Hammond Times, Volume 3, Number 99, Hammond, Lake County, 13 October 1908 — Page 4

4

THE TIMES. Tuesday, October 13,1 90S.

The Lake County Times INCLUDING THE SOUTH CHICAGO TIMES EDITION. THE CART EVENING TIMES EDITION, AND THE COUNTRY EDITION, EVENING NEWSPAPERS PUBLISHED BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING AND PUBLISHING COMPANY.

"Entered as second class matter June 28, 1906, at the postoffice at Hammond, Indiana, under the Act of Congress, March 3, 1879." - C : '

MAIN OFFICE HAMMOND. IND. SOUTH CHICAGO OFFICE 9049 COMMERCIAL. AVE. GARY OFFICE IN GARV HOTEL, BROADWAY. TELEPHONES EAST CHICAGO, 111. INDIANA HARBOR, 111. HAMMOND, 111 112. WHITING, 11L GARY, 157. SOUTH CHICAGO 283.

YEARLY . . . . 3-00 HALF YEARLY ' 1B0 SINGLE COPIES .ONE CENT

eart to Heart

Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Copyright, 1908, by Edwin A. Nye.

For President WILLIAM H. TAFT

For-President JAMES S. SHERMAN

LARGER PAID UP CIRCULATION THAN ANY OTHER NEWSPAPER IN THE CALUMET REGION.

CIRCULATION 'OS YESTERDAY Ji fVH

CIRCULATION BOOKS OPEN

T THE PUBLIC ALL TIMES.

FOR INSPECTION AT

TO SUBSCRIBERS Readers of THE TIMES are requested to favor the management by reporting any lrresrularitles la delivering. Communicate wtth the Circulation Department. .

COMMUNICATIONS. THE TIMES will print all communications on subjects of general Interest to the people, when such communications are signed by the writer, but will reject all commluncatlons not signed, no matter what their merits. This precaution is taken to avoid misrepresentation. THE TIMES Is published la the best Interest of the people, and Itm utterance, always Intended to promote the general welfare of the public at large.

ASK YOURSELF THIS, MR. WORKINGMAN.

For what would it profit labor to gain its ideal concerning the injunction if, following its victory, came unrest and disturbance to business, the alarm of capital and THE LESS-' ENING OF LABOR'S WAGE-EARNING POWER? Are you going to let Mr. Gompers pull the wool over your eyes?

v v BRYAN'S ELECTION MEANS PANIC AND FAILURE.

JOINING HANDS WITH HAMMOND and Gary merchants, bankers, business men and manufacturers, as well as with representatives of those

industrial leaders in other sections of the nation, Chicago men have shown that business recuperation depends entirely upon the election of W. H. Taft to the presidency. Several commercial leaders stated that they had given

orders for merchandise and manufactured articles contingent upon the suo

cess of the republican ticket. During the past month, numerous instances

of these contingent orders have appeared in these columns and never have

been specifically denied. Such prominent Chicagoans as John V. Farwell

George M. Reynolds, James B. Forgan, Enos M. Barton, George E. Roberts

have joined the hosts who are not only supporting. Mr. Taft but are appeal

ing to the vote against Bryan unless they want business to be brought to a standstill. It behooves the voter to pause before he does anything which will imperil his own interests. James B. Forgan, president of the First

National Bank of Chicago, who comes into daily contact with large num

bers of capitalists, merchants and manufacturers, is outspoken in his dread

of Bryan. It wont do to experiment with Bryan. He is a dangerous man

It won't do to say, "Oh, well, I want to see what he will do, things can't be

worse." Things can be worse, there can be panic and starvation. There can be even orse. Remember, Mr. Laboring Man, that much as you may hate the banker and the manufacturer, if they can't do business, what will be your fate? They are looking out for their interests and by looking out for their interests they are looking out for your interests. Let the farmer also, who has had undoubted prosperity since the Cleveland administration, pause before he votes for Bryan, the dangerous demagogue. Let well enough alone, Mr. Farmer, you are on the safe side now! IS IT TO BE THE BREWERS OR THE PEOPLE?

-ENTERING JOURNALISM." A young man asks the writer to state what is necessary by way of preparation to "enter daily journalIsm." " EVERYTHING IS NECESSARY. Daily newspaper work, on the editorial side, is the most exacting business on earth. First, the beginner must have a strong body. He should have a RES

ERVOIR OF VITALITY to withstand

the killing strain of Intense labors

concentrated into a short time.

Next, he must have that sixth sense

known as "the nose for news." It is

difficult to describe the faculty, usually born in the bone. It Is the ability

which sees "a story" where others

would stumble over it. i

These are fundamentals. Add the

scent and bulldog tenacity to follow a

lead, accurate judgment, ' ability to

make and hold friends, patience, poise.

Initiative, industry, loyalty to orders.

What? you say. How about the

ability to write? Any school graduate

can write. Of course it la necessary

to be able to write strong, clear, sim pie English.

Mind you, all this will simply put

your foot on .the LOWEST RUNG OF

THE LADDER as a "cub reporter."

You can only climb through experi

ence and trials under daily difficulties

That is why a veteran warns the

unknowing.

Young man, don't "enter journalism

unless

You were predestined from all eter

nity to be a newspaper man, or

"Unless you know you will never be

happy outside a newspaper office, or

Unless the stern duties are like a

bugle call of challenge to your best

endeavor.

Because the demands of a modern

daily newspaper if you would climb-

arc keyed AS niGH AS FLESH AND BLOOD CAN STAND. And the pay

Is not in proportion. The discipline is almost as severe as that of the military service. And there is NO

MERCY FOR THOSE WHO FAIL. . B,ut

If the odor of printer's Ink is Incense to your nostrils, If you feel it is hx your power to make good, if the strong soul of you rises to the call.

why, then

In the name of Benjamin Franklin,

PITCH IN.

lou will get your chance, never fear. "Full" cannot promote some less

able fellow above you. You stand on

your own business. Merit will win.

And there are compensations and satisfactions. The fascination of the

business Is beyond that of any other.

But, by the price of your eternal salvation, do not misunderstand the re

quirements.

- He la aa strong; aa he la gentle.

HIa reputation la simply spotless, la all the saltation of a heated

campaign for the greatest office fa the world, no one has ventured to Intimate a donbt of the absolute honesty of this man who has been before the country for a quarter of a century. Nor can any one successfully dispute the simple proposition that la the whole history of the United Statea no one was ever named for the presidency who was so fitted by nature, by training; and by experience for the duties, dignities and responsibilities of that unique office CHARLES HOPKINS. In "The Independent."

"We certify to all the areat electorate that when their -rotes la November shall have chosen James S. Sherman to be vice president of the United States, the senate will be sure of a presidium officer In character and competency worthy of the best traditions of that BTeat deliberate body, and that which God forbid the sad contingency were to come which should for n fourth time call a vice president from w York to the executive office, the Interests of the whole country would be safe In good hands, and the great office of the presidency would nutter no decadence from the high standard of dignity and honor and competency of which we are so justly proud." ELIHU ROOT, at Sherman Notification Ceremonies.

RURAL DELIVERY.

UP A

ND DOWN IN INDIAN.

MILLS OPEN AGAIN. After having been shut down for

some time the Evansville cotton mills

will resume operations Monday morn

ing. Employment will be given several hundred persons.

LOOK FOR (), 11 SHOES. The Princeton police are looking for

a culprit with a pair or .no. ii tan

shoeg and a loaf of bread. Early this morning an unknown person threw a

brick through a $100 plate glass window of the Pfohl shoe store and took one pair of shoes from the window. At

the Spencer grocery by the same method he took a loaf of bread.

SUICIDE IS IDENTIFIED. The body of the man found Saturday

on the road a half mile north or l-a-

fayette, dying from the effects of carbolic acid, self-administered, was identified today as that of Joseph Kuehn of Willlamsport, Ind.

GAS JET STARTS FIRE. Newcastle, Ind., Oct. 11. The resi

dence of Miss Mollis Kellar, on East Broad street, was damaged to the ex

tent of $2,500 by fire this morning, which is believed to have originated from a gas jet. Miss Kellar, who is deaf, was awake and her attention was called to the fire by neighbors.

D. A. R, TO CONFER. The annual state conference of the

Daughters of the American Revolution

will be held in Muncle next Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursaay, and the

members of the Paul Revere chapter of this city have completed pla.ns to make this, the eighth congress, the most auspicious in the history of the organ

ization.

OPENS DESERTED HOME. Admiral James H. Dayton, who will

be retired fro mthe United States navy October 25, is at his home in South Bend, to spend the remainder of his

life. His home, which has been closed the greater part of the forty-six years that he has spent Ut the navy, is be

ing prepared for use.

STAVE FACTORY BURNS. Fire which burned from 3 until 8

o'clock yesterday morning destroyed

the stave factory an warehouse owned by George Schinerer of Columbus, who

sustained a loss of $8,000. Hs is con

fident that the fire was of incendiary

origin. WILL TEST STATUTE.

To test the federal statue governing the duties of a township trustee as to

keeping in repair and passable condi-

tion such roads as rural mail carriers

are compelled to travel In delivering

mail, D. A. "White, a rural mail carrier out of South Bend, has brought action

in a local court against Trustee Hol

land of Greene township. PULLED WIFE'S HAIR. E. E. Mangold, proprietor of a pho

tographic studio in South Bend, has

been made defendant In a sensational divorce case. In her complaint Mrs.

Mangold charges her spouse with pulling her hair and beating her. HIS WIFE TOO GIDDY.

Because his wire xora rode on a

merry-go-round and stayed out late in

company with her friends and left her

husband at home was noted as one of

the main reasons why John Loy of Columbus brought suit for divorce. The case was heard before Judge Marshall

Hacker. Mrs. Loy failed to appear. WOMEN FIGHT IN" THEATER.

The opening of the new Colonial

theater Sunday night was featured

with a fight in which two Warsaw wo

men were the participants, and as a re

sult the audience as tnrown into a commotion and almost stampeded. One of the omen, offended because the other stepped on her dress, made an uncomplimentary remark which incensed the

offender. MOB THREATENS ATTACK.

r f tfk wim Sfi

"Funny how popular a feller gets every four years!" Brinkerhoff in Cleveland Leader.

and the famous "Red Special. me

eastern trip wound up in New England with a speech by Mr. Debs delivered In historic Faneuil hall.

Edward W. Townsend. author of the

Chlmmie Fadden"' stories, is the demo

cratic nominee for congress in the sev

enth New Jersey district.

nominee for president from Fremont to Roosevelt and says that "he expects to vote for Taft. He has twenty-two descendants who will vote for Taft and Sherman.

John G. Oglesby, the republican nom

inee for lieutenant-governor of Illinois, is a son of the late Richard Oglesby, who was governor of the state and one of Its most- noted men.

The ticket to be used at the election

in Tennessee next month will contain

over a hundred names and it is esti

mated that It will require an average of about seven minutes for the voter to

cast his ballot.

THE CREAM OF THE Morning News

W. Bourke Cockran, one of the most

eloquent speakers In the democratic ranks will be heard on the stump in behalf of the Bryan and Kern ticket

in Indiana, Xew Jersey, Maryland, West Virginia and New York during the remaining weeks of the campaign.

Three aspirants are engaged in a

lively fight for the democratic nomination for governor of Virginia next spring, and now It 'is reported that

Pursued by a mob intent on wreak-! Lieutenant-Governor J. Taylor Ellyson

ing revenge for a brutal attack upon Mrs. Frank Dusczyuski. a pretty bride

of three months, Frank Banack, of I South Bend, 20 years old, was late last

night rescued by Patrolman Urbanski.

who forced his way into the midst of i

the crowd and then held it at bay with

a revolver until the arrival of the pa

trol wagon with reinforcements.

may soon announce his entry into the race. . , . . .

THE STATEMENTS OF MR. KENNEDY, the American Federation of Labor organizer, in last night's Times, have set many people in Lake county thinking. "I thing it is the most truthful and most powerful arraignment of the brewery trust that I have ever read," declared an East Chicago business man, "and it has made me look at the Marshall ticket in a new light." Yes, and many other democrats have looked at the brewery question in a new light. It has made the people think. They are thinking whether or not the brewery trust shall run the state of Indiana. Whether its representatives, the democratic ticket it supports, the candidates under its wing, shall run the business men, the taxpayers, the farmers, the workingmen, and all the decent voters in Indiana. The question is, shall the brewery trust rule or shall the people rule? Don't let them pull the wool over your eyes. That is the only issue in the state campaign. HE WANTS TO TINKER WITH YOUR POCKET BOOK. YES, MR. BRYAN'S BANKING plan is a great thing; it is wonderful isn't it, Mr. Man with a little money in the bank? If Mr. Bryan is elected you will do well to take your money out of the bank, before he begins another of his ducks-and-drakes experiments.

There is enough of doubt in Mr. Bryan's banking plan to make it prudent for even the most conservative, to wait until experiments have been proven

before plunging the country into ruin.

You know, Mr. Voter, that when politicians begin to tamper with your

pocket book, it is carrying things pretty far! Mr. Taft doesn't want to change ytfur system of banking, Mr. Voter! Mr. Bryan wants to tinker with your pocket book, Mr. Voter! ARE YOU GOING TO GIVE HIS A CHANCE? OH LET IT NOT BE HEARD IN GATH.

MR. ROOSEVELT, FATHER OF MR. BRYAN's policies, says that Mr. Taft is sure to be elected and intimates that Mr. Bryan has about as much show as a man with a pretty girland two bits at a church fair. . The Peerless Leader's Free Silver Band, assisted by the Tom-Tom Taggart orchestra; the celebrated Hewgag string organization; the John E. Lamb choral union; the Push-Me-Near-thePiecounter chorus; the Haskell Standard Oil quartette, supplemented by the Brewery Trust warblers and the braying of the suffering jackass, will kindly make all the noise possible to prevent any such heresy being heard by the faithful. ALONZO Article on "When Love Grows Cgld" is unseasonable. Along about the first of November is the time. Then shake the mothballs out of her $49.75 fur coat, spend $S3.26 to have it retrimmed and renovated and the temperature of love will improve.

- JAMES J. HILL frankly allows that he doesn't know who's going to be elected. Modest thing! - JUST HOW USELESS the injection really is, anyway is shown by the fact that a Hammond man went over to Gary yesterday wearing a straw hat.

THIS DATE IN HISTORY'. October 13.

1635 Roger Williams banished from

Boston for heresy.

1712 George Washington presided at

the laying of the corner stone for

the White House.

1829 The first daily newspaper issued

in the state of Maine.

1S54 Howard college, in Alabama, de

stroyed by fire.

1859 Monument unveiled on Queens-

town Heights in memory of Gen

eral Sir Isaac Brock.

1874 James A. Garfield elected to con

gress.

18S4 Adoption of the Meridian of

Greenwich.

1900 Strike in the anthracite coal district of Pennsylvania ended by mu

tual concessions.

tiful and flourishing citizen of Swains-

boro, was here Friday. Come again,

Penton; we are always glad to see such

as you among us. craymont iua.j Hustler.

When a Man moves into A town, he Is always Surprised at the number of men Who do nothing but stand On the street corners And exchange Fool opinions.

THIS IS MY 62ND BIRTHDAY. Augnstus E. Wlllson.

Augustus E. Willson. governor of

Kentucky, and long prominent as

lawyer in that state, was born at

Maysville, Ky., October 13, 1846. He

prepared at Alfred university for Har

vard, where he was graduated in 1869

He was for a short time at the Harvard

law school, and studied in law offices in Boston and Louisville before he was admitted to the bar. He was chief clerk of the treasury department, in

1875, and was republican nominee for

congress from the fifth district of Ken

tucky in 1884-6-8 and in 1892. He was

a delegate from the fifth district of Kentucky to the republican national conventions in 1884, 1888, 1892 and 1904. Last year he was elected governor of Kentucky on the republican ticket for a term of four years.

Rev. Billy Sunday says that hell is

full of fudge-eating mollycoddles.

Shannon said practically the same

thing. Is Sunday copying Shannon, or vice versa. By the way, what a sticky place hell must be.

IN POLITICS

Princeton The colored voters of this city have organized a Lincoln

league, with A. H. Howard as presi

dent and William Tucker secretary

The organization has a large member

ship.- An Independent Voters' league, has also been organized by the colored

people here.

Samuel G. Cosgrove, the republican

candidate for governor of the 6tate of

Washington, Is 61 years old and a civil

war veteran. He was born in Ohio and spent his early life on a farm in

Defiance county in that state. Late in the seventies he started west and

worked for a time as a miner in Xe

vada. In 1882 he settled in Washing

ton and has since been engaged In farming and in the practice of law, in both of which pursuits he has been

successful from the financial viewpoint.

There is a slump In political news

In Lake county this week. Everybody seems to be waiting for the big Watson rallies at Crown Point and Indi

ana Harbor on Saturday.

Did you ever meet a successful man Mho told you what he was going to do nextf

Elinor Glynn thinks Mark Twain is our greatest man. Wonder what

Mark thinks of Elinor?

IF YOU WOULD HAVE A PEACEFUL HOME, ALU Yor HAVE TO DO IS TO PAY THE FREIGHT AND LET

YOUR WIFE RUN IT.

Mt. Vernon A democratic meeting and fish fry was held at the Thompson mound, in Lynn township, north of this city, Saturday afternoon, and about 200

democrats of the township, Including

candidates" for county offices, sat around and ate fish and made demo

cratic speeches.

Portland James M. Zion of Tippe

canoe county, the independence party

candidate for governor, ' spoke to

large crowd Saturday afternoon from a store box at Main and Meridian

streets.. . .John C. Bilheimer and Ed V

Fitzpatrick conferred with the republi

can county committee on Saturday con

cerning the conduct of the campaign.

Washington, D. C, Oct. 12. H. H.

Kohlsaat of Chicago conferred with the

president today on the political situa

tion In the west and told him some In

teresting stories of conversations he

had heard among laboring men in Chi

cago, telling how they felt toward the

different presidential candidates. Mr.

Kohlsaat said that he had talked with

the editors of three of the leading

newspapers of the country which are

supporting the candidacy of W. J.

Bryan. Two of these editors, he said

had told him that they did not want to see Mr. Bryan elected and did not expect he would be. "And tne of these

men," continued Mr. Kohlsaat," is

Framing committee of sixteen attacks new Chicago charter problem by organizing and planning for future meetings.

Seven hundred delegates of American

Meat Packers' association open three-

day convention in Chicago and Indorse

federal control of Industry.

Hot words between counsel in Chi

cago representing the government and the Standard Oil company during hear-

ing in which facts are sought relating to secret rates.

The attitude of workingmen in Ohio

has caused republican managers to

plan a vigorous campaign to secure the state.

Democrats in campaign fund hunt.

scour whole nation, even invading the

back woods to secure the farmer's

mite.

W. J. Bryan in an address to uni

versity " students at Lincoln replies to Governor Hughes and declares the "New.York executive always has shown himself on the side of the railroads and

trusts.

President Roosevelt figures 306 electoral votes for Taft and Sherman and a list of the states he counts safe for the ticket is given out. State agent for the visitation of children tells charities meet that children are treated with horrible cruelty In many homes to which they are intrusted and meeting decides to call for drastic laws. New York woman Is convicted of bigamy, evidence showing, that she lived with one husband In the daytime and another at night. Gaelic American of New York bitterly denounces Cardinal Gibbons for "fulsome praise of King Edward."

member of committee."

the democratic national

LABOR NEWS

Be , patient. You can devote your

full attention to politics tins week.

The Cub-Tiger agony is to be over

then.

RANDOM THINGS AND FLINGS

Once In a great while a woman actually believes that her husband known as much as he thinks he knows. .

Muncie Eugene Chafin and Aaron

Watson, candidates respectively of the prohibition party for president and vice president, will be in Muncie on the morning of October 30, and their com

ing is to be made the occasion of an

eastern Indiana prohibition rally. The railroads will give special rates on all lines that day to all points within fifty

miles or so of Muncie.

A central labor union has been organized in Augusta, Ga. San Francisco barbers' union has a membership of more than 700. The various central bodies of Orange county. New York, have joined a county labor union. On October 20. at Cohies, N. Y., the United Textile Workers of America will meet in convention. A reorganization of the building trades unions has been brought about

: . n . r,'.. I .. XT tr f r . , . -i - . r. w

his paper, the Indianapolis News, ere

A Paterson, X. J., woman predicted

that she was going to die June 14.!

She is still alive and in good health.

Her husband is said to have become an

awful pessimist.

ARRANGE FOR BEVERIDGE MEETING.

Executive Committee Gary Republican Club To Meet Tomorrow.

AFTER A YOUNG MAN BEGINS TO CONCENTRATE HIS ATTENTIONS ON ONE GIRL, THE OTHER GIRLS

STOP, LAUGHING AT HIS JOKES.

Getting Off Easy.

The man who gets mad at what the

newspaper says about him should return thanks at least three times a day

for what the newspaper knows about

him and says nothing. Green Ridge

(Ho.) Local-News.

Most people wouldn't believe a candidate for office under oath.

The Citizen Beautiful. Insufanceman P. W. Wilson, a beau-

The executive committee of the Gary Republican club will meet tomorrow evening in the office of President Manlove for the purpose of perfecting arrangements for the Beveridge meeting which will be held on the twentyfourth of this month. It is planned to give this meeting more publicity when those which have been held in the past thereby insuring larger crowds. In order to accommodate the throngs that

will undoubtedly cassino, which

properly fixed up should seat twelve to fifteen hundred people

is

ffom

ARE YOUR STORING A LOT OP UNUSED THINGS ABOUT YOUR HOUSE OR OFFICE THINGS THAT A "FOR SALE" AD IN THE TI.ME9 WOULD CONVERT INTO MONEY?

Xewcastle C. M. Christopher, chair

man of the republican county commit

tee, says he is well pleased with the result of the thirty-day poll made in

Henry county, which shows, he says,

that the county will roll up its usual

large majority for the republican party

A meeting of the precinct committee

men was held here Saturday.

ates a good deal of amusement when

he says:

"So it is pretty hard to tell just

what will happen in Lake county. Xine-tenths of the foreigners who will be naturalized will -ote the republican ticket; they' will not know what they are voting, but ill do Just what

the bosses who get them their first papers tell them to do. So the result in Lake county will depend in a great measure on the number of foreigners the repubilcans are able to naturalize. On an even break Lake county will go democratic. But under the plans of the republicans. It may go republican."

The democrats are busy looking for Watson money so they claim but the republicans claim that they can't find any democrat when he has his bunch ready to put on Mr. Marshall.

Judge Alton B. Parker of Xew York, who was the democratic nominee for the presidency in 1904. will speak in South' Bend next Friday night. Samuel Gompers will speak at noori on the same day. It is somewhat of a remarkable coincidence that Messrs. Gompers and Parker should come on the same day as the latter is defending the former in the contempt proceedings before a Washington court.

The Hammond democrats have not decided yet where they will have Mr. Gompers speak. It may be at Brooks' theater or Huehn's hall.

The managers of the national socialist campaign express themselves as weil satisfied with the results of the coast-to-coast tour of Eugene V. Debs

Oakland City Eugene V. Debs, socialist candidate for president, will sj-f-ak in this cit yrOtboetaoini ao speak in this city Octooer 22.

Fort Wayne The republicans have made much preparation for the speech here tomorrow night of Seth Low of Xew York. The speech will be made In the rink, which accommodates 3.000 persons.

warfare.

It has been decioa by the leather workers to make a universal demand for the eight-hour day within the next two years. The annual convention of the Massachusetts state branch, A. F. of L will be held at Lowell, beginning Monday, October 12. The accident report of the Illinois bureau of labor shows a list of 100 miners killed and 287 injured in Illinois from July 1. 1907, to July 1, 1908. International Cotton Spinners' union has presented Samuel Ross of Xew Bedford, Mass., its veteran secretary, witli a silver service of fifty pieces. The strike of the operatives in the textile industries of India has ended. Low wages and bad conditions of employment were the cause of the strike.

Shelbyville The board of county commissioners lias found it necessary to take Elisha Sexton and Steven Barnes off the board of election inspectors which was named a few days ago. Both are related to candidates.

Linton Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, will mak? an address in this city on Sunday afternoon, October 18. On the same day he will speak at Jasonville, Shelburn, Hymera, Dugger and Sullivan.

Warsaw James Guy of Harrison township, Kosciusko county, aged SO years, has voted for every republican

Marriage Licenses Granted. Richard Elwood, Gary; Xellie C. Weiss. Buffalo. William Sickenalck, Ella Knaak. Chicago. Hugh L Ray, St. Louis; Charlotte I'. Johnson, Austin. Edgar K. Beckwith, Xew York; Ivan B. Garanar, Albeon. Berton S. DeBall, Irene Vroom, Chicago. SI Kltchle, Adeline Cadrett, Chicago. Arnold Muhs, Margaret Fitzpatrick, East Chicago. Lunday L. Ru3sell, Daisy Phillimore, ll.iinmond.

New Circuit Court Cases. 81,04. Henry A. Pain? vs. John Fischbeiri, ft al. Foreclosure M. L Fetterer & Hall, plaintiff's attorney. 8105. John Xagle vs. Dale D. Claudy, et a!. Appeal. O'Connor & Beck, plaintiffs attorneys. 8106. Isabell Alyea Green, et al. vs. Ada A. Burton, et al. Partition. J. Frank Meeker, plaintiff's attorney.