Plymouth Republican, Volume 45, Number 45, Plymouth, Marshall County, 26 September 1901 — Page 7

The Republican.

WM. O. El ENDRICKS, Editor mmd Proprietor. Advertisements to appear in THE REPUBLICAN must be in before Tuesday noon to insure beir appearance in the issue of that week. Plymouth,lnd.Se tember 26. 190. LOCAL NEWS "WANTED Boy to do work at this office. County Commissioner Jarrell was a business visitor here today. IraD.Buck, ofreoria,Ill., was greeting old-time friends here last week. Frank Chaney has moved his residence to his house in the Maxey ad'dition. The Plymouth telephone exchange was closed from 2 o'clock until 4 Friday afternoon. Now is the time to buy a buggy, surrey or rocd-wagon. Ketcham &Wil son, Plymouth 42t3 Bert Marble left Saturday forBuchanan, Mich., where he has accepted a position with his father. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Bell, of Chicago, are the proud parents of a baby boy born last Thursday. . Frank C. Buck, of New York, cashier for Armour & Ca., made his annual visit here Thursday.. Buggies, surreys and road wagons. Quality up, prices down. Ketcham & Wilson, Plymouth. 42t3 James McDonald has moved Into the residence on Michigan street adjoining the Forbes seed store. As we go to press Amasa Johnson is in a verv low condition and there is no hope for a prolongation of his life. We offer great bargains in light vehicles to avoid wintering them. Ketcham & Wilson Plvomuth. 42t3 Daniel Morrison, of Connersville, now 86 years of age, has attended every Indiana state fair from the first to the present year. The suit brought by the Modern Samaritans against J. A. Shunk has been continued because of a death in the family of a distant witness. S. B. Fanning went to Rochester fcaturdav to spend Sunday with his family. He will move here as soon as he secures a suitable house. The automobile gun battery of Northwestern- military academy got as far as Hudson lake on its journey to Washington and then the trip was abandoned. Mr Harry A. Engnian, of Lexing ton, Ky., is a guest at the home of Z. M. Tanner. Mrs. En gin an was formerly Miss Etta Cleaveland, daughter of the late John W. Cleaveland. Mr. Ensrman's son. Harry ir., is business manager of the Malleable Bange firm of South Bend. Miss Mary C. Brown will open a dancing school Sept. 27, 1901 at Hill's Cafe. Miss Brown will go to Chicago for a few days to take instruc tions and post up on the late dances. Any desireing instructions will please notify her. Class Lessons 35cts. Pri vate Lessons SOcts. Assembly 35cts. Israel's Most Sacred Day. In the Jewish calendar Monday was Yom Kippur, or the day of atonement, one of the greatest holidays of the Jewish church. It began at sunset Sunday and ended at sunset Monday. The stores kept by Hebrews were closed ir. this city, as is the case with them every year. For more than thirty centuries this feast, prescribed by the Mosaic law, has been rigidly observed b Jews wherever they may be dis persed. Even the mst liberal Israel ite complies in some measure with the law of Moses prescribing the annual day of atonement. New Suits Filed. Complaints filed in circuit court are as follows: Josephine Feller vs. Allen J. Feller, divorce and alimony. The parties live in Bourbon. Kapha I. Brown vs. John W. Brown, divorce. The defendant lives in Mishawaka. Susan White vs. Calvin P. Klinger, et al., on note. Franklin Ilarbert vs. Mary Ilarbert, divorce. The parties live' near Donaldson. Large Farm Sold. John Dalman, as trustee, has sold to William C. Gannom that part of the large Simons farm lying south of the Pennsylvania railroad east of this city. The price, $7109.91, was at the rate of $46.47 an acre, which is considered very low, at least $14 per acre less than the real value. Mrs. Thomas Sponsler. Mrs. Thomas Sponsler died at her home in Argos Tuesday, Sept. 17. The funeral services were held at her late residence in Argos at 10 o'clock Friday morning and the remains were brougit here at noon and interred at Oak Hill cemetery. ' Bourbon Fair. The Bourbon Fair will be held October 1, 2, 3, and 4 and every effort is being put forth to make it eclipse in interest and entertainment every former fair of the association. C. W. Shakes is president and B. W. Parks secretary. I58tl 433t

MEMORIAL

Observance in Plymouth of the Day of the Meeting in the Long before the hour fi;ed for the memorial service at the Washington school Thursday the citizens of Plymouth and vicinity were finding seats n the larjre auditorium and when the bell ceased its mournful tolling at 2 o'clock the room was well filled and many were seated on the stage. It was a quiet and sober assemblage and the audience sat silent and attentive as though in the presence of the dead. It was a part of the greatest funeral i.i the world's history, participated in by eighty million mourners. Wherev er the American flag floated that day there was McKinley 's funeral and all thoughts were centered at the grave side in Canton. .V selected choir of thirty voices under tire direction of K. F. Brooke opened the service with the hymn, "Jesus, Lover of my Soul," and Rev. W. W. Raymond pronounced an appropriate invocation, beginning with the Lord's Prayer, in which the standing audience joined. The President's proclamation appointing the day as one of mourning and prayer, read by Jacob Martin, was followed by the resolutions prepared by the committee and presented by its chairman, Judge Hess. The preamble, reciting the personal and official virtues of McKinley, is too long to be printed; the formal resolution is as follows: "Therefore, Be It Resolved, That in the death of William McKinley the nation has lost a soldier and patriot, a lover of mankind, an exemplary christian, an eminent statesman and a great and beloved chief magistrate, whose administration will ever stand out as one of the most eventful and illustrious in American history. And with our countrymen we unite in profound sorrow for the untimely death of President McKinley, as well as in admiration -of his spotless character as a man and his great public services, which have brought so much honor, power and greatness to our great republic. And to the widowed wife to whom the president gave a life-long devotion as pure as it was beautiful we offer our deepest heart-felt sympathy." When the choir had rendered Cardinal Ne w m a n 's bea u t i f ul hy m n , 4 Lead , Kindly Light," Mayor Jones, the chairman of the meeting, introduced Rev. O.S. Thornberry, of the Presbyterian church, the first speaker of the day. Rev. Thornberry painted a dignified but terrible picture of the great crime, comparing the good man who was stricken down with the cowardly brute who did the deed, and then proceeded to a consideration of the remedy for anarchy. Mere punishment he rejected because of its inadequacy except in the way of necessary regulation. Right, eternal truth, intelligently understood add universally dis seminated, must be the starting point for any remedy. "Freedom of speech is a blessing to any people," continued the speaker; "but when freedom of speech is taken to mean the right to distort and abuse, to execrate ana lampoon, to iioia up to contempt and ridicule, then it is that the divine idea has been miscon ceived and prostituted to an unholy and illegitimate use. And it will cer tainly bear fruit after its kind." Mr. Thornberry deprecated the powerful tendency to denounce principles and question motives where honest uisa agreements arise and said: "Hence I hold it to be safe teaching that no one has morally the right either from the stump, or the platform, or the pulpit, or through the press, or anywhere, to pour contempt and ridicule upon the well-meant ideas and achievements of his fellow. It will be a sad day for the cause of right and truth and sacred honor but a most glorious day indeed for anarchy and its kindred doctrines if the time should ever come when we shall regard other men as being as great humbugs as we feel ourselves to be, and their motives ind endeavors as insincere and unpraiseworthy as our own. " The speaker suggested that if men will control their hysterical tendency to berate and belittle, to rant and fume, law-breakers and assassins would be less incited to commit 'their dastardly crimes. Ex-Senator Drummond was next introduced and spoke eloquently as follows; "We meet today with bowed heads and aching hearts in the presence cf mighty Death. "We come not as partisans, for in death all men are brothers; we come as American citizens whose servant has been murdered at his post of duty. He stood ripe in worldly ' honors, strong in health and intellect, heroic in his devotion to a frail and faithful wife, with the warm hand of fellowship outstretched to take and to hold the hand that murdered him. "Oh God! it is a fearful thing - To see the human soul take wing In any shape, in any mood. " "And yet more fearful and still more

SERV16E

Mourning and Prayer Solemnities a School Auditorium. horrible it is to see one, who has come from the great body of the common people step by step to the highest place given by men, torn from the bosom of her who first loved him as an unknown soldier boy, by the wretched hand of one who hates all government. "Grave questions are repeating themselves in our sad and searching hearts. Sober men and women may well ask the spirit of Abraham Lincoln, of James A. Garfield of William McKinley, Is this God's mysterious ml m way? And, if it is His way, what does it all mean? "In a country whereLiberty lays her love and blessed mercy at the door of all alike; where a flag christened in the life blood of stout hearts is the emblem of all that is good in govern ment; wnere tne Harvest song ani the sweet melody of industry melt in harmony above and about the heads of freemen presidents are murdered! And who shall stay the hand of the assassin? Shall we hedge our presidents about, with the glitter and gleam of armed men? Alexander. Czar and Autocrat of all the Russias, did so and died in the arms of his guards, by the hands of assassins. Marat tried that and died at his bath, at the hand of Charlotte Corday. Kingly accoutrements will not save. Brute force has ever met brute force and ever will. The cunning of the assassin will strike through the cordon of armed men. "UntilLiberty bell sent out its blessed message xjf hope to an eager world, as far back as the knowledge of man runneth, government had been in a greater or a less degree an oppression. Men had governed men by force and fear. Some victor on the field of valor was taken up and crowned as king. Sometimes he lived until he was slain by his successor; sometimes he was vouchsafed to die a natural death. The record of kingships is one bloody train throughout profane and sacred history. Men had tried the vain pomp and glory of a government by brute force and had failed. "In l"7G,we declared upon a govern ment new to tne worm, it was founded upon the cardinal principles of the teachings of Jesus Christ faith, hope and love. Kings in scorn, smiled at our experiment. We open ed our doors to the king-ridden hosts of Europe. They came, they are coming still. Thev brought with them their language, their customs, their traditions, their enlightenment, their science, their ignorance, their depravity, and I regret to say that some of them brought their hate for all government, for to them in their native land government was an oppression and a curse. Some of them, thank God, would give, as thousands of them have given, their lives to keep the stars forever in our flag's field of blue. Others, with hearts and souls saddened, depraved and darkened by centuries of oppression, easily entlamed by murderous teachings, would kill any man who seemed to be the government. Coming from a land wnere to dream evil or tne king was at one time treason, they become drunk with license and call it liberty! Emma Goldman the Modern Medusa trails her snaky locks and" sows her seed of fire and death throughont our land. John Most the infamous and the awful is heralded and heroized; and William McKinley, beloved of men, is murdered as a sacrifice to the monster of the red hand and the red flag. And so long as men and women are given the license to stand in the name of liberty, with the red torch in one hand and the red flag in the other, teaching the ignorant, the weak and the depraved that all govern ments are a curse and all men in hirh places should be slain to the end that anarchy,rcd-handcd and reeking, may prevail, so longshall we meet together as we do today about the biers of our murdered presidents, in sorrow, humiliation and shame. My friends and neighbors, I deem it an exceptional privilege to stand, as -it -were, in the presence of this illustrious dead, and to renew my devotion to my country, by placing a flower on his tomb. He was my president. He stood as and for my beloved country. His assassin struck not at him; his deadly bullet was directed against the cherished institutions of our native land. "Breath there a man with soul so dc. , Who never to himself has said, This is my own, my native land?" After vhe audience, standing, had joined in singing "Nearer, My God, to Thee," George II. Thayer, jr., was introduced and delivered a beautiful panegyric upon the character and life of McKinley, whom . he pronounced our best beloved President." The simplicity, of the martyr's character, his devotion to duty, his adherence to truth, his affection for his fellow men and theirs for him, all were eloquently portrayed by the gifted orator. v

Mr. Thayer was followed by. exSenator Parker, who spoke earnestly and convincingly of the necessity for obedience to law and respect for established institutions. Lynching is anarchy and too much freedom of tongue and pen has an anarchistic trend, the orator maintained. "Let there be a thorough understanding among us that obedience to the law is the thing." Senator Parker spoke with deep feeling of the uniyersal sorrow for the nation's loss and expressed his faith and hope that Roosevelt is a patriot as was his predecessor and that the strong young nation of the west will live and flourish. The chairman called upon Senator Parks, Judge Capron and H. G. Thaver for brief talks and each of them responded appropriately. Senator Parks deplored the spread of anarchy but thanked God that the government still lives and will live, and he spoke earnestly for higher christian effort in political as well as private affairs. Judge Capron suggested that the law-makers in this

twentieth ceuturv have before them the problem of restraining rather than punisljing crime, of apprehending criminals before the commission of criminal acts, and declared that science must point out the method. Mr. Thaver eulogized the character of McKinley and pleaded for a general recognition of the supremacy of law. Other hvmns were sung and the solemn service was closed by Rev. J. E. Hartman, who pronounced the benediction. From one o'clock until five all business of a public and private character was suspended and the city was hushed and solemn. From sea to sea and from the great lakes to the gulf the funeral hour was observed. Railways, streetcar lines, steamships, factories, all united with merchants and professional men in the universal tribute of respect. The day will ever be remembered for the profound and widespread mourning of a great and busy people. For State Superintendent. F. E. Kinzie, ofSouth Bend, now su pcrintendent at the Indianapolis blind asylum, was in Plymouth Saturday interviewing the leading republicans concerning his prospects as a candidate for nomination for state superintendent of schools. He is related to the Kinzics who live in Bourbon township The other candidates for the place are F. A. Cotton, of New Castle, now deputy in the office; R. C. Hillis, sup erintendent of Cass countv schools; Alexander Thompson, superintendent of Grant county schools; W. II. Herschman, a Vincennes newspaper man. Dies Aged 101 Years. Richmond, Ind., Sept. 21 Mrs. John May, aged 101, died at her home in Henry county. Her parents were rich Virginia married against land owners. She their wishes and was compelled to leave home. Salesmen Go Forth. The traveling salesmen of the Clizbc manufacturing company lef tFriday on their trips for the sale of the gasoline engines invented by John Hay and made by the company. The salesmen will visit all parts of the United States before returning. Those famous little! pills, DeWitt' Little Early -Risers compel your livei and bowels to do their duty, thus giving, you pure, rich blood to recuperate youi body, Are easy to tase. Never gripe. J. W, Hess. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS TO SEPT. 21, 1901 AS FURNISHED BY CRESSNER & CO., Owners of the only abstract books In the county. Abstracts of title to all real estate la Marshall county compiled promptly and accurately. Peter Hair and wife, warranty deed to John Hughes 20 A in X i of S of Sec 23, Tp 32, ll 2, consideration $550. Artana Jankc and husband,, warranty deed to "William Yantrcese, X of N E Ex W 20 A of Sec 10, Tp 32, It 3, consideration $2500. John Dalman and wife, warranty deed to William C. Gammons all S of It II in E j, Ex strip off of N end, of Sec 12, Tp 33, 11 2, consideration $7,109.91. . Albert Kinzie and wife, warranty deed to Julian E and Amanda M. Emmons, lot 11 -Masts addition to Bremen also a lot 10 ft strip S of and Adj lot 11 Masts addition, consideration $800. Elizabeth Ecker, warranty deed to Adaline Stofer lot 62 Thayers 2nd addition to Bourbon, consideration $075. Heal estate mortgagees filed to the amount of $3600. In a Glass of Water. Put a handful of glazed coffee in a glass of water, wash off the coating, look at it; smell it! Is it fit to drink? Give' Infill ? the same test. It leaves the water bright and clear, because. ts just pure coffee. The ald pack age 1 saure uniform Quality and fjthnM,

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There la more Catarrh in this section

of the country than all other dieeaees put together, and until the last few years doctors pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requir ing constitutional treatment. Hairs Catarrah Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonf u). It acts directly on the blood and mucous surface of the evetetu. They offer one hundred dollars fo any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Add ress, F. J. Cheney& Co.,Tolado.O. Sold by druggietB, 75c.' Hall's Family Pills are thr best. Water Cur- for Chronic Constipation. Take two cups of bot water half an hour before each meal and just before going to bed, also a drink of water, hot or cold, about two hours after each meal. Tdke lots of outdoor exercise vwalk". ride drive. Meke a regular habit of this and in many cases chronic constipation may be cured without- the use of any medi cine. When a purgative is required take something mild and gentle like Cham berlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. For sale by J. W. Hess. Blue Island, Iii., Jan. 14, 1901. Mesere Ely Bro3.: I have used your Cream Ba'm in my family for nine years Hud it has become my family doctor for colds in the head. I use it freely od ro) chilJreo. It is a Godsend to children as they are troubled more or less. Yours respectfully, J. Kimball. Judge for yourself. A trial size can be had for the Email sum of 10 etc. Supplied by druggists or mailed by Ely Brother?, 5G Warren St.. New Vork. Pull size, 50 cts. Couiinunlcilon. Mr. Editor Allow me to speak afew words in favor of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. I suffered for three years with the bronchitis -tnd could not sleep at nighte.l tried several doctors and various patent medicines, but could gpt nothing to give me any relief until my wife got a bottle of this valuable medicine, which ha9 completely relieved me.-VV.S. Brockman, Bagnell, Mo. This remedy is for 9ale by J. V. Hee9. Nasal CATARRH In all its stages there should be cleanliness. lj's Cream 3alni Cleanses, soothes and heals the diseased membrane. It cures catarrh and drives away a cold in the head ouicklT. Cream Balm is placed into the nostrils, spreads crer the membrane and is absorbed. Relief is immediate and a cure follows. It is not drying does not produce sneezing. Large Size, 50 cents at Druggists or by mail ; Trial Size, 10 cents by mail. V.I.Y BUOTUEKS, 50 Warren Street, New York. T, Rheumatic Has Been Successfully tried by thousands of Rheumatic sufferers.who will testify to the merits of this great remedy. Now 1 the time to take it. Kegutate the bowels, gives a pood appetite. A 5 week's treatment $1.00. Sold by J. W. Hes, your druggist. Star Restaurant The LeaderWe are triut; hard to make this the baet restaurant in the city.,We make it a specialty td suit our patronr. We are prepared to furnish you with Oysters in can or bulk. Yours to please PHONE 114. 0TT0 ALBERT. TENTING on the OLD CAMP GROUND y After an interval .. of retirement the old familiar Kendall Grocery - is re-established at the old stand. All kinds of goods usually found in a first class grocery will be kept in stock and prices will always be rignt. We want Your Country Produce. If. fJI. Kendall f.Hehigan Street.

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GUMPTION.

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NE does not have

properly cheated' Persons of gumption are using Ivory Soap, women who have trusted themselves too near the precipice of false

economy and who can now appreciate the true economy in a soap made of pure vegetable oils and other high -class ingredients, but made in such quantity as to bring the price within the reach of the very poorest family. Indeed it is the very poor who most need it, for they can least afford the extravagance of common soap.

Special Inducement. Prospective Boarder Why do you offer to board young men for $G iess? Don't they eat as much? Farmer More, but you i?ee 1 have tlx marriageable daughters to get off this vear. Chicago News. The movement against women wear lug trains and long petticoats In streets is growing In Importance In Berlin. Al the different hygienic societies are call Ing rueetings to consider ways an. means of Inducing women to wear onl ßhort skirts In the streets.

There's Great Satisfaction

In getting relief from the eye-strain which you and almost everybody else must suffer Headache, nausea, pain in or over the eyes indistinct vision, all yield to proper -treatment such as we are able to give. Call and talk it over.

International Stock Food Always Sold on a Spot Cash Guarantee to Cure or Prevent Hog Cholera.

3! 1 3 i 4 It also fattens hogs in 30 J endorsed by over 100 leading farm

J by over bOO.OOO farmers, was included in tne u. b. government exhibit at Paris, 1900, and awarded the highest medal. We guarantee j j paying results and leave the entire matter in your own hands. You are to be not only the user but also the sole judge of results. If it jp j does not make you extra money in growing and fattening hogs, or if j it does not save your hogs from hog cholera the use will not cost j j you a cent. Did you ever have a fairer offer.

t 1 i ...J. W. TttTfTnHrTTT 1 1 tt tttTtt nnrLruTJinnjxanjTari Silver Leal Flour Best $1.80 per hundred. 5 s Zehner's Mill J axruxrmnjaruTJTnjiJ VJeak Men Hade Vigorous rstxr src&ar trs&rr trx What PEFFER'S ÜERVIG0R Did! It acta powerfully and qtilekly Cures when all others t&n. Voun men regain lost manhood: old men recover routbial rigor. Absolutely Onarnteed toCare rservooiiienf, Lot Vltalltr luipotencr. Nightly Eniiseion. Lort Power, either mx, Falling. M-raory. tVwtlnc Dileaes, and alltffcttot telf-abute or txetttt and indiscretion. Wards off Insanity and consumption. Donl let druegu-t impose a wonbless substitute on ?ou because it yields a greater profit. Insist on cavng: PEFFER'S is EKVlGOlt. or send lor It. Can r carried In veet porket. Pre!ail. plain wrapper, 1 per box, or O for $3, with A Written GnaranteetoCurer Itffiiml Money. Pamphlet free PEFFÜU MEDICAL, ASS'N. Chicago. 111 For Sale by L. TANNER emr.MFSTfc.TS'3 cnslish EnnvnovAL pills 0 tl for CIIICUESTEH'S EULLSU ia HEB u 4 bold Ktttllio boxe. trj f with blMribiao Take other. BrCim I Daagvr Pabotttattona aad laalta. tlonik Buy of jor Urttgut, or ri 4c. I umni tat Partiealaro. TeaftaoaULfl iJ al Kr Hef fo ld Im."! utim, y rlira a Mi m vinr i riumvuiaj. oia mj I DruKiMa. CkiclMtr ChemlooJ Co.

KoMloa UJj raw, MmiiMomrmrk-ViWLAmtAr

gumption till one has been

I A 6AM ICS CO. CIHOIHKAT1 To Clean Carpet on the Floor. An excellent method of cleaning a rarpet upon the floor is to use a bran swab, which is made by tying a generous handful of wheat bran or sawdust loosely in the middle of a double square of cheesecloth. The swab is dipped in clear ammonia water and rubbed hard over the surface of the carpet. When the swab becomes dirty, it is washed in plain water and the cleansing process iß renewed.

J. R LOSEY & SON, J. LOT LOSEY, Doctor of Optics; 109 Michigan St, PLYMOUTH. IN0.

days' less time and saves grain. It is papers and has bun used for years r it t t t H t tt t ItTTt ttt T 1 1 1 1 1 1 tlTTT t TTTT THE GREAT Pan-American EXPOSITION BUFFALO, ll Y. MAY TO NOVEMBER, 1901. Make am ;emeus now for your sum nier vx ation, and join one of the special low-rate personally conducted excursions VIA THE Lake Erie & Western The Pioneer Niagara Falls Excursion Route. Both shows this year for one admission. For fall particulars, call on apents Lake Erie & Western R. R or address C. F. DAL . General Passenger Agent, INDIANAPOLIS INDIANA Da Witt's Witch üazel Salre should be promptly applied to cute, bums tnd ecalde. It soothes and quickly heals the iDjured part. There are vrorthle8 counterfeits,' be eure to get De Witt's. J.W.Hees.