Plymouth Tribune, Volume 1, Number 33, Plymouth, Marshall County, 22 May 1902 — Page 2

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TCbe tribune. Established October 10. 1901. HENDRICKS & CO., Publishers.

Telepnone No. 27. OFFICE In Bissen Block. Corner Center and Laporte'StreeU IDVXSTiaiNQ RATES will be made known on spplicatioa. Entered the Postcffice at.Plj mouth, Ind.. is eeond claM matter. SUBSCRIPTION: One! Year In Advance fi.50; Six Months 75 cents;Thre e Months 40 cent. delivered at any postoffice. Plymouth, Ind., May 22. 1902. POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS. For County Clerk. Editor Tribcse: Please announce that 1 am a candidate for Clerk of the Marshall Circuit Court, subject to the decision of the Kepu oilcan county convention, called to meet in Plymouth, Saturday, June ?, 12. F. M. McCbort. Havana and Santiago are boasting that they are the cleanest and healthiest cities jn the world. Uncle Sam has proved himself to be an excellent housekeeper. Senator Tillman wants to see freedom and unrestrained government for the far off Filipinos, but he believes in slavery and the shot-gun policy for the negroes of his own state and country. Such demagogy is shameful. Uncle Sam's official donation to the St. Pierre relief fund now amounts to f 500,000 and ships are on the way taking food to the sufferers. The United States, as usual, is first in the field when there is anv good work to be done. The civil war veterans are emphatic In denunciation of the attempts to hamper the administration in Its efforts to bring about peace in the Philippines. They remember how the same sort of interference worked forty years ago. The secretary of agriculture reports that 205,000 acres of wheat sown in Indiana last fall have been abandoned and that the present condition of the wheat crop in Indiana is the worst, with the exception of the years 1899, 1893 and 1888, since 1885. President Palma lays down a good civil service rule for Cuba, when he says that it shall be "the best man for the office and the welfare of the island." If he has trouble in putting the policy in practice he will have had no experience different from what we have had. CHJLD3 SET Kmff forK & Spoon JO BANDS

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Lewis Nixon, the newly elected leader of Tammap-, has resigned because he says Croker supervised all moves of that organization. Evidently the tiger cannot get out of the leashes of the wily director.

As long as trusts strive to evade the law, the public will strive to make the laws more drastic. If the trusts wake up some morning and find that the government has taken them under its direction and control, they will .have nobody to blame but themselves. The I14th general assembly of the Presbyterian church began its sessions at Norfolk, Va., Thursday: The assembly is expected to be the most important in the history of the church, as creed revision, which has been discussed for years will be passed upon. The President and Congress acted with praiseworthy promptness and intelligence in the matter of the appropriation for the sufferers by the West Indian volcano. This calamity, which is one of the most extensive in the world's history, appeals to all peoples, and with especial force to the, Americans, who are near neighbors to the afflicted locality. This is a case in which aid must be furnished at once if it is to be effective at all, and the United States is rising grandly to the emergency. , In the history of the world there has never been an event like that of the flag parade of Thursday. Of historic battle flags and regiments there have been many, but never before have the surviving members of disbanded regiments, soldiers once but civilians for a whole generation, marched together beneath more thän a hundred flags that once led them in battle. It was a pathetic scene, one to be long remembered, and the like of which will probably never occur again. Indianapolis Journal. It is to the credit of the United States that it leads off by appro-i priating by Cougress $200,000 for the relief of the French "West India Islands. While the German Emperor offered through his Embassabor at Paris 10,000 marks, less than 82,500, and King Edward of England sent 25,000 Francs, equal to less than $5,000, the United States President in a speeial message to congress asks that $500,000 be at once appropriated for this great purpose. Both houses of Congress passed a bill giving $200,000 and proposing to send $500,000 or more if necessary. The president signed the bill at once.

Cremo Cigar BANDS and Old Virginia Cheroot WRAPPERS may be assorted with TAGS fromMSTAR,M "HORSE. SHOE." "STANDARD NAVY," "SPEAR HEAD, " "DRUMMOND" NATURAL LEAF, "GOOD LUCK," "BOOT JACK," "PIPER. HEIDSIECK," "NOBBY SPUN ROLL," "J. T.," "OLD HONESTY "MASTER WORKMAN," "JOLLY TAR," "SICKLE," "BRANDY WINE," "CROSS BOW." "OLD PEACH ÄND HONEY?' "RAZOR," "E. RICE, GREENVILLE," "TENNESSEE CROSSTIE," "PLANET," "NEPTUNE," "OLE VARGINY," and TRADE, MARK STICKERS from "FIVE BROTHERS" Pipe Smoüing Tobacco, in securing these presents, ONE TAG being equal to TWO CREMO CIGAR BANDS or TWO OLD VIRGINIA CHEROOT WRAPFER.S.

MANDOLIN CWaihDurn) 3200 BANDS

WRITE YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS PLAINLY on tuUld of pckfcj containing BANDS Ct T71VAPPER.5, mnd forwmrd. them bjr rc(Istri mail, or tzpres prepaid. De sure to hae your package curely wrapped and properly marked, ao that it will not be lost in transit, dene ' -3s or wrappers and requests for preseats (also requests for catalogues) to C. By. Brown. 4241 Folsom ..bue, St. Louin Mo.

True to the strenuous instincts of himself and his comrade, President Roosevelt, Senator Beveridge will spend the coming summer on a ranch in the mountains midway between San Francisco and Los Angeles. John Redstone and Ralph Hopping own a lare ranch in the valley and he will be their guest. The nearest town is Visalia, fifty miles miles away, and the Grant forests are not far distant. He will almost live in the saddle and on the trail. He will go there as

soon as congress adjourns and return to Indiana late in September to enter tie state campaign. Three Vaunt Seats in Congress. Three members of congress have lately passed into the great beyond, Amos J. Cummings, of New York; Joshua S. Salmon, of New Jersey, and Peter J. Otey, of Virginia. The rare sight of three desks in the house of representatives at one time decorated with crape presents itself. The Woman$ Relief Corps. The attendance at the meeting of the "Woman's Relief Corps at Indianapolis this year was the largest in its history. The reports of the state officers show that the organization has grown in strength numerically and financialy during the year. The amount expended for relief daring the year was over $7,000 and 3,355 veterans or members of veterans families were assisted. James Mather's Wit. An Elkhart man is in receipt of a letter from James Mather who is now confined in the asylum at Longcliff. Mr. Mather writes that he expects that he will have to sti y in the asylum all the remainder of his life, but he says he is not, lonesome. "There are a great many people from Elkhart county here," writes Mather, "and there are a great many more there who ought to be here." Court Says Saloon Keeper Is Blameless. In the case of the state of Indiana on relation of Marv Pratt against Lawrence B. Williams, Wesley D. McDaniel, Alfred B. Decker and Chas W. Arnold for damages, wnich was filed in the St. Joseph county circuit court, the court sustained the motion of the attorneys for the defendant to have the jury instructed for the defendants. The case involved 'ie death of Mrs. Pratt's husband, vhom it was alleged purchased liquor in the Williams saloon at Walkerton while intoxicated and died a few davs later. The other parties were on Mr. Williams' bond and were made co-defendants. The

GUITAR (Washburn) 3200 BANDS

represent the presents to be

Nominated for Representative. A. A., Gast, ex-sheriff of Fulton county, and a prominent resident of Akron, was nominated by the democrats of Cass and Fulton county in the convention Wednesday at Logansport for joint representative. His opponents were Ambrose O'Brien, Isaiah Imler and Julius Rowley; all of Fulton. Mr. Gast served Fulton county as sheriff for two terms, and is at present chairman of the democratic central committee in his county. He owns several brick and tile factories.

Winona Agricultural School. The Moody memorial building at Winona, erected by Rev. J. Wilbur Chapman, has been tendered by him to the Winona agricultural and technical school, which is to open September 1. The Patrons of Husbandry, of Indiana, will erect a building on the ground in memory of the late Gov. James A. Mount. In it will be located an agricultural department school. Efforts are making to secure a government experiment station. The school is to be inter-denominational and, It is said, enough funds have already been pledged to pay the faculty for five years. ' - Once More in the Public Eye. The appointment of Thomas Xast to be United States consul general at Guayaquil, Ecuador, brings into public notice again a man who was once prominently in the public eye. Nast, as the cartoonist, did more to overthrow and destroy the Tweed ring in New York than any other individual. His cartoons in that memorable fight against a corrupt political gang have not since been eoualed in versatilitv and strength. Since his retirement from newspaper work, Mr. Nast has been devoting himself, at his home in New Jersey, to oil painting, in which branch of art he is also a master. Butte Inter Mountain. Dies of a Broken Heart. Deserted in the honeymoon by the husband she had won through a matrimonial advertisement, Mrs. Susan Rea died in Chicago Wednesday night of a broken heart. Last Februarv Mrs. Rea. then at Hanna, this state, advertised in a matrimonial paper and received an answer from John Ellis, of Hot Springs, Ark. They were married and went to Chicago to live. Shortly after Ellis took his belongings and disappeared. His wife resumed the name of Rea and secured work in Chicago as housekeeper, finally securing a position in the Garden City hotel where she died. Mrs. Rea was 58 years old and leaves a daughter.

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above illustrations American Cigar Company

Death Rate for April. The monthly bulletin of the state board of health shows there were 2,716 deaths in the state during the month of April. Of the total deaths 22.6 per cent were under five years of age and 29.2 per cent over 65. As usual consumption was the most destructive causing 381 deaths, then followed pneumonia causing 352 deaths.

Michigan City Prison Park. James S. Reid, warden of the State prison at Michigan City, will convert the State's land in front of the prison into a park as soon as he can get the street railway company to take up its tracks. There are several buildings on the grounds and they, too, will be moved. Mr. Reid's intention is to emplov a landscape gardener and make it one of the prettiest little parks in Northern Indiana. Indiana's Grand Army. The State Encampment at Indianapolis was a success in every particular, but the veterans are growing older, their steps are less firm and their heads are getting whiter as the years go by, and their number is decreasing. Adjutant and Quartermaster-General Smock's report shows a decrease in G. A. R. membership and number of posts, and an increase in financial assets. His report covers the fiscal year from January 1, 1901, to 1902. In membership it shows a decline from 16,211 to 15,414. The greatest loss was by suspension for non-payment of dues, and other causes. That loss aggregated 1,236 members. The loss by death was 459, by honorable discharge, 38, and by transfer, 519. The death rate is averaging about 450 a year now, and is rapidly increasing. Twenty-two Indiana posts were abandoned during the year and only four new ones were organized. They were at Birdseye, Rensselaer, Oxford and Redkey. The disbanded posts were at Rockport, Clarkshill, Middlefork, Sard'nia, Unionville, Augusta, Sellersburg, St. Paul, Akron, Darlington, Memphis, Montezuma,' Hartsville, Hanover, North Madison, Ashley, Plainville, Trinity Springs, Vallonia, Wheeling and Bristow. The assets of the Indiana department have increased to $5,299.44, which consists or j,i04.t?y cash, a $1,500 first mortgage lean, $194.55 supplies on hand, and $500 office furni ture. The collections from all sources during the past year were $4,353.52, the latest items being 3119.70, de rived Irom the per capita tax, and $704 from the sale of lots Nos. 1 and 2 in the Johnson heirs' addition to In- ! dianapolis. The total expenditures aggregated $3,965.15. BICYCLE giveäfor fandirdrnfike 5000

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OUR NEW ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE of presents fdr 1902 Includes -my article kbove. It contains the moat attractlre Hat of presents ever offered for bands and wrappers. AOO by mail on receipt of postage two centa. Our offer of presents for band and wrappers trill explrs NoTcmber 30. 1902.

A GKEAT

-IN-

We have purchased 250 best grade Middlesex and Slater Flannel G. A. R. Suits, all are "True Blue" guaranteed. Every Suit Warranted Fast Colors Warranted Not to Fade or Crock and we make this special price to you so that you can come out on Decoration Day looking bright and new. 50 Men's guaranteed Pontusic Flannel; ALT ft ft all sizes, 34 to 44 4;j.UU 200 Men's guaranteed Middlesex and Slater (JtJ Kft Flannel; all sizes, 34 to 44 . . . ( We give with each suit two sets of buttons and a pair of fine silk or President Suspenders. Come to headquarters for all your clothing for yourself and family and you will save money. We are the only exclusive Men's, Boys' and Children's Outfitters in the county. Trading Stamps on all sales.

M. LAUER & SON THE ONE-PRICE OUTFITTERS

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