Hammond Times, Volume 1, Number 40, Hammond, Lake County, 3 August 1906 — Page 5
FRIDAY. AUGUST 3. 1906.
THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES PAGE FIYE
if
JOS. W. WEIS, R. Ph.
HE
UGGI
Mr
1
98 State Street. Phone No. 1.
WORK OFTHE REOS SO FAR AFA1LUR
third was to seize the fortress ant! the i COLLISION WAS SO SCEATCH train. The train crew" li.nl agiied In j advance to be read;-- Revolutionaries (Illinois and Alabama Did Each Other
Czar Seems to Have an Abundance of Troops That Are Loyal.
ELOWS ARE STRUCK RAPIDLY
YOU
" -V. W you try to g along t L -V: tli8 winter without the
Will Miss It!
m
t w-"S.a-i r.rmvr kind
ci ccai.
Always bear in mind that the best is the cheapest in the end. We sell the best coa that money can buy,
but we charge no more for it than you will have to pay for an Inferior article BccKman, Illatt QX Co. COAL. - FEED. - BUILDIND MATERIAL TELEPHONE 40. - 34C INDIANA AVE.
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First Sveaborg, Then Cronstadt New Reval.
:nd
TWO FIRST REVOLTS FDT DOWN
Mutineers liaise the Red Flag on the
Cruisers 1'amjat Azova and Asia Government Forest Set Aflame.
CITIZENS GERMAN NATIONAL BANK HAMMOND IND. Capita! $100,000. Yonr Bank account is not too large. "Neither is it too small for the CITIZENS GERMAN NATIONAL BANK to handle. We solicit the same on the most liberal terms consistent with good Banking. 3 per cent interest paid on time certificates of deposits. Same issued from $1.00 up. Drafts to all parts of the World sold. O O SMITH Pres W D WEIS XI D Vice Prea GEO M EDEIl Cashier E 3 EMEIUNE Asa't Oaihier DIRECTORS
CHAS- SMITH C II FRIKDRICII J C BECKER
VM D WEIS . . HERMAN SCHREIBER II M PLASTER
G. W. HUNTEi
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M
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Ft. Petersburg, Aug. 3. Military
disorders have broken out at Keval. De
tails cannot be obtained. Reval is sit
uated on an arm of the (Julf of Fin
land, -uo miles southwest of St. Peters-
burp.
The crew of the Russian cruiser
Asia, which was sent to Abo, has hoist
ed the red flag. The vessel has left in the direction of Sveaborsr.
Immense forests in the Kostroma
district belonging to the government are burning. This probably is the work
of incendiaries.
Ilelsingors, Aug. .!. Tli entire
Sveaborg fortress is now in the hands
of the government. The prisoners are
being hurried to Skatudden island.
Iteval, Aug. 3. The cruiser Pamyat
Azova has arrived in the roadstead
here in the possession or the loyal por
tion of her crew. One hundred and rifty of the mutineers have been sent ashore
and Imprisoned. The loyal men gained the upper hand of the imitineers. at sea. When the ship came in here they asked
for a detachment of troops to aid them in nanding over the mutineers! to the
authorities. Three officers whom the
mutineers had placed in irons are
aboard the vessel. The remainder of
tne crew has been disarmed. An agitator has been arrested.
Military Dictatorship Humored. St. Petersburg. Aug. 3. On the heels
of the other bad news comes the startling statement that the emperor has
flaly refused to accept the conditions
to which Premier Stolypin agreed in his negotiations with Count Hevden,
Alexander (luchoff. Prince Nicholas
Tjvoff, Paul Vinogradoff and Senator
Konl for the reorganization of the cab
inet. There is an increasing apprehen
sion that the empn-or proposes to take
the final step of turning the country over to the military dictatorship of Orand tuke Nicholas. Reds liaise Cain at Helsingfors. London. Aug. 3. A dispatch to Reuters Telegram company from Ilelsingfors says that serious conflicts between the communal police and socialist "Red Guards" occurred there. The regular police as well as the communal guards were called out during the afternoon. Among, the casualties were the chief of police, who was wounded, and his assistant, who was killed.
cut the telegraph ai.d tesepiame wires. '
The horrible task of the first group ; ! was accomplished Imrrjedlr. and it: I then joined the second group, which! i was already on the bridge leading to j j Fort Constantine. This is the only fort j directly connected with the main landf 'the oihers being detached island-. The: j sentinels on Fort t'onstuitine oft'ertd l no resistance. The artSierymen rei mained neutral and submitted to im-j prisonmnt in the casemates. It was ' at this time that the sappers and piou- . eers. who comprised the two groups, ; found themselves checkmated. The : batteries of the fort are arranged in ; ; two tiers. The guns on the lower tier j can be swung in an arc of 4." degens, j and command only the sea. while those : : of the upper tier are on pivots, and ; : can be directed in any direction. ! ; The magazine, however, while con-i , taining a full supply of shells for the-: lower tier guns, had in it only two i ; shells for the guns of the upper tier. ; I When, therefore, the storming party ' later brought up field and machine I guns the mutineers were without the
i possibility of using artillery, and were , ,.
compelled to surrender. Their tiag. in- Subscribe for the Lake County Times. s-L-ibed with the words "Land and, . - . i
Considerable Damae-Seama Minus Lie; and Arm. Newport. II. 1., Aug. The board of impia-y npiointed to investigate the collision of the battleships Illinois and Alabama last Monday night off lircnton's reef lightship, has discovered that the ships are wor daiuatred than supposed at first, tin the Illinois four of the six-inrh guns on the starboard side forward were damaged, and a portion of the forward run deck was sprung. The starboard shaft was bent and the starlmard propeller cracked. The Alabama sustained severe damage to two of her six-inch guns, one of tnem beins bent badly. A compartment around a casemate on tl; port side forward is leaking. Roth ships have to go to a navy yard for repairs. Ordinary Seaman iVrbett. who was injured by a fall of a davit holding one of the boats on the Illinois, was more seriously hurt than Avas at first reported, One of his legs was amputated on the day following the collision, and it was found necessary to amputate an arm also.
Want Taggart to Resign. From Democrat papers, great and small, outside the state and in. comes the unanimous demand that National Democratic Chairman Taggart resign, after having had his place at French Lick raided like any other gambling joint. Commenting on th:s subject, the New York World says: "Mr. Taggart theuUl nevr have been made chairman of he national committee, lie owed his election to a superstition that he was the boss of Indiana, a Napoleonic organizer and a politician of indescribable popularity. "It was expected that his selection would result in the Democrats carry, ing the state. As it turned out, Mr. Roosevelt's pluralicty was i''4.000, or about tour times McKin'.ey's plurality in r.Hi-t; five times McKirdey's plurality in 1S;H; thirteen times Cleveland's plurality in 1 Sl2. and forty times Harrison's plurality in 15SS. "Hut even ii" Mr. Taggart were a resourceful organizer of political victory, the proceedings begun against his hotel company by the Indiana au thorities make his position as chairman of the national committee un tenable."
A Sailor ort Sea Pietw. "I'll tnk, snUnr np ..g with n;o th aext time I buy a marine pa'tuting." said a millionaire. "1 bought two marines last mouth, and yesterday my old friend Captain Salthorse had a look at them. "SaPdiorse said: "'In this first picture we've got a trading Sv hot-ner in charge of a tn towing away from a rock bound coast , through a fearful jnn.l '.e of sea. Tho schooner's tnainiop u...st is gone, and fill sails are lowered except her stayfail, which is kept haisto 1, though she ! is towing head on to the gale. Why ; that hoisted staysail? All hands, I j suppose, are drunk. j " 'In the second picture. continued ! Captain Salthorse, 'the principal boat, ; a a eighteen footer. Is racing, yet has j no fiag hying. That's as Incorrect as it would be for you to go to a dinner i party minus a shirt. The crew of this j boat are getting in the spinnaker, and. j if they lower away, both spinnaker and i boom wi.l bo in the water, for they i have neglected to let the boom go for- ! ward. lUit I know what the trouble U with the:". They, too, are drunk. "St. ! Louis Globe-Democrat.
Times' Want Ads. Brinsr Results
Liberty," which they hoisted on enterii g the fort, was hauled down. To the sailors, who all were practically unarmed, their carbines having been taken from the racks in their barracks by order of the commandant the day before, fell the task of capturing the arsenal. This proved easy, but to their amazement the men found it practically empty. With the exception of a few old style guns there were neither artillery nor ammunition to be found. This paralyzed them, as without arms they could not hope to stand against the loyal troops. So by 4 a. m. it was all over. Meantime the civilian reds w ho had planned the trouble had got away in a steamer. The casualties among the loyal men included four naval captains killed.
Honor for Herzenstein. Moscow, Aug. 3. Premier Stolypin
has given permission for the holding of a public funeral for M. Ilerzenstein, the Constitutional Democrat leader of the dissolved parliament who was assassinated here last Tuesday.
A Qoiden Opportunity
ENGINEER WAS TO BLAME
OUTLOOK STILL IS BLACK
Cause of the Terrible Plymouth Special Disaster Was His Disregard of Orders. , London, Aug. 3. Presiding at tho half yearly meeting of shareholders of the London and Southwestern railway Sir Charles Cotter said that the cause of the disaster at Salisbury July 1 to the Plymouth express, resulting in the loss of over a score of lives, was, unlike many others, not shrouded in mystery. The schedules were so arranged as to allow trains to run through Salisbury well under thirty miles an hour, of which every engineer was aware. For some reason not ascertainable the engineer of the wrecked express ran Ids train over sixty miles an hour, at which speed a disaster was inevitable. Fp to the time of the Salisbury disaster the company had not lost a passenger since Jan. 1, 1SSD.
ONE GIRL RESCUE3 ANOTHER
O fr. fi f? tf!rrrFfmfrm
O first class livery in connection. Night calli promptly attended. 6
o
UADY ASSISTANT Priyate ambulance Office open night and day
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NICHOLAS EMMERLING 5uccetor t KroJt & Emmerling UNDERTAKER AND FUNERAL DIRECTOR PRACTICAL EM BALM ER. 211 Sibley Street, Hammond, Jnd.
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Iteds Not Discouraged by Failure-
Panic at Feterhof.
St. Petersburg, Aug. l:lo a. m.
Although the mutinies at Sveaborg
have been ended and the one at Cronstadt has been practically put down the outlook is still black. The revolutionists, whose hands were suddenly forced by the premature rising at Sveaborg. apparently are undaunted at these initial reverses, and intend to persist in their programme of calling a general strike on Saturday or Monday. One of the leaders of the revolutionists with whom the Associated Press spoke boasted that the word had gone forth, and that the fire of revolt would spread to the corners of the empire. His closing words to the correspondent were: "Now watch Reval, Ripa and Libau.'' When the firing began at Cronstadt
Wednesday night there ensued a wild panic in the imperial palace at Peterhof. as the palace lies under the guns of the fortress. All preparations had been made In advance to flee to Tsarskoe Selo. but the report afloat yesterday afternoon that the emperor and his family actually had fled in the middle of the night was denied later at the chancellery of the imperial household. It w as explained, however, that en account of "dampuess" at Feterhof arrangements had been made for the return of the imperial family to Tsarskoe Selo.
Just Completing a Mile Swim She Comes Up in Time to Save aIiife. Chippewa Falls. Wis., Aug. 3. Miss Pertie Schneider, of Milwaukee, rescued Miss Claire L. Corwin from drowning
in the Chippewa river here. Miss Corwin, who could not swim, floated by means of inflated wings to a point in the river beyond her depth, when suddenly the air in the wings began to exhaust and she sank beneath the surface. Miss Schneider, who is an expert swimmer, was coming from a ndle swim, and reached the drowning woman as she was going under a second time and towed her to shore. A crowd of helpless girls was on shore witnessing the thrilling rescue. Miss Corwin weighs seventy-five pounds more than Miss Schneider.
NEWS FACTS IN OUTLINE
WORK OF THE "RED'TOMMITTEE
Plot Fails Because the Authorities Were on the Watch. The plan of the uprising at Cron
stadt was conceived by the revolution-!
cry military committee. While it was ' executed to the letter it failed because ! the information of the situation at Fort ; Constantineandthe arsenal was faulty.!
....... .... ; ....... - e... c, " States ambassador at St
wv... t .--iv-i"Uj arul her tighter, have
pioneers ten tneir oarracKs ana Divided into three groups. The mission of the first and smallest group was to kill the officers: the second w as to take
''UNli5vu Vi luc ""-'ja precipice and was killed.
Dr. Charles M. Shoman. of North Baltimore, 0.,was drowned in the Maumee river at Findlay, O. The colonial marriages: bill has passed its third reading in the house of commons. Nineteen persons were seriouslv
wounded in a collision between electric street cars which occurred at Viucennes, France. President David Starr Jordan, of Stanford university, has resigned his power to appoint and dismiss professors. ; The Lewis and Clarke Centennial exposition Corporation has declared a dividend of 2;Vi per cent, of the par value of the stock. Hon. James N. McKenzle, state railroad commissioner, dropped dead at Lebanon, Tenu.. his home. Navarro Reverter, the Spanish minister of finance, has announced that there will shortly be established a line of steamships running direct from Vigo to New York. General Brugere, the ex-commander-in-chief of the French army, is laid up as the result of an operation for appendicitis. Mrs. Meyer, wife of the Fnited
Petersburg, arrived at
Pan's. Walter Friedlander, while descending the Brauningzinken (mountain iu Austria!, lost his footing and fell over
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