Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 32, Hammond, Lake County, 25 July 1906 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES Wednesday, July 25, 1906.
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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 A LIFE TIME
This is a very interesting study of one of nature's most wonderous processes, 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 habit and work of these wonderful little manufacturers and in the beautiful, compli cated and 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 wee or ten days, but come at once and see the very commencement of the short, active and useful life of these little toilers.
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Tel. 2032.
H. Kolling & Co.
Building Contractors Buy a lot and build your own home. Suit yourself. We loan the money to build and build your house for you.
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 Extravaganza. Although 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 bo smart a show at a price less than half the standard rate. Mabel Harrison 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 ayers as Otis Harlan, Henry V. so nnelly, Jacques Kruger, F. Newton io, Edith Decker, Blanche Chapman and Charles Dow Clark. A glance at the names themselves is sufficient endorsement for the quality of the offering, while the fascinating theme of the automobile and the
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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 fthey have vied with fine weather in bringing the amusepark 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 a master, and the celebrated French tenor, A. L. Guille, sings every evening. John F. Carroll, director of the tree open air hippodrome at the north end of the plaza, presented a complete change of bill for the cur rent week 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 ENNYROYAL PILLS CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH in Red and old metallic box sealed with blue ribbon. Take no other. Refuse dangerous subs HICHESTER'S ENGLISH in Red and tutions and imitations. Buy of your Druggist, or send 4c. in stamps for Particulars, monials and "Relief for Ladies," by return Mail. 10,000 Testimonials. Sold by CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO. 2100 Madison Square, PHILA., PA. Subscribe for the Lake County Time
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WAR TO THE KNIFE
AND TO THE HILT That is the Answer of the Czar to the Address of the Parliament. STOLYPIN SENDS OUT ORDERS They Are to Crush with Iron Hand the Enemies of Society. REVOLUTION IS NOT YET A FACT Expected to Break Out in the South and Roll Northward--Czar, Trepoff and Others Conto Death. St. Petersburg, July 25.--The official telegraph agency announces this morn"The third day after the dissoluof parliament passed quietly. Neither here nor at Moscow or other provincial towns have disorders or strikes occurred in any way connected with the dissolution." St. Petersburg, July 25.--War to the knife with revolution, and the knife to the hilt, has been proclaimed by PreStolypin in a telegram addressed to the governor generals, governors and prefects throughout Russia, and to the viceroy of the Caucasus, who are ordered to strike and spare not in efto preserve order and crush "the enemies of society." Before the decof the dissolution of the lowhouse of parliament the war ofhad perfected its plans for hanexpected disorders, both military and civilian. Outbreak Was Not a Surprise. General Muller Zakomelsky, who suppressed the Sebastopol revolt and co-operated with General Rennenin the reduction of the Siberian rebellion last winter, was recalled from the command of a corps and placed at the disposition of the war office to be used wherever trouble may first be manifested. Both the government and the revolutionists expect an outbreak in the south, and that it will roll northto the two capitals. This may induce the proletariat organizations to postpone the declaration of a general strike from St. Petersburg until conis borne up from the south. Ordered To Be Vigilant. Stolypin's telegram is as follows: "In conformity with instructions refrom the emperor with the view to securing full co-operation between the different local authorities, I hereinform you that the government expects you to exercise vigilant and untiring supervision over your subso that order may be promptand definitely restored. Disturbmust be suppressed and revolumovements must be put down by all legal means. The measures you take must be carefully considered. Against the Enemies of Society. The struggle begun is against the enemies of society, and not against so ciety itself. Consequently wholesale repression cannot be approved of. Imand illegal acts are likely to give rise to discontent instead of conto calm, and cannot be tolerated. The intentions of the emperor are immutable. .The government firmdesires to assist in the amendment of the legal procedure and the laws hitherto enforced which no longer serve their purpose. The old regime will be regenerated, but order must be fully maintained. You must act on your own initiative, as you are invest ed with responsibility. Firm and vi orous steps taken on these lines will doubtless be upheld by the best part of society. NO AID FOR THE MINISTRY Constitutional Democratic Clubs Are Closed--Secret Meetings Held. The ministry is obtaining slight aid from the forces of society at large in putting through its policy. MM. Shipoff and Guchkoff and practically al the others who have been approached have refused flatly to participate in the enlarged cabinet proposed. Of the members of the late parliament only Prince Nikolai Lvoff, of Saratov, who, though a Constitutional Democrat, is a personal friend of Premier Stolypin, is understood to have given the plan fa vorable consideration, and it is said that he probably will accept a ministry without portfolio. The Constitutional Democratic club and two other political clubs have been closed by order of the police authoriA caucus of Constitutional Demowas being held at the club named at the time. Prince Paul Dolgourokoff, chairman of the central executive comappointed at Viborg on Monhas called a meeting of that committee, which will arrange a secret caucus to discuss further tactics. Moscow Constitutional Democrats recomthe summoning of a national convention of the party, but this will scarcely be allowed by the authorities. Meetings are being held at night in a dozen houses in St. Petersburg, and just across the frontier railway empeasants, socialists and revoluof different shades of opinion are discussing the best plan of action to throw the whole machinery of the government out of gear. Agrarian disorders have broken out in the vicinity of St Petersburg. Th
estate ot General Baron Fredericks, aide-de-camp to the emperor, forty miles from the capital, has been plunby peasants. General Frederick asked for troops from Gatchina, but was informed that the situation was too serious to permit of the changing of the present military dispositions. The reds have, so it is reported, conto death the czar, General Trepoff, M. Pobiedonostseff, and GenThey are said to have nailed copies of these '"sentences" on the doors of Generals Trepoff's and Orloff's apartments in the Peterhoff. In RusPoland the Singer Sewing machine stores have been dynamited because the company (a United States concern) refused to subscribe to the fund for revolution. In the explosions eight persons were wounded.
NO RIOT AT ODESSA Drunken Cossacks Are Rounded UpArrests at St. Petersburg. Odessa, May 25.--There has been no actual riot here, but drunken Cossacks endeavored to instigate an anti-Jewish massacre in the industrial suburb of Maldovanka and were scattered by inwho instantly cordoned the Jewish quarter and threatened to anthe Cossacks. The latter were withdrawn to their barracks by their commandant's order. Paris, July 25.--The St. Petersburg correspondent of The Journal telethat despite the prevailing calm in that city there were 200 arrests last night, and that four newspapers were seized. In an interview with the London correspondent of The Matin Prince Hilkoff, ex-Russian minister of railcondemned the attitude of the Russian members of parliament at Viand affirmed that Emperor Nicholas was acting in good faith. Immediate Strike Opposed. Moscow, July 25.--The immediate declaration of a general strike is meetwith opposition in the workmen's council here. A bomb factory in which was a quantity of loaded bombs was discovered here. The owner of the house and the bomb makers were ar rested. Net Only Held Fourteen. Moscow, July 25.--The police at tempted to capture all the delegates to the workmen's council and succeeded in capturing fourteen. TWO BAD TRAIN WRECKS Five Die in One, Four in the Other--One Goes Into a Lake, the OthDown a Precipice. Spokane, Wash., July 25.--At least six lives were lost, seven persons were seriously injured and a score of others sustained cuts and bruises in the wrecking of the trans-continental fast mail train on the Great Northern a mile and a quarter east of Camden, Wash., thirty miles east of Spokane. The train went down a seventy-foot embankment into deep water in Dia mond lake, the cause being spreading rails. The dead are N. Edward Munson, engineer, and Frank Bell, fireman Hillyard, Wash.; Charles Danner, mail clerk, Spokane; George R. Strickland, express messenger; George Howard Curtice, Spokane, lumberman. St. Paul, July 25.--A train on the Great Northern railway at Nelson, B. C., went into a chasm 200 feet deep and the following were killed: Judge Townsend, Rossland; D. M. McKinnon, purser of the Great Northern steamer Kaslo; W. J. Smith, saloonkeeper of the Kaslo; unidentified miner, Spokane, Wash. Secretary Shaw Coming West. Washington, July 25.--Secretary Shaw will leave Washington today for Chicago. Later in the week he will go to Iowa, where he will deliver an aadress at a Chautauqua near Des Moines. He also will deliver several addresses throughout the state and will attend the state convention at Des Moines on Aug. 1. Shaw will return to Washington about Aug. 15. Secretary Root at Bahia. Washington, July 25.--A cabelgram to the state department from Bahia, Brazil, announces the arrival there Monday night of the Charleston, with Secretary Root's party aboard. The ship only stopped in to take mails and cable messages and was to leave at once for Rio, where it should arrive this evening or tomorrow morning. Marriage of Major McCawIey. Washington, July 25.--Major Chas L. McCawley, of the United States ma rine corps, and Mrs. John Davis, of this city, daughter of the late Secre tary of State Frelinghuysen, were mar ned at Providence hospital, where Major McCawIey is convalescing from an attack of typhoid fever. The Terrible Infant, "Kiss me, Toto." "I won't. I'm afraid. Mamma said yesterday you had the tongue of a snake."--Soleil du Dimanche.
For RARE JUSTICE Bunny Rabbit went one day last week to rob Mr. Coon's corncrib, and Mr. Coon caught him in the very act. "I'll march you off to jail, sir, and that's what I'll do with you!" "Oh, don't march me off to jail! Anybut that! I know I ought to be killed. Throw me in the river, drown me, but don't march me off to jail!" pleaded Bunny Rabbit. "All right," said old man Coon. "But f I throw you in the river you'll swim out. I know you. That's what you'll do." "I was just coming to that," sai Bunny Rabbit. "I was just going t ask you to tie my hands behind my back, so I couldn't swim a stroke. I afraid when I get in that cold water might try to swim, and so I want y to tie me." Old man Coon thought he never h seen such a repentant rabbit in all days. There was something suspicio about it, but he tied Master Bunn Rabbit's paws hard and fast. The Bunny Rabbit stood on the bank RAN AS FAST AS HE COULD. the river and wept, and the tears hop ped down his furry little cheeks, and his paws were tied so he couldn't wipe them away. Oh, he was a piteous spectacle! "Go up to the top of that high hill," said he, "and run down just as fast as you can and give me a good shove away out into the middle of the water, so I will drown quick." Mr. Coon went up and ran, but BunRabbit's hind feet were not tied, and when Mr. Coon got to him Bunny stepped to one side. Splash went old man Coon into the water. "Oh, save me! Save me, Brother Bunny Rabbit!" he cried, for Mr. Coon, who could not swim, was helpless .with fear.--Atlanta Constitution. DIDN'T GET ON THE SPOT Policeman "Goes on" as a Widow and Hits a Thug in the Jaw--Ensues. St. Louis, July 25.--By impersonatMrs. Theresa Bornero, a wealthy spotted a man giving his name as captured a man giving his name as Johann Hoppe, who is held on a charge of sending a threatening letter to Mrs. Bornero. The letter was received and demanded $500 in cash. It threatened that if Mrs. Bornero communicated with the police or failed to provide the money her home would be dynamited. An appointment was made for 8:30 p. m., and Carpenter, dressed in one of Mrs. Bornero's gowns, followed the directions contained in the letter. lie was accosted by a man who demanded the money. Carpenter handed him a package with his left hand, at the same time striking him on the jaw with his right. The man showed fight, and Carpenter, hampered by the dress, was worsted and the man fled. Other powho had been stationed in the neighborhood, captured him, however. Raising the Tax on Railways. Helena, Mont., July 25.--The state board of equalization, which, under the laws of Montana fixes tax assessments on the railroads, of the state, has deon an increase of about 12 1/2 per cent. over last year's appraisement of the main lines. Last year the main lines were appraised at $14,432 per mile. The board has increased this to $16,236 per mile. Paper Makers Threaten Strike. Buffalo, July 25.--Paper makers in the thirty-three mills of the InternaPaper company in United States and Canada have given notice that they will go on strike on Aug. 6 untheir working hours are reduced to eight hours a day, without reduction in the scale of wages. Illinois Milk Is Doctored. East St. Louis, Ill., July 25.--Dr. A. A. McBrien, health inspector of East St. Louis, seized a consignment of thirgallons of milk at the relay depot and discovered that it contained forto prevent it from spoiling. The milk was shipped from Formosa, Ill. They Want To Be Shown. Washington, July 25.--The departof justice will be asked by the navy department whether a warship under construction is public works government within the meaning of the eight-hour law. Subscribe for the Lake County Times.
n Animal Story Little Folks
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If you want to buy or sell real estate, or need fire, life or accident insurance, it will pay you to call on us. Our companys are of the best. We list bea few bargains. If you do not find anything here that suits you ask to see our list 10-room brick house on East State street, lot 50x118 Price, $3 000. Will exchange for a farm 25-foot lots near Pennsylvania depot at $55 each. $5 down and $1 per week. 4-room house on Cedar street, 50-foot lot, $900. 52-foot corner lot on Hoffman street, $800. 5-room cottage on Oak street, 50-foot lot, fine lawn, shade trees, a fine piece of prorerty at $1450. 37 1/2 foot lot on Hickory street at $250. 25-foot lot on Pine street, $200. 25-foot lot on Ash street $150. 4 lots on Griffin street, a snap at $125 each. Easy terms. We can sell you a lot on any street on the north side at very low prices and very easy terms.
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Hammond Horse Market 15 to 40 Head of Horses always on hand Hay, feed and Wood for Sale. Exchange Stable. ED MARSH, Proprietor, MANHATTAN HOTEL, 396 Calumet Ave.
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