Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 31, Hammond, Lake County, 24 July 1906 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES TUESDAY, JULY 24, 1906

ATTRACTION

Silk Worms at Work; See the Little Spinners Spin A REGULAR SILK COLONY

Established in this place and the beautifully attired operatives are now at work day and night. After commencing work they do not stop to eat, drink or sleep until their task is finished, then they take a good long sleep.

A SIGHT OF

This is a very interesting study of one of nature's most wonprocesses, and must be seen to be appreciated. Everyone, especially the young, should embrace this opportunity to learn a lesson in natural history.

GENUINE CHINESE SILK WORMS

These worms were imported direct from China and were procured through the influence of Minister Conger. In no branch of entomology is there more of facinating interest to the student than in the contemplation of the habits and work of these wonderful little manufacturers and in the beautiful, compliand beneficial results achieved

A BEAUTIFUL PICTURE The rich cream color of the worms, the golden sheen of the silk and the dark green of the foliage upon which they feed makes a very beautiful picture, especially at night under artificial light. This exhibition will last about a week or ten days, but come at once and see the very commencement of the short, active and useful life of these little toilers.

Tel. 2032, H. Kolli

LION

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THEATRICAL NOTES. At the Chicago opera house a brilliant revival of "Land of Nod" has been made with such instant sucthat the big theatre is crowded at every performance. With new scenery, new costumes and a company including nearly all the old favorites and some new ones, this popular exseems likely to repeat its remarkable success of last season when it ran out the entire summer season at the "Home of ExtravaAlthough the company is larger and the production finer than those usually offered in Chicago at $1.50 the management of the opera house has established a scale of prices rangfar below anything ever before exacted for a great standard show. As this will be the only musical enof its class in Chicago for some time to come visitors to the city will doubtless be pleased to see so smart a show at a price less than half the standard rate. Mabel Barrison whose success as "Bonnie" has made her a star conto improve this dainty role while Knox Wilson's April Fool has raised him into the front rank of eccentric comedians. The famous Madcaps are still holding notable features and Walter Stanton's Giant Rooster and fighting bantam are imelements in the startling nightmare palace scene. All the other original characters such as the Rarebit, Man in the Moon, Rory Bory Alice, Knock Out Drops, Chorus Girl, and Jack of Hearts are represented by skilled artists long identified with these roles, while the beauty chorus is thought to be the best singing organization ever heard in the Chicago opera house. Gathered together from their sumvacation, the company which will appear at Chicago's most beautitheater, the Colonial, Sunday night, July 29, in the Chicago producof that tremendous New York success of last season. "The VanderCup," is engaged in active reand the final preliminaries for the western debut of this play. Elsie Janis, the inimitable and impopular star of the produchas returned from a brief Eurotrip refreshed and re-inspired, and she has a fine support of such players as Otis Harlan, Henry V. Donnelly, Jacques Kruger, F. Newton Lindo, Edith Decker, Blanche Chapand Charles Dow Clark. A glance at the names themselves is sufficient endorsement for the quality f the offering, while the fascinating theme of the automobile and the

STORE

A LIFE TIME 411 Sohl St. celebrated Vanderbilt cup contest has afforded splendid opportunity, for a real play with a real plot. The autorace is declared by compecritics the most realistic scene ever placed on the stage . The Chiengagement is limited. After a series of the most successflights ever seen in the west, HorWild and his airship "Eagle" are established at White City in Chiwhere they have vied with fine weather in bringing the amuse ment park almost a record attendduring the last few days. Mr. Wild has gone higher and farther, shown more complete mastery, and an absolute fearlessness that have made his ascensions, repeated every day when the weather conditions are not absolutely forbidding, a source of eager inquiry to thousands. Alessandro Liberati and his grand military band opened a series of concerts in the White City plaza last Sunday afternoon, playing programs made up almost equally from the great Italian operatic composers and from the tuneful and catchy music of the day. Sig. Liberati is heard at every concert in solos upon the cornet, an instrument of which he is a master, and the celebrated French tenor, A. L. Guille, sings every evenJohn F. Carroll, director of the free open air hippodrome at the north end of the plaza, presented a complete change of bill for the curweek on Sunday, including Campbell and Brady, club jugglers; Fisher and Johnson, in a comic bicyturn; and Scheppes' dog and pony circus. Toddles, the riding elephant, has also been added to the list of plaza attractions, and the vaudeville theater on the east side of the board walk has a complete change of bill this week. Palace of Sweets CANDIES AND ICE CREAM CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS Safe. Always reliable. Ladies, ask Druggist for CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH in Red and Gold metallic boxes, sealed with blue ribbon. Take no other. Refuse dangerous substitutions and imitations. Buy of your Druggist, or send 4c. in stamps for Pariculars, Testimonials and "Relief for Ladies," in letter, by return Mail. 10,000 Testimonials. Sold by all Druggists. CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO. 100 Madison Square, PHILA., PA. Mention this Subscribe for the Lake Counts Times.

EXTRAORDINARY

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REVOLUTION!" SAY THE DEPUTIES

Address Issued Tells the Russian People Not to Pay Any More Taxes. NOR GO INTO THE CZAR'S ARMY Members Who Met at Viborg, FinAre Ordered to Disperse. ORDER IS BACKED UP BY TROOPS

ernment to lodge its authors in a Everybody went to see the wonderEnd to the Gathering--Text fortress. A large crown gathered at ful hen, and her master was very much

of the Address Issued--Council of the Empire Is To Be Prorogued.

onstration. Among the arrivals were President Mouromtseff and Ivan PetPetersburg, July 24.--The coun- runkevitch. The former came on a cil of ministers has recommended the local train, entirely unattended. He emperor to issue a ukase proroguing was plainly downcast, and responded the council of the empire, or upper to the salutation of the Associated Press correspondent by the mere raishouse of parliament. ing of his hat, and hurried on to es-

Viborg, Finland, July 24.--The curhas dropped on the final act of the drama of Russia's first parliament. Under the spur of the threat of GovRechanberg to use military force to end the session, and with troops alconverging on the Hotel Belwhere the meeting was held, the assembled members of the lower house, 186 in number, hurriedly adopt ed and signed an address to the people which is thoroughly revolutionary in its nature, elected a perpetual execucommittee headed by Prince Paul Dolgoroukoff, vice president of the house, to carry on the work of liberaand adjourned amidst characterRussian embracing and kissing. Why the Poles Didn't Sign. With the exception of Count HeyMichael Stakovitch and the Poldelegates every member present signed the address, the Polish delestating that they bad no credento advise the Polish nation as to future tactics, and that they cannot participate in directing the Russian people, but that all their sympathies were on the side of Russian revoluProhibits Payment of Taxes. The address, which bears a remarksimilarity to the manifesto framed by the council of workmen last Nowhich landed its authors and the editors of eight St. Petersburg newspapers in cells of the fortress of St. Peter and St. Paul, declares that the administration and not parliament is responsible for the delay in the setof the agrarian question, and proclaims a cessation of payment of taxes and of military service, and reof future loans. TEXT OF THE ADDRESS Onus of the Difficulty Declared To Be on the Government. The following is the text of the parmanifesto, headed "To the People from Their Popular Representa"Citizens of all Russia--Parliament has been dissolved by ukase of July 21. You elected us as your representaand instructed us to fight for our country and freedom. In execution of your instructions and our duty drew up laws in order to ensure freeour duty we

dom to the people. We demanded the feller when he lands in New York next removal of irresponsible ministers who Saturday. Attorney Troup, of Bowling infringing the laws with impuni- Green, O., representing Rockefeller ty and oppressing freedom. was here and secured the permission "First of all, however, we wanted to of Prosecuter David and Probate Judge

ut a law respecting the distribu- Banker to enter Rockefeller's appearof land to working peasants, and ance in the latter's court, and this

involving the assignment, to this end, of crown appanages, monasteries and lands belonging to the clergy, and compulsory expropriation or private es

tates. The government held such a law mous at an early hour this morning to be inadmissible, and upon parlia- passed to its third reading the Irish ment once more urgently putting for- laborers' cottages bill. This bill auits resolution regarding compul- thorizes a loan of $22,500,000 to proexpropriation parliament was dis- vide laborers' cottages in Ireland. The solved. cost of a cottage is estimated at $850. "The government promises to con- so that between 25,000 and 30,000 will voke a new parliament seven months be erected.

hence Russia must remain without popular representation for seven whole; months, at a time when the

standing on the brink of ruin and in- partrment has received a dispatch from dustry and commerce are undermined; United States Minister Morgan, at Hathe whole country is seething vana, announcing that there appears to with unrest, and when the ministry be no outrage in the Isle of Pines teledefinitely shown its incapacity to graph incident. do justice to popular needs. For seven months the government will act arbi- COSTS THE ROAD $4,000,000 trarily and will tight against the popular movement in order to obtain a plia- Michigan Central Has to Pay That in ble, subservient parliament. Should it Back Taxes, So the Supreme

ng the popular movement the overnment will convoke no parliament "Citizens, stand up for Citizens, stand up for your trampled rights for popular representation gernment has, without the assent of

the popular representatives, no right 1856 to 1893. to collect taxes from the people, nor Suit was brought before Judge to summon the people to military serv- Wiest in Ingham county circuit court, ive. Therefore, you are now the gov- to coIlect, on the ground that the comThe dissolved parliament pany had made a fraudulent report as was justified in giving neither money to the amount of property it had subsoldiers. ject to taxation. The company filed "Should the government, however, a demurrer. alleging that the state was contract loans in order to procure barred by toe statute of limitations, funds such loans will be invalid with- The court below overruled the demurout the consent of the popular repre rer and the company appealed. The supreme court sustained Judge Wiest.

acknowledge them, and will not be called upon to pay them. Accorduntil a popular representative parliament is summoned do not give a kopec to the throne or a soldier to the

army. Be steadfast in your refusal. No power can resist the united, inflexible will of the people. "Citizens, in this obligatory and nnavoidable struggle your representative's will be with you. IN DANGER OF ARREST Authors of the Address May See a Fortress Cell. news of the day is the adoption of the address to the people by the deputies to parliament who assembled at Viborg, the language of which, with its revolutionary demands that the people cease to furnish money and troops to the government and repudiate further loans, affords cause enough for the govthe Finland station where the deputies were expected to arrive, but only a few appeared and these were not molested, and neither was there a popular demcape an interview. Copies of the address are in the hands of all St. Petersburg newspabut it will scarcely be printed tofor the reason that a detachment of police is posted at the door of evnewspaper printing office in the city with orders not to permit any papers to leave the building until authorized by the censor. The authorities hope by equally vigorous measures to prethe publication of the address in other cities, and in the meantime to nullify the fears of the people as to its possible effect. The Associated Press also is inthat a ukase will soon be isfixing the date of elections for parliament for the first week in DeRussian style, and that as an additional guarantee that the principle of popular representation will not be abandoned another edict will be issued proroguing the council of the empire until the convocation of the new parMinor disorders are reported from half a dozen cities. An incipient antioutbreak at Odessa has been checked by the police. A sympathetic strike has been begun at the Kharkov railroad shops. which may inaugurate a general tie-up of communications, but St. Petersburg, Moscow and most of the other great centers are still calm ou the surface. PREMIER'S DARING PHRASE Campbell-Bannerman Says Something That Depends on How Taken. London, July 24.--All the newspathis morning comment on Premier Campbell Bannerman's address before the Interparliamentary Union, and eshis phase "The Russian paris dead! Long live the Russian parliament!" The most conservative journals consider this latter undiploand indiscreet; others diplomatcorrect the interpretation to suit the emperor of Russia, while the Liborgans characterize it as a blend of high courage and deep caution, nothover which diplomacy can stumble. Henry Norman, in The Daily Chronisays that the phase, considering by whom it was said and when and where, will echo round the world. No Arrest of Rockefeller. will be made to arrest John D. Rockewas accordingly done. More Aid for the Irish. Lnodon, July 24.--The house of comNo Outrage in the Isle of Pines. Washington, July 24.--The state de- Lansing, Mich., July 24.--The state has gained an important point in its last of the great railway cases by a decision of the supreme court in the under an original charter of the corperation, and covering the years from

For The Deceptive Hen's Fate A hen wanted to have some fun at her master's expense, so she procured an ostrich's egg and placed it in her nest. "Oh, my," cried her master when he saw it, ''what a remarkable hen I have! See, she has laid this enormous egg." And he thought it was so wonderful that he immediately put the hen in a cage and took her to the circus, so that everybody could see the hen that laid eggs as big as she did. He made a nice nest for her in a box, and she was given a good position on the side show platform between the fat lady and the tattooed man. SHE GOT AN OSTRICH'S EGG. pleased. But the next day the hen laid an ordinary egg, and day after day it was the same size. At the end of the week the circus man went to the hen's master and said: "Why have you deceived me? This hen only lays ordinary eggs." And the master did not know what to say. He gathered up his cage with the hen in it and went back home. When he got there he picked up an ax and chopped the hen's head off And that reminds me that we should always be careful not to make things appear in a wrong light.--Detroit JourCRONE CARRIED A CLUB Fact Remembered by a Man Who, with a Girl Since Dead, Was MurAssaulted. Kansas City, July 24.--Frank Kern, who with Bertha Bowlin, since dead, was murderously assaulted on the KerCoates terrace drive last Thursday night, has regained consciou s, but is unable to give an intelligible stateof the affair. Kern does not realize that any time has elapsed since he was assaulted. When asked if he had seen Albert Crone, Miss Bowlin's former sweetwho is being held by the police as a suspect, Kern said that he saw Crone "tonight" a few blocks from the scene of the assault, and that Crone was carrying a club. Boat Sinks in a Storm. Detroit, July 24.--News has reached here that the steamer William Case, of Detroit, owned by the Detroit Coke and Gas company, and recently rebuilt at considerable expense, foundered in Lake Erie during a storm, and sank in twent feet of water off Colchester. No lives lost. A Sale. Old Salt--Do you care for a miss? She--Yes, if it's a bargain sale. lustrated Bits. sail. IlMenagerie at Home. Jones declined to visit the zoo his friend, says London Health. "I don't have to go to the zoo," h said, "because my eldest daughter does second daughmy son laughs as cross as a bear, and my mother-in-law says I'm Not Like Him. Hubley--I've had a couple of drinks, yes. Mrs. Hubley--The idea! Why do you tell me that? Hubley--Why, it's the truth. Mrs. Hubley--I know. That's why I can't understand your telling me. Philadelphia Ledger. Subscribe for the Lake County Times.

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