th automobile approached the crossing

from the east. According to the state

ment of Ilinie ho slackened speed to allow a uorth-lHund car to pass, then drove upon the double track when

with a crash the collision came wltSi

the south-bound car Lo had failed to

see. The view was momentarily cut off by the other car. Both Mrs. Lovo

and Mrs. Gordon died at a hospital. Indiana to Help 'Frisco. Indianapolis, Juno 12. At a meeting

held here of Christian ministers of this

city and several cities of the tdato a resolution was adopted indorsing the appeal of the San Francisco churches struggling for an existence as a result ot the earthquake, and calling upon the Christian churches of the state to raise donations for their assistance. Notices were ordered sent to each church in the state asking aid in the movement. Khodins Case Up Again. Indianapolis, June 12. Tho grand jury investigation of the George Ilhodius case has begun, and Judge Samuel B. Artman, of the Boone couuty circultcourt, appeared before the grand jury and, supposedly, gave testimony as to how he arrived at the opinion stated In his finding relative to the unsoundness of mind of George Ithodius, that Justice Whatham and others of

of this city indulged In "machinations' In the case.

rnouLKM i on Tin: covin?

WESTERN LEAGUE. Omaha, 3; Denver, 2. Des Moines, 4; Lincoln, 0. Sioux City, 9; Pueblo, 5.

lieved to be. an original copy of the

Pete's home adjoins the railroad right Eeptuacint version made from the Ile-

The Indiana state golf turnament Gf way at the south edge of town. His brew into Greek In 27T B. C careful

will beheld in Terre Haute July 10 to cuJckens ect most of their living by copies cf the Hebrew text having been Two Ihnma llawkern.One Pcad.WhicU

Was the One Whose Life Wa Insured ?

Julius was 20,000, which, considering

wm uo litiu in icnc xxauiu uni iW iu chickens get most or their living uy copies cf the Hebrew text having been 13. and It is expected that a big field feeding on the tracks on grain jolted prepared at that date for the use of will go over the course. Get out your out of pasaing Brain .ars. One to two Beventv translators The offer to bag of clubs and start working up of Pete-a fancy chlckcns are kied ITfZ

The plan suggested by Messrs. Paxton and Gostlin for the widening of State

street should bo carefully considered by the property owners along this street.

Hammond has a right to be proud of the progress that State street has made in tho last two years. The beautiful new federal building will always bo an

ornament to It and a few of the finest business blocks in the city have already

been built upon it.

Tho fine new Nickel Plate depot is to be built on Sibley street near by and

the equally imposing new Michigan Central depot is to be built on Plummer

avenue in close proximity.

The Monon and Erie depots are already located on this street and the great

stream of traffic that will arise because of Hammond's thousands of transients will make State street and the streets which parallel It the most important

business district in the city. !

But the property owners on State street will never realize in a full measure

all that is in store for them if they do not rise to the opportunity and make

their street, without question, the most attractive business street in the city

There will be differences over various questions and there will be found the

ever present objector who is "penny wise and pound foolish" and who could not be convinced In a thousand years that an initial expenditure of hundreds today will mean thousands in his pocket in a few years, but the promoters of this

idea should stick to their plans and future Hammond will sing their praises.

Much of the progress in Hammond in the past has been the result of inside

ingenuity and outside push.

This step of widening State street will represent, if carried out, one of the

CENTRAL LEAGUE. Terre Haute, 9; Canton, 1. Springfield, 4; South Bend. 0. Wheeling. 9; Evansville, 0. Dayton, 5; Grand Rapids, 1.

your drives at once.

The Harvard freshman crewr is up

against hard luck at present as Wyman, the crack number four, is laid

up with the mumps. The Harvard

crews have had a Jonah with them this year.

every day by trains, except Sunday,

the difference between the value of

iiu nu.... . . ... . 1, J

manding track elevation Pete has put money men anu now. wouui m our uay in a claim for damages against the represent the princely sum of $000,000.

New Albany, Ind., June 12. Wheth

er the life of Emma Hawker or that of her daughter, Emma Hawker, was

for killing his

GAMES TODAY. AMERICAN LEAGUE, Chicago at Washington. St. Louis at Philadelphia. Detroit at New York. Cleveland at Boston.

NATIONAL LEAGUE. Philadelphia at Chicago. New York at St. Louis. Brooklyn at Pittsburg. Boston at Cincinnati.

railroad

poultry. Judging from the claims made against railroad companies, all slaughtered stock is pedigreed or blooded.

In the Wrong Room. Based on values claimed the stock

The ladv missionary to India sat must have pedigrees as long as Aus

tralian Danots. ior instance, wie

value claimed for a killed cow, merits

registration In the herd book. Tho ancestry of a dead horse, to Judge from the amount of damages claimed, can be traced back to England -or France.

summon. "Well, I declare to good- Only mules travel on their merits. An-

ness!" cried the lady missionary, cestry don't seem to count for much

"Whatever led you to suppose there with mules.

I .. ...... .. .1 V... Vi f rr.r-.15f ,1 n T c 11 M I"l 1"A

pedigreed Julius was at that time greatly pressea 1USU"-14 L'J

for money to maintain the holy league companj-, is the knotty problem tuai

which the pope had organized against must be decided by a jury In the tin

France, but in spite of his lack of

funds he declined the offer.

up In bed, with a spiteful jerk. "You

are a man-eater?" she said, looking the tiger severely In the face. "I am," replied the beast, licking his chop3

with as horrid unction as he could

cult court. The caso la now on trial.

Emma Hawker, the mother, has filed

suit to recover on a policy alleged ta le held on the life of the daughter.

Emma Hawker, who died several

The Philadelphia bunch

measure of the Cubs yesterday and

won out in the tenth inning by a score of 6 to 5. Overall, who was sent in to

relieve Fraser, went away up in the air in that inning and passed three men, forcing in a run. The big fellow does not seem to be able to round out this year and every game has been

most progressive moves that has taken place in Hammond from within, in some so wild that run getting was only a

matter of time for the opposing players. Fraser, who started the game, was also very wild and was touched up for five hits and four runs In three innings, rfiester succeeded him until the ninth when the visitors began to pound him and Overall was put in. r-Hd.-n nitched the whole game and

and trie moving or tiiese demonstrated the possibility of engineering feats nt time it looked as though he would

which wero heretofore regarded as quite Impossible. The world stood aghast be driven from the box but he managed

nt ChiciriVs un.lert;i k t n sr Stjit Ktro? -n c !.in..i i,t ot o ,1 . to stem the tide, lhis aiternoon tne

city and property owners.

The echoes of the controversy stirred up by the proposal to widen Halsted

street are still reverberating and Hammond will exhibit a truly progressive spirit If it takes the bull by the horns before the critter becomes too unwieldly for it to handle.

was a man here? Scat!" "But, madam" "Not a word, sir!" Of course, the tiger had meant no disrespect, but inasmuch as the lady mis

took the sionary would listen to nothing, and

covered up her head withal, it was only left to him to slink away. Puck.

time. Every city that has reached any growth has had the same problem to

face. Chicago faced it in connection with its own main thoroughfare of the

same name and is racing it now with reference to Halsted street. State street

Chicago, was widened under the most herculean difficulties or what were re-

garuea as nercuiean ai me ume tne worK was accomplished. The entire street j was lined on both sides for miles with permanent brick and stone structures

Linen and Other Showers.

Miss Ida Iodoform, who is soon to

wed Chll Blaine, was given a linen

shower Wednesday evening by her female friends.

On Monday, wash day, the Anse Slo-

cum family also had a linen shower. A strong gale blew away their clothes

line, distributing the family wash over the entire neighborhood. Gad Godfrey had a crockerv shower

Woman. I when he came home the other night In

Weman is like a flower ana needs his usual condition drunk. Mrs. Godgentle warmth and congenial surround- frey threw a heavy meat plate at her ings to bring out her' best points, husband, which struck him on the ternMan, like the oak, may he hardened Vle- temporarily sobering him.

and tempered by the cold winds of ad- A imetic Explosion.

versltv though not all men can stand The maddest woman in Hopkins last

Weight of a. Lion.

"What does a lion weigh?' Ask that

question of any acquaintance and see months ago. Both held policies, which

what he will say. Those who best "were allowed to lapse. A few months know the look of the king of beasts later one was revived. The company

and how small hl3 lithe body really Is says It reinsured the life of the moth-

will probably come furthest from the . "while the plaintiff asserts that It

truth. About 300 to 350 pounds is a vvas her daughter's policy that wa3

usual estimate. But this is below the revived.

mark. A full grown lion will tip the scales at no less than 500 pounds.

Five hundred and forty pounds Is the record for an African lion. Ilia bone is solid and heavy as ivory. The tiger

runs the lion very close. A Bengal tiger killed by an English oScer scaled 520 pounds. A tiger of this size has,

however, considerably greater muscu

lar strength than, the biggest lion.

Escape from a Horrible Death, Noblesville, Iud., June 12. Frank

Cropland, 14 years old, had his left

arm chopped off at the elbow In a

shearing machine at the Atlanta tin plate factory, where he was employe!.

Ills glove caught between the rapidly

revolving knives and his arm wa drawn into the machine. A fellow

workman threw an Iron bolt into the cogs and stopped the machine, or elso

the boy's body would have been liter-

The reports from Washington forecasting the program of the American delegates at The Hague shows a plan in important respects identical with that announced from St. Petersburg recently as the Russian program. It is declared that, according to tho American view, the improvement and strengthing of the Hague tribunal, a court of arbitration, and the international commission of inquiry are deemed of the first order of Importance.

In this respect, then, we are in entire agreement with the Russian program. Tho statement that only America and Great Britian have made use of the Hague tribunal. which comes from Washington today, is misleading. The first case was submitted in 1S02 the tribunal opened in 1901 the United States and Mexico resorting to the court for the settlement of the Pious Fund claims. Great Britain and Japan made use of It in the Japanese Home Tax case. The three powers which participated In the blockade of the Venezuelan Preferential Favment case.

And France and Great Britain submitted the Muscat controversy to the tribunal. But the amount of work done by the court has been small enough. At the same time we must remember that it took some time for our own supreme court to get under way." Before the conference there can come little of as great practical importance as would be the upbuilding of this tribunal. New York Sun.

last game of the series will be played

and it looks as if it might be Pittenger and Brown on the slab.

Before the Days of Race Suicide. Housewife of 1S30 (to her new hired girl) Yes. Eliza, you will find it a nice, easy place. My brother, the captain, is away at sea, and my two oldest boys are at boarding school, so you'll have to cook and wash for only 15. Puck.

The advertiser who succeed ia brondmtnded enough aot only to advertise ia the paper he like, but also In the paper other people Illte.

".vThat Is the matter with the third basemen on the big teams all over the country? In the American league particularly the trouble seems to center around that sack and it promises to be a Jonah this year. It is a well known fact that it is a hard corner, but other years it has been played with ease by

the stars. hen iannema was laia up for repairs the Sox found it hard to fill in, although Rone is a good ball player and the errors he has made at that sack have been plenty. Collins of Boston was off on his third sack this year and did not suit the management so he was swapped for Knight, who

also was way off on that corner. New from injuries had trouble with LaPorte from inuries, and Morlarty made a mess of the job while the latter was away. Washington is now having a hard time taking care of the third sack, and it

looks as though old Lave Cross would

have to step aside for a younger man

The Sox added another postponed

game yesterday when the rain descend

ed on the Washington grounds, and increased their lead to one full game when Boston turned on Cleveland even

with Addie Joss in the box and won

thi3 very severe test; but undoubtedly warmth, physical and sentimental, Is wanted to allow the fair sex to blos

som forth in all its delicate beauties

of mind, body and spirit The Queen.

back door step. Mr. Katz found the

Hope. box when he arrived home, which pre"Woman is naturally more hopeful ceded the arrival of his wife, who than man," began the moralist. "Yes," was making calls, by a couple of hours, interrupted the plain man. "There's Mr- Katz had been reading of Rusmy wife, for instance; every time she s5an lnfeal machines and the doings vj s i .v, ? . of local white cappers. Being natur

ally of a suspicious nature he some

how got it into his head that the box

contained something dangerous, its odd wrappings and undecipherable writings adding to his suspicions. So what

should he do but immerse the box in a tub of water to soak the suspected

has had occasion to buy fish since wo

started housekeeping she has asked her dealer if they were fresh, hoping, I suppose, that some day he'll say 'no.' "

Millers' Best Customers.

Th fortv ndd million sacks of flour .. . . .

" "V.."7 T.,., v. any cnoppea to pieces

LUIibUIiitfU till ijf 1U tiiC mi cu. ii-AAio

aom are mamiy eaten in me loria ui Cox IIas a curious Hallncinatlon,

Dreaa. in tne nouses ui uie Mount Vernon, Ind., June 12. Wk

in the best hotels bread is sparingly , S7 s oM farm La9

eaten, out among uw miUu,0 be,.,, adludee.1 Insane, n !, la!ora

and In workmen's homes it forms a nnJer bailucination that Carrie

considerable portion or me u.eu as v.wtm rd;rvi idno nh rm vi

was delivered at the house. As the ho littpr rla;i nredominate and as i j t , - , . , . i i-, i . i . tne iauer cias3 preuuiuiuaic una aa an(j comm ssloned h.ui to do special house was locked it was left ni the i: .v,. r,,-,mnmr,a I k v ....

mt.i . -work in me regener&uon or man. or 4- i- inrrfiKuWa flidt thf rniMron I . . . . ....

il is 1UJl,luUu... - - whlcn power lie was robbed by a under sixteen consume about three- pachpr Cox Is ratioual on all oth. rf . t M nl Maun C- . 1 in 4- 1

nuns 01 me ww. aui .u tne pr H,jbjectSf on(1 it ,3 expected that he

United lvmguoiii. iu u cumuierciiii sense, therefore, the children are the

millers' best friends. London Milling.

week was Mrs. Angora Katz. She was

as mad as a wet Plymouth Rock hen.

Her husband was the cause.

During the family's absence a box

will yield to treatment

"Idiot."

The Alteration in the meaning of explosive.

--A "tAi" ia i-iaM-slior CiHo-lnai. When Mr.

lv this word meant only a man in

Katz opened the box

which he did cautiously, instead of a

private life as distinguished from one whJch had be'en 8pnt to Mrs Katz

who was concerned in puniic auairs. .nnrftval bv our skilled and tasteful

In time the word degenerated, untn local miinner( jjiss Tinnie Foil

It came to mean one who was defec- it wasn't until next day that Mr

tive in mental powers. Sunday Maga- Katz summoned up enough courage to

zine.

Eeware of Ointments for Catarrh

that Contain Mercury,

A Terrible Remedy. I can only think of one method ty which nurses can guard against imitations of their professional costume.

It is that they should adopt one that

Is Ugly or at least dowdy and that &rounds at the Janery home next We-I

remedy would, I expect be regaruea nesday evening. Shakespeare's noted

by most of the nurses as worse than drama, Romeo and Juliet, will be given

th vil ir was dpsismed to cure. by .the dramatic department of the

I Truth.

show his wife the bedraggled and ruin

ed headgear. Then there was an explosion, although not so violent nor dearly as dynamite. An AI Fremo Entertainment. A novel al fresco entertainment, Including a hop and the rendition of a

tragedy, win oe neu on tne spacious

Lyric club. Mr. Wlr.de Williams, the

Metinsr of the Pharmacists. Evansville, Ind., Jane 12. Tha

twenty-sixth annual convention of the

Indiana Pharmaceutical association will be held June IS, ID and 20 in the

as mercury win sureiy destroy the old superior court room in the court

sense 01 smeu ana tompieieiy derange - . t n :lr-rpj,t nnrt'tArlnrr.. thft whole system when entering it uOU-e, OIe Ot -U lTget aUQ.tOnum

through the mucous surfaces, such !n the city. Tn? programme for tha

articles sr.ouia never oe usea except invention has been coirnletprt on prescriptions from reputable physi- contention Eas Leen compietea. cians, aj the damage they will do is

ten fold to the good you can possibly Natural Gat Ioa a Stunt. rlrive from them. Hall's Catarrh

Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney Shelbyville, ind., June 12. Mrs.

& Co., loledo. o.. co . tains no mercury. Elmer Moore attempted to licht tha

. ..... . I notnra! rr't a In f:Of n V. t

rectly upon tne oiooa ana mucous sur-1 uaiu"" " u i utr noma

faces of the system. In buying Hall's in Waldron, wLen an exploion oo. Catarrh Cure be sure you get the ,ila, , , " genuine. It is taken internally and curred, tearing the stove to pieces and made in Toledo. Ohio, by F. J. Cheney throwing Mrs. More to the floor Her

Sold by Druggists. Price, 75e per

bottle. Take Hall's Family Pills for consti

pation.

hair and eyebrows were s!nged

otherwise she escaped injury,

but

Arrested for Brutal Assault. Richmond, Ind., June 12. The no

lice nave arrested Henry Hegg, who U alleged to have committed a brutal

S".cent foreman of the c!e factory, TIJIP"

Have you anything; yon have no use j

for bat vriiloh mar be unefnl to tome-j body else? You can find somebody wbo

has something that you do want and assault on Henry Tlenian. Tietuan was

mil cane vnai you uon i wtai

the medium of the Darter ai

department of the LAKE

. .. ... . ,v "uui. i ic.nau w as aat throuBh waylaid as he was passing throu-h an IvE COL.NT1 JbeatPn till he was unconscious