Plymouth Tribune, Volume 1, Number 2, Plymouth, Marshall County, 17 October 1901 — Page 2
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EiUblUhed October 10. 1901. HENDRICKS & CO., Publishers. H. B. OQUHSBBB, Hdltor. Telepnone No. 27. OFFICE In Bisseil Block. Comer Center and Laporte Street. SUBSCRIPTION: One Year In Advance $1.50; Six Months 75 cents; Three Months 40 cents, delivered at any postoffice. Plymouth, Ind., October 17, 1901. We are not apprehensive that the President is willing to submit tamely to such an outrage as the kidnaping of an American woman by Bulgarian brigands who hold her for a ransom and we suspeet that something characteristically strenuous is about to happen. The election of Bookwalter to the mayoralty of Indianapolis is gratifying to the republicans throughout the state. It shows what the party in the capital city can do when it works harmoniously. If there 'aad been more harmony there would Lave been more plurality, for the city is normally republican by something like three thousand, and therein lies a lesson. Our spiteful and envious neighbor of the Independent, who is decreasing his office space while we are doubling ours, says we acknowledge that the Republican and Evening News have come into disrepute under our management. Can a man who will lie like that, with the printed evidence against him, be trusted in his circulation statements, with the evidence in his own control? Who knows how many papers he distributed under his .recent promise to circulate four thousand? The Independent says it "has at various times sought to impress upon the merchants of Plymouth the fact that it covers the daily field and that its weekly edition leads the others in circulation." The most conspicuous feature of the Independent's efforts is their total lack of success, as evidenced by a comparison of the paid advertising in the several papers of this county,showing that the unreliablelndepeodent has the hast. Dishonesty toward advertisers nay be shrewd and funny but it is no1, profitable. It would not serve Metsker's purpose to admit that only one of the creditors of Mr. Hendricks would yield to.Martindale's persuasive talk about the great things he could do in a foreclosure and receivership, and that one a democrat, so he casts truth to the winds and says that all the, creditors joined in the petition that was filed Thursday. Neither did he consider it desirable to inform his few readers that the receivership proceeding was discontinued as soon as the respectable lawyers in the case reached town. Thus is the devil's hoof of politics in the affair revealed and Metsker's hopes made plain. CONGRESS TO CRUSH ANARCHY. Congressman Landis, of Delphi, was a speaker at the annual meeting of the Marquette club in Chicago Wednesday evening. Speaking of President McKinley he said: "He regarded responsibility as a sacred trust. Responsibility seemed to inspire him, to lift him to the sublime heights of every peak of human genius as embraced in statesmanship, and from that supreme height, in calmness and serenity, he took his bearings. He stood on one of those peaks when he prepared that last address he delivered at Buffalo. The entire Republican party, loyal and true, strenuously American, stands tonight and will continue back of President Theodore Roosevelt, to the end that the sentiments expressed in that address are given the. vital force and effect of law. And to this legislative duty we will add another. We will go after the red jlag in this republic. "I confess that I am not a competitor with any man who enters the lists as a conservative on the question of anarchy. My blood boils with indignation when I read that the only way to lay hands on the wretch at Spring Valley who sent his congratulations to the assassin at Buffalo is to arrest him for publishing a lot tery advertisement la his newspaper. And that creature without sex, who set that coward's brain on fire, turned Joose in the streets of Chicago and protected by the very system to the destruction of which the effortr of her life are dedicated! Congress will convene in less than two months, and 1 believe that before the holidays, under a suspension of the rules, by practically unanimous consent, a bill will be enacted into a law that will enable the people of this republic to crush the life out of these social and political reptiles. " A VEXATIOUS LAWSUIT. Late yesterday afternoon suit was brought by George W. Vinall against William G. Hendricks, the St. Joseph County Savings Bank, Samuel Parker, Fred H. Kuhn and Philip J. Ball to foreclose a chattel mortgage given by the defendant Hendricks on certain printing material that was formerly used in the old Republican office. The bank holds a prior mortgage .on the same material and the other defendants hold notes secured by the mortgage sought to be foreclosed. They are all made defendants because . they had too much sense to join as plaintiffs for the sole and only purpose of giving a greedy lawyer a fee. Besides asking for a decree of fore
closure the plaintiff asked for the appointment of a receiver, notwithstanding the fact that Mr. Hendricks had already set out and tendered all the property covered by the mortgage, and the hearing was set at 8 o'clock Friday morning at Rochester. Martindale and Stevens are the attorneys for the plaintiff. Mr. Stevens was out of town while the attempt to harrass Mr. Hendricks uselessly and unnecessarily was being made, and when he returned in the evening saner counsels prevailed and the receivership proceedings were postponed. This litigation does not in any manner affect or concern The Tribune or the plant In which it is printed, neither the plant nor the paper being touched by the Vinall or the bank mortgage. It is a personal matter of Mr. nend ricks, who is represented by attorneys Frank W. Boss and L. M. Lauer in the case, and it will be desposed of in due course of law. It is what is known as a vexatious lawsuit, its purpose being to annoy rather than to enforce a right, but the vague notions under which it was started will be dispelled and the plaintiff will ultimately regret that he was not more wisely advised.
INDIANA'S YELLOW SHEET. The Indianapolis Sentinel is making a desperate effort to lend an air of plausibility to its attacks on Governor Durbin because of his anticipated ruling on the Taylor requisition and in its foaming and ranting it bites wildly at the Plymouth Evening News. The dizzy height of mendacity attained by the Sentinel in Its mad rushes may be appreciated from the following statement appearing in its editorial bluff: It is shameful, but it is true, that republican politicians, making some claim to respectability, were to be found in Indiana to indorse and rejoice over the murder of Goebel; that some republican newspapers In this state apologized for it." When truth and reason have so far departed from a newspaper the only thing left to be said when it charges that others "may be expected to glorify the assassination of democratic officials" is that a crazy liar is an object of pity rather than of condemnation. Every one except a bigoted and blinded partisan knows that the republicans and the republican press of Indiana have been outspoken in their condemnation of the foul and despicable murder of William Goebel and have always pronounced it one of the most outrageous crimes in history. But that act, dastardly as it was, is exceeded by the attempt of the Goebel faction, over the protest of a very large element of the Kentucky democracy, to use that murder for political ends, subverting law and prostituting courts in their infamous efforts. "What democratic papers and lawyers and a democratic judge have said on this subject are matters of well-remembered history and cannot be viped out by the Sentinel's- idiotic drivel. Taylor may be guilty and if he is guilty he ought to be hung. But the point of immediate Interest is that there is ample evidence of unfairness in the Kentucky court having jurisdic tion of the case, so that such a trial as every accused American citizen is entitled to is denied this man, aiid he is a fugitive from injustice. Whon the Sentinel and its jaundiced kind have something to offer against this proposition other than frothy assertion there will be time to give it consideration. A NEGLECTED CLUE. At the time William Goebel was elected to the Kentucky senate a bitter political animosity grew up between himself and Col. John L. Sandford, a fellow townsman and a warm friend of Senator Blackburn. Here is what happened: Always resentful and aggres 've, Mr. Goebel bought a newspaper and made a vicious assult on the character of Colonel Sandford. They met on a Covington street a few minutes after 1 o'clock in the afternoon and diew their weapons simultaneously. Two shots were fired, so near together that it was impossible to say who fired first; but Sandford fell dead,' with a bullet hole in his forehead. Sandford 's shot went through the right side of Goebel 's coat. Goebel was never incarcerated he was not even indicted. He was boss of the trial court and owned- the coroner: and his plea of self-defense was considered sufficient to exonerate him. At the funeral Senator Blackburn said to Sandford 's widow: "Leave it to me. I will not rest until this is avenged." In his oration at the grave he declared: "My lifework shall be to hound to the grave the assassin of my friend." Goebel had many enemies who were equally threatening and he always went armed and prepared for an attack. Kentucky is the state of bitter and undying feuds, the "dark and bloody grouud." In expending the hundred-thousand-dollar corruption fund voted by the Goebel legislature ostensibly to detect and punish the assassin of Goebel not one dollar of it was used in following known personal enemies of the victim but it was confined to the hounding of republicans for political purposes. Those democrats who care to criticise Governor Mount's course in denying the requisition for Taylor are compelled to assume Taylor's guilt, which is contrary to the American rule of pre
sumptive - innocence, and to assert that fairness of Cantrill's court, which is contrary to all the evidence from the outset until now. "So republican palliates the murder of Goebel. Neither will any republican, or many democrats, consent to the murder of Taylor under the hollow forms of law. Governor Mount did not hold that Taylor is Innocent, or that he is justified if guilty, but he did hold that according to the evidence the .chances were against a fair trial. The subsequent spectacle of an unjust judge, a packed jury and perjured witnesses demonstrated the wisdom of Governor Mount's decision. ' When one reads the threats uttered, at the graveside of Goebel's slaughtered victim and remembers how much that kind of talk means in Kentucky, there comes the thought that a very promising clue has been wholly neglected while thelpurs'iit of Taylor and the persecution of other republicans has been going on.
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS TO OCX. 12 1 901 AS rURXISHED BT CRESSNER & CO., Owners of the only abstract books In the county. Abstracts of title to all real estate In Marshall county compiled promptly and accurately. Harry Block warranty deed to Fmma A. Hamljerg, NE J of N E J of S 7, T 32, R 2, consideration $1000. Heirs of George Myers, deceased, warranty deed to William H. Myers. All int in W J of N W J of S 14, T 32, R 2, consideration $2000 Edward E. Parker and wife warranty deed to M. R. Cline, i A In E J of S W of S 23, T 32 R 1, consideration $450. Charlie L Personett warranty deed to Aaron L Warner. Lot near N E cor of E i of S W of S 23, T 32, R 1, consideration $275. Minnie. K. nartman and husband warranty deed to Fhilip Swihart, Lot 61 of Blk ö Orig Ilion, consideration $185. Heirs of Nicholas and Emeline Pero, deceased, warranty deed to Louis Pero. Und. Int. in E J of S E of S 30, T 33, R 1; S i of N E i of S 32, T 33, R 1; S E J of S 32, T 33, R 1, Ex 2 A and Ex burial lot; 2 A in S W cor of S I of S E of S 23, T 33, R 1, consideration $825. John W. Parks and wife warranty deed to 1. Ft. W. & C. R. R. Company 25 ft strip S of and adj present Rt of way acoss X W J of S 24, T 33, R 3, consideration $363. Benjamin B. -Peterson and wife warranty deed to Pennsylvania Company 25 ft strip in E of S W J of S 1, T 33, R 3, consideration $79. " Louisa Vanvactor and husband warranty deed to Pennsylvania Company 20 ft strip in X E 1 of S 11, T 33, R 2, consideration $43. William H. Alderferand wife, war ranty deed to State Exchange Bank of Argo, E 20 A of W 29.72 of lot 3 and X 10 A of 20 A of W 28.65 A of lot 4, also lots 1, 2, 3 & 4 of Alderfer Par in S W all in S 36, T 32, R 2. Consideration $3000. Addison Q. Johnson, Q C D to So phia Sherland, lot 17, in original plat of Lapaz. Consideration $35.00 Stephen Edwards and wife, war ranty deed, to Henry B. Heywood, lot near S W corner of lot 3, S 27, T 32, T 32, R 1. Consideration $250.00 Stephen Edwards and wife, warranty deed, to nenry B. Heywood, lot near S W corner of lot 3 of Sec 27, Tp 32, R 1. Consideration- $76.50 Stephen Edwards and wife, war ranty deed to William J. Wood, lot near S W corner of lot 3, of S 27, T 32, R 1. Consideration $33.50 Trustees cf M. E. Parsonage, Culver, warranty deed to WilliarOlI. and Eva Torter, X ft of lot 10, original Culver $65.00 James B. Xoycs, warranty deed to Alexander II jlieday, E of X W of S4, T32, R 3. Consideration $200. Lewis Bose & wife, et al heirs of Francis Bose, dee'd, warranty deed to Levi Ebie, S W i of N W of g 7, T 34, R 2, S E J of N J of S 15. T 34, R 1. Consideration $2200.00. Ruth E. Fanler and husband, warranty deed, to Elijah T. Blue, lot 83, E J of lot 82, Fredericksburg. Consideration $1000.00 Ask Ticket Agent J. E. Hanes, Plymouth, Ind. about very low fare to Buffalo in effect over the Pennsylvania Lines Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays for Coach Excursions. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucaa County, 68. Frank J. Cheney malus oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and States aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of one hundred dollars for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the uce of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY.8 worn to before me and subcribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A.D. 1886. aVkT I A. W, Gle&eon, ÖEALJ Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internal ly and acta directly, on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Drugsesta, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best.
SENATOR DEPEW'S WEDDING
The Ceremony Will Occur in Paris in December. Paris, Oct., 14. Miss May Palmer, fiancee of Senator Chauncey M. Depew, lives with her mother in a fashionabie apartment house in the Rue Galilee, just opposite the Countess de Sers, Senator Depew's niece. The Palmers occupy the third story, which is artistically and expensively furnished. Miss Palmer is a pretty blonde, rather tall and lithe, with ä charming touch of timidity which sometimes makes her seem embarrassed. She speaks English with a slight French accent discernible. She was educated here entirely. Miss Palmer said the exact date of the wedding was undecided. She expects Senator Depew here in December, and the marriage will be celebrated shortly on this side, not in America, as reported. The senator and his bride will probably not return to America before the following spring. "Please deny," Miss Palmer said, "the report that the sena tor and I met by chance in the waiting room of the law offices of Coudert Bros, here last year. I have known the senator six or seven years. We met and grew acquainted in the usual social way." Miss Palmer looks about 25 years old, though even close friends disagree upon her age, some saying she is quite 32. Senator and Mrs. Depew will settle in "Washington. Miss Palmer believes that Washington is much pleasanter than New York, in which city she was born. A Pastoral of the Pasture. Bangor, Me., Oct. 14 The strange story of the elopement of an ordinary milch cow with a bull moose comes from Lake Onawa, a pretty sheet of water in the hills of Piscataquis county, much frequented by sportsmen from the big cities. The cow was the property of Dr. A. T. Sanden of New York, wLose cottage is located on the shore of Onawa, and she was kept in a pasture enclosed by a rail fence. A big moose had been' several times seen hanging around the cottage grounds late at night, displaying great boldness. Last Thursday night he came close up to where the cow was, and the two seemed to be good friends. Late at night a tremendous crash was heard, and next morning the fence was a wreck and the cow was gone. Neither she nor the moose has been seen since. Preacher Will Stick. Kokomo, Oct. 14 The Rev. E. G. Shouse, pastor of the First Baptist church, refuses to resign his pastorate, which is one of the best in the state, saying that he will occupy the pulpit of the church until by diviue manifestation he is called'away. Shouse says hevyas directed by the Lord to begin work at Kokomo, and he will not tender his resignation, and bids defiance to any movement which seeks to encompass his removal. Shouse was once the Prohibition candidate for governor. His plans, as announced, promise interesting complications between the congregation and the obdurate pastor. Big Four Wreck at Warsaw. Warsaw, Ind., Oct. 14. The south-bound Elkhart-Indianapo-lis accommodation train on the Big Four railroad was wrecked just south of this place Saturday. The locomotive, after running 100 feet on the ties was ditched, but the coaches remain ed in an upright position. Over 100 passengers were bad ly shaken up, but none was seriously injured. The engineer and fireman escaped by jumping. rue accident was caused by a washout. Farms Active in Putaski, Win am AC, Ind., Oct. 14. A real-estate agent of this place has closed up contracts whereby he sells twenty-four farms, all in one deal, to fanners from Illinois. The farms aggregate 3,199 acres, and the lands sold are situated in two townships. Lands that sold a few years ago at $20 an acre now sell at 550 to $75.
Hope in the Stone Case. Constantinople, Oct. 14 In consequence of the ransom negotiations it is hoped that Miss Stone, the American missionary who was abducted by brigands, will be free within a few days. The first negotiations opened by the brigands who have Miss Stone a captive failed 'owing to the attempt by the Bulgarian police to entrap them. This has caused delay. Miss Stone's companion is in a delicate condition, but both are believed to be well treated. Spenoer Eddy, secretary of the UnitedStates legation inConstantinople, has received a notification from Washington that the funds have been forwarded. Mrs. McKinley Better. Canton, O., Oct. 14. Mrs. McKinley's health, which gave her physicians so much concern after the assassination of the president, is much improved and she is able to.be out driving almost daily. She is frequeutly seen on her way to the cemetery where her martyred husband's remains lie, as she goes to the grave with flowers as often as the weather will permit.
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Monsters and Microbes. How the Jlicrobe Would Appear If Magnified in Size to Correspond With Its Power. The world has always believed in monsters great dragons of the land, and huge serpents of the sea. As a rule these monsters have been fairly peaceable, and beyond frightening people occasionally, they have done little recorded harm. The real calamities of humanity have come from the smallest forms of life. The minute microbe has slain its millions upon millions. If this microscopic form of life were depicted in size and form equal to its danger and deadliness we should see a monster which would dwarf into insignificance all the monsters ever begotten by human imagination. The microbe has this in common with the fabled monster, its food is human flesh and its drink human blood. It battens on slaughter. For centuries medical science fought this microbic foe in darkness. The presence of the foe was recognized, its deadliness conceded. But it was ever an invisible foe, unknown aiid unnamed. To-dav science with eye-power increased a million fold finds this lurking foe, knows it and names it. FINDING THS FOB is the first step, fighting it Intelligently is the next. We lenow this minute organism lurks in the air we breathe, the food we eat,' the water we drink. We know the object of attack is the blood. We know that as the microbe is bred from foulness it must be fed on foulness. Hencer we know that the microbe finds no lodgment in the body when the blood is pure. Keep the blood pure and you shut out the microbe. When the blood is impure nature at once begins to show the red danger signals. Boils, blotches, pimples, eruptions begin to work upon the skin surface, as signs and symptoms of the corruption of the blood. When these or any signs of blood impurity appear; the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is confidently recommended as a most powerful and perfect blood-purifying medicine. I consider your 'Golden Medical Discovery ' one of the best medicines on the face of the cai-tb,' writes Wm. Floeter, Esq., of Redoak, Montgomery Co., Iowa. n While in the south-west, three years ago, I got poisoned with, poison ivy. The poison settled in my blood and the horrors I suffered cannot be told in words. I thought I would go crazy. I could do nothing but scratch. I would go to sleep scratching, would wake up in tne morning and find myself scratching. X scratched for eight months. Had it
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