Plymouth Tribune, Volume 1, Number 32, Plymouth, Marshall County, 15 May 1902 — Page 3

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SENATOR TILLMAN : SPEAKS THE TRUTH

His Candid Admission of Crirrinal Practices Infuriates His Democratic Colleagues. SENATORS Dr-SERT CHAMBER Seek to Repudiate the Statement of the South Carolina Statesman By Refusing to Hear Him. Washington, D. C May 8 Senator Tillman yesterday confessed the crimes' of the -democratic party in the south and almost broke the back of the opposition to the Philippines bill. Every other ; democratic senator left thesenate chamber soon after Tillman began to speak, and they remained in the democratic cloakroom until he had finished. They sought by conspiciously and dramatically absenting themselves to repudiate Tillman's tirade, but in his confession of the crimes of democrats against the negroes in the south he spoke so much truth that they realize the incalculable injury he has done to their opposition to the Philippine bill, but particularly to their attack on the United States army. In the democratic cloakroom an indignation meeting was held and the profanity there indulged in by such men as Carmack of Tennessee, Jones and Berry of Arkansas, Martin of Virginia, Pettus of Alabama, Patterson of Colorado, Rawlins of Utah, and Dubois of Idaho, could be heard in the senate chamber. It was one of the most extraordinary ber. Tillman, still smarting under the ostracism he has felt since he attacked his colleague on the floor of the senate in February, at last broke into the debate and began such a tirade against the republican party as only he is capable of. His ostensible excuse was to reply to Senator McComas, who had referred to the burning of Columbia, S. C. by Sherman in his march to the sea as an incident of war the commander could not prevent. mum m -m 1 -m - "WW 4 " gm x ill ill till reouHeu ucumu: iui dragging the civil war into ;his debate on the Philippines bill. Then he proceeded to discuss the negro question, and in an hour he frantically and defiantly confessed every crime that has been charged against . the Southern democrats in their struggle to override the law and control the government of those states. He admitted and gloried in the fact that the white men of the South had defied the law and resorted to every political crime known to man, including murder, to maintain the white man's supremacy. He told of the situation in his own county of Edgefield, S. C, when President Grant ordered a regiment of United States soldiers there to guarantee a fair election. He admitted that there were 2,000 more negroes than whites in the county, and ten companies of soldiers there to see that there was a fair election. "But," said Tillman, "we had only 3,900 majority at the polls. "We could have made it 39,000 or 99,000-or 999,000 but we only needed 3,900 and that was our majority in Edgefield county." . Senators Daniel and Martin of Virginia and McLaurin of Miss issippi were the only democrats remaining in their seats when he made this confession. All the others had deserted the chamber soon after Tillman secured the floor, fearing, that he would em barras them. ' When Martin and Daniel iheard this confession of ballot-box stuffing they quit their seats and joined the other democratic senators in the cloakroom. McLaurin of 'Mississippi sat grimly in his seat, chewing his short mustache and trying to look calm and unconcerned, but when Senator Foraker who sat near, leaned over and asked him if he was enjoying the speech, the Mississippian broke outwith: "i '.'GÖLawäy; don't 'tomenV me 1 li!re you, Forakor, but you must not cbno nzzr mo. at such a time." Jones of '-Arkansas came into the chamber for a moment,8 but 3 ho heard Tillman's confession he dodged back into the cloak-

roomr-nBaconof Georgia came in from the marble room, but huir y "on ! to the cloakroom, so' as to hear as little as possible!.' Clay of Georgia came in and assisted Daniel of : Virginia tö es cape. Carmack of Tennessee poked his head through the half open door, but with an oath drew back into the "now close and stuffy cloakroom. Tillman pro ceeded. He was now at white heat. He had been deserted by the democrats, while nearly every republican senator was in his seat listening in silence to his confession. ' , The. scene was intensely dramatic. Tillman wanted encouragement, even by retort, from the republicans, but they would not gvo him that small advantage. Spooner sat directly across the center aisle looking as much pleased3 as though at a minstrel show, and Tillman advanced until he towered over the Wisconsin senator's chair, gesticulating and grimacing like a combination of a madman and 'an idiot, but Spooner only sniiied and sat Some of the republican senators laughed and Tillman went on to confess for the South greater and more horrible crimes. "We haven't got the water cure in South Carolina," he yelled. "There has been some talk about the sand cure, but I want to say to you that when we think it is necessary to put a nigger's head in the sand we put in his whole body." McLaurin, of Mississippi, who had remained, could stand no more. He almost ran from his seat to the democratic cloakroom. A moment later Patterson, Carmack, Dubois, Jones and Pettus could be seen walking the floor and' gesticulating in the cloakroom. It looked so ominous that Senator Beyeridge paid a visit to the democrats and came back laughing over what he had seen and heard. He won't tell, because it was a senatorial conference. But later Senator Pettus demanded of another republican senator on his honor as a man what price the republicans had paid Tillman for that speech. Dubois, the head manager of

the new leadership on the demo cratic side, visited Senator Lodge and said the democrats repudiated Tillman and his speech. 'But how can you?" asked Lodse. "Didn't Tillman speak the truth as he knows it in South Carolina?" ACTENIC RAY USED AGAIN. Experiment with a Light That Is Said to Kill Germs of Disease. New York, May 8. At the Flower Hospital a second experiment has been made with the actenolite, the new electrical apparatus through which the actenic ray, or the Violet colored light, which has been found to be germicidal, is thrown upon the diseased parts of the body. The patient was the one used in the first trial of the ray Frederick M. Campbell, fourteen years old, who, before he became ill, was a great favorite as a messenger in the Stock Exchange. So fond are the( brokers of the boy the have just endowed a bed in perpetuity of his name. He is the special protege of Anson R. Flower, the president of the hospital, who for a year has defrayed the expenses of the boy's care in a private room. The boy's case is a' desperate one. He has tuberculosis of the hip in a very advanced stage. The entire upper part of the femur has baen cut away. His only hope is in the actenic ray, and, although that has been used on him but once, already there is noticed a decrease in the discharge from the wounds. The operation blasted ten minutes, after which the böy was carried from the operating room, and a second patient, suffering with a secondary cancer of the neck, was brought in. The light used is of 3,000 candle power. i Vfilhelmiru Free of Fever. 1 The Hague, May 8 The condition of Queen Wilhelmina show some improvement. t Yesterday there has been complete ab sence of fever and her .majesty has taken a littlo nourishment.; The doctors are satisfied with her condition, as the disappearance of the fever enables her majesty to get refreshing sleep, j

DIRTIEST MAN SHE EVER SAW.

Clara Barton Recalls When She Met Theodore Roosevelt in Cuba. Washington, May 8. Clara Barton, president of the National Red Cross society, who sailed Tuesday for Russia as a delegate to the convention of the Red Cross societies of the world, called on President Roosevelt before leaving Washington. When the president learned that Miss Barton was in the White House he stopped all business and received her. "I am certainly very glad to see you," said the president, as he rushed toward her to shake her hand. "The last time I saw you you were riding across Cuba in an army wa?on. You had a lot of medicine and clothing and provisions to some sick and worn-out soldiers about twenty miles away." 'Yes, and you were the dirtiest man I ever saw," said the Red Cross woman. "You remember the rain was coming down in torrents and the roads were in a horrible condition. I saw a couple ot men dashing across the country, and when you rode up to our wagon I remarked that I never saw such awful looking horses and men." The two had quite a chat about the Cuban campaign, and Miss Barton left with the president's assurance that the Red Cross could always rely upon his support. LEAVES CANAL TO PRESIDENT Bill by Hoar Provides Executive Shall Choose Isthmial oute. Washington, May 6 Senator Hoar yesterday introduced a new isthmian canal bill, leaving to the Presidont the selection of a route. The bill is brief. It provides that "It shall be the duty of the president of the United States, as soon as the same can economically and conveniently be done, to cause to be excavated and constructed a canal of such depth and capacity as will be sufficient for the movement of ships of the greatest tonnage and draft now in use, and such as may be reasonably anticipated, from the Atlantic to the Pacific, by such route as may be selected by him, having satisfied himself of the right of the United States to construct and protect such canal." The president is also directed to have harbors constructed at both ends of the canal, and he Is given authority "to employ such agencies and obtain such advice as he shall find necessary." Authority is givan to the president to determine the terms upon which foreign countries may use the canal. The aggregate cost of the canal is fixed at $180,000,000, and 10,000,000 is appropriated for the beginning of work. Winter in Germany and France. Berlin, May 8 A snowstorm occurred in southern Germany yesterday and the orchards, which were in bloom, were severely damaged. Snow fell to the depth of a foot. The weather is unusually cold. Paris, May 8. Heavy snow fell at Abbey ville and Amions, in the department of Somme, today, and frost is reported from many places in the northeastern departments. have to give up Its all Over When Nervous Sick Headache Comes to Young or Old Everything Stops and Nothing Goes on But the Nervous Sick Headache. If anything will engender a disregard for even life itielf it is continued or oft repeated attacks of sick headache. You may be able to partially describe it but the English language fails to fully do it justice Its misery so concentrated so condensed eo prostrating that all else is enveloped in its meshes.' . . Mrs. W. Walters of Thayer St., Plymouth, Ind., eays: "My daughter used to suffer with hard nervous ßick headaches everything brought them on. They left her very weak and nervous. I was asked to try Dr. A. TV. Chase's Nerve Pillsaud did eo getting them atJ.W. Uees's Drug Store and they are splendid. The headaches are gone and the nervous system steady and strong. The result ia more thaa pleasing to ua." Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Pills are sold at 50c. a box at dealers or Dr, A. W. Chase Medicine Co., Buffalo, N. Y. See that portrait and. signature of A. W Chase. M. D. are on every package. 12 J ssbbbsbbbbm m mammmm We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure, Send for circulars, free.

AT. PELEE DISASTER

GROWS IN HORROR Possibly 40,000 Lives Blotted Out in a Twinkling on Island of Martinique. ONLY TWENTY ESCAPE ALIVE Fire, Stones and Aud Belched From the Volcano Destroy the City of St. Pierre and Nar-by Towns Eighteen Ships Caught in Shower of Fire and Burned. St. Thomas, D. W. I.. May 10 Later reports of the disaster of St. Pierre, Martinique, confirm the immensity of the dis aster that has- overtaken that town, from these reports there does not appear to remain any doubt that the entire town has been destroyed, with a loss of from 40,000 to 50,000 human lives. The victims did not all live in the city.but the surrounding country appears to have also suffered heavily. A rain of fire from the volcano of Mount Pelee seems to have swept down on the city with a suddenness that precluded all attempts of the populace to escape. Even the vessels in the harbor were destroyed, with or or two exceptions, and these only managed to get to sea and away from the menacing peril with the tion of St. Pierre seems to have been as complete as was that of Sodom and Gomorrah, and by exactly the same agency. At S o'clock Thursday morning the volcano of Mont Pelee, which had been belching smoke and ashes for several days, suddenly shot a great sheet of molten mat ter into the air, which seemed to spread over the heavens, and a few moments laterfire as liter ally raining on the city of St. Pierre. There was no escape for the people. Following the show er of fire came mud, steam, stones and sulphuric gasses, and persons who were not burned to death were asphyxiated by the foul air. Ships in. the harbor caught fire and sunk, and vessels five miles out at sea were covered with mud and ashes. The scene was indescribable and the few survivors seem too confused and appalled to give more than rambling accounts of the horror. Some oi the natives were so superstitious that they believed the end of the world, as dspicted in the Bible had come. Vessels which have visited St. Pierre say only a mass of ashes and charred bodies mark the site of the city. Not more than twenty persons escaped with their lives. Eighteen vessels were burned and sunk with all on board, including four American vessels and the steamship Roraima, of the Quebec line. Thomas T. Prentiss, tha United States consul, and family are reported among the victims. In addition to the known losses at St. Pierre the gravest apprehension exists for the safety of other islands in the vicinity of Martinique. Cable communica tion with St - Vincent, Barbadoes, Grenada, Trinidad, Demerara, and St, Lucia is completely cut off, and the latest advices from St. Lucia were to the effect that a volcanic eruption was in progress there. Mont Pelee j Head Blown Oft. London, May 10. All the newspapers here express the utmost horror of the Marinique catastrophe, which, they say, for suddenness and magnitude, is only comparable with that of Pompeii, and they extend deep sympathy to the French nation. Owing tothe cable break down in the "West Indies no details of the disaster at Martinique have yet been received here. The available dispatches from the West Indies represent the inhabitants of the other islands as being in deadly fear. Prof. John Milne,-the seismologist, in an interview published in the Daily Express, declares that Mont Peleo "has blown its head off" owing to the infiltration of water through the rocks until it reached the molten material beneath, forming steam of tremendous pressure. when something had to give way.

We live by our blood, and on it. We thrive or starve, as our blood is rich or poor. There is nothing else to live on or by. When strength is full and spirits high, we are being re freshed, bone muscle and brain, in body and mind, with continual flow of rich blood. This is health. When weak, in low spirits, no cheer, no spring, when rest is not rest and sleep is not sleep, we are starved ; our blood is poor; there is little nutriment in it. Back of the blood, is food, to keep the blood rich. When it fails take Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil. It sets the whole body going again man woman and child. If you hare not tried it, send for free sample, its agreeable taste will surprise you. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists 409-415 Pearl Street, New York. z. and Ji.oo; all druggists. I raAnd the tortures of the damned with protruding piles brought cu by constipation with which I was afflicted for twenty years. I ran across your CASCARETS in the town of Newell. Ia., and never found anything to equal them. To-day I am entirely free from piles and feel like a new man" C B. Keitz, Uli Jenes St., Sioux City, Ia. CANDY CATHARTIC Pleasant. Palatable. Potent, Taste Good, Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c 60c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... tiwllai Ktmtij Coaptey, Chlnyo, Bonlrnl. Ktw Tork. 81 Hfl.TO.RAP Bold and jrnaranteed by alldrngI1U" I U"OMb gists to CUKE Tobacco Habit. ;)on't Be Fooledi Take the genuine, original ROCKY MOUNTAIN TEA Made only by Madison Medicine Co.. Madison, Wis. It keeps you well. Our trade mark cut on each package, price, 35 cents. Never sold in bulk. Accept no substl tute. Ask your druggist. i r 0 MEX, not under 25 years, tojcall on old and new customers. No delivering. Tosition permanent to the ripht partv. Pay weeklv. GLEX BROTHERS, Rochester. N. Y. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Qnoiei and b-'fcutuie th hftir. Promote a .uu riant growth. Never Fails tc Jaestore Gray Hair to iir. Youthful Color. Prevent J)t:.'ri: and hair tailing. 6r. er; 'Ji ntDnicpiw? mm Sell, R ent. Repair end Exchange lfypew riters Vffc sell Tabulating Attachments. 7e sell Typewriter Supplies. We sell Typewriter Furniture. We furnish Stenographers and Operators. . Can We Ser-Oe you ? Wyckoff. Seamans & Benedict 327 Broa.dwv. Now Yor!s INDIANAPOLIS HOUSE 12 E Market Street. NOW LOOK OUT I "Take care of yourself," say our friend. Til try to," we answer. We do take a little care, yet ia spite of wann clothes, rubber! and mackintoshes, an army of people "were bowled out by pneumonia and other lung and chest diseases last winter. They caught cold, neglected it, let it fix upon them, were torn by coughs, choked by inflammations and congestions, wasted by fever, tired oat by pain and then care tip the fight. The hour you realize that you haVe a cold on the chest, place a Benson'i Porous Plaster where the pain or oppression is felt. If you think two are needed make it two. No harm if you were cor red with them. They act quickly and prevent the engorgment of blood in the orpans. In this way with ordinary can. tion as to exposure you will break up the cold and aroid a serious sickness. Ho other applications, or any other form of treatment, will accomplish this as certainly and speedily. Benson's Plasters have a dis. tinct and positive action and are curative to the highest degree. Use them with the samt confidence for coughs, muscular rheuma. tism, the grip (back and chest) and all similar ailments. Women , who are chief suffer, rs from cold weather complaints, should keep these plasters always within reach. G et the genuine. All druggists, or we will prepay postage on any number ordered in the United States on receipt 6f 25c. each. Seabury & Johnson, Hlg. Chemists, N.T. Strong evidence sustains the popular verdict that Ely's Cream Balm is worth its weight in gold. Trial size 10 'cents. Full size 50 cents. Sold by druggists and mailed by Ely Brothers, 56 Warren St., New York. Probirta, Cal. Messrs. Ely Bros.: have been afflicted with catarrh for twenty years. It made me so weak 1 thought I had consumption. I got one bottle of Ely's Cream Balm and in three days the discharge stopped. It is the best medicine I have used for catarrh. Very truly, Frank E. Kindlesplre. Dangerous If Neglectad. Burns, cuts and other wounds often become troublesome sores. Even where delay has aggravated euch injuries DeWitt'e Witch Haze! Salve effects a cure. "I had a runniog sore on my leg thirty years," eays H. C, Hartly, Vankeetown, Ind. - After using many remedies, I tried DeWitt'a Witch Hazel Salve. A tew boxes healed the sore, Curee all eldn diseases. Piles yield to it at ouce, Beware of counterfeits, j. w, exss.

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Police Bar Christian Scientists. Lafayette, Ind May 8 The police wore .obliged to take a hand in the case of a five-year-old lad named Smith, living on twelfth street who broke one of his legs by falling from an ice wagon this morning, for the reason that his parents are Christian Scientists and refused to send for a surgeon. Prosecutor Randolph went to the home at the request of neighbors and found Elder Osborn, of the church to which the Smiths belong, praying at the bedside of the sufferer The parents were ordered tosend for a doctor and wtre told that an affidavit would be filed against Osborne if he further interfered in the matter. The parents finally consented.

Fxttsyga. Ft. Wajaa & Chicago En ennsulvania Lines.1 Schedule cl Passenger Trains Central Tim 121 I Q i 1.1 W CSVWttTU. Avr Axr PM iUb'Kh.Jv.l 057 006 Ilia uce ar. 3 5sl Q "Vi Q Canton lvj 4 0d 9 581 9 X? Massillon... " 10 10 9 47 to m Voostrr. " Mansfield L'rcstllue.ar 6 1012 3511 25 Lve 6 3712 3511 5flt7 00 o ilucyrus lv. Lima " Van Wert- " 1 0012 29i 7 251 8 39 2 25 2 001 9 4q 3 10 2 4010 4fi 37 awayne'io id 9 21 4 00 3 2811 55! AM CA g 10 19 4 IA 3 35 H2 Ktt3d I 12 33 7 46. Areola Icluaibia Citj. tjiirwill " I'ierwton . " Ä inrn Lke ... " '.V'arsaw . " "tna Green ' :urbon... " 'nwood " J'lyniouth . 4 41 4 0612 51 8 05 1 06 8 19 1 14 8 27' m X n 04 ... 4 H 25i 8 37 11 31 5 24' 4 4d 1 32! 8 42 1 Aa o cr f5 48' ... ... 1 55 9 06' ? f2 0 9 141 6 ca 5 15 ... 1 15, 9 2Z .;I;it!ilet."."! " 1 lanna " Wanatah... " Valparaiso " Hobart " IiiVtTpOOl... " 'Hrke " Whiting L'Mrago ...ar. 2 41 9 45 4Q -XS 3 0410 08 am s 3 1410 196 30 cs 3 2910 34 7 00 C 1 15 7 08; 6 27 I. f3 55llf0O SOOTS' 14 06 lUlO 812E" d Oil 11 a n . 1 2 50' 8 45,8 00,5 1512 20 9 35 s 20 50 5 It. 1200 3 00 7 30 1145 17 30 15 35 Ml 25'io g'5 FM I I'M I AM j FM AM AM -.ncag-o... .;&350j ;12 44 8 20i 6 30 '2 24 a 4C (iarke averoool v. liö33iB4312 3711 53 Hobart Valparaiso Wanatah.. Manna Hamlet .... luz 8 43; 6 5512 5ÖJ2C4 119 8 49! 7 01 12 5712 03 143 9 09 7 91 1 90110? 132 4 36 C M 9 4U f2 12 9 35 7 51 55 f2 23; 9 511 8 09 I I 9 57, 8 14 955 2581023' 833 I ifl TJ O tin . tr '- ?! r . n .-- f-rovemova.... PlTinoatli 235 545 I nwood.... Honrbon... ...... AW V, J JJ 31910 41 8 58 10 48 9 04 3 451106: 9 20 1lflli Q 07 Etna Grwn.... Warsaw ... 311 623 Vinona Lake.. Pierceton . .'f4 08ll 25! 937X3 lis ...f4 211132; 9 45 E l?I Larwill i Columbia Citj..! 343 7 QQ . I -, ...... - -T 4 ,y (J, J Ft. Vame. r.t 4 IS 7!K11J; "XWi 9";in x' Areola I .... i . f4 59121010X15 '- ... 'ut.ji.i t ij f Ii Ol D Ou Ist TU an Wert.! 511 8 39 1 6 39 1 40 -: J- CO 56 1-8 Kuovrus ... 7 Mil 19 i Q 45 A K l k r T W Crest!n....jxJ 7 5711 45 2 3710 10 5 00 Ssfield ...it.' 8 30 12 15 10 33 5 45 vooster...l 9 29 1 25 12 03 7 00 Massillon .mil 9 19 10 W! 7; "w a w w Canton..... 10 25 2 35 4 53 1 17 8 18 e M5 iiuaEce ar.uuu 310 525 205 900 Pittsburgh .v.: 140 5 50 7 45 530 1 3 i , LS R rise stop to take ca jasstngers for Port Vayse or poiati ast thereof. 50TE Train No. 24 has no connection east cf Pittsburgh; .ItTihn tickets to eastern points will not U honored ca üui i. L. PECK. - E. A. FORD, General Kanager, General Passtiger Igen; J-1-02.-F. Pittsburgh. Pess'a. For time cards, rates of fare, throueh tickets. baggage checks and further information re garding tne running ot trains, apply to Uiy Agent of the Ptnnsyl vinia Lines. Lake Erie &, Western R. R. In Effect on and aftr Sunday, March 3. 19C1 Trains will leave Plymouth as follows: NORTH BOUND. No. 20. Toledo. Chicago & Michigan Express, Ex. Sunday 12:03 pm No. 22. Toledo, Detroit & Chicago Limited, Dally 5:15 pm No. 24. Muncie, Lafayette &, Michigan City Special. Ex. Sunday 11:59 pm 80CTH BOUND. No. 21. Detroit, Indian ipolis & Cin- . cinnati Express. Daily....- 5:50 am No. 23. Chicago, Detroit, Toiedo & Indianapolis Fast Line Ex. Sunday .10:28 am No. 25. Chicago, Toledo & Indlanapolls Special. Ex. Sunday 5:15 prr ELEGANT NEW SERVICE AND EQUIPMENT. Trains No?. 20, 22 and 24 make direct connection for Toledo, Detroit, Chicago and all points East, North and Northwest. Trains 21 and 23 make Immediate connection at Indianapolis Union Station -for Cincinnati, Louisville and all points in the Southeast, South and Southwest. Tra.n 25 connects at Indianapolis with fast trains for St. Louis and Southwest. For further Information call at L. E. &W. ticket office. J. M. DADBENSPECK. Agent Lake Erie& West K. K. Vandalia Time Table. In Effect Mat 5, 1902. Trains leave Pimouth. Ind., as follows: NORTH BOUND. No 10, dally ..... 8:40 am, for South Bend No 14,ex 8un......12;01pm, " No 8. ...10:23 pm. " " 8UUTH BOUND. No 21. ex Sun 5:43 am, for Terre Haute No S, " 12:34 pm, No 9. dally 7:18 pm. for Logansport. For complete time card, giving all tralm and stations, and for full Information aa to rates, through cars, etc., address W. E. Smith Agent, Plymouth. Ind., or E.A.Ford, General Passenger Agent. St. Louis. Mo. Mothers! Mother Mothers! How many children are at this season feverish and constipated, with bad stomach and headache. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for children will always cure. If worms ' are present they will certainly remove them. At all druggists 25 cents. Sample mailed free, Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Likt a Drowning Man. Five years ago dyspepsia took eucb a hold of me that I could scarcely eo, writes Geo. S. Marsh, Nocona, Tex. 1 took quantities of medicine but nothing helped me. As a drowning man grabe at a straw I grabbed atKodol. Dieting is unnecessary. After a few oottlea 1 am sound and well. Kodol digests any good food and cures any form of etomach trouble. J. w. hess. A big haul by highwaymen, substitutes and others who steal the good name and fame of Rocky Mountain Tea made famous by Madison Medicine Co. 35c. J.W. Hess. It is said that every bride has many friends, but in a few years, they dwindle down to one. That's Rocky Mountain Tea. Makes and keeps her well. 35 cents. J. W. Hess.

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dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. It artificially digests the food and aids Nature in strengthening and reconstructing the exhausted digestive organs. It is the latest discovereddigestant and tonic. No other preparation can approach it in efficiency. It instantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea, Sick Headache, Gastralgia.Crampsand all other results of imperfect digestion. Price 50c. arid fl. Large sire contains time small sixe. Book all about dyspepsia malledfree Prepared by E. C. DeWITT & CC, CrjicafiO. For Sale by J. W. Hess. PRORES A. C. HOLTZEN DORFF C. F. HOLTZ EN DORFF, Physicians and Surgeons, Oorner Michigan and Jefferson Street Night calls answered. Dr. F. M. BURKET, DENTIST Office over Plymouth State Bank, Michigan ßt Plymouth, IndidQa. MONEY AT FIVE TODAY. 5!o Itcosts nothing to 5!o Call or Write. JOHN G. GflPRON, Packard BIK JOHN W. PARKS, Attorney and Counselor at Law Office First Floor Parks' Law Bulling, PLYMOUTH, IND. Practices in all courts and in al branches of the profession. Notary and stenographer in office. Brick and Tile Mill with 30 horse power engine, only six years old. Cost 2, 600, includes kilins. Will take 500 cash. J. A. MOLTER, Plymouth Indiana. lYeak Men Made Vigorous rstJSt WtkXT ETSHZT' What PEFFER'S NERVIGOR Did! It acts powerfully qnickly. Cares wben all others fau. Young men regain loet manhood; oil lucuiccuicriuuiuim vigor. ADgointeir uuar Itallty. Powfr. CaeS. and all tlftct Of rll.ntmm or um trill ntr IH inditcretion. Wards on insanity and conbnii.pUon, Dont let drarclFt Impose a worthless 6uttltuT on you because ityjelds a greater profit. Inslet on Laving PE FFEIVS M EKVIGOR, or Bend tot It. Can te carried In vest pocket. Prepaid, plain wrapper. 91 per box, or 6 for $5, with A Written Guar' BDtMtoCnreorKrfnnd Money. Pampnietfre SOLD BY L. TANNER. Plymouth, Indiana THE POLICEMAN SPOT LESS TOWN This brilliant man walks up and down Upon the streets ot Spotless Town. Theglivter of his shining star Arrests attention from afar. It lights the beat and goes to show That naught can beat SAPOLIO A housekeeper's attention is instantly arrested by the condition of the shelves, paint, windows, and tins in her neighbors kitchen. These mark food housekeeping. No matter how ne the rest of the house may be, if the kitchen is not clean it shows the worst kind of tinthrift. A basin of water, a cloth and will save you from this reproach. Nasal CATARRH In ali it stages there should be cleanlin'jss. ly'g Cream Balm, cleanses, soothes and heals the diseased membrane. It cores catarrh and drives away a cold in the head ouickly. Cream Balm is placed Into the nostrils, spreads over the membrane and is absorbed. Belief is im mediate and a cure follows. It Is cot drying does not produce sneezing. Large Siz, 60 cents at Druggists of by mail ; Trial Size, V cents by mail. . KLY BROTHERS. 56 Warren Street. New York. -VTOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT. J No. State of Indiana, Marshall County, ss: In the Marshall Circuit Court, id arch term, 1902. Bertha A. Dlnlus . . ts V Complaint for Divorce. John H. Dlnlus. ) The plaintiff In the abore entitled cause, by Samuel Parker, her attorney, has filed In my office her complaint against the defendant and. It appearing by the afildarlt of a competent person that the defendant, John H. Dlnlus. is a non-resident of the State of Indiana: He Is therefore hereby notified of the filing and pendency of said complaint against him, and unless he appear and answer thereto on or before the calling of said cause on the 18th day of Jane, 1902, being tb e 19th day of the May term of said court, to be beiun and held at the Court House 1b Plymouth, llarshaU County, Indiana, on the 4th Monday of May, A. D., 1902, said cotiplalnt and the matters a iid things therein alleged will be heard and determined in his absenor. Witness, the Clerk and Seal of said seal. Court, at Plymouth, Ind., this ' 3 day of ApriL 1CC2. 8213 . K.F.BEOOKB, Clerk, Samuel farker. Atty. tor Plaintiff.

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