Hammond Times, Volume 2, Number 43, Hammond, Lake County, 7 August 1907 — Page 8

8 THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES Wednesday, 'August 7, 1907

HOT SHOT FOR MOORS

They Begin a Fight at Casablanca That Teaches Them a Bloody Lesson, MANY OF THEM BITE THE DUST French and Spanish Naval Guns Get Into Eapid Action. Outskirts of the Town Swept by Shell and the Ground Littered With Dead and Wounded Story of the Fight. rangier, Aug. 7, .":C0 a. m. The Kmass tribe-imeii are suing for peace, but the commander of the shereenaa troops declines to negotiate until Caid Sir Harry MacLcan is released. London, Aug. 7. According to a ppecial dispatch from Tangier about l.'rO Moors were killed in the town, battery and villages around Casablanca during the bombardment by the foreign warships. Tangier, Aug. 7. According to a eetui-olticial account of the fighting at Casablanca the commander of the French warship Galilee asked for permission to land a guard of sailors to protect the French consulate, which was granted; but while the guard was proceeding to the consulate it was fired upon In the streets and six blue jackets and an ensign were wounded. The French then cleared the streets at the point of the bayonet, killing many of the Moors. JIooi-s Desert Their Guns. On arriving at the consulate the guard signaled news of the incident to the Galilee, and the French ship notified the Spanish cruiser, which landed a guard for the consulate of Spain. The warship then bombarded the Arab quarter of Casablanca. The Casablanca battery fired a couple of blank shots when the I)u Chayla was entering the bay, and the cruiser replied, destroying part of the battery, the Moorish gunners retiring. The European part of the city was not touched. The Dn Chayla then shelled the beach, where a number of Kabyles had assembled, killing many of them. The cruiser also shelled the outskirts of Casablanca, where groups of Moors were seen. The French ships at Casablanca are the Galilee, Du Chayla and Forbin and the Spanish cruiser Don Alvaro do Kazan, Italy Demands Reparation. Senor NerazzinJ, the Italian minister here, has demanded reparation for the murder of three Italians at Casablanca, and the wounding of a fourth Italian subject. The minister insists on the punishment of the guilty persons and the payment of an indemnity to the families of the victims. Reports from Rabat say the situation there is critical. The F.erber tribesmen continue threatening to Invade the city and the Europeans are panic-stricken and are fleeing from the place. I1I7NDUEDS OF MOOKS KILLED Report of the Affair as Received by the Paris Press. Faris, Aug. 7. A special dispatch received here from Tangier says the street fighting in and the bombardment of Casablanca, according to a refugee who arrived from there on the steamer Anatole, continued throughout Sunday and was still in progress when the Anatole left at f o'clock Sunday evening. The French ships fired a total of about K) shells. The number of Moorish dead will run into the hundreds. A single party of marines killed Moors. The French wounded number about twelve. No Frenchman was killed. The Marabout Sidi Marouf was wounded. On Saturdaynight the Moorish pasha at Casablanca was advised that troops would be landed the next day. He gave assurances that the city would xemaln calm. At a. m. Sunday a detachment of fifty French marines In command of an ensign landed in the city. This force had hardly passed through the water gate before it received a volley fire at point blank range from a detachment of regular Moorish troops. Five marir.es and the ensign were -wounded. The ensign was shot through both hands. In spite of his injuries he ordered bis men to fix bayonets and charge. This the Frenchmen did. and in the fighting 3,10 Moors lost their lives. The marines continued their way. clearing the ground of tho enemy as they went, until they reached the French conFfilate, where the French citizens in Casablanca had taken refuge. The other European residents had sought saletr at their respective consulates. In the moan time the French cruiser Galilee had commenced shelling the native villages outside of Casablanca to prevent armed Arabs from entering the city. According to the Anatole passenger TTie shells could be seen ploughing up the earth and killing men and horses. At 11 a. m. the French cruiser Du Chayla arrived. She had been in wireless communication with the Galilee, and as she steamed in her ginmer were at their stations. Broadside on to the beach she opened an enfilading fire with mellinite shells on the horsemen and natives on foot who were In the market place to the east of the

town. The horsemen were riding madly in circles. The Du Chayla also sent a party ashore under Commandant Mangin. As they were landing these men were subjected to a fire from a Moorish force under command of the Marabout Sidl Belout. but the rapid-fire guns in the bows of the French launches cleared the ground for the sailors, who made their landing expeditiously. They scaled the walls of the Portuguese consulate and reached the French consulate under cover of the guns of the marines already there.

NEW PAPER MILL COMBINE One Proposed That Will Steer Clear of the Hocks of the AntiTrust Laws. Applcton, Wis., Aug. 7. John T. flanrahan. of New York, Is at Appleton looking over the paper mills witn the object of forming a combine of all the mills in the state that will not be declared a trust. With him are J. T. Hanrahan, Jr.. and D. S. Lansing, an expert appraiser. Hanrahan would neither affirm nor deny that eastern capitalists were attempting to get control of the Wisconsin paper industry, but John Van Nortwlck, president of the Five Locks company, said that he understood that this was the object of IIanrahans visit. It is said that the Menasha Paper company property will be appraised first. Coudert on Our Judiciary. New York. Aug. 7. Frederick IT. Coudert of Coudert Bros., who have an international reputation as lawyers, has returned from a visit to Europe. He Is convinced that a comparison of the judicial systems of England and France with that of the United States would result unfavorably to the United States system. He believes judges in the United States often fall short in qualifications for their positions. He attributes this mainly to politics. Capt. Young's Claim Has Xo Rase. Washington, Aug. 7. The state department officials are not in the least concerned about the reported intention of Captain Young and his party of Canadians to raise the British flag over Isle Royale, in Lake Superior. They point out that the treaty of 1842 expressly names the channel between Isle Royale and the Canadian mainland as marking the international boundary at that point in Lake Superior. Wife Shooter a Fugitive. New Castle, Fa., Aug..- 7. -With a troop of the state constabulary In pursuit Lafayette Parks, a dairyman of this place, Is a fugitive in the hills surrounding this city. Parks, in a fit of jealous rage, grabbed his wife by the throat and fired five shots at her, three of which may be the cause of her death. Immediately after . the shooting Parks made his escape and was pursued. Not Quite, But Nearly. Dover, England. Aug. 7. In a fifth attempt to swim the English channel, Jabez Wolffe, the amateur swimmer, made a record swim from South Foreland, getting within three-quarters of a mile of Cape Blanc, France, in the quick time of fifteen and one-half hours. The turn of the tide carried him away from the land and necessitated the relinquishment if his attempt. Czar Sails for Home. Swlnemunde, Prussia, Aug. 7. Emperor Nicholas has sailed for home on the Russian imperial yacht Standart, escorted by a squadron of Prussian warships. Previous to the Russian emperor's departure Emperor William and Princes Henry and Adelbert breakfasted with his majesty in private on the Standart. Emperor William Intends to go to Wilhelmshohe. Negro Lynched in Texas. Runge, Tex., Aug. 7. A negro named Tom Hall, living at Goliad, was arrested charged with an attempted rape of two young white women mid placed in the city jail. Early next morning his dead body was found hanging to a tree in front of the jail. Winona Hit by the Wind. St. Paul. Minn.. Aug. 7. A telephone message from Winona. Minn.. savs tnar a terriuc wind and ram storm which broke over that city did damage which is estimated at $100,000. Was This That Albany Shock ? Santiago, Chili, Aug. 7. An earthquake shock was felt late Monday at Valparaiso. WAS PROBABLY DROWNED One of the Battleship Georgia's Marines Has Disappeared Father Says Foul Play. New York, Aug. 7. Henry Francis Lynch, a United States marine of the battle ship Georgia, lying af anchor In the Hudson River, is missing. The ship's officers say that Lynch toppled over the side of the vessel while hang ing a light Saturday night. Dani-el Lynch, father of the missing or drown ed sailor, believes that his son. who was to have been a witness in the in vestigation of the explosion iu tht gun turret on the Georgia, met with foul play and has asked the police to ! Investigate. It is learned from the officers of the Georgia that following the explos- . -r , , . i i ion Lynch, who is only 10 years oid. went on a furlough and Captain McCrea ordered him to report Saturday. Lynch reported, but after he was on ship he disappeared. A lantern he was to hang on the yardarra was found floating in the water.

DEAD WITHOUT A SIG1

Second Victim of the Dayton Deviltry Passes, Leaving No Clew to His Slayer. HE SPOKE IN HIS DELIEITJH What He Said Useless in tho Hunt for the Miscreant. Sleuths are Dusy With the Case But With Little Hope of Discovering Anything Situation At New York. Dayton, O.. Aug. 7. With Abe Cohan dead the Sunday night crime mysfery becomes a double murder, intensified in horror bv the rape alleged to have been committed upon Anna Markowitz before she was strangled to death. Cohan died at the hospital after an ineffectual attempt had been made to secure from him a coherent statement of the crime and an identification of the two Markowitz brothers. Owing to his delirious condition the information he gave as to the tragedy is considered of little value. His father and brother were with him an hour before death came, but could obtain no rational answers to questions regarding Sunday night's fatal events. Crime Seems To Be Unsolvanle. A score of police officials, deputy sheriffs and detectives is seeking desperately for the man who outraged and murdered Anna Markowitz. Clews so far have proved without result, and th?re seems scant hope of ever solving the mysterious crime. The two brother? of the dead girl, who admitted disliking Cohan and following the couple for a time Sunday evening, were tak. en to the hospital where Cohan was dying, but the wounded man could not identify them. They stoutly maintain their innocence of the crime, and tho officials generally accept their story since the autopsy on the body of Anna Markowitz. Negro Woman Heard a Scream. It was conclusively shown by the autopsy that in the murder of Anna Markowitz a double crime was committed, the slayer raping and then killing her by strangulation. A colored woman who lives near the scene of the murder is quoted as declaring that she heard a woman scream in the woods at about the time the crime was committed: "Harry! oh Harry!" Harry Markowitz still maintains that his sister Bertha can clear up the mystery if she desires. The girl, however, continues reticent to the point of sullenness. Both she and her brother are still in jail on suspicion. TI1ERE IS NO CRIME WAVE Assertion of a Gotham Should Know. Man Who New York. Aug. 7. "There isn't any crime wave," said Superintendent Jenkins, of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children." "I mean by that our statistics show no increase in the number of actual assaults committed upon girls under 16 yelrs. At this season of the year there is always a relative increase in the number of assaults and attempted assaults upon girls under 10. They have not, however, increased relatively to the increase of population. They are about the same number to date, this month and last, that there were In July and August of 1000." More of what have come to be seriously known at police headquarters as "near" crimes against girls have been followed by nearer lynchings. Out of a score of complaints that reached the police a half dozen demanded serious attention. Whether the number is extraordinary is disputed, but certain It is that never before lias mob vengeance so froqtiently attended attacks upon children. Led by a woman who alternately in Italian and broken English cried "Avenge my daughter," a reckless crowd of perhaps 2,000 persons stormed the Fourteenth street car barns of the Metropolitan Street Railway company, where a policeman had sought refuge with a seriously pummelled prisoner. Paul Sorgerato, a Gree peddler CO years of age, had made the mistake, so It is ehareed. of kissing Grace Josco. an Italian of 11 years. A shrill cry from the girl and an impassioned appeal by the mother put the foreigners of the neighbortood in a ratio, and as the Greek took to his heels the mob pursued. Cheated of its victim the crowd vent ed its fury on Gaston Keriskell. an unoffending workman bound home ward. As he was passing the rlcters a bov pointed nun out, at tne same time yelling "That's the man's friend He was there too. Keriskeli was pounded until he was unconscious. The police reserves finally got the injured man and removed him to a hospiatl. Edward Pratt, a millwright, 4G years old. had a somewhat similar experience In West Fifty-seventh street. Nellie and Helen Farrell, each about 10 years old. accused Pratt of Imprcpj I till.: I tv:.. lit- vx iiikauuiit uitfu.ra ... . - . . . i-eiore rescue irom a muu uy iue police. Adelaide wildrer. a nurse, fought off an assailant on the west side. The man was arrested. A man who attempted a rape upon a little girl in Greene street escaped. Tony Sarfio

was arrested on a child's complaint ia Brooklyn.

ANOTIIEU CASE IN OHIO With a Very Probable Attempt at Lynching at the End. Wadsworth, O., Aug. 7. Anna Kiel 27 years old, a daughter of a promi. rent farmer living near here, was ittacked while on her way to a street car line by an unknown man, and afer being terribly bruised and cut was tied to a tree, where she was found several hours later by a passer-by. The condition of the young woman is critical, and fears are entertained for hei recovery. She was unable to give a coherent account of the assalut. Several hours after she was found an unknown tramp was captured and brought to Wadsworth. He refuses to give his name or explain his presence in the vicinity. Great excitement prevails and soon as her condition will .warrant the tramp will be brought before Miss Kiel, with a view to possible Identification, when an attempt at lynshing Is not unlikely if she accuses the prisoner. FOUR KILLED; SCORE INJURED Wild Gondola Car and Express Train Collide Dead Are Mother and Babe and An Engineer. Pittsburg, Aug. 7. Four persona were killed and twenty-five injured In a railroad wreck on the Buffalo and Allegheny division of the Pennsylvania railroad at Kelly, about thirty-five miles from this city. The wrecked train was the Titusville Express. While passing through Kelly the train was sideswiped by a gondola coal car and th engine, tender, baggage and express cars, with the three day coaches, were derailed. The dead are: Mrs. Alonzo Huff and male infant, of Johnstown. Pa.; M. R. Irwin, of Oakmont. Pa., engineer of the passenger train; George Cochran, Riverburg, Pa. The Gondola car was loaded with coal and had broken away from s train and rolled down over a switch extending over on to the main track. The passenger train, running at about sixty miles an hour, came around a curve, and before the speed could be reduced had struck the gondola. The engine was thrown about thirty feet from the track and landed on its side. Engineer Irwin was caught beneath his engine. The tender was likewise turned over and the cars broken and battered were strewn along the track on their sides. Most of the injured were cut and bruised, but none seriously. Flagler's Daughter Insane. New York, Aug. 7. Broken in health and mind, a shadow of her former self, the Baroness Anna Har-den-Hickey, widow of the eccentric nobleman who committed suicide daughter of John II. Flagler and cousin of Henry M. Flagler, the Standard Oil multi-millionaire, has been committed to a sanatorium at Stamford, Conn. To the shock of hei nusoanu s suiciue in ner presence is directly ascribed the present condition of the baroness. Suicide or Stock Broker. New York, Aug. 7. William S. Alley, a member of the New York Stock Exchange, committed suicide at -the Larchmont Club by shooting. II died while being removed to a hospital Alley had been under suspension from the stock exchange for almost a vear. and since then had confined his oper ations to the curb market. He left m word to explain his act, which hh friends believe was caused by despond ency over his financial troubles. lit was Do years old. Semonin Pays Up His Shortage. Frankfort Ky., Aug. 7. The official report of State Inspector Henry B Hines as to the indebtedness of for mer County Clerk William B. Semonin of Loiiisviile, to the state, was file here and shows that Semonin owes the state $4r,4t5."5. As a matter of fact Sem onin does not owe the state a cent, having paid up in full at Louisville about the time the foregoing repor was issued. Last Hanging In New Jersey. Flemington, N. J., Aug. 7. John E Schuyler, convicted of the murder oi Manning Itiley, has been sentenced to be hanged Aug. 30. He will probably be the last person to hang in the state, as. under a new law, condemned persons hereafter are to be killed by electricity. Attempt to Wreck a Flyer. Hiram, O.. Aug. 7. An attempt wa9 made during the night to wreck Pittsburg flyer No. 23 on the Erie road. Between this place and Garretsville, a trunk of a tree was dragged to the track and chained down. Section men discovered the obstruction and sent in an alarm. I tain Washes Out the Tracks. La Crosse. Wis., Aug. 7. A rain torrent lasting a quarter of an houi washed out the tracks and telegraph lines and tied up all traffic on the Chicago, Milwaukee and St Taul and Chicago, Burlington and Quincy railroads. Georgia Is a "Dry" State. Atlanta, Ga., Aug. 7. A large crowd of enthusiastic Trohibitlonists watched Governor Hoke Smith attach his official signature to jthe prohibition bill, and the act has become a law of the Btate, effective Jan. 1, 190S. Insatiate Devil Wagon! Blnghampton. N. Y., Aug. 7. W. B. Stretch, of Killawog, was thrown from his automobile at Richmond, his skull was crushed and he died 8ts hours later.

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RAILWAY TIME TABLE. Roads Hmd. Chi. A.M. A.M. Lve. Ar. Roads Chi. Hmd. A.M. A.M. Erie.. 12. 45 1.35 Penn.. .6.20 6.16 Penn.. .5.30 6.42 L. S 5.20x 6.21 Penn.. .6. 00 6.59 L. S 6.05x 7.06 M. C...7.10X 7.53 Erle...7.15x 8.10 L. S 7.281 8.48 Penn...8.00x 8.56 Mon'n. .8. 30 9.19 Penn.. .8. 50s 10.11 L. S....9.20 10.14 N. P.. 10. 35 11.25 Erie.. 10. 45 11:35 Wab'h 11.00 11.48 Penn..ll.20x 12.38 P.M. P.M. Mon'n 12.00 12.60 L. S.. .11.431 12.58 Penn.. .1.00s 2.18 M. C...1.15X 1.64 Penn..2.10x 3.31 Erie... 2.25 3.20 N. P...2.30 3.26 Wab'h. 3.00 3.48 Mon'n. .3. 05 3.56 M. C. . .3.15x 3.55 Erie... 3.22 .4.15x L. S 3.60x 4.48 Penn.. .4. 15 5.32 L. S 4.12x16.28 Penn.. .4.30 6.32 M. C... 6.25 7.16 L. S...5.17 6.32 Penn.. .5. 40 6.42 Erie. ..5.15 6.15 L. S....5.50 6.48 Penn..6.15x 7.17 Mon'n. .9.00 9.50 N. P...9.15 10.08 Erie... 9.30 10.25 M. C. .10.00 10.47 Wab'hl0.30x 11.20 Mon'n 11. lOf 11.58 Penn.. 11. 35s 12.32 L. S...11.35 12.28 M. C. .11.55 12.49 Erie.,.5.45x 6.42 Pfnn..5.50x 6.45 Mon'n. .6. 10 7.10 Erie... 6.12 7.12 L. S....6.0SX 7.12 Wab'h. G. 16 7.15 M. C...6.20 7.10 Penn . , L. S... N. P.. M. C Penn . L. S... Erie. . Penn . . Erie. . .6.16 7.25 .6.21x1 7.88 ,.6.40 7.40 ..6.40 7.30 .6.42 7.45 .7.06x1 8.22 7.25 8.20 .8.00x D.00 .9.05 10.05 .8.48 U.45 I,. S. Wab'h. 9.34 10.22 Mon'n. .9.3C 10.35 M. C. . .9.55x 10.45 Erie.. 10. 00 10.58 L. S.. 10. 141 11.85 Penn. .10. lis 11.10 Mon'n 11.11 12.00 M. C. .11. 53x 12.35 P.M. P.M. Penn..l2.3Sx 1.35 U S...12.58 1.55 M. C...2.06 2.55 Venn.. .2.18s 3.15 Wab'h. S.03 3.50 Penn..3.31x 4.30 Erie...3.50x 4.50 N. P...4.02 4.59 M. C. . .4.08x 4.50 Mon'n. .4. 39s 5.35 Erie... 5. 13 .6.07 L,. S 4.48x1 6.04 Mon'n. .5. 02 5.55 M. C...5.12X 6.00 Penn.. .5. 32 6.30 L. S 5.28x 6.27 L. S 6.481 8.05 L. S....6.32 7.33 Penn..7.00x 8.00 M. C...7.05X 7.55 Mon'n..7.49x 8.40 N. P 8.16 9.15 Wab'h. 8.40 9.30 M. C 9.13s 9.55 Erie.. 11. 2D 12.10 L. S.. .12.261 1.55 I Via Indiana Harbor x Dally Sunday. Dally f Dally Monday. except except Sui MAL TEA v. : - a r r o i -a. . a, WHISKY Whiting Wholesale Liquor Go. DISTRIBUTORS WHITING, IISD. GET IT HERE. Maybe you've had some hard luck lately. You owe some bills that are worrying you. Our business Is to give you a little lift until times are better with you. Hundreds of others are taking our advise when they are financially embarrassed. BORROW MOM BY on your Furniture, Piano and other personal property. Consolidate jour small bills and only owe one firm. There will be no publicity about the loan. WE WILL, LOAN you from $10 to $1,000 and leave the security with you the same as real estate. You repay us In small weekly or monthly payments to suit your convenience. Call, write or phone. Our representative is sent to your home upon request. The Chxago Discount Co. 913840 Commercial hi SOUTH CHICAGO Room 200 Tel. So. Chicago 104 Open Monday. Thursday and Saturday Evening until 9 o'clock We close other Evening at 6 o'clock or address L. Box 516, Hammond, lad.

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