Plymouth Republican, Volume 45, Number 41, Plymouth, Marshall County, 29 August 1901 — Page 8

THIS fgy AND'

BARGAIN TABLES: No. 1 Women's Shoos 98C No. 2 Women's and Misses' Shoes 69C No. 3 Men's Shoes..... ..$1.39 No. 4 Men's and Boys' Shoes 98c Come while they last. fl. Ä- ShamtaMh, Ba,

AEGOS NEWS Hand concert tomorrow night. TIazcl Rannells is seriously ill with bright 's disease. The Sclioonovcr store is receiving a new coat of paint. Wm. Sarber went to Chicago on business this week. Wm. Cannon returned to South Bend this morning. Med Biewer has disposed of his milk wag;on to Lewis ITess. Mrs. Joseph Bryan, who has been seriously ill, is improving. James Cannani and wife attended the reunion at Plymouth today. ElmeT Connor is visiting friends at Indianapolis for a few days. Emery Gray is now proprietor of the South end butcher shop. II. Iseral made a business trip to Chicago the first of the week. The Hoop factory is being torn down and will be moved to, Kokomo. A new cement walk is being put down in front of L. J. Hughe 's barber shop Lincoln Seeore, of Kendallville, is visiting with his brother, Charles, of this city. Emerv Finne v left for Ft. Wavne, where he will le empbyed at 'the Randall hotel. . Herb Hoffman is improving after a week's confinement with hemorrhage of the lungs. John Knapp and wife are visiting with Mrs. Knapp's mother, Mrs. Sue Hickman. C. A. Morgan left for Indianapolis yesterday, where he entered his fourth year's course in the Indianapolis Medical college. Mrs. A. J. Boggett and Mrs. B. A. Magors, of Ft. Wayne, are visiting with James Doggett and wife. James Bolin has traded his town property to Richard Curtis for a farm, Mr. Bolin will move to the arm and Mr. Curtis will move into the property forme rlv owned bv Mr. Bolin. The greatest children aiedicine on earth ia Rocky Mountain Tea made by Madison Medicine Co. Makes and keeps them well all ßümmer. 3öc. J. W .Hees. TTNER ASD VICIXITY. Mrs. S. J. Haag was shopping in Walkerton Tuesday. Ben Cook moved into Burt Campbell's house vesterdav. D. R. Richardson, of Chicago, visited here with relatives last week. Miss Emma Yockey, of Plymouth, spent Sunday with Mrs. John Nye. ", Mrs. D. R. Richardson and son, George, are visiting Mr. Chase and other relatives. Mrs. Johnson . and daughter, of Teegarden, ate Sunday dinner with Mrs. Belle Myers.- - Mr. and Mrs. Myron Chase and Mr. Joseph Chase spent Sunday with friends in Bremen. j Dr. Weiser, of Bourbon,' returned home Monday having visited here a few days with his son. Miss Sarah Kyle, of Plymouth, attended the K. O. T. M;, dance here last Saturday evening. ' Edna Miller and Bessie Johnson spent Sunday, at the home of Miss Pearl Davis near Teegarden. Miss Edna Miller, of South Bend, returned home Monday after visiting a week with her cousin, Bessie JohnSOU There will be preaching at the Ü. B. church next Sunday by Rev.

Cleaver. Everybody is cordially invited. Walter Davis resigned his position as book keeper at the Pickle factory last week and is attending institute at rivmouth. Little Ruth Bennett stepped on a piece ot glass last week and severely cut her foot. Dr. Weiser dressed the wound and she is getting along nicely. Tyner, Ind., Aug. 28.

"I wish to truthfully etate to you and the readers of these few linen that your Kodoi Dyspepsia Cure is without question, the best and only cure for dyspepsia that I haye ever coma in contact with and I have used many other preparations. John tSeam, West Middlesex, Pa, No preparations equals Kodol Dyspepsia Cure as it contains all the natural digest ants. It will digest all kinds of food and can't help but do ynu good. J. W. Hees, DEFIANT NEGRO CREMATED NEAR TENNES-, SEE VILLAGE. WiNCHESTER,Tenn., Aug.2G. Henry Noles, the negro who criminally assaulted and shot to death Mrs. Charles Williams, wife of a farmer near here, last Friday, was captured early Sunday morning at Water Tank, near Cowan, Tenn. He was brought to Winchester by his captors and placed in the county jail. Sheriff Stewart made haste to try to barricade the jail and protect the prisoner. Soon a mob of several hundred men gathered, but assistant atAttorney General Matt N. Whittaker appeared and made - a speech to the crowd. He appealed to them, to assist him in allaying excitement and upholding the majesty of . the law. He promised to reconvene the grand jury to promptly indict the negro and have him speedily tried at the present term of court, assuring the crowd that his conviction and legal execution were a foregone conclusion. . This appeal was supplemented by Judge J. J. Lynch, Captain W. P. Tolley, Jesse M. Littleton, Foster Ramsey and others. No sooner had their appeals been made than several hundred citi zens from the neighborhood where the crime was committed came . up and augmented the crowd to thousands. They swept forward upon the jail, overpowered the sheriff and his deputies, took the prisoner, and started for the scene of the crime, twelve miles distant, at 10:15 a. m. The mob was orderly, but determined. It seemed that the whole population for miles around had turned out to see the fate of the negro. A procession three miles in length followed the mob to the Williams home. Arriving at a point in sight of the. scene of the crime the negro was placed upon a stump and given a chance to make a statement. He mounted the stump stolidly and laughed as he began his statement. . He said: 'Tell all my sisters and brothers to meet me in glory. I am going to mane' that' my home.

Tell my mother to meet me where parting will be co more." He was then asked as to whether anyone else was implicated in the crime. Noles stated emphatically there was no one implicated but himself. "Why did you kill Mrs. Williams?" was asked. "I just done that because I had nothing else to do." He finished hi? Laternen t at 1 :35 p. m. He was taken from the stump, carried to a tree near by, bound to the tree with chains, and his body saturated with oil. At 1:40 p. m. a match was applied and instantly the quivering body was enveloped in flames. Fence rails were piled about the burning body and soon life was extinct. The nesrro made no outcry at any time and died like a stoic. There were no disorderly scenes about the burning body. At least 0,000 people witnessed the execution of the negro. Many remained until nightfall, augmenting the blaze until the body was entirely consumed. They then departed for their homes quietly. Lying on the floor of the family room, her face splashed with clotted blood and the oaken planks stained with the same drops, Charles Williams found his devoted "young wife Friday afternoon when he returned from marketing his wheat in the little town of Maxwell. A bullet had gone through her head, life was completely extinct, and her two baby children were crying aloud their grief and fear. The older boy, aged 5, told what had occurred. The young mother had been shot and killed by Henry Noles, a negro hand upon Will tarns' place. As the mortally wounded woman sank to the floor No!es shot at the boy, the bullet grazing the child's head. , Then he fled to the woods. Williams friends were-stirred to the pitch of exacting merciless and summary justice. On receipt of news of the crime Sheriff Stewart departed for the scene with bloodhounds. A posse of determined citizens, well armed and provided with a rope, wa also on Noles' trail. - It is reported that robbery was the motive, and $20.00 was obtained by the murderer WilK iams is a farmer, well to do, and one of the most prominent residents of his section of Franklin county. The dead woman was a member of one of the oldest and most respected families in the connty. The two children were the only witnesses of the tragedy. , - Chamberlain'a Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Keme3y has a world wide reputation for its cures. It never fails and 19 pleasant and safe to take. 'For esle by J. W. Hess.

OIL WELL LOOSE Texas Gusher Threatens Field with Dire Calamity by Fire." Beaümont, Texas, Äug. 27. Two men are dead and one of the largest oil gushers in the world is going absolutely wild, utterly defying the mechanical skill of man to stop it. The famous oil field presents the possibility of one of the direst calamities which ever visited Texas, should fira join forces with the great gushers. Today the gusher is spilling itself on the prairies and flooding the country with oil. James Smith died trying to shut off the gusher and John McDaniels died trying to save Smith. Both showed great heroism. The wild gusher is in the HoggSwayne syndicate tract. The well belongs to the PalestineBeaumont Oil company. Christians Being Murdered. Berlin, Aug. 28 The Volks Zeitung reports that Christians are again being murdered- at Kuldja, Mongolia. Six persons have been killed at the place where two Germans were murdered in 1897. A Care for Cho era Infantum. "Last May," eaya Mrs . Curtis Baker, of Bookvralter, Ohio, "an iofaüt child of our neighbor's waa Buffering from cholera infantum. The doctor had given up all hopes of recovery. I took a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy to the housa, telling them I felt eure it would do good if used according to directions. In' two days' time the child had fully recovered, and ia now (nearly a year since) a vigorous, healthy girl. I have recommended this Remedy frequently-and have never known it to fsü ia Ray cirls iastisca." For tzl by J. W. Hess.

ROOSEVELT FAVORED

GENERAL SENTIMENT IN THE NORTHWESTERN STATES ON THE PRESIDENCY Speaker Sherman, of Illinois, Tells of His Observations During an Extended Trip to the Coast in Which he rinds the New Yorker Very Strong In the Hearts of Westerners. CuicaGO, Aug. 23 Theodore Roosevelt is the choice of the republicans of the Northwest for the republican nomination for president in 1904, according to the statement of Speaker L. Y. Sherman, who has just returned from a tour of the states of Washington and Oregon. The people in those states hope to see Mr. Roosevelt nominated, and the fact that New York may not support him in the republican national convention will help rather than hurt the vice-president, is the opinion of the republicans of the Pacific coast. "The people on the Northwest Pacific slope all want Roosevelt as the republican candidate for president," said Mr. Sherman. "I have just returned from a trip through Washington and Oregon. I traveled by easy stages, and I met and talked with a great many republicans and not a few democrats. The sentiment for Roosevelt there is over-whelming. The people want him. I am satisfied that unless he should peremptorily decline to allow his name to be used as a candidate for the nomination the delegates from those states will be enthusiastically foi him for president. The fact that his home state of New York may not bring him forward as a candidate will have no effect on the people of the Northwest. I met all classes of men while I was out there. I did not see so many of the politicians, and therefore I cannot say what the regular party organization leaders think, but I do know that the people are for Roosevelt. 'I talked with farmers, miners, lumbermen, laborers, merchants, business men, and manufacturers, and every body seemed to be for Roosevelt. In my conversation with many of ' those whom I met, I asked them what effect the fact -that New York might not support Roosevelt would have on their delegates in the republican national convention, and they all replied that such a condition would make Roosevelt all the stronger in the West. The people out there have great admiration for Roosevelt. They look on him as a Western man in spirit, and they do not care what the politicians of the East may think of him. The war with Spain was popular in the Northwestern Pacific states, but I can say that the people in Washington and Oregon are enthusiastic for Roosevelt for president." Speaker Sherman left last night for his home in Macomb, .j Housekeeper, Attention! . Try a package of Rubs Bleaching Blue and you will use no other. 10c. at grocers. 127U4 3SU CONKEY'S OIRLS ON STRIKE FIGHTING FOR UNIONISM Militia May be Called to Hammond to Aid in Making ,- Arrests. Hammond, Ind., Aug. 28. Striking employees, of the W. B. Conkey printing establishment are defiantly violating the temporary restraining order issued by Judge Baker at Goshen Saturday and are' expecting to be arrested. It is apprehended by strilte officials that sU,te troops may be brought here to enforce order while the arrests are being made. No move has yet been made to hinder or arrest the pickets sent out by the union nor has the company made any attempt to import U any one to take the places of strikers. President Alting.of the Pressmen's union, has received a check from the International union for C500, with assurances of more if needed, to maintain the strike. The bookbinders went ' out yesterday afternoon and other, de

partments will follow until the great plant is tied up. Promptly at 7 a. m. yesterday 178 of the girls employed by the company walked out in a body without waiting to see Mr. Conkey and to demand the reinstatement of the officers of their union. This left about fifty girls in this department. Four Boys Drowned. New York, Aug. 27. Four boys between the ages of 10 and 15 years were drowned yesterday at Long Branch, N. X. The victims are: two sons of Professor Blakeley, the head of the Long Branch High school; a son of Alex Gaskell of Long Branch, and, Harold, son of Harry Sher man of Long Branch. The boys were on a raft quite a distance from the shore and were swept into the sea by the waves. WILL FIGHT ON

Boers are Defiant in Face of Late British Proclamation. London, Aug. 27. A dispatch from Lord Kitchener, dated from Pretoria, says: "Have received a long letter from Steyn containing an argumentative statement of the Boer case and saying he will continue to fight, also a short letter from Dewet to the same effect. Botha writes acknowledging m the receipt of my proclamation and protesting against it, and stating that the Boers intend to go on fighting. On the other hand, the surrenders lately have' increased considerably. "Three officers and sixty-five men who were sent north of Ladybrand, Orange River Colony, on the right of Elliott's columns, were surrounded on unfavorable ground and captured by a superior force Aug. 22. One man was killed and four were wounded. The prisoners were released. Am holding an inquiry." A YOUNG LADY'S LIFE SAVED. At Panama Columbia, by Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Dr. Chas. II. Utter, a pronaineDt physciaD, of Panam9, Columbia, in a recent letter states: "Last March I had aa a patient a young lady sixteen years ot age, who had a very bad attack of dysentery. Everything I prescribed for her proved ineffectual and ehe was grow, ing worse every hour. Her parents were sure 6he would die. She bad become so weak that she could not turn over in bed. What to do it this critical moment was a study or me, but. I thought of Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and as a last report prescribed it. The most wonderful result was effected. Within eight hours she was feeling much bettor; inside of three days she was upon her feet and at the end of one week was entirely well." For sale by J. W. Heßs. Ladies Can Wear Suoes one size smaller after using Allen's Soot Ease, a ponder to be shaken into the shoes. It makes tight or new Bhoes feel asy; gives instant relief to corns and bunions. It's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. "Curesand prevents swollen feet, blisters, callous and eore spots. Allan's Foot-Ease is a certain cure for eeaticg, hot, achiDg feet. At all druggists and shoe stores. 25c. Triai package free by mail. Address. Allen S. Le Roy, N.Y. 127t24 33.4 Labor Day Excursions on Vandalia Line, On account of Labor Day Sept, 2nd the Vandalia Line will sell round trip excursion tickets for one fare to points where celebrations will be held that day. Tickets good returning to and including Sept, 3rd. Picnic at LaPaz Junction Aug. 31st. . On occount of Old Settlers' Picnic at LaPaz Junction Aug. 31st the Vandalia Line will sell round trip excursion tick ets to that point and return from Plymouth for 35 cents, Tickets good returning to and including Sept, 2nd. LONG EÄ TIME AT BUFFALO. Return Limit Extended on Pan-American Excursion Tickets via Akron Route. The return limit on ten day excursion tickets to Buffalo over the Akron Route for tho Pan-American Exposition, sold at one fare plus one dollar will be fifteen days, and the limit on fifteen day tickets sold at one and one-third fare will be twenty days. These extensions vrill be effective on and after August 20th. For information about specific fares, through time. ate., consult nearest ticket agent of the Pennsylvania Lines. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE. In t he Marshall Circuit Court, October Term, In the matter of the estate of Anthony Han es, deceased. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, as Executor of the estate of Anthony Iianes. deceased, has presented and filed bis account and Touchers In final settlement of said estate and that the same will came np for the examination and action of said Circuit Court on the 14th day of October. 1901, at which time all persons Interested In said estate are required to appear In said Court and show cause, if any there be, why said account and vouchers soould not be apnroved. Aui the heirs of said estate, and all others Interested therein, are also hereby required, at the time and place aforesaid, to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of said estate. - SIMON IIANES, Done May 31,1501. Executor. Witness tbe Clerk and Seal of said llarshall Circuit Court, at PlymLsial mouth, Indiana, this 21st day Of August, 1801, K.F. Bbooke, Clerk. John D. Thorn as, Atty. 0t2

CAPTURE OF BOER LEADERS NECESSARY TO END THE WAR

Kitchener's Proclamation Cannot Otherwise be Enforced. New York, Aug. 23. The barometer of South Africa fell when it was known that Steyn, Dewet and Botha had defied Mr. Chamberlain and had announced their -determination to fight in the last ditch, says the London correspondent of the Tribune. The proclamation of Lord Kitchener has not frightened the Boer leaders, for whom a menace of exile has no terrors when they do not believe it can be enforced. Military men here have not swerved from the conviction that the war will continue until Steyn and Dewet are captured. The Transvaal leaders are bound in honor to keep up warfare so long as their allies south of the Vaal are unwilling to surrender. Proclamations only involve a waste of printers ink while Steyn and Dewet remain in the field. This is the judgment of practical men who under stand the full force of the point of honor among the Dutch allies. Generals cannot abandon one another when a war has lasted nearly two years without a sign of treachery among the men in the commandos. Lord Kitchener's comment on the surrender of a British, force of sixty-eight men after one soldier had been killed is that he is holding an inquiry. This points to the suspicion that the resistance offered by the British force was inadequate. Military men explain the difficulty of keeping jaded men up to their work when they know that to surrender to a superior force is followed by a speedy release after their deprivation of arms, powder and shot. Heavy work and incessant marching have rendered the British army stale. The same feeling of weariness is shown in England, where the yeomanry force recruited for special service is still 11,000 below the full quota, notwithstanding the strenuous exertions to strengthen it and the high pay offered for rough riders. ALL OVER THE HOUSE. The Latest Formalities For the. Dinner Table. Georgeoua ornamentation of the dinner table is conceded to be as bad form as a colored aunty in the Eouth. The embellishment the ornate, if you will has been overdone, and now there is a reaction which tends to simplicity extreme expressed by a handsome centerpiece and a moderate exposition of not common flowers. A different kind and color of china with every course are affected by those whose cabinet is crowded and who are proud of it, but this pride has its limitations among people of refinement and culture. Thi3 class does not give dinners simply to exhibit earthly treasure and create envy and perhaps covetousness too. The larger the table napkin the" better. A yard square is none too big. and pleasantly recalls the Parisians, whose liberality in damask is proverbial, but not a characteristic in anything else. The material should be the best obtainable and the design the most beautiful. Any lace edging or embroidery, plain or colored, is just as bad taste as quinine. Knives, forks and spoons .nowadays for almost everything are somewhat confusing to those who do not dine out with sufficient frequency to keep up with the continually advancing procession. Some of these knives, forks and spoons are quite unnecessary, not to say silly, but the business of the silversmith must be considered. Unless fruit be served, finger bowls are almost obsolete at modern dinners and are no more a necessary part of gastronomic ritual. Abroad in Germany, for instance, the use of the vessel for disgusting ablutions still obtains, albeit soap and towel aTe not provided. It were better to discontinue any table custom or fashion that generates vulgarity. A man at a formal dinner assigned to "take in" a woman whom, he has never met before should take his conversational cue from her no Chinese desecration of course and thereby avoid pitfalls to which the diffident and embarrassed are often led. Besides, it " is woman's admitted privilege to "do all the talking' and she best gives the keynote at dinners. "Should name or place cards at dinners be retained V ask the uneophisticated. "And why ?" says the trained catechist. . Because the host or hostess has had them prepared in expectation ol their being retained and preserved as souvenirs. Ignoring them would be disrespect,

and such disrespect under the social circumstances would be unpardonable. What to Eat.

That Summer Rug. In summer rugs the San Yo is really very little known to most housewives, yet is very attractive and inexpensive too. There are several different colorings, mostly with a bright center, on which are two or three characteristic Chinese figures surrounded by a dark bandlike border. American fiber rugs are really triumphs in their way. They are woven from one and one-half inch strips of tissue paper made into fiber. The patterns and dyes are very pleasing, the latter being quite fast. The Dhurrie India rug is another summer friend, whose patterns and colorings in many cases resemble our Indian work, Navajo blankets la particular, only their red is more magenta where the American redskin's is quite "frisky." Their blues and yellows are particularly good. A Useful Bag. This is a useful bag to hold work, or it may be used to carry purse, notebook, small parcels, etc., when shopping. Our model is cut from a piece of willow green face cloth 13 inches deep and 19 inches wide. Line this with a piece of pale blue silk the same size, put a band of WOKK BAG. blue and gold or blue and green figured silk or embroidery straight across one end, then sew up the side and lower end. Work two rows of machine stitching an inch apart about two and one-half inches below the upper edge. This forms a slide between the lining and cloth in which to run ribbon to draw it up by. Young Ladies' Journal. Whistler and the Prlnse. It is said that the Royal Society of British Artists never had a charter until Whistler became president. On the occasion of the first visit of the Prince of Wales our West Pointer was there to welcome him. "I never heard of this place, Mr. Whistler," said the prime, '"'until you called my attention tc it. What is its history?" "It has none, your royal highness," was the quiet rejoinder. "Its history dates from today." Nobody in England knows whether Whistler is an "art acrobat" or a "reformed genius." His house at Chelsea was the greatest curiosity, lie furnished only one room besides his bedroom in the first two years of his stay, and none could tell whether it was from laziness or impecuniosity. New York Press. THE MARKETS. Plymouth Wheat '. ...... C") Corn 50 Oats v 30 Rye .. 50 Clover Seed .'. 1300 Potatoes New ICO Lard lO-lOJi Hens 6 Spring Chickens ... -. .8 lloosters '. 3 Gobbler? . 4-5 Geese .. .. 4 Ducks 6 Turkey Elens. C Fggs It U 1 1 r. i iiiim imiimniiiimn 1 1 3.1 Chicago Wheat ....GOH ....SI1,' Corn. sits h Rye . Potatoes........ . Cattle .... - Hogs....................... Sheep 33?, . 22?4 ...8 00-10 00 1 03-1.30 ..5.10 to 5 75 ..5.75 to 6.C0 .....3.58 to4.0S PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Clenaea and beautifies th hair. Pruriiotn luxuriant prevth. Never Fails to Bee tor Gray Hair to ita Youthful Color. Present Dandruff and hair tailing. Wie. tw1 1 iQ at tm?ri's. the CLEANSING AND II KALI X G CATARRH CUKE E OK GATAtM. Is . Ely's Cream Bain Eaey and pleasant to Q83. Contains no in junona drag. It is quickiy absorbed. Gives Kelief at once. It Opens and Cleanses ine itasat I'aseacei.. Allays Inflammation. COLD 'H HEAD Ileals and Protects the Membrane. Re?torea thd Senses of Taste and SmeiL Large Stz 64 cents at Druggists or by mail ; Trial Size, 10 cent by mail. ELY JBüOTÜEiiS, 56 Warrea Street, Sew York. OR. PEFFEFVS ROYAL-TANSY' PILLS KZW DISCOVERY. KEYER FM.5. A new. reliable and aafe relief fat aopprc cd. eic-jwirw. casty or painful menstruation. How used by over O.bOO Ladies. lariniratM the organs, üiwae or DAXorcrs pITATIOKB. 2 per box, imr 1 box SL Prepaid in plain wrapper. I "i ie in "II for rrticulara. i-cJJi UhUlCLL äLoS. Qucayo, IÜ. For Sale by L. TANNER