Plymouth Tribune, Volume 2, Number 43, Plymouth, Marshall County, 30 July 1903 — Page 7

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KSTLEY KND HESS

7 TEbe TObime, HENDRICKS & CO.. Publishers. Advertisements to appear la THE TKIB OJiB mct be In before Tuesday noon to Insure taelr appearance In the issue of that week. Plymouth. Ind, July 30. 1903. 1 & LOCAL NEWS J Alfred Grater has returned from a visit At SoutbBend. Fred Kuhn is building a new boat house at Pretty Lake. . Miss Ella Craig went to South Bend Thursday to visit relatives. There was a street fair and harvest jubilee at Tippecanoe Friday. Mrs. Fred Schrom, of Chicago, is visiting her parents in this city. Mrs. S. C. McCallip and children, of South Bend, are visiting in this city. Floyd Linkenhelt came up from Indianapolis Thursday to visit until S inday. C. W. Yearrick and Mrs. C. N. Tubbs were Rochester visitors Thursday. Mrs. Florence S. Babbitt, of Ypsllantl Mich., Is visiting Mrs. Mary Holdridge. The Maxinkuckee Assembly will open August 6, and remain in session three weeks. Mrs. Kate Trowbridge and daughter, Susan, are visiting relatives at Sout'a Bend. The club of kids known as "Ilungry Iloosiers" is camping at Pretty Lake this week. Mrs. Trimble arrived from Chicago Thursday to visit her daughter, Mrs. Harry Armstrong. - . Mis. Ira Brumbaugh, of Chicago, arrived last week to visit her sister, Mrs, Jacob Hoover. - A tank holding 175 barrels of water has been completed at Brightside for additional fire protection. Mrs. D. S. O'Brien and tier sister, Mrs. Lindley, of Omaha, Neb., were visiting in Plymouth Thursday. Misses Gertrude and Bessie Woodbury and Mr. Harry Woodbury, went to Michigan City on the excursion. Miss Vera Vi nail has returned from a visit of a week with the family of Charles Foster at- North Manchester. The Pennsylvania railroad gives excursion rates to Fort Wayne this week on account of the carnival in that city. Miss Nellie Martin has returned to her home at Muncie after a visit with the family of Mr. and Mrs. Priddy in this city. Herbert Ilanna, who has been visiting Rector Hdward in this city, returned to his home at Fort Wayne Thursday. Mel Williams, of the Warsaw Times with his wife, aad mother, stopped here Thursday enroute to Rochester to visit relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Julius Marks, of Cincinnati, and their son, Leo J. Marks, of Columbus, Ohio,spentThnrsday with Moses M. Lauer. Mrs. Johnson, wife of 'Dr. Johnson, of Bourbon, Is suffe ring from a serious fall which broke some of her ribs and ' cracked her breast bone. Mr. and Mrs. Simon Yenn have returned to their home at Mishawaka, after a visit of a week in this city with their son, Rev. S. M. Yenn. The glorious weather we have been enjoying during the greater. prrt of July is without a parallel In many years. For comfort it could hardly be excelled. . Four children were transferred Thursday f rwaBrigbtside to the school for feeble minded children at Fort Wayne. Mrs. Work accompanied them. Mrs. Simon Becker and son, an. Mrs. Loris and Mrs. Mary Becker, of Chicago, are visiting the family of A. Becker and other relatives and friends in'thl3city. '.v C. It. Leonard ha3 purchased S. W. Joclisoa's property on Sophia street and S. W. and Howard Jackson 's f amproperty. Mr. Ira Shrider hc3 rented c:ne cf ths farmers are tcC'.zzizz to think that a tz-j cf t-3 1 college 073 wfco cz2 cnt to tzii ctit3 prccumtly to Lirr:: trl::t; cro mzzlj t-cro fcr tili purJ C L- .. . w- v 1 C

A. A. SEE THEM Mr. Ed. Angart returned to Onaway, Michigan, Friday. Misses Gladys and Grace Hoover are spending a few days in Chicago. Samuel B Jordan transacted businessin Chicago Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Smith went to Tio a Friday for a visit of two weeks. Mrs. W. F. Suit and children went to Laporte Friday to visit until Sunday. A new porch and new paint' have much Improved Fred- H. Kuhn's residence. Pearl Ziders, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Ziders, is very sick with ca tarrhai fever. Mrs. Thomas Sponsler and Miss Cullison are visiting at Bloomingsburg, Fulton county. .Misses Cecelia and Alvena Sbarber, of Chicago, are here for a visit of two weeks at St. Michael's Academy. Peter Schroeder's family moved to Laporte Friday where Mr. Schroeder has been employed for some time. Mrs. Adam Holetn has returned from a visit of two days with her daughter, Mrs. Rambsy, at Walkerton. Miss Bessie Reeve has returned to her home in St. Joseph, after a visit of several days with relatives in this city. .Mrs. Frank Wheeler and son, Marion, left Friday for Onaway, Michigan, to visit her daughter, Mrs. W. A. Logan. A telegram from Onaway, Michigan, says Mr. and Mrs. Bert Logan are the parents of a ten pound boy born Friday morning. . Christian Killian, who resides south of Nappanee, has bought a farm a few miles from Plymouth and will remove to this county in August. The Michigan City Maccabees took in a class of forty-five candidates Tues day night. Over a hundred guests from neighboring towns were present. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Parks and the St. Elmo Sunday school class of the M. E. church, which Mr. Parks teaches, spentFriday afternoon atLake Maxinkuckee. Hundreds of college men, lured to Kansas by the hope of. profitable employment in the harvest fields, failed to find work, " and are stranded and looked upon as tramps. Mrs. Johnson has returned to Tippecanoe after a visit of a few days in this city. She is at present making her home with her son, Dr. Sherman Johnson at Tippecanoe. Mr. Hoyt, the rural route mac, for this section of Indiana is in this county rearranging routes and will probably establish some new routes, , but particulars cannot be given now. Jacob Ness of this city has received an Invitation from the St. Louis Building Committee of the World's Fair asking him to put in a bid on the Indiana building to be erected at St. Louis. - Miss E. Bruckhart, of Johnson county Missouri, who has been visiting, Mrs. Noah Marsh and other relatives in this county, went to Illinois today to visit before returning home. Chicago did not realize how she was losing caste when she sent out the report that her recent hailstones were only as large as nutmegs. - She should araise and explain that she meant nutmeg melons. While the hail storm in this and adjoining counties was fully as bad as first reported farmers are preparidg to make the best of It. The storm covered a strip about two miles wide and sixty miles long. Bourbon people have decided that the demand of the imittation leather people, of 840,000 and buildings, to move their factory to that place, is too high. Right. They could build and equip a good factory of their ow,i for less money. - - The contract for building the new school house at Donaldson was let to William Everiy Friday. There were only two bids. Mr. Eerly's bid was 84,250 and the bid of Jacob lleca was 54,483. Work on the building will commence at ouce and it will be completed October 1. The ladies of Sunshine Conrcc3 M. S. O. T. W. took dinner with Mrs. Rcber, one and a half milc3 north of town Thuruday. Few ladies could prepare eofjeed a dinner zz they had. Tfccce present vrere IZczZzzzzz J: fzc:n, Ctylar, Vcr-ii::r, neunten, ' 1 r V k. -

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There are five cases of small pox in Monterey. Mrs. Anderson of Donaldson, is visiting In South Bend. . Quincy Kelley has gone to Chicago for a visit of a few days. Mrs. M. E. Jordan has gone to Bourbon for a visit of a week. Chris Ringgenberg isbuildmga new and up-to-date hotel In Bourbon. Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Lackey are the parents of a ten-pound baby girl. Mrs. L. L. Funk ana children have gone to Kansas City for a yislt of two weeks. , The excursion to Niagara Falls leaves Plymouth at 10:38 a. m. August 6. , Union services at Reformed church Sunday evening, sermon by Rev. A. P, DeLong. Mrs. George Eckert is again spending a few days at Larwill. She reports her health improved. J. W. Whltsellwent toWalrut to visit over Sunday with relatives and friends in that vicinity. ' Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sponsler and Miss Eva Feiser went to Argos Satur day to visit over Sunday. Robert Ligget lost one of his large draft horses Friday. Its death was caused by kidney trouble. Miss Ida Schulthlss is again in her place at Kloepfer's store after a visit of a week in Fort Wayne. Again it is the young man's day. A boy. twenty-one years old, is being held in Philadelphia for bigamy. 1 Mrs. Dan Rentschler and son, of Akron, Ohio,, are visiting relatives and friends in this city and county. Mrs. Fannie Ruth arrived from Chicago Friday evening for a visit of ten days with her brother, Otis Patterson. .Mr. and Mrs. Ilenry Yost of Mishawaka, visited over Sunday with Mrs. Yost's parents, Mr and Mrs. C. J. Etch.

Mrs. J. T. Dewey has returned to her home in Iowa after a visit in this city with her duughter, Mrs. L. L: Funk. Miss Jennie Lauer has returned from a visit of. three weeks in Chicago at the home of her sister, Mrs. Ruhman. Pope Leo and Cassius M. Clay were born 10 the same year. This was about the only point of similarity between them. Mrs. Schloss, of Warsaw, and Mrs. Bertha Shane, of Kansas City, are visiting Mayer Allman's and "other relatives here. The soldier boys left on the early train Sunday morning for Indianapolis where they will camp and drill for a week. Master George Fellers, of Chicago, is spending a week with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Urias Fellers, in West township. The L, L. club met with Mrs. Burton of North Walnut street Thursday afternoon. Refreshments were served and a jolly time is reported. B. J. Nussbaum, cf Four-Mile, Ixjfi and Herbert Nussbaum. of Chicago arrived Saturday for a visit of two weeks with relatives and friends in Plymouth. Rev. J. B. Carter went to Warsaw Saturday to consult Dr. Moreau in re gard to his son, J. A. Carter of Ro chester, who has been seriously ill since July 4. With all their faults we love them still" is what the Dublin folks were singing while they cheered King Ed ward and his queen down .Sackville street and on historic College green. Miss Eva Turner, of thls'city and her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Rankin, of Los. Angeles, are taking a trip through Mexico, and Miss Turner writes that she enjoys It very much. The hail storm destroyed 32 acres of com, 23 acres of clover and 18 tons of timothy hay belonging to Robert' Robison. He also bad 100 chickens and 20 turkeys killed by the hailstones. Walkerton Independent. Mrs. S. W. Butcher, of Geneva,'Ind., stopped here Saturday, on her way to Ilanna to visit her sister, Mis. Chambers. She will return to Plymouth in a tew days and visit , her brother, Charles Walburn.. Milton S. Maye. general manager of the Nelson Morris packing houses In Kansas City, Chicago and St Joseph, arrived Friday evening for a visit with his parents and other relatives at his old home in Plymouth. The Indiana Brewers' association declared at a late meeting that caloonkeepers who violate the law must be driven out of the business. If they mean what they say and do it, all good people will be thankful. There Is little satisfaction in looking over a list of pensions granted, as now published, the postoflce addresses bcicj omitted. One cannot tell whether any local parties have been granted pensions or not under the order. Carter Harrison has stabled hn ambition to run for th3 presidency next year and r?ill fatten it fer entry in the ct--c3 cf ICC 3. Four ycara tr-cee C. II. uill havo to Litre. C2 hi 22:2! f to a country toat trill tavs forderten til rJ

A. N. Bogardus, of this city, Alexander Dinamore, Henry Bucheister and James Wilson, of Union township, have gone to Indianapolis to erect a number of buildings which Mr. Bogardus has contracted to build. William Botsch, who married Miss Meta Ru?e in this city, died at his home in Washington, D. C, Tuesday morning of consumption. His wife died of the same 'disease a few years ago. He leaves one child, a daughter. Mrs. Olive Spangler and her two children left for Denver, Colorado, Thursday after a visit of six weeks with relatives in this county. Her father, Mr. John Ringer, who came here with her will remain a week longer. Solomon Mayer, of Spokane, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Speyer and family, of New York and Mrs. Nathan Kramer and daughter, Corrinne, of Chicago, are visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sigmund Mayer and other relatives here. Twelve oil wells sunk and only one of tem dry is the record to date of the operations in Liberty township. Porter county. The company now at work in that field proposes to drive at least fifty wells, and land in the vicinity has gone up to $50 an acre. The pastors of the city, with their families, spent Friday In a delightful manner at Pretty Lake. There were 23 in the crowd.'" An excellent dinner and supper was served 'by the ladies. When not fishing or eating the time was taken up in playing games. Still another score for Indiana. A contractor from Columbus, this state, has beaten all the records in the building line by erecting complete the mammoth agricultural building on the world's exposition grounds at St. Louis in about 50 days' time. Out in Kansas City the coal dealers have decided to advance the price of coal tl a ton because of an increased cost of 7 cents per ton in mining. This is another benevolent move on the part of the operators to let the public help the hard-worked miners. An expert examination has been ordered of the books of all Elkhart county officers, dating back to the going into effect of the law requiring all fees to be paid IntJ the county treasury. The investigation is to determine what disputed feesare due the county. A Marshall county lass is reported to have endeavored to stimulate industry among her father's harvest hands by offering to give t'.iree kisses and fk hug to the one who shocked the most wheat. That ought to be enough to shock the wheat, and everything else around the place. John. Ringer, of Denver, Colorado, has been here for the past six weeks visiting bis brothers, sisters and other relatives, after an abseuce of fourteen years. He says Colorado is just like all other countries, some men

make money and others lose. Mr. Inger has evidently done well. Mrs. Chauncey Place died at the tnome of her daughter, Mrs. Robert Clark, In Teegarden Tuesday, July. 21, of consumption, aged 61 years. She is survived by a husband and two children. The burial took place at the Morris cemetery Thursday. Rev. Hardy, of South Bend, officiated. The Bourbon News says Chas. Fribley sowed to wheat last fall 4 J acres of ground that be had in pickles that season, and when he threshed the wheat last week be got 155 bushels and five pounds from the 4 acres, which is a little over 34 bushels to the acre. Who said pickle raising was hard on ground? The largest tree in Oregon was felled recently, to be sent as a curiosity to the World's Fair. It is the Aberdeen spruce and stocd nearly 300 feet high, 40 feet around and 118 feet from the ground to the first limb. Its age is calculated at 410 years, being a good sized tree when Columbus discovered the land that was afterward named America. D. C. Cole of this city finished threshing bis wheat on his farm near North Liberty, ne had over thirteen hundred bushels and has sold it and got the .mcney in bank, ne has . 150 acres of corn that at present promises a large yield; this along with his four acres of onions will probably enable him to buy coal to keep him and his wife from freezing nextwlnter. The Boston doctor who, during a business trip to Indianapolis last week met a telephone girl who was an entire stranger tu him, courted her and made her his "to have and to I hold from this day forward, for better, for worse, for richer, for poorer, In sicknesand in health, to love and to cherish, till death us do part,' all in just thirty-five hours, must have found his affinity in one of those rare moments when the line wasn'tbusy. William Doering, of Goshen, has received letters patent on a grain-shocking device that will no doubt do much to solve the question of harvest help. It is designed to take the place of a bundle carrier on a eelf-bindsr and will carry eiht or ten bundles, as the operator may desire and automatically deposit them cn the ground in the chepe cf a choclr. Thi3 sliccliinj device can to u;:d for all'--all ccrjab rye, rrhcat cni cats--, -ythir in

The Woodmen's Circle of Mlshawaka will unveil the monument of Mrs. Ilameral at Oak Hill cemetery in this city, Sunday, Augnst 2. By mistake it has been announced that the monument would be unveiled in Mishawaka. Mrs. Hameral was born in Plymouth, grew to womanhood here as Miss Hattie Kllnger, was married here and ber remains are interred at Oak Hill cemetery. Gum chewing by waitresses and maids in hotels is prohibited at Chicago under the agreement signed yesterday between the waiters' unions and the Hotel Owners' Association. Any young woman found working her jaws in a desperate effort to masticate a stick of gum or anything else that may tend to affect the mobility of her features will be open to4the charge of violating the agreement. The statement comes from West Virginia that the story of the most horrible case of lynching yet recorded the victim being said to have been flayed alive was the invention of a scoundrelly newspaper correspondent; that no euch ghastly occurrence took place in the locality named, and that the people of Bluefield are intensely indignant over the audacity of the correspondent who invented and sent out the false statement. Lewis Wright, of Pontiac, Illinois, a brother of George and Willis Wright deceased, who has been visiting in Plymouth for several days went toWalkerton Friday for a visit before returning home. Mr. Wright settled near Plymouth 53 years ago, and went to Illinois 33 years ago, where he has since resided. He is a well preserved man of bis age and is a genial gentleman reminding us forcibly of his deceased brothers who were among the best citizens of Marshall county.

Prohibition in the South. Ten of the southern states are shown to have local option laws, under which, apparently, a majority of the counties or cities, as the case may be, have adopted total prohibition, and many others have put stringent restrictions on the sale of liquors. The figure for the total number of saloons in the southern states as compared with New York, which are furjished by Secretary 'AlonzoE. Wilson, of the Prohibition state committee, tell well the story of progress. Fourteen southern states, with a combined population of about 20,400,000, have 27,000 saloons, Or about one for 750 Inhabitants. New York, with a census population of 7,268,000, has 34,000 saloons, or one for 214 inhabitants. The explanttion of this 'progress in the South as given by the Prohibitionist leaders is the planters cannot avoid recognizing that the negroes become much mure peaceable and much more easily controlled when they are kept away Irom liquor. Prohibition is such an unmistakable aid to law and order that in several states hopes are good for the passage of state prohibition laws. Loving Traits of Cattle. Speaking of trained and untrained cattle, the Silver Lake Record is responsible for the following: Henry L. Oldfather, west of Silver Lake, says: "My cattle will follow me until I leave the lot, on their way up to the barnyard- iu the evening and will stop and call for a lock of hay." Elmer Studj says: "There Is nothing at all remarkable about that:He went into a barnyard in the country one day last week to buy some stock when be had not had the slightest acquaintance with the cattle, and an old bull not' only followed him until he left the lot, but took the gate off the' hinges and raced with him up to the house in the most familiar manner possible." Study says he has no doubt that the old fellow would have celled for something if he would have waited a little longer, but he did not want to keep the folks waiting for dinner; so' he just hung one tail of of his coat and a part of his pants on the fellow's horns and went into the house. Warsaw Times. Have Preferred Chrn. : The bookbinders in the Government Printing Office at Washington have presented affidavits with their charges against - assistant loreman Miller. They are the charges on which he was expelled from the union and constitute good reason, the bookbinders say, why he should not hold his place. This is a very different thing from the position first assumed that if Mr. Miller were put back the unions would strike. That put It on the ground of membership In the union and put the government in the position of abdicating law and being ruled by the demands of labor unions a thing not to be contemplated for a moment. But If Mr. Miller is unfit for the place, bookbinders," citizens, or any other citizens, have a right to prefer charges and have tbem acted on. liihVa3j. The wage seals conference at Pittsburg, Pa., between the window glass rrorkers and manufacturers has resulted In an agreement wherebv the workers are to receive the highest vages ever paid them, being the came rate' provided fcr during the loct fire la what wo3 known C3 the Burns ceale.

Oll f:r-3 ct tia Tr;Luz3 cZzs.

I I l!p ' v Jim Dumps' young wife while yet S' :-tf3 a bride

U Tbt Beadj-to-Serre when in doubt. cat

All "Sunny Jims" Row. 44 In our household 'Force Ms u familiar and welcome as 4 Sanny Jim,' and that's Baying a good deal, for we are aU

Bunny Jims 'now. 44 K L. Etox,"

W 6 Their Time is Coming. Labor troubles in Chicago have been unusually serious in the last two weeks, and the strike at the Kellogg factory has resulted in rioting and bloodshed. Now the head of the teamsters' union threatens to 4,tle up the city" by means of a sympathetic strike, and 4,brlng these people to terms." The time will come when the people of this country will see that men who arrav class against class and organize large bodies of men Into excitied and lawless mobs who seize and hold the property of those by whom they have heen employed, and by force, violence, and even murder prevent persons who do not belong to their particular organizations from earning bread for their families, are enemies of society. Bremen Enquirer. Real Friends of Labcr. The real friends of the laboring classes, jrganized or uaorganlzed, are those who tell them the truth, whether palatable or unpalatable The worst enemies of organized labor are professional agitators fellows who live in clover and feast on the earnings of those whom they are able to decei ve. The sooner organized labor turns the cold shoulder to these vampires the better it will be for those chieily concerned. Jessie Grant is Millionaire. Jesse Grant, son of President Grant, is expected in Baldwinville on Saturday to confer with Col. A. K. Owen concerning property in Mexico. Mr. Grant assisted Mr. Owen in securing mining concessions from Mexico, from which, under a recent court decision, property was awarded him valued at $50,000,000. He is heavily interested with Col. Owen In a railroad and other property at Topolobamo. Miss Nellie Grant, daughter of Jesse Grant, is now in Baldwinsville. Indiana's Pride. Indiana has long been famous for her many natural resources, her valuable building stone, ber rich deposits of coal, her natural gas, her flowing oil fields, her forest lands and her grain fields, but just at this season of the year every Hoosier swells with the real pride for bis native commonwealth the Indiana melon season is on. We believe that Indiana has the largest, sweetest, prettiest watermelons on earth, cholera morbus to contrary notwithstanding. Indian apolis Star. , "Lest We Forget." The Indianapolis Sun says:. 44 You fellows who are kicking about the hot weather perhaps forget that about seyen months ago you were paying $14 a ton for coal." STATE OF OHIO. CITY OF TOLEDO LCCAS COUNTY. 6S Frank. J. Cheney, makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F J. Cheney & Co., doing buisnesa in the Pity of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, aod that eaid firm will pay the sum of, ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure Frank J Cheney. Sworn to, before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of Decernetrber, A. D. 1880. t 1 A. W. Gleason, I seal J Notary Public Ball's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous eurfacea of the aystem. Send for testimonial?, free. F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. r Hall's Family Pills are the best. Sptclil Feres to Cil!.'crr.:a via Per.rjyl nix Unts. Account ' national Encam'pmcnt Grand Army of the Republic will be in effect July 31st to August 13th, inelusive. For further information regarding rates, thr;ujh time, etc., consult Ticket Agents of PennsylvaFor the latent telcjruphic reports LZ2 tho TmruNr:.

Some biscuits made with greatest pride. Jim looked with fear upon the food, But to & bride one can't be rude. " Let's eat 4 Force ' first, dear, 'tis my whim," It saved the life of " Sunny Jim."

Cereal iL WHEAT AT II DOLLAR Move-rent to Put ItThere Started with Kansas in the ForeVIEWS OF AN A0TIVE WORKER DelicTes the Cereal Will fie That High by September "Snakea" State News Note. Indianapolis, July 23. J. A. E"?rHt, president f the American Society of Equity, a farmers' organization, has iud an appeal to farmers to hold their wheat for the $1 mark. This will be addressed especially to the farmeis of Kansas, among whom organizers and lecturers are now working, resides the appeal, which will be sent tot every town in the great Kansas wheat belt, 100,000 special appeal papers of the organization will be mailed to farmers in the wheat states. Kaniat Farmer Dave a Cinch. "The farmers of the wheat belt of Kansas hold in their hand the control of the b:eadstuff markets of the wcrld at this moment," said Everett. "If they shoujd dump their 100,000,000 bushels of wheat on the market the speculators' organization will rule. If they should do this, the farmers of the country would not et a fair price for their grain. If they hold their crop they will rule the speculators and will get $1 a bushel which is a fair price. Cmm Do It by Sentiment. "We can raise wheat to ffl by sentiment in Kansas, but we must have an organization to cause farmers to sell when that fair price is offered, aDd not to extort unfair prices. It is my opinion that thefa:mers will hold their grai.i and it is also my opinion that we will have dollar wheat by Sept. 1." Two L-ir Lost In a Mino. ' Linton, Ind., July 23. Two lives have been loat in the Buell mine, the victims Frank Alumbaugh and a boy 9 years old. Alumbaugh was working the mine and the boy, whose mother lives in Chicago, but is now jn Germany, went down to see it. Both were killing by falling slate. The boy was visiting an aunt, and his body has been shipped to Denver, to another aunt. . Baroo Done by the Storm. Lapo:te,Ind., July 23; Reports from southern part of Laporte county.which was devastated by rain and hail, show that the storm-swept pathway was from two to three miles wide, ruining every bit of corn, oata and fruit, and killing birds and small animals. The hails on the ground measured eight Inches deep in places, while it broke thousands of window panes. Coronor'a Tordlct Hold Bock. Evansville, Ind., July 23. Coroner Matthew Walling announces it will probably be u week or more before he gives his verdict In the cases of the rioters who were killed in. this city on the night of July 6 by the state militia. It Is said that the coroner will exonerate the state militia. No more arrests of people who were Indicted for rioting have been made. Homicide Gives Himself Up. Indianapolis, July 23. William Sumner, who killed his brother-in-law, John Ilorn, Monday night and fled, has given himself up. He saif4 he killed his brother-in-law with a hatchet in selfdefense. ' Om Travels on n Check. ' Uaperstown, Ind., July 23. A 10-year-old boy checked through from Bingen on the Rhine, In Germany, to Cando, N. D., passed here over the Pennsylvania on train No. 21, closely holding a small dachshund under one arm and displaying his baggage check in his hand. Ugbtnlna; Strlkee a Freacner. Grefntown, Ind., July 23. This place was risited by a disastrous storm. Rev. E. Miller was struck by lightnirg at his home and seriously Injured. Five miles east fences, small buildings and derricks were blown and com was riddled with hail stones. Hade a Dramatie Exit. Hammond, Ind., July 23. - Lewis Newcomer, of Shelby, walked twenty miles to buy a bottle filled wjth carbolic acid, then, stacdlcj ia a dramatic attitude, ho gulped down the contents, dyinz half an hsur later. Canadian Defender Selected. I.Ic:ilreal, July 23. The TfccrcIIa II has been cCici.illy chosen cs defender of the Ceawanha'a cup. The first race fcr the cup will b3 tailed ca July CD.

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