Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 36, Hammond, Lake County, 30 July 1906 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES MONDAY, JULY 30, 1906.
LION
STORE
Visit our Green Tag Sale lastone entire week commencing Saturday, July 28, until Friday, Aug. 3rd. Merchandise marked
low throughout our entire This is one of the oppor
tunities to buy fine seasonable merat greatly reduced prices. Read our Green Sale Bills. Watch for the Green Tags. They signify
cut in prices
MUTINY IN THE ARMY
Serious Outbreak That Required the Use of Machine Guns to Suppress.
very store
deep
LION
STORE
J
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RUSSIA IS IN A VERY BAD WAY
Peasants Attack a Monastery--Reds
Hold Up a Print Shop.
Latter Is Done Right in St. Peters
burg and Under the Noses of the Police--Frequent Train Robberies.
Lake County
itle & Guaranty Company
ABSTRACTORS
F. R. MOTT, President, J. S. BLACKMUN, Secretary, FRANK HAMMOND, Vice-Pres. A. H. TAPPER, Treasurer, S. A. CULVER, Manager. Hammond and Crown Point, Indiana. Secretary's office in Majestic Bldg., Hammond. Abstracts furnished promptly at current rates.
St Petersburg, July 30.--A rumor
has reached the Associated Press that
General Trepoff has been killed. It could not be confirmed, and probably is a revival of the false rumor current last week. Poltava, Russia, July 30.--A grave outbreak has occurred in the Sevski regiment, following the arrest of a priof the First battalion, who was
discovered with some other soldiers
in a shed where the revolutionists are in the habit holding meetings. After the arrest the entire First battalion, acby a large crowd, paraded the streets in defiance of the military
authorities. The soldiers proceeded to
the artillery barracks, where they seized several guns and marched with them to the prison where the political
prisoners are confined. At this stage
all the remainder of the Poltava gar
rison was called out. The loyal troops
fired on the mutineers with machine
guns as they were engaged in breaking
down the gate of the prison. Several
men were killed or wounded, and the
outbreak was suppressed. Peasants Attack a Monastery.
Yekaterinoslav, July 30.--While the
train upon which a correspondent of
the Associated Press was traveling
from Kharkov to Yekaterinoslav was
passing the great monastery erected
by Alexander III to com-
escape of himself and
members of the imperial family from a
railroad wreck in 1888, firing and cries for help were heard. The train was
stopped and a monk came on board. He said the peasantry was attacking the
monastery and that the monks were defending it. He had managed to es
cape to summon help. He was brought on the train to Yekaterinoslav, whence he telegraphed the governor of Khar-
kov, asking that troops be sent to the
monastery. No further details of the
affair have been received. The peas
ants apparently have seized the tele
graph lines. Bold Deed of the Reds.
St Petersburg, July 30.--A party of men armed with revolvers forced their
way into the Boussel printing estab
lishment here. They made the fore
man a prisoner and prevented the com
positors from leaving the building.
They then had printed 150,000 copies
of the Viborg manifesto of the lower
house of parliament. Strangers calling at the establishment while this work was being done were detained to pretheir giving alarm. While this was transpiring within the printing works a religious procession, escorted by policemen both mounted and on foot, drew up to a church immediately opposite, but no one was aware of what was passing inside the establish-
a little town across the Finnish border which is now the Mecca of all opof the government. The mem
ers agreed that a general strike,
though it must be declared later, at
the present moment would be untime
ly. The afternoon was spent in disother measures, and an ex
pression of views as to the attitude to be taken by the workmen on the disof parliament. Many of the
delegates favored a gigantic one-day
strike, but no decision of this point was
reached.
There is much jubilation among the
revolutionists over the escape from
prison at Sebastopol of Samenkoff
who is believed to have been an ac
complice in the attempt last May on the life of General Neplueff. This es
cape sets at liberty one of the most dangerous revolutionary organizers in
Russia.
The censorship on foreign newspa
pers, which for a number of years blocked out all articles distasteful to the government but which was pracabandoned this year, is being
restored. "The classic caviar" (arare blocked out with a mixture of caviar printers' ink and sand) adorns column after column of the leadforeign periodicals now received in
Russia.
near Borky
memorate the
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 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 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.
bilt Cup," 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 of the offering, while the fascinating theme of the automobile and the 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.
An Animal Story for Little Folks The Long-tail Cat
"What a wonderful fellow is the monkey!" said the cat one day. "He is as nimble as a flea, and with that retail of his he can swing about in the trees without ever using his feet. Why can't I have a nice long tail like
his instead of this one, which is of no
use to me?" "You can have one if you wish," said a little hoptoad who sat at the roadside
blinking his big eyes in the summer's sun.
"Pray tell me how!" cried the cat. "Fasten the end of your tail to your
doorknob, and whenever anybody calls
GORKY MAKES AN APPEAL
Wants to Know if There Are Living
Men in This Country. New York, July 30.--Maxim Gorky
has made public an appeal directed to
the people of the United States to
"help the people of Russia to free its
body from the parasites which suck its
life's blood." He takes for his text "the czar has dispersed the duma." Some characteristic phrases are these:
"The Russian government will now
inaugurate a policy of brutal and bes
tial reprisals. The hangmen and
thieves surrounding the throne and
supporting it with bloodstained hands have of late heard many bitter and intruths from the lips of courage
ous and honest men. They will avenge themselves for it and their vengeance
will be severe.
"The black, blood-soaked wings of death will flutter over the country for months. The exhausted earth will swallow thousands of corpses of men
whose only crime was the desire to live a human life. Are we civil
ized people or are we not?
If such crying horrors occur as those
which we now witness in Russia true
men and women cannot remain quiet
at their sight." He closes with an ap
peal for help for Russia and asks: "Are
there in this country living men, and
will they hear me?"
TRIBUTE TO JACKSON
TRAIN ROBBERS ARE BUSY
LETTER LIST.
Paid by a Negro Community to the
"Stonewall" of the Confederacy Memorial Window.
Roanoke, Va., July 30.--A handsome
memorial window to General Thomas
("Stonewall") Jackson has been un
veiled in the Fifth Avenue Presbyteri
an church (negro. The window was
obtained by the pastor, Rev. L. L.
Downing, the money for its purchase
coming wholly from negroes. The exwere largely attended by both
races, the Confederate camps of Roanoke and Salem, and the chapters
of the Daughters of the Confederacy
of the same place being well repre
sented. The chief addresses were by
leading white citizens of Roanoke.
Downing's father and mother were members of a Sunday school class of
negro slaves taught by Jackson at Lex
ington before the war, and these ex
ercises marked the realization of an ambition Downing has had since boy
hood to pay fitting tribute to the Con
federate commander.
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 Vander-
The following letters remain uncalled for at the Hammond postoffice for the week ending July 23, 1906: Miss Hattie Barnes (2). Mrs. J. A. Brown. Mr. Jos. Bonner. C. H. Hammond. Mr. Geo. E. Leville. Mr. Matt H. Martin. Mr. J. Maxwell. Ed. Nicksch. Fred Pecceny. Miss Grace Stapekemper. Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Smith. Miss Georgia Savage (2). Stetson Lumber Co. Miss Mary Anna Wolf. W. H. GOSTLIN, Postmaster.
One Band Attacks a Guarded TrainFight Follows. Warsaw, July 30.--Two daring train robberies were committed in RusPoland, one of them resulting in a considerable loss of life. A train from
the frontier station Herby, bound for
Czenstochowa, was carrying money re
ceived from the customs house to the
branch of the Imperial bank, under protection of seven frontier guardsmen. General Zukat, chief of the frontier guard; General Weitenring, chief of
the customs service of Warsaw; Colonel Brzezicki, and Captain Laguma were passengers. Fifteen persons boarded the train at a way station. They evidently had been waiting for it, and made an aton the guardsmen, who were reby the officers named. A regfight followed in which the two generals, two officials, five soldiers and one robber were killed and Colonel Brzezicki and one robber wounded. The robbers escaped, taking $8,000 and the arms of those who had attempted to defend the train against robbery. The second robbery was committed on the Warsaw-Vienna railway, six miles from Warsaw. While the train was under way unknown persons pulled the danger signal, causing it to stop. Robbers who were aboard jumped out and seized the locomotive and dethe mail car from the train and ran it down the line. They secured $37,of government money. The train was without a guard, and hence there was no fighting and no casualties. The robber who lies wounded at Czenstochowa is in a serious condiHe refuses to give any informa
tion whatsoever concerning his ac
complices. WORKMEN'S DEPUTIES MEET
Umpire Demands Investigation.
Milwaukee, July 30.--Umpire Owen
of the American Association, demands an immediate investigation of the charges of collusion with gamblers in
Minneapolis in connection with the Minneapolis-Columbus series played at
Minneapolis last week.
Hammond Horse Market 15to 40 Head of Horses always on hand. Hay, Feed and Wood for Sale. Exchange Stable. ED MARSH, Proprietor, MANHATTAN HOTEL, 396 Calumet Ave.
HIS TAIL WAS AS LONG AS TWO TAILS.
at your house and opens the door your
tail will be stretched a little. After
awhile it will have been stretched so
much that it will be as long as the
monkey's," said the little hoptoad.
So the cat fastened the end of his
tail to the doorknob, and pretty soon a visitor called at his house and gave the
door a fearful pull.
Ouch! How it did hurt poor Mr. Cat! And then somebody else called, and
then somebody else, and then some
body else, and each time there was a
yank at the cat's tail and a yell from the cat. After awhile, sure enough, the
cat's tail was as long as the monkey's, but such a miserable, painful tail it
was! There was only one thing to do,
and that was to have the tail cut off entirely.
"I haven't any tail at all now!" cried
the cat.
"I haven't had any since I was a tadsaid the hoptoad.--Atlanta Con-
SAVE TWO CENTS A DAY YOU CAN OWN A FARM We mean what we say. "The Marvin Plan" enables any one who will put away a small sum each day to own a farm that he can live on, or lease out, and in either case have a good income for life. Land is situated in the most productive belt in the United States. An absolutely safe, sure and profitable investment far superior to a savings bank. Let us explain the plan to you. It is money in your pocket to know our method of doing business. TRENHOLM, MARVIN & CO. D, 605 Baltimore Building, Chicago, Ill.
INVESTORS
TAKE N
OTICE
BISHOP ASSAILS GORKY
Calls Him Villain, Scoundrel and Pol
lutor of Womanhood--Socialism Denounced.
Buffalo, N. Y., July 30.--The fifth annual convention of the American Federation of Catholic Societies opened here with a mass meeting at Convenhall. President Minahan, of the National Federation, was not present but Archbishop Messmer, of Milwauand Bishop McFaul, of Trenton, N. J., the joint founders of the moveresponded to the addresses of welcome.
Bishop McFaul spoke against the
evils of socialism and divorce. "The
stability of this nation rests upon the
American home," he said. "Socialism
would stretch out her foul hands upon the property of our people. Look at Maxim Gorky, the Russian socialist, coming to America to ask us to turn upon Russia. See him living with a
woman who cannot be recognized as
his wife. That villain and scoundrel
and polluter of womanhood would preach to us the gospel of human lib
erty."
About $4,000,000 Worth
of Land Sold Already
Lots and Acres Immediate Adjoining the Pur
chase of United States Steel Corporation on Lake Michigan, Adjoining Tolleston, Lake County, Ind. MODEL CITY TO BE BUILT
OVER $75,000,000 TO BE SPENT
Largest Steel Plant in the World
Palace of Sweets CANDIES AND ICE CREAM
Times' Want Ads. Bring Results
General Strike to Come, Not Now, but
Later, They Say. St. Petersburg. July 30.--A plenary
meeting of the St. Petersburg council
of workmen's deputies, representing 130,000 workmen, was held at Terioki,
Carried a Union Printer's Card. St. Paul. July 30.--R. W. Penaff, who carried a printers' union traveling card from Rochester, N. Y., was killed in the Milwaukee railway yards in this city.
Bryan's European Itinerary. London, July 30.--Mr. and Mrs. Bryaccompanied by Colonel Wetmore, M. F. Dunlap, Mrs. Dunlap and Miss Dunlap (of Chicago), have left London for Holland. They will visit Amsterand The Hague, go to Cologne, where Mr. and Mrs. Bryan will join their daughter, and then go up the Rhine, through Switzerland and to Venice, Florence, Rome and Naples, successively, reaching Paris between Aug. 10 and 15. They will then go to Madrid, Granada and Gibraltar, whence they will sail for home Aug. 20.
CAN DEPORT IMPORTED LABOR Enormous increase in values in property now
offered is in sight in short time
Preparing; for Michigan Men. Indianapolis, July 30.--The quarand commissary departments for the Michigan militia have been esat Camp Benjamin Harrison preparatory to the arrival of the Michnext Saturday. Major H. W. Leach, commissary of that state, has arrived. Brigadier General C. W. Harof Michigan, is expected Wednesday and the governor of Michigan it is understood will come Aug. 9.
Madman Bites Three Men. Pittsburg, July 30.--Snapping and snarling like a dog and rolling and writhing on the ground, while sufferfrom an acute attack of hydrophoWilliam Garrison, bit three men before being gotten under control. The
men bitten are Policeman C. J. Grimes, Wagonman Robert Holmes and Walter Owens, a citizen.
Canada Sustained in Her Right t Prevent Foreigners from Workin That Country.
Detroit, July 30.--General Counsel
Frederick W. Stevens, of the Pare Mar
quette railway, has received word from
the Canadian attorneys of the road that the privy council of England has sustained the ruling of the Canadian
high court which ordered the tdeporta
tion some time ago under the Canadian
alien labor act of several officials of the road from the United States, who
were employed at the division head quarters in St Thomas, Ont.
The decision will not affect the Pere Marquette any, as the road has moved
its division headquarters from St
Thomas to Detroit since the appeal
was taken, but is important as definiteestablishing the right of Canada to
prevent United States citizens from
working in the Dominion.
PERRY ULRICH, 108 Dearborn Street
J
acobson's Agency Real Estate and General Insurance 77 SOUTH HOHMAN ST.
ITALY WANTS TO KNOW
She Is After the Facts Attending a
Recent Mob Murder of Italians in North Carolina.
Washington, July 30.--At the re
quest of the Italian embassy the state
department has addressed a letter to
the governor of North Carolina sug
gesting that an agent of the Italian government, to be designated by the embassy, be accorded the privilege of attending the hearings in court conthe alleged killing and woundof a number of Italian laborers, emin laying a new railroad in that state by a mob recently. The governor is also requested to afother facilities to the agent for the ascertainment of the facts in the case, which are said to be far from clear at present
Times' Want Ads. Bring Results
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 property 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.
Phones: Office, 1394 Residence, 3632.
77 SOUTH HOHMAN ST.
Jacobson Agency
