Plymouth Republican, Volume 45, Number 44, Plymouth, Marshall County, 19 September 1901 — Page 8
DECLINED GzoIqosz Stands Mute Betöre flrralflned For Munter
Buffalo, N. Y.. Sept. IS Leon F. Czolgosz, the assassin of President McKinley, was arraigned before Judge Edward K. Emery in the county court at 3 o'clock yesterday afternoon on the -indictment for murder in the first degree in fatally shooting President McKinley in tho Temple of Music at the Pan-American exposition Sept. 0. A:am iho stubborn prisoner refused to plead, or even to utter a word or sound, and, the Hon . Loran. L. Lewis, ex-supreme court iustice, entered a plea of not guilty. The accused will be tried in the supreme court next Monday morn ing. . Crowds flocked to the city hall to see the prisoner, but the uncertainty surrounding the question as to whether or not counsel could be secured for him saved congestion of the court-room and corridors of the hall. The most notable incident of the day was the hissing of the prisoner by the crowds who surged around him as he was being escorted down the steps, still draped in mourning garb. The strong' guard of deputy sheriffs and soldiers was dis pensed with, so the people were able to get nearer the prisoner as he went to and from the courtroom. The prisoner entered the courtroom just as the city hall clock was striking 3 o'clock and as many of the curious spectators as could surged into the courtroom behind him A murmur ran through the audience, but the gavel of the judge and the tipstaff of the crier soon restored order. j As soon as Czolgosz was before j the bar and the handcutfs' were j removed District Attorney Pen ! ny began the formal arraign-j ment. He read the principal; charges of the indictment in a voice of severity and asked: CABINET MEETING Roosevelt Virtually Commands His Advisers Noi to ResiQP.
Washington. D. C, Sept. 18 President Roosevelt at 3 o'clock yesterday convened his first cabinet meeting held in Washington. At this meeting the president asked the members of Mr. McKinley's cabinet to retain their respective portfolios throughout his term and announced that his administration would follow the policy outlined by President McKinley in his Buffalo speech. President Roosevelt requested the members of the cabinet to meet at the residence of Commander Cowles, where the presiident is staying until after the funeral, principally for the purpose of informiDg their new chief of the state of affairs in their respective departments. The president desired to learn if there were any matters of moment requiring his attention before his departure for Canton. He was assured that there was nothing of pressing importance. The president then addressed his advisers collectively, as he had previously done individually, resquesting them ali to retain their respective positions in his cabinet. Mr Roosevelt express' ed the hope and expectation that every member would serve throughout his term, for, he said, he tendered the appointments as if. he had just been elected to the presidency and was forming an original cabinet. The president said, however, there was one difference between the present tender and original offer, namely, under the present circumstances they were not at liberty to decline. Upon being asked if resignations should be formally presented in the usual manner the president answered that his action at this meeting had precluded the necessity of presenting resignations. Tho discussion turned upon
TO PLEAD ttie Bar ot Justice Wlien in ttie First Degree.
"How do you plead, guilty or not guilty?" Not a sound was uttered by the prisoner. He stood mute before the bar of justice, apparently continuing his feint of insanity, which was noticed for the first time when ho was taken into court yesterday afternoon. His curly hair was disheveled, and although his linen was white and clean, his disordered clothes and the growth of his beard gave him an unkempt appearance. - Although his demeanor was still one of stubbornness he gave a little more evidence of concern than "upon ' his first presence in court. "When questions were being asked of him rapidly, he moistened his lips with his tongue and seemed to be endeavoring to maintaiu the appearance of stolid indifference. When the prisoner refused to plead, the district attorney asked him if he understood what had been read, and, receiving no answer, told him that ho had been indicted for murder in the first degree and that he could answer "yes" or "no." For an instant Czolgosz glanced at Mr. Penny, and it was thought, that he intended to speak, but he did not. Judge Lewis then addressed the court at length saying he had called upon the defendant but had been unable to ascertain any wish on the defendant's pari as to the employment of counsel. He said his associate, Judge Titus, was in Milwaukee, but that he had appeared informally to enter a plea of not guilty on behalf of the defendant, as the law required such a i!ea under the circumstances. He asked permission to reserve the right to withdraw the pica and enter a special plea or interpose a demurrer if, after consulting with Judge Titus, they decide not to ask the court to assign other counsel. t'ie policy of the administration and Mr. Roosevelt announced that he regarded the speech of the late president at the Buffalo PanAmerican exposition, the day previous to the assassination, as outlining the policies to be followed by the administration. It cannot be learned at this time whether or not all the members will be willing to serve the full term. The cabinet members, with the exception of Secretaries Hay and Long, will accompany the remains of the dead president to Canton and participate in the funeral ceremonies on Thursday. Secretaries Hay and Long remain in Washington at the president's request. G.A.R. PARADE IN CLEVELAND Half Million People Cheer Old Veterans in Column ' Cleveland, Ohio, Sept. 12 The feature of yesterday's Grand Army of . the Republic encampment was a parade which was viewed by 500,000 persons. The veterans awoke to the sound of reveille, and long before tho hour set for the starting of the parade they lined the streets and avenues adjacent to Case and Euclid avenues, where the parade was formed ' Veterans prominent in the affairs of the G. A. R. said it was the grandest parade and the greatest dy the organization had ever seen. In a seemingly interminable'iine of blue the various departments took up their march over the hard granite pavements. Surging masses of people numbering in the hundreds of thousands, lined the streets and the housetops, and took advantage of every available point of view along the entire length of the. line of parade. In the downtown district the streets intersecting and adjacent to the line of marcb were one struggling mass of eager and expectant humanity. The column was over eight miles in length and vzs splendidly handled, moving steadily and with scarcely a halt or a
break until the entire line had passed the reviewing stand. The' scene was most inspiring. Aged octogenarians with tottering footsteps, and others erect and sprightly as in youth, plodded patiently side by side, and among the thousands who made up that gallant host there were a bare half dozen whom the fatigues of the march caused to fall out before they passed through the living sea of faces in the Court of Honor and the reviewing stand. Promptly at the hour set for the parade to move. General Leo Rassieur, commander-in-chief, gave the signal, and the column moved forward. The solid masses of humanity which crowded the avenue from curb . to curb gave way like the parting of the waves, and the march began. The governors of several states marched in line with their
respective posts. Even Senator Hanna caught the infection of the hour, and left the reviewing sr?.nd to march down the line with Memorial post. Every department as it passed the Court of Honor, and neared the living flag of children formed upon the grand stand facing the long vista at the foot of Bond stieet, was greeted with a patriotic chorus from the throats of thousands of school children composing 4,the Hag." Mingled with tho inspiring strains of martial music and patriotic choruses was the unstinted applause of the populace. With General Rassieur in the reviewing stand were the following: Tom L. Johnson, General Henry S. Peck, Adjutant General F. M. Sterrett, M. A. Taylor, Surgeon General Wilking, George Stone, department commander of Colorado; General John C. Black of Illiaois, General Joel Longen ecker of Illinois, General Daniel D. Sickles, Guy T. Gould, past department commander of Illinois; General Louis Wayne of Pennsylvania, General James Barnett, Colonel Thomas Scott of Illinois, L. E. Holden, and General J. Warren Keifer. The parade was led by mouuted police. Following were the local grand marshal of the parade,' Captain Rüssel E. Burdick, and his staff. It is expected that the patriotic outburst will be duplicated this afternoon, when a mass meeting will be held in praise and thanksgiving for the prospective recovery of President McKinley. Senator Hanna, Governor Nash of Ohio, Mavor Johnson of ClevelancT, General Rassieur of the Grand Army, Judge William R. Day of Canton, Senator Fairbanks of Indiana, Charles Grosvenor, and the Rev. Dr. Manchester, tho president's pastor, will address the meeting. Cleveland, Ohio, Sept. 13 The first.day of the national convention of the Grand Army of the Republic was taken up with the reading of the rfeports by the commander In chief, adjutant general, chaplain, and the various committees. The proceedings of the convention were prefaced with ttie adoption of a resolution offered by General Daniel E. Sickles, tendering to the president the affectionate congratulations of the Grand Army upon his rapid convalescence. The resolution was embodied in a telegram, which was immediately sent to Mr. McKiu ley at Buffalo. Commander in-chief Rassieur devoted "a largo part of his annual address to the matter of pensions. "Without any effort," he said, ''on - the part of the organization or its officers to give the pension problem any undue prominence, that subject has overshadowed all others and has called for more attention and thought in the last year than all other questions which concern us. He criticized Commissioner Evans' administration of the pension bureau and demanded "the honest and fair administration of laws which are already on the statute books." . Senator Hawley announced his intention of fighting any attack made upon Commissioner Evans. He expressed the fullest confidence in his ability to rectify any existing evils in due time, and counseled moderation in the convention. ' For a bad, taste in the mouth take Ch&nberUin's Stonsea end Lirer Tablets. For eile bj J. 7. Hees.
McKinley s grandparents
Pioneers of St. Joseph County, Died the Same Day, Buried at . South Bend, In a quiet corner of the South I 'end city cemetery the dust of the grandparents of the late President McKinley, Mr. and Mrs. James McKinley, has been peacefully reposing for over half a century. They were pioneers of St. Joseph county, coming here from Ohio in the early part of the '40s and settling on a small farm in Warren township, a few miles west of the city. They were plain peeple of modest means and lived in the simple manner becoming the early settlers of the west. Thev were much esteemed by ail their neighbors, were noted for their quiet respectability and their generosity. The story of their lives and the pathetic manner of their deaths is told in the inscription on the monument over their graves, which reads thus; J james Mckinley, Died Aug. 20, 1847, Aged G3, Y. 11 M. 1 D. MARY, Wife of James McKinley, Died Aug. 20, 1847, Age 58 Y. 9 M. 5 D. Thev died on the 43rd anniversary of m m their marriage. Lived and died in theehristian faith and left a large family to mourn their loss. Thus it will be seen that both died on the same day and on their marriage anniversary. Thev were bnricd side by side, and for many years their resting place was un marked. It is said their grandson, the late president, caused the monument to be erected over their graves, and also the iron fence that encloses it. The president's father, William McKinley, sr.. frequently visited the tlie burial spot in early years, although he did not live with his parents here. Every 30th of May. wlfcn the veterans of the war decorate the graves of their comrades in the cemetery, the McKinley lot is remembered by them, out of respect to the illustrious grandson, who fought for his country in the days of her peril, and died as her chief magistrate. Flowers in abundance are strewn over the graves of these ancestors of the martyr president, and old glory waves above them. South lend Tribune. MRS. MCKINLEY'S NURSE Mrs. Beerbower, of This City, Had the Care of Little Ida Saxton. Mrs. Philip Beerbower, who has for many years been a respected resident of this city, passed her early life in Canton, Ohio, and was intimately acquainted with the family of Mrs. McKinley. John Saxton, the grandfather of Mrs. McKinley, was the founder of the Canton Repository, now the leading newspaper of that city. Ida Saxton was born at Canton June 8, 1847. She was not a strong child and required much care. During her . early childhood Mrs. Beerbower was employed as her nurse and was with the family in that capacity nearly two years. Mrs. Beerbower be!ng then sixteen or seventeen years old. The child's delicate health did not permit her to attend school regulativ, nor was she able to complete the course at the seminary to which she was sent, at Media, Pa., and after she was about sixteen her education was completed at home, but she was not attacked with the disease with which she is now afllicted until after her marriage with Mr. McKinley in 1871. - Mrs. Beerbower recalls perfectly and with great pleasure the sweet and lovable disposition of her little charge and has many anecdotes illustrating her intelligence, brightness and ainiiability, both at that time and in later years. Mrs. Beerbower s family moved away from Canton before Mrs. McKinley grew to womanhood and they have not met since the marriage with the late president, now thirty years ago. Sawuch Service. The new cavalry instructor at CulMilitary Academy, Capt. II. J. Noble, of Fostoria Ohio, .spent three years in the U. S. cavalry in the Philippines, and was in fourteen battles with the insurgents. He was bugler for his company, and stood within a few feet of Gen. Lawton, when a bullet cut short that hero's life. During those hot times, Mr. Xoble saw fourteen men and officers fall in his own company. He is twenty-eight years of age and was honorably discharged from the army about one year ago. i .Every Tuesday to Buffalo. From Sept. 24 to Oct. 29th, the Nickle Plate Roaa will eail round trip tickets to Buffalo at one cent per mile going Tuesdays; returning on any train up to midnight of tbe following Sunday. Inquire of nearest ticket meat of the Nickel Plsta Read or C. A, Aetsrlin, T, P. A., Ft. Wayne. Ind. 4it0 163U2
STATE CUP
Dunn Doubly Indicted. Fort Wayne, Ind., Sept. 18 The grand jury today completed the investigation into the murder of Alice Cothrell at Wallen last July and returned an indictment against Charles Dunn, charging him with Ihe Crime. The indictment was in eight counts and charges that Dunn first assaulted the child and strangled her to death in the elfort to suppress her cries. This indictment was expected, but the other caused a sensation. It charged Dunn with causing the death of Elizabeth Wciscl,a feebleminded girl who worked for Mrs. Dunn as a house servant. A year ago she died from the effects of a criminal operation and there was talk about Dunn's connection with the case, but his high standing in tlie community prevented an investigation at that time. Since his arrest for killing Alice Cothrell, however, the ollieers have leen investigating the Weisel girl's death, with tlie result as stated. Luck in Oil. Muxcie, Ind., Sept. 18 Word has been received here that Frank Yost, a former Muncie man, is now -president and principal stockholder in the Texas Oil Company, operating in the Beaumont" field, and that Yost has been olTered a million and a half dollars for his holdings. A newspaper of Beaumont savs that Yost is negotiating with an English syndicate to sell his claim for $2,000,000. Yost left Muncie several weeks ago to seek fortune in the West, lie was a poor man then. He has many relatives here, including a brother, William Yost, who still lives here. His Muncie relatives knew nothing of his good luck until the word reached here. Woman Killed at Work. Tout Wayne, Ind., Sept. IS Mis. John M. Urown, wife of a sewer worker, and her 2-year-old child were suffocated at 4 o'clock this afternoon in a small frame structure on the corner of Columbia avenue and Clay street. The mother was 21 years old last month. She had recently moved here from Decatur, where she was married three years ajro. Her husband said she had been hired by a man in the house where she died to clean some rooms and it is presumsd she had used gasoline and attempted to light a candle or a lamp, causing an explosion. Green Stockings Disband. South Hexd, Ind., Sept. IT Donald Grant, manager of tlie noted independent Green Stocking team, which, for the past six seasons, has been playing professional ball, and was one of the most successful independent teams in the "West, gave up the ghost, and the team disbanded today. From it have graduated to the National, "Western-Ohio, and other leagues pitchers Mullen, Bailey, Coggswell, Gibson and Keeler, catcher Fuller, and shortsop Angus Grant. A Dramatic Success. As a pictorial achievement the dramatized version of General Lew Wallace's "Ben Hur" is a triumph of stagecraft. The dramatic features of the representation are really secondary, but are so cleverly handled that acting and stage pictures seem to blend naturally into a harmonious whole. It was a statelv gathering in the beginning, but when Ben Hur and Messala engaged in their sensational chariot race, decoum was put aside for the nonce and applause took the form of cheers and waving of handkerchiefs. Two chariots, each drawn by four Arabian steeds, formed the center of the exciting picture: Despite the machinery it was for the moment a real race. The foam-flecked animals, with far-stretched necks and dilated nostrils, ran like the wind under the lashes of the charioteers. Tlie wheels of the gaudy cars rumbled and tipped from side to side. First Ben Hur and then Messala gainedtthe lead. Ben Hur won and the curtain dropped amid a pandemonium, of cheers. Wilder enthusiasm than that which followed this scene has seldom manifested itself .in a theatre. Last night's audience sat spellbound for several seconds and then burst into prolonged applause. Chicago Chronicle. Knights Templar Orders. IIon.L.,I Newby, grand commander of Knights Templar in Indiana, has issued an order announcing olticially the death of President McKinley, who was a member of the several Masonic bodies, and directing suitable .exercises as a tribute of respect. Misapplied Ingenuity. The fact that hundreds of counterfeit cents are being received at the subtreasury in New York affords another illustration of the time honored truth that the genius devoted to illegitimate" endeavor would probably achieve fame . and fortune if directed along legitimate lines. The cent making industry calls to mind the Yankee who 'made wooden nutmeg j. Baltimore Herald. " Take Rocky Mountain Tea. öee it exterminate poison. Feel it revitalize your blood and nerves and bring back that happy, joyous feeling of bovhood days. 35c, Ask your druggist.
THE MARKETS. Plymouth Wheat C5 Corn 5) Oats , 30 .'. 47 Clover Seed 4 50 Potatoes New 80 to 90 Lard 10-10 S Hen s ........................6 Spring Chickens 8 Roosters 3 Gobblers 4-5 Geese 4 Ducks c Turkey Hens .g F?gs : js Butter 12-lC Chicago Wheat f,03 Corn '. Oats 35ft ttye 55; Clover 4 50-8 50 Potatoes s-so Cattle 4.53 to 5 45 Hogs 5.05 to CSTi Sheep 3- t'0to4.15 Josh Westhafer, of Loogooiee, Ind., h poor man, but he eaya he would Dot be without Chamberlain's Pain Balru if it cost five dollars 'a bottle, for it ?aved him from beiogr a cripple. No external application is equal to this liniment for stiff and swollen joints, contracted muscles, stiff neck, sprains and rheumatic and muscular paine. It has also cured numerous cases of partial paralysis. It is for sale by J. W. Hess. A Certain Cure for Dysentery and Diarrhcea. S jme years ago I was one of a party that intended making a long bicycle trip." 6ays E. L. Taylor, of New Albany, l3rdford County, Pa. "I was taken euddedy with diarrhoea, and was about 10 tjive up the trip, when editor Ward, of the Lacyville Messenger, suggested that I tako a dose of Chamberliin's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. 1 purchased a bottle and took two dotes, one before starting and onern the route I made the trip successfully and uever felt any ill e Tect. Again last summer I was almost completely ruu do.vu with an attack of dysentery. I bought a bottle of thi? same remedy and this time cce doäe cured me." Sold by J. V Ues. It is easier to keep well than get cured. DeWitt's Little Eirly Ris-ere tiken now and theD, will always keep your bowels in perfect order. They never sjripe but promote an easy geDtle action J. W. Hess. Those famous litt lei pills, DeWitt's LHtle Early Risers compel your liver and bowels to do their duty, thus giving you pure, rich blood to recuperate your body. Are easy to taKe. Never gripe. J. W, Ihfis. Chop Home Visitors' Excursions. Wednesday. September 25th, 1901 On the above date the Lake Erie A Westtrn Railroad Cmipany will run its annual Home Visitors' excursion to Cincinnati, Dayton, Columbus, Sandusky Springfield, Ohio and Louisville, Ky., and - ther points In Indiana and Ohio. The rates are so low that it will cheaper toeo to this excursion than to stay at home, thu9 giving everybody an opportunity to visit their old home and friends in the state of Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky. Tickets good for thirty (30) days from date of sale. Excursion train will leave Plymouth Ind. at 5:30 a. m.' For any further information call upon ticket agent, L. E. & W.R. R. C. F. Daly, General Passenger Agent. LONGER TIME AT BUFFALO.
Return Limit Attended on Pan-American Excursion Tickets vl Akron lloute. Trie return limit ou ten day excursion 'ickets to Buffalo over the Akron Route for the Pan-Amertcan 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 wenty days. These extensions will be effective on and after August 20th. For information about specific fares, through time. etc.. consult nearest ticket agent of the Pennsylvania Lines. TpEBJEflaRAPW U OPERATORS flare Pleasant Work every month of tbe year and tret good wages. We teach it quickly and place oar graduates in railway and telegraph service. Eipenseslow. Operators in great demand. School 23 years old. Write for Illustrated catalogue VALENTINE'S TELEGRAPH SCHOOL, JancsviIle.Wi$, cmcwrsTe-rs enou in XlV.lt au't iold mtlkliie toxet. mitt Ub hJwerlh-w fake ether. Krf tinnn. uj "f rnvr Orurc!.v or HrHd 4. ' 1 i3 and "K-!1rf. IaxJIi . If twre, x mi. J .0 T. Vi I n lrtucii.. hlrhMt I Aidli-," mi lent, br r Tt-atitacaia-1. Sola hi Don't Be Fooledi V. Take the genuine, original j4?Si ROCKY MOUNTAIN TEA VAl-VJ Made only by Madison Medlk V;,J cle Ce.. Madison, Wis. it -CT' y'vjf keeps you well. Our trade mark cut on each package. lV?i3iw?-'iy Price. cents. Never sold VSCV" in bulk. Accept no substl . . - " v s - - j - - us c tute. Ask your druggist. aoal T -11 l. tiA 1U mix ii guijjc. uw. ä should De cleanliness. "Sly'g Cresa Bala Cleanses, soothes and heals the diseased membrane. It carta catarrh and drives away a cold in the head nnir Irl v. Cream Ealm Is placed Into the naänis, cprtida orer the membrane and is absorbed. Keller Is im oediat and a core follows. It Is Dot drying does not produce neulng. Large Size, 50 ceati tt Drusgists or by a all ; Trial Size, 10 cents by mall. ELT BROTHERS, M Warren Street. New York. - - r
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PROFESSIONAL CARDS A. C. HOLTZEN DORFF C. F. HOLTZEN DORFF, Physicians and Surgeons, Ooir.tr MUhipati bLd JtlTerton Street Xigbt calls ubswertd. DR. I. BOWER, Physician and Surgeon 315 N. Michigan St., PLYMOUTH, IND. Dr. F. M. BUKKET, DENTIST 02ce over Plymouth Sute Bant, Michigan St Plymouth, Indiana. MONEY AT FIVE TODAY. 5c!o Itcosts nothing to 5;0 Call or Write. JOHN G. GAFRON, Packard B1K JOHN W. PARKS. Attorney and Counselor at Law Office First Flour Parks' Law Bulinj, PLYMOUTH, iXI). Practices in all courts and in all branches of the profession. Notary and stenographer in oilice. MONEY TO LOAN AT 5 PER CENT. C B. TIBBETTS PLYMOUTH, IND. ORic in Kuhi Building. T, Rheumatic Has Been Successfully rled bv thousands of Kheuraatk suffV rers.wlio will estlfy to the merits of this sr-at reme1y. Now is tlie time to takelt. K-2u!itte tlie bowels. a eod appetite. A 2 week's treatrneut, SI.OO. .Sold by J. V. Her, your druggist. Brick and Tile Mill with 30 horse power engine, only six j'ears old. Cost 800, includes kilms. Will take 500 cash. J. A. MOLTER, Plymouth Indiana. 'TOE POLICEMAN SPOT LESS TOWN This brilliant man walks up and down Upon the streets ot Spotless Town. Theglitter of his shining star Arrests attention from afar. It lights the. beat and goes to show That naught con beat SAPOUO A housekeeper's attention is instantly arrested by the condition of the shelves, paint, windows, and tins in her neighbors kitchen. Theje mark pood housekeeping. No matter how fine tho rest of the house rray be, if the kitchen is not clean it shows the worst kind of tmthrift. A tcsin of water, a cloth and will save you from this reproach. 5 Oi1ttti T f THI mi v 5 ftiiYci neat rwm Best $1.80 per hundred. s zenner innjxrLririnjuinriJuu ehner's Mill uiriruxruTJLr Cloak Lien Llads Vigorous rztzr titzr rrrrr What PEFFER'S tlERVIGOR Did! It acta Powerfully and quickly Cures wöen all Others fail. Young men renin Iot manhood: old men recover youthful vigor. Abolotlr G regn.1 or. Jt lopotenc7tNi"'htl7 rmUslcD. Loot Power, nteed to Cur NerroDinms Lot IT. utr. eitaer. aex. Failing; Liaory, i attnr uis. ease, and oil rf rrtt of melf-alntae or axf ami indiscretion. W&rus cl laoacitv and consumption. Dontlet ürnjlst lmpoeeaworihlrss Substitut oa too bf,'"i Ifylelda a greater profit. Insist on fctvlllg PK KiTEIi'S NEKTIO Oil. r wd for It C be carried invest pocket. Prepaid, plain wrrrer. VI par box, or of or C-5. rttb A Written C. r-r-tnCr- r.efaad I Tr-y. I trr; tlx ft For Sale by L. TANNER
