Plymouth Tribune, Volume 1, Number 42, Plymouth, Marshall County, 17 July 1902 — Page 7

SIX SCORE DEAD

Terror of the Mine Gets Loose in a Pit in Pennsylvania; CORPSES ALL ALOS HIS T2A0S Total Death Roll Will Reach the Number of 125. Colliery Is a Tom!) Which Aftrr-!)amri Make Nearly Imi'cui'tr. bit Those Kscajin DM So Over lit ail ?.Ici. Johns-town. IV... .Tr.Iy 11. TI. t'rst four victims L.ivo l ien 1 i t.: I.t to the s-r.rf;i-v from tho KkKuike sii-ticn. Tin y we re Williiiiu Ik lir-MUi, vL W;-s ur.c.)n.-civi:s wl-on found; .Join: Metallic, alive ar.J in pvtty ;:...a1 shr.pe, ami two ur.ki.own 5I::vs, loth alive, hut uiioonsi ior.s. Dr. Joh 1 li. Lewman, of this city, v.i.o tr.m? up with the men, said he iascd twenty-five dead hodies, som. postures. of il.- ii in -ittin:r Johnstown, Pa., July 11. Two lmn-drev,-uiiiuTs iT.toml.ftl ly ;;n explosion in a mine whose main i-h.-.t't opens within the limits of this city was news to check with terror the ptdestrians on the streets lure yesterday. At first the rumor said that all in the "Holling Mill" mine of the Camlria Steel company were dead or in danger. This would have meant i'UO ihts-oiis. liut later reports showed that -JUO were safe. The mine is one of the largest in the country, and yesterday GUO men were at work there. When the news of the disaster reached here it spread like wildfire, and in less than a quarter of uu hour the Point, an tpeu space at the junction of the Conemauu'li and the Stony Creek, was crowded with women and children. There V. ill 123 Oead. Across from them, in the center cf the Teen hillside, could he seen the dark openirji; of the mine. It looked as usual, but the women who looked across the waters saw a mtaiiing there that they had not seen before. JSome cried, some moaned, and little children clasped their skirts and cried in sympathy. 1 'resident Powell Koekhouse issues a statement that the death roll will he about ll'ö men. w scuFi of Herne Uereai ed It was nearly an hour after the explosioii before any general knowlecie of what had happened gut uhroad. Men who came from the mines, escaping with their lives, told the terrible news ami soon it spread like wildfire all over the city. In scores of homes there was the mot pathetic scenes. Mothers, whes. daughters, sons and relatives were frantic with grief. Hundreds rushed to the point and with sobbins hearts awaited news that did not come from the ill-fated mine. 31 i ne Full of Deadly Damp. At the open'ni: across the river from the point the Cambria Iron company police stood guard, permitting no one to enter the mine, from which noxious gases were coming. It was nearly 4 p. m. when all hope of sending rescue parties from the West Mont opening Ä';is abandoned. Two men who had escaped from the mine Ulchard IJennett and John Meyers went back two miles to see what assistance could be rendered, but the frightful dainp drove them back and they tell prostrate when they finally, after a desperate struggle, reached the outside. Two doctors gave the men assistance and after working Avith them half an hour restored them. Some Kescuers l'robt ly Dead. The;r story of the situation in the mine made it clear that the rescue work could not proceed from the Wcstiiiont opening, ;.rid then hasty vrei.arations were made to Lc vein that id mii;!ti at the Mill Creek entrance. Soon after the news of the explosion reached the Cambria othcials Mining Engineer Marshall G. Moore and o::v of his assistants, AI (I. Prosser, made an attempt to enter the mine. They were followed by Mine Superintendent George T. Kubinson, but the deadly &ascs stopped their progress. Mine Foreman Harry llolgeis, his assistant William Ulancli, and Pile i esset John Whitney. John Ketallick and John Thomas, were overcome by the gases and it is feared that they iierishee in a heroic effort to rescue the miners. WHAT TIIK M'KVIVOKS SAY Condition In.oiJe the .Mine Gives Little Sope lor Any l!eru-s. The mining othcials of the Cambria company stated that the explosion was on-.' of tire damp. The catastrophe occurred in the section of the mine known among the miners as "Klondike." The name of the section on the company's books is the sixth west of the south main heading. It is about a mile and a half from the main euerance of the Lolling Mill mine. The few survivors who have escaped from the depths of the mine describe the conditions to be frightful in their nature. Outside of the "Klondike" the mines are safe and uninjured. Within the fatal limits of the mine the havoc wrought by the explosion is such as beggars description. Solid walls of masonry three feet through were torn down as though barriers of paper. The roofs of the mine were demolished and not a door remains standing. In the face of these difficulties even the most heroic efforts toward rescue may well seem hopeless. Two young men who were at Work Is the "Klondike" when the explosion occurred escaped by way of the air shaft heading up through the Kernville hill from the mine. A fan house, now out of use, stands at the top of this air shaft. This way the young men, sick and dhzy from the nauseous afterdamp, or black damp, reached tafety. They told how they had walked across dead bcdles to pure air and light. How many chey did uot know. : The stories of the men who escaped are miraculous in their nature. Tom Foster, an assistant foreman in Ihe "Klondike" mine, was among the first to emerge from the Mill Creek shaft. Shortly after rowell-Griffith, a tire boss, came up. Fester was in his office when the explosion .occurred. His first thought was for the safety of the men tinder his charge. With the help of Foreman Roberts an effort was made to replace a few of the shattered doors. All the while the fire damp was closing around them. They did not falter for an Instant, but straight into the midst of danger they

went. The thought "save the men" was paramount. Through galleries. Into headings, warning and helping, the two men went. Kcbeits fell, but Foster staggered on. whither he hardly knew. In the midst of .he danger he met Powell Grihith. a lire los. He had faced what pee tried certain cbath in an chert to save his men. Ferwj.id they went, dragging a comrade k.to a possible place of safYty litre, giving a word cf warning there, until human endurance eu.-.hl stand the strain no longer. Exhaited. they staggered into a heading where the l.re damp had not entered. There they rested for a moment and then plunged forward where they did not know it:til finally t hey wandered into a wat r level and through it

j readied a place ei saiery. r-::iu j om ! p! -t( r: "I low I escaped 1 do not know. It erms like a terrible nightmare. Hundreds of times I iüvc v.p hepe, but fro la slu-er i::sti:t 1 stumhhd forward until I finally n;i(i vl n place of safety." T!1I:Y AI1K NOT ALL DEAD Dr. Taylor Says He Itan cms Live Men in tiv Dull l it. "hey are not all dead. We ran across some of them alive." stammered lv. Swaii Taylor, when he staggered out of the shaft at Mill creek. Just how many, though, dead or alive, he was unable to say. Indeed he could scarcely talk at all for neatly half an hour. lie was .almost overcome with the foul air in the mine, where he had been with the first rescuing party sent down. lie had been down in the mine for eight hours. He was unable to tell anything about the work of the rescuers he had left behind him. He could only say that they would soon be coming up. It was just an hour though, when the first victim Mas brought to the surface. It was William Robertson, accompanied by Dr. John li. I.owman. Said the doctor: "Ilobertson is In the worst shape. He is unconscious and badly hurt- We passed twenty-five bodies while getting out these four who are alive. We counted them as we went along. They lay in all kinds of positions. One man was sitting leaning against a door, not far from Robertson, just where he had been thrown by the force of the accident. Froth was running from his mouth and he had undoubtedly died in great agony. 'Others were partly standing and partly reclining. They were in heaps and singly. The party with us has nearly reached the actual scene of the explosion ami the work of bringing out the poor fellows ought to progress rapidly from now." NEW3" FACTS IH OUTLINE. The City National bank of Tuscaloosa. Ala., has been designated a depository of public' moneys. The pope has created John Spencer Turner, of New York, a marquis, in recognition of his pious generosity. King Victor Kmmanuel has left Homo for St. IYtersbtarg to visit the czar of Russia. The Irish Times asserts that the Prince and Princess of Wales will reside in I'ublin a portion of each year. Tames A. Pugh. private of the marine corps, died from cholera at Cavite. P. I., on the 7th instant. The P.utfalo express, cast-bound on the Northern Central railroad, ran into a landslide about two miles north of Troy. Pa. No serious injuries. Cholera Is spreading among the Chinese ."t Peking, hut it is impossible to estimate the number of victims. The money movement to western and southwestern points from New York continues. Extreme heat prevails throughout Italy and France. Pitcher Karl Moore, of the Cleveland team, last night married Miss Planche (;. Patno. Andrew Carnegie has donated 12,."00 for the completion of the Lambeth library system. King I'd ward's wound is healing slowly but surely. He is declared on highest medical authority to be free from any blood taint. Kelley won the diamond sculls at Henley, and Third Trinity, Cambridge, the Grand Challenge cup. Edward Show, To years old, a Chicago man. was arrested for abandoning Ids young wife after two weeks of married life. lie L;lirt .Notice the Train. Monroe. Miels.. July 11. Fred Zarendt, a I.nke Shore section man, was killed by a Fere Marquette engine in the yards at Warner. He was weeding in the middle of the track, and did net notiee the appro u-h of the Fere Marquette train, as there was a Lake Shore train comnii: just ahead on the main track. lie leaves i widow and fix children. Second Attempt at Suicide. Lansing". Mich.. July 11. Mrs. Jas. Oiddings. of North Lansing, jumped into the nrtißcinl hike at Fifth Wäret park, presumably with suicidal intent. A friend followed her and pulled her out. Some months nco she attempted suicide with carbolic acid, and had leen confined in the Kalamazoo asylum. Press Does Not Manufacture. Louisville. Ky., July 11. Judge Miller, of the circuit court, rules, in denying the claim of a certain creditor to a lien on the property of The Dispatch FuMishing company, that a newspaper plant is not a manufacturing establishment like a rolling mill or a foundry. KaWer Ha Inide News. Too. Christiania. Norway, July 11. Emperor William met an English clergyman In the course of one of his excursions yesterday, to whom he said: "I can greet you from your king and tell you that he will be so well next month that he will be on board a steamer." Score on the Dlamoud. Chicago, July 11. Yesterday's base ball scores are as follows: League: At St. Louis Brooklyn 2, St. Louis 2 twelve innings, darkness; at Cincinnati Boston 3, Cincinnati 0; at Pittsburg New York 3, rittsburg 1; at Chicago Fhiladelphia 0, Chicago 4. American: At Washington Baltimore 3. Washinsrton 7: at Cleveland Detroit 0, Cleveland 2; at L'oston Philadelphia 1, Iioston 3. Association: At Milwaukee? Kansas City 3, Milwaukee 2; at Minneapolis St. Faul 4. Minneapolis 10; at Indianapolis Columbus 1, Indianapolis S; (second game) Columbus 2, Indianapolis 4. Western: At St. Joseph Milwaukee 1, St. Joseph 0 ten innings; at Kansas City Peoria 0. Kansas City 5; at Des Moines Denver 2, Des Moines 3; at Omaha Colorado Springs 2, Omaha 4. gome ATerage Conditions. Washington, July 11. The average condition of winter wheat is 77. Average condition of spring wheat 02.4. Average condition of acreage of corn 3.9. Average condition of. oats 92.1.

FREIGHT STRIKE IS OFF

Chicago Handlers Conclude to Accept What tho Companies Offered July I. GUKRAN HAD TO END TEE FIGHT His Hen Were "Going: Baci" on Kin?, Sd He Declares. Mitchell Speaks to the Coal Miners and Pays His Ilespects to tho Citizens' ;1" Alliance." Chicago. July In. Tl:. strike the? freight handlers i iitr.:iily senl.d. M( clings of the strik rs" will )- held today to ratify the action taken last r.i-ht by Probier, t Ci:rran, of "the union, but as he stated lat nicht, after a conference with, the general managers of the railroads, that he ii;id agreed to their terms because the majority of his men were 'go:n- back" on him, there is little doubt that The terms Mill be accepted by the mass meeting of the strikers. Py the turns of the settlement the strikers accept the schedule of wages offered them by thi' railroads on July 1. 'This schedule was emphatically refused by the strikers at the time it was ma.de. f lives 20 I'er Cent. Increase. It offered an average increase of 2'J per cent, for all classes of labor connected with the freight handlers' union. The demands of the men would have made an average increase of about öo per cent The railroads at th. time of offering the increase on July 1 s:iid that tinder no circumstances would they recognize the union of the freight handlers to the extent of allowing the officers of the organization to make terms for the men with the officers of the railroads by which they were employed. This was one of the chief reasons for the strike, the men insistlngthut the union should be fully recognized. Victory Tor the Itailwayr. The railroads have won a complete victory on this point. The attitude of the roads toward the freight handlers union is the same as that maintained toward all local organizations of railroad men. The freight handlers demandod something that no other organization of railroad employes in Chicago had asked, and the managers announced that under no circumstances would they agree to this. Cumin Had No Alternative. President Cut ran. of the Freight Handlers' union, said after the meeting with the general managers that h had practically been compelled by hi own men to accept the terms of the roads. "Two-thirds of them would have gone to work this morning, anyhow." he saui, "and it was simply a question of " ing the best possp-.le under the circur-ances." The railroads agree to take back all the strike rs who will apply for their old positions by noon today. The settlement of the strike came unexpectedly, and was precipitated by an appreciation of the fact that the teamsters would not help and that the Federation of Labor was doing its best to induce the strikers to accent the companies' terms. MITCHELL MAKES A SPEECU Iaj"a Ills Hesperts to the Memlxn of the Citizens' Alliance." Wilkesbarre, Fa., July 10. In an address yesterday before the 400 del egates of district No. 1, in convention at Nanticoke, Fresident Mitchell said he had never participated in a strike in which he was so confident of success. The national president severely criticised the Citizens' Alliance organizations which have been formed in Scranton and Wilkesbarre for the purpose of prosecuting persons who boycott or otherwise intimidate men still working in the mines or their relatives. He said, in part: "It may not be amiss for me to make a few comments upon the situation as it presents itself to me; and also to point out some of the means that are being used to discourage and injure you. "Th coal operators have orgahized a prevs bureau and are eonstantly sending out through it what purport to be interviews with and statements from them; whfie, as r. matter of fact, then? is. not a coal operator in the entire region who will stand responsible for Jiny of the statements. The operators have also organized another adjunct, under the name of the Citizens' Alliance. I am sure I uo not know how many citizens are members of this mysterious organization, as so far only one has had the manhood, or the effrontery, to acknowledge his menihership. "Is it not rather strange that this organization was not formed at any time during tlie twenty-Hve years in which the anthracite coal companies were blacklisting, boycotting and driving from their homes and families all men who dared assert their rights and join a labor organization? Moreover, did this great Citizans' Alliance attempt to prevent the illegal efforts the eoal corporations are making to cause the defeat of every candidate for membership in the legislature of the state of Fennsylvania who advocated or favored labor measures in the last session? "However, gentlemen, let mo say that we know more ahout the personnel of the Citizens' Alliance than its members think we do. and when this strike is over some of them who are playing fast and loose with the causo of the mine worKers will find it extremely difficult to account for their conduct." IMPORTANT AID FOR STRIKERS Locomotive Engineers' Brotherhood Hefuses to Haul Non-t'nlon Coal. Charleston, W. YaM July 10. The case of the f-trikers was strengthened yesterday when the managements of the mir es were notiiied by the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway company that it '-ar.r.ot haul the coal offered it pending a settlement of the strike. The Frotherhood of Locomotive Engineers will not transport coal taken out of the mines while the union men are on a strike, and has so notified the company. Manager Cassady, of the Winifrede company, says he will barge the product down the Kanawha river. Gave $1,000 to the Miners. Indianapolis. Ind., July 10. The VjLlted Mine Workers' headquarters in this city received news yesterday from Toronto that the National Iron Molders of America, holding their annual convention In that city, had voted $1,000 to the striking miners of the anthracite field. Mighty Slow Fnn, This. Canton, O., July 10. S. Kayser, an employe of a local steel roofing plant of this city, and It. Bloch, of Warsaw, Russia, have made four moves in a cameof chess which is expected to

last five years. The game Is "being played by letter, and it requires about fourteen days for a letter to pass between Canton and Warsaw. The men are playing for a prize of r,U00 offemd by Charles Rosenblam, who is related to both of them. Storm Damage- in Wisconsin. Chippewa Falls. Wis., July 10. Serious damage was done by the storm In Chippewa county Wednesday night. Ole Hanson a farmer near Whenton, had two large barns and a number of machine sh ls blown -down, and will suffer a loss of J?.'.000. Crooks' and Cummings' large hay barns were demolished, their loss being Sl.rOO. Matt Cheney's bant was struck by lightning and destroyed, entailing a ioss of 1,-SCO.

Titu, Will Li-avo rio-jn in V.n !:in:l Caniiiii in Alo IJcIfrtCivl. Ilenky. llng'.and. July Id. C. Titus, of the Vnlon Moat club, of New York, was dcfcatid in the eighth luat cf the diamond fkullj yctteitlay by F. IV-'V ..Ä rrv- s.v--' C. S. TITUS. S. Kclley, of Palliol college. The Canadian P.oat club, which was expected to bring the (Irand Challenge cup across the Atlantic, was also beaten. JUPITER PLUVIUS IS BUSY In Iowa and Neltraska He Is Drowning Out Everything. Des Moines, la., July 10. The Des Moines, IoAva, Itaccoon, Cedar and Skunk rivers are from seven to fifteen feet above low-water mark and tha lowlands are submerged. Hundreds have been made homeless. In Des Moines '2(H) persons have already been forced to abandon their homes and have suffered the loss of horses, cattle, and hogs. Truck gradentrs have suffered tho loss of crops of an estimated value of ..mx. Lincoln. Neb., July 10. The flood situation here is becoming serious. Reports of a rise in Salt creek, south of here, caused the police to warn people to escape from the lowlands. A carload of Hour donated to sufferers is being distributul. The number of those forced to leave their homes is no. large. All over the state rain has worked much ruin, and in the worst sections the ruin to crops is almost complete. At midnight the levee on the north side of town broke, flooding a large residence section.. Most of the families removed earlier in the evening. Hryan' Political Mantelpiece. Tuscaloosa. Ala., July 10. State Geoloprist Smith has rex-cived a notice from the secretary of state that he had received a request from William Jennings Fryan for a slab of Alabama marble, to V used as a tiling for a mantelpiece Fryan is bavins built Each state that he carried in the lart election is to be represented by a tile. Afro-American Council. St. Taul. Minn.. July 10. The National Afro-American Council met in this city yesterday. Ilishop Alexander Walters, president, called the council to order, and after prayer by 1'ishop Clinton there were addresses of welcome by Major Smith. Governor Van Bant. Harry Shepherd, Mrs. J. E. Torter and He v. Timothy Iieevcs. One Teacher Who Is Alive. Flainlield, X. J., July 10. Lewis S. .Thomas, of this city, one of the teachers who was supposed to have been slain by natives in the Fhilippines. Is alive.- Kobert Craur. of I)u::ellen, has received a letter from him, postmarked Napasakiem. Japan, June , in which he bays that he left the Philippines for Japan to see the sights. DEMANDS SCARCE GOODS No Oiie lut Absolute Self-Governors for diool Teacher. St. Faul, July 11. "I hope before I die to see tho day that it will be rctrarded as s-ulHcient to expel a teacher from the school room if she gives wry for one brief moment to anger." This was the declartion made yesterday by Dr. Thomas E. Shields at the Colum bian Catholic Summer School before an audience made up largely of teachers. Dr. Shields was lecturing on "Social Heredity," and in a discussion of the subject he told of the value of suggestion in education, and he declared that all wretched, irritable and wornout teachers "must be relieved, in spite of sympathy, from the school room, for the child must not be sacrificed to their downward and .degenerate Influence." Two Women Nearly Drowned, Warsaw, Ind., July 10. Mrs. W. B. Lewis, of New Albany, Ind., and Kathleen Senton, of Oberlin, O., were rescued from drowning while bathing at the beach, Winona lake, yesterday. Iloth were going down the third time when two beys went to their assistance with a boat. The ladies walked into a deep hole made by a dredge. Neither was able to swim. Devilish Deed of an Angry Man. East St. Louis. Ills., July 10. As the result of a family quarrel Jeremiah P. Fenton, a master machinist, shot his wife, mortr 'y wounding her, and then blew out his' brains. The trapedy occurred at Fenton's home, and in the presence or their two young children, who frantic illy pleaded with their father not shoot. Declines to Honor Yates' Requisition. Topeka, Kan., July 10. Governor Stanley has lefuscd to honor the requisition of Governor Yates, of Illinois, for Charles F. Poland, a farmer living near Ottawa, who is wanted in Joy, Ills., on a charge of wife abandonment. Foland's friends convinced Governor Stanley that it was Foland's wife who had deserted him. She Dad Done Her Century. Mt Vernon, Ind., July 10. Mrs. Susan Byrd, who was the oldest resident of Fosen county, is dead. She was a few months more than 100 years old, and came to this county early In the last century, with her husband, one of the pioneers of Posey county. She was from Pennsylvania.

.Mi, :ir; A I

say "Consumption can be cured." Nature alone won't do it. It needs

neip. uoctors say "Scott's Emuision ia the best help." But you must contlnuo its use even in hot weatner. t If ...... V. .... , 1 2 1 a r . N. y (.neu il, m!uu ior iree sample. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists 409-415 Pearl Street, New York. 50c and ( 1.00; all drugpist. If yo'l Laven't a refilnr, benlthy in-veni?nt cf th bowels tvt-ry d;iy, you're ill or will lio. Keep youi tiowels opoi., and bo well. Force, in the flmjseof violent physic or pill prison, is daup-roiis. The smooth, est, easiest, mott perfect way t keeping tiie bowell clear and clean id to take EAT 'EM LIKE CANDY Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Oood. Do Good, Serer Sicken, Weaken, or Ciripe. 10, 2."i, anil 6'J rentf Cer box. Write tor free sample, and booklet on ealth. Address 433 5TERLIXG RE9EDT C05P1XT, CIIIC1CO or KEW TORE. KEEP YOUR BLOOD CLEAN THE DOCTOR f 5P0TLESS TOWN This lean M. D. Is Doctor Brown, Who fares but 111 !n Spotless Town. The town Is so confounded clean !t is no wonder he is lean. He's lost ell pctlents now, you know, Because they use SAPOLiO. Health and dirt cannot exist toEtrct'.ier. If a nousev.-ue wants the Doctor m frequent attendance, ana Lig bills conur.s' in constantly, all she has to do is to let. the dirt get ahead of her. If. cn the cortrary, she wants health, and a pleasant l;ome with no dre.iJ of Hectors let ber buv and easily keep every th:ng cler.n. jE Sell, Rem. Repair ! and Exchange fFyPevv liters We sell Tabulating Attachments. We sell Typewriter Supplies. We sell Typewriter Furniture. We furnish Stenographers and Operators. ...... Can Wc Scr-Vc 5)oxi ? 1 Vvckoff, Seamans &, Benedict 327 Dro5vdwvv. New York INDIANAPOLIS HOUSE '12 E Market Street. ... . -.-. ri::M0-liin HAIR BALSAM (V '- i .;- J?-1! C.Pii)?t nl beautifies liie hair. f -v.. r& yi l'r.iiaoti. uixunant growth. t : '2X--1 J'ever Fail3 to F.estcre Gray 7 : . 5 Iliir to lis Voutht'ul Col'T. n L ri li : V : - . .. v-j P-vv:ts J H!.i!rti:'fa?i.1 hair (auiiig. DOW'T BE rOOLEDI Take the gsnuine, original ROCKY MOUNTAIN TEA Mdw'e cnlv by Madison Med! cne Co., flhilison. Wis. It Iseer vcu welt. Our trade ntufK cut on each package rict', 35 cents. Never solo' in bulk. Accept no Aubsti tute. Ask your druggist. 'IP ' Change In Time of Trains on Pennsyl vania Lines. Under a new schedule in effect Sun day June 15th. 1Ö02, passenger trains over the Pennsvlvania Lines leave Plymouth station as follows: For the East: No f. Daily No 2', Dullv except SundayNo 20, Dally No 8. Dally No 2, Dally Extra Fare Train.. No ', Dally except Sunday.-... N o 24, Daily P'ff'li Special For the West: No 15, Daily - Is'o 5, Daily Extra Fare Train. No 37, Dally except Sunday... 2 XI am 10 is am , 2 35 pia .... S 40 pm 7 50 pm 8 3! pm 'J 4i pm . 5 10 am . 6 20 am . 1 2i am No 21, Dally 12 IS pm 2 25 pm 6 US pm No 39, Dally except tunaay No 9, Dally - For particular information on the subject apply to J. E. IIaxes, Ticket Agent, Plymouth, Ind. Lake Erie & Western R. R. In tieftet on ana after Sjn Jay, March 3, 1901 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 ex Sunday 5:15 pm No. 21. Muncie. Lafayette & Michigan City Special. Ex. Sunday 11:59 pm No. 20. Sunday only. Due at Plymouth 10:50pm. SOUTH BOUSD. No. 21. Detroit, Indianapolis & Cincinnati Express. Daily ! - 5:50 am No. 23. Chic afro, Detroit, Toiedo & Indianapolis Fast Line Ex. Sunday 10:38 am NO. 25. ChlcajTO, Toledo & Indianapolis Special. Ex. Sunday .... 5:15 pm ELEGANT NEW SERVICE AND EQUIPMENT. Trains Nos. 20, 22 and 24 make direct connection for Toiedo, Detroit, Chicago and all points East, North and Northwest. Trains 21 and 23 make Immediate connection at Indianapolis Union Station for Cincinnati, Louisville and ail points In the Southeast, South and Southwest. Tra.n 25 connects at Indianapolis withfast trains for St. Louis and Southwest. For further Information call at L. E. &W. ticket office. , J. M. DAUBENSPECK. Aeent Lake "Erie & West H. K. There's no soaking required if you use Mrs. Austin's Quick Lunch Tapioca. Ready In a minute. Your grocer can supply you. Tell your neigh oors about the good qualities of The Trdjtjne.

CANDY

SAPOLIO

Lifers Get a Commutation. Springfield. Ills., July 12. Governor Yates has commuted the sentence of John and Thomas Hickman, who were convicted of the murder of Robert Knox, whom they killed in a light at a country picnic at Alto Pass, Jackson county, and who were each sentenced to ninety-nine years in the pen

itentiary at the December term, lssd, of the Jackson county court. The petition came up before Altgeld, but it was never acted on by him. Secretary Shaw in Nv Kurland. P.oston, July VI. After Inning had

B area trip on the revenue cutter Ircsu- can approach it in eiheier.ey. It inj am, from New York, which he de- : stantly relieves a::.J permanTitlj cures

jiiareu m-u ocen mosr hrüi ticui. Secrotary -f th Treasury Shaw arrived I in 1 . t'-i with r.;s lan.ily yesterday. The secretary itmainii hi Lost on i.ii'v a shoit tii!;. lie b n with his vviie and dari.ide rs lh-- d.-.y l,r Verm-int. I. i'.fn Kt-i-i.-O I.N ' St. Faul. .Inly F Itepubiiean a;di;hdc. mayor f iMiluth. Tl i iiyr sy.-r i: pre: 'o, tl?:' s th" eoiii t has so deemed. One vole .counted l'o;Trueison was thrown ut. thus lavin- j liiu-'o a m.iionty t i. 1 1, . crue held that the neglect of the judges to place their initials on the ballots did not invalidate the votes of those voting tlUMIl. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, ) Lucas County, tea Frank J, Cüeney makes an oath that he is the senior partner of the tirm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doicg business in the city of Toledo, county and state aforesaid, and that eaid firm will paytheeum of One Hundred Dollars for each and every case of catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Uall'a Catarrh cure, Frank J. Chenky Swcru to before me and subscribed in my presence, this Cth day of December, A.. D. 1SSC. A. O. Gleason, Notarv Public. Seal Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and muc ous surfaces of the system; Send for testimonials free. F. J. Cheney Co.. Toledo, O. Sold by Druggist. 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Mother Always Keeps It Handy. My mother suffered along time from depressing pains and treneral ill health due primarily to indigestion, says L. W. Spalding, Verona, Mo. Two years Btjo I got her to try Kodol. She grew better at once and now, at the age of seventy-eix, eats anything sh9 wants, remarking that she fears nn bad effects ts she has her bottle of Kcdoi handy. Don't waste time doctoriLg symptoms. Go after the cause, If vour stomach is sound your health will be good, Kodol rests the stomach and strengthens the body by digesting your food. It is nature's own tonic. J, w. iiess. Yellow Clothes Are Unsightly. Keep them white with Russ Bleaching Blue. Get the genuine. All groers 10c. Very Low Round Trip Rates via the Northwestern line Chicago to Salt Lake City and Ogden, Utah until September 15th. Return limit, October 31, 1902. Luxurious fast trains leave Chicago 10 a. m., S a. rn., and 11:30 p. m., daily. For tickets and information apply to A. II. Waggener, 22 Fifth avenue, Chicago, 111, ousekeepers, Attention.! Try a package of Russ Bleaching Blue and vou will use no other. 10c. at grocers. Ilomcscckcrs' Cheap Excursions to te West ami Northwest via Chicago ,$: Northwestern R'y from Chicago, June 17, July 1-15. August 5-19, September 2-l(i and October T and 21. Exceptionally low rates to a large number of points in Northern "Wisconsin, Michigan, Northwestern Iowa, AVestern Minnesota, Nebraska, North and South Dakota. I letter own a farm. Start now. Send 2cent stamp to AY. B. Kniskern, 22 Fifth Avenue, Chicigo, for copy of "Northwestern Ilomsseeker." Apply to your nearest ticket agent for particulors, or address, A. IL-Waggener, 22 Fifth avenue. Chicago, 111. Notice. The 1. I. & I. It. It. will run their Sixteenth Annual excursion to Niagara Falls the latter part of July or early in August. Exact date will be given later. The rate and conditions will be practically the same as former excursions and we would like to have our friends and former patrons make arrangements to join us. A L. Ross, General Agent. Acts Immediately. Colds are sometimes more troublesome in summer than in w inter, it's bo hard to keep from addiDg to them while cooling off after exercise One MiDUte Cough Cure cures at ence. Absolutely safe. Acts immediately. Sure curefor coughs, olds, croup, throat aud iurjg troubles, j. AV, II ESS. Vacation Days. Vacation time i9 nere and the children Bra fairly Jiving out of doora, There could b3 no healthier place for them. You need only to guard against the accidents incidental to most open air Eports. No remedy equals DeWitt's AVitch Hazel Salve for quickly stopping pain or removing danger of serious conSequences. For cuts, scalds and wounds. "Iused DeAAritt's Witch Hazel Salve for sores, cuts and bruises," say L, ti. Johnson, Swift, Tex. It Is the best remedy on the market. Sure cure for piles and skin diseases. Beware or counterfeits. J. w. mss. You will be delighted if you use Mrs. Austin's Quick Luncii Tapioca. Ready in a minute. No soaking required.

Cure

lyspepsia Digests what you cat. It artificially digests the food and aids Nature in strengthening and recocstructing the exhausted'digestive organs. It is the latest-discovjittidigest-ant and tonic. Ko ether preparation Dyspepsia, InaigestivUi, lieartourn, Flatulence. Sour Stomach. Kaucea, Siclc Headache. Castrate in Cramps and all other re s u 1 1 s o f i m e r ! v l d i it i on. Price 50c. hT-.d f 1. Lr.rre 70ccr.l:'.z? 2V5 tines small size. LookahuUiutayöt.fa.rLahöalifce Prepared by Z C. CeV.lTT C.CC, C'csjo. For Sitlj by J. W. II CSS. PROF ESS I O X AL CARDS A. C. HO LTZ ENDO ? FF C. F. HO LTZ EN DORFF, Physicians ad Surgeons, Oorner Miciii.m auJ JelTersu Street Niiit calls auswert-d. Dr. F. M. BUCKET, DENTIST O-iceovvr Plymouth Stite Bant, Michii'in St Plyrrjouth, Indiana. EVIOWEY AT FIVE TODAY. 5o It cots nothing to 5!o Call or Write. JOHN G. GflPRON, FacKard BIK JOHN W. PARKS, Attorney and Counselor at Law Office. First Floor Parks' Law Builing. PLYMOUTH, 1ND. Practices in all courts and in al branches of the profession. Notary and stenographer in o!üce. Brick and Tile Mill with 30 horse power engine, only six years old. Cost $2, 600, includes kilms. Will take 300 cash. J. A. MOLTER Plymouth. Indiana. TOriCE TO NON-KES1DENT. No. 1154 State of Indiana. Marshall County, In t he Marshall Circuit Court. October term. Bertha A. Dinius vs John II. Dinius. i Cuinplaint for Divorce, The plaintiff In the above entitled eaue. by Samuel Parker, her attorney. rn- tilu iu my office her complaint a?kiu-.t the a-ftrjd-ant and. it appeiirlnp bv tle affidavit of a competent person that the defendant. John 11. Dinius. is a nnn-reident of theStüte of Indiana: He Is therefore hereby n otitic of the tilinjj and pendency of said eoniplaint azalri.-t him, and timers h appear and answer thereto on or befor the ca'liof said cause on the 13th day of October. l'."2. beinc the first day of the October term of std ourt, to be becun ar,d held at the Court House in Plymouth. M trshali County. Indiana on the second Monday of October. A. )., said complaint and the tamers and thlnsrs therein alleged will be heard and determined in his absence. Witness, the Clerk and Senl of a!d seal. 'o'urt. -it "-Nvmouih. led .thi 1st day of .Ti,H l'J . 3-.M4 K. F. BUOOKE. Clerk. Samuel Tarker. Attv. for Plaintiff. TOTICE TO NON-KESIDEXT. State of Indiana. Marshall County, s-r: Charles K. Leouard j In Jus'.ice Moiter's vs -Court. Alva Myers. ) Attachment. Notice is hereby slveji. that wh?rea- the above -ue is tiled t;tffr mv. anti It appeals by affidavit of a 'mpeiet!t pcr-on tiiat ihe defendant, Alva Myers, is a notj-r.. dtnt of the State of Indiana, lie is hereby notified that thi cause Is et for ri tl for I li 4t b clay of August . l;v:J. at D o'clock a. im., ni.d in.it t lie cause and aVi proceeds tilgte be heard in defendant's abence. unless be üLears. . .1 A. MOLTEII. .lustlv1 vi f thelVace. Martludaie & Stevens, nttj's. Commissioner's Salo of Real Estate. yOTICE is hereby jrlven that theunder-s-kned. a coiiibiissoner uf the Mar); .1 Circuit Court, in Cau-e X. 117J!. Polly A. Anderson v. Il.tc-hel Trowbridge et al.. "y order of said court. w.ll offer for sale ;.t private sale, at not les than i:s aiiyra:sid value, lot No. 'Ai. in the nriz'n! piatofthe town (now city) of Plymouth. Marshal county. Indiana, on Saturday, August 2, 1902, and from dav to dy thereafter unt.t sold, at the law office of L. M. Lauer. Plymouth. Indiana. Said sale to be maae for one-thitd cash ia hand, one-tb'rd in one and one-third In two years from date of sale; purchaser to secure deferred payments by nots drawln 0 per cent. Interest from date aud inorigage on said premises. Said real estate 1 known as the Moire Droperty, corner of Washiustonf iiid Walnut streets. L M. V.AUEK, 4l3tw Comodssioi.er. 1 VOTIJE TO XON REsIDEXT. No. Il?:J State of Indiana. Marshall County, ss. In the Marshall Ciicuit Coait. October term, Jacob W. KepLart j cp.t l0oUiet tife. r Su.i! 1- cancel moiifca?e and Ihe plaintiff In the above entth deause.br L. M. Lauer, his attorney, has tiiea Jr. mv office his complaint aealut the defendants; and, Itapptariujr by the affidavit of a c- nipetent pers n that the defei.Cat.ts. David M. Howell; the uuKt.owu hir ai d ueve- ijf Da 'id M. Howell. Ueceastd; Nathan Hockley ; the unknown heirs ana devisees or Nathan Hackley, deceased; Hugh McK-hai.; the unknowu heirs ani Ui-vi-ets r liu-jn McKehan, decf ased; Julia Aim Tu k i ; ti e unknown lieiib aLd devl-ets of .luiia Ann Tucker, deceased: Mary Jane S nions; the uokoowD heirs and devl-ees or Alarv Jue Simons, deceased; El zabe'.h Nlc .!: the unknown heirs and devisees -f E.'zibttli A ichols. deceased; William L. McIvAhan; the unknown heirs aud dvieesor Wll.la-3 1. McKahan, deceased: Lonida Tucker; the unknown heirs and dev'.stes of Lrilda Tucker, deceased; Cyrus Motur; ine unknown heirs and devisees f Cvrus Moiter, deceased; Moiter. widow of C3 rus Motter. deceased; the unknow n In Its a.d devisees of Mtter, oeceaseu; ai;d tins widow of Cyrus Motter. deceased. re nonresidents of the Slate ot Indiana: Tht-y are therefore herebv noiltird of tue tiiijur nd pendency of said complaint sigainst them, and unless they appear and auswer thereto on or before the cailtn? of said ans on li.e Uth day of October. ll.i bt-ingthe 2nd day of the October term of aid Court. t be becn and held at the Court House in Plymouth, Marshall County. lud Una. on the 2i d Monday of October. A. D.. l'JG, said cotnpU'.M and matters and things therein alleged will be heard and determined tu tneir aoseuce. Witness the Clerk and seal of said Curt, at Plymouth, this t.h day of Juiy, SEAL 1002. K. F BROOKE, il t4 Clk Mrhail Circuit Court. Leopold M. Lauer, Plalntlü' Attorney.