Plymouth Tribune, Volume 3, Number 30, Plymouth, Marshall County, 28 April 1904 — Page 2
Zbe tribune.
Established October 10, 1001. Only Republican Newspaper In the Couaty. HENDRICKS & CO., Publishers. OFFICE-Blssell Bulldlne, Corner LsPorte ajjd Center btrtets. Telt-phone No. 27. bDBSCRIPTION RATES One Year, In advance, 11.50; Sli Months. 75 cents; Three wfontLs, 40 cents, delivered at any postofflce ADVERTISING RATES made known on application. Entered at the potofflce at Plymouth, Indiana. a second-class mall matter. Plymouth, Ind., April 28, 1904. Senator Gorman's bitter denunciation ot machine politics doesn't specify wbetber he had reference to Dill's Tammanv'sor hisnwn. Tha Parker buum does not rise to any great height in states outside of New York. The movement is indeed not considered favorably by democrats in general. In spite of all the excitement raised about the subject, no political platform has yet declared against the courtesy of entertaining a colored man at the White House. Brigham II. Roberts, on the stand at the resumption of the senatorial investigation of the Smout case, admits that with the favor of the Mormon church he was elected to congress and without it he lost. Tom L. Johnson sajs he is not a candidate for the presidency. In the last election he was elected to private life by an overwhelming majority. It speaks well for his good sense that he doesn't wish to resign. Bourke Cockran says the United States is morally bankrupt. " If you want to bear eloquent mourning over corruption and tearful desire for the good and beautiful, listen to a Tammany tool, every time. George W. Self, of Corydon, Harrison county, candidate for the nomination for reporter of the supreme court, is editor of the Corydco Republican. Nothing is too good lor an editor, therefore, he usually gets nothing. ' Massachusetts democrats stick to Oiney and they find a hearty second in Virginia, where a boom has been started for Gen. Fitzhugh Lee as candiate for vice-president on the democratic ticket witUOlney at the head. It is at least significant that wh to nearst is best known he has least strength. In New York, where he lives, there is no sentiment for him. In California, where he used to live, aid where he began his yellow newspaper career, the situation is the same. The Massachusetts democratic state convention in Boston instructed not only for the delegates at large, but the twenty-eight district delegates to vote for Oiney at St. Louis and bound the delegation by the unit rule, thusdepriviug Hearst of the district delegations already won by him. The end of the war in the far East is" believed in St. Petersburg to be in sight, nigh officials can see in the virtual recall of Viceroy Alexieff nothing less than a complete change in the government's policy. The Czar has favored peaceful counsels from the first. He was practically overruled by the aggressive party, of which Admiral Alexieff was the head. . A Democratic congressman is quoted as saying when asked what he thought Bryan would do at the St. Louis convention, "Oh, the trouble with Bryan is he thinks be is in partnership with the almighty, and just npw he has some doubts as to which is the senior partner." This is rather unjust to a man whose chief desire and only ambition is to regulate the Democratic party, an organization the Almigbty seems, to have forgotten. Indianapolis Journal. i There Is nothing like optimism! The New York Tribune, commenting on the arrival in one day last week of 9,000 immigrants, two-thirds of them from Italy an immigration that is causing the authorities alarm puts it thus: "These descendants of the ancient Romans delight to dig and drill. They are sons of the soil and of great industry and energy." Could any other press in the world put it so? The Tribune will be chronicling next that "four hundred of theca descen dants of the ancient Romans 'have ac cepted a pecition V7ith ths Blinli. lulrcid in crd:r to cicrclcs ttcir z-
!ht' td 12 ncrry."
THE CITY OF PLYMOUTH. Plymouth is now a city of 4,000 people and contains property worth a million of dollars. The men who manage its interests should be men of experience and ability, men acquainted with its needs and possessing the honesty and intelligence necessary to legislate for the best Interests of the city. ' The Improvements that have been made are all right, but taxes have reached the highest limit possible and it Is evident to every citizen who gives city matters Intelligent thought, that we brve just reached a place where good judgment, honesty and intelligence is needed to maintain our present position and have our city go forward without additional taxation, or additional indebtedness. On Tuesday, May 3. the voters of Plymouth will elect an entire new set of city officers and at least five new councilman, only one old councilman having been nominated. Every man and woman in Plymouth is interested in electing the best officers possible;
it therefore behooves every voter to consider calmly and candidly the question of good city government and to vote accordingly. The city election is of far more importance to us than the-presidential election, and the best men for mayor, clerk, treasurer, marshal and city council men should be chosen. In one respect' both factions of the democratic party are right each declares that for the other to get into power would bring limitless disaster to the country. . The testimony of Brigham Roberts in the Smoot case amply justifies the action of congress in keeping him out of his seat, if there had not been sufficient reasons betöre. Hen who put the laws of a church above those of their country can not be very good citizens. Two robbers of Chicago, under arrest for burglary say they would have commited murder to promote their stealings If they had not been deterred by the quick action of the courts in sentencing the car barn murderers to death. That is testimony to the moral iolluence on other knaves of pjjpmpt punishment. A special from Dawson says: The Klondike will produce at least 810,000. ü00 this season. Nome has done more work this winter than ever before and will swell the total several millions more." The first sluicing of the year in the Klondike has begun. The clean up will be in full blast in three weeks. John D. Rockefeller h- so afraid that some people will not think he has always been the saint that be prtends to be that he caused a letter, written by the general attorney for the Stan dard Oil Company, to be sent to all the country. And why? Merely be cause Ida M. Tarbell has probably been telling the truth about him in her history o! the Standard Oil Company. The editor of the Rockville Republican was a candidate for the Republican nomnation for clerk of Parke county, but with the usual fate of editorial aspirants for political honors, he was thrust aside for another, - who more deftly pulled the ropes. The editor takes his defeat philosophically, even promising to "continue to hew wood and draw water for more successful men, as he has done for the last sixteen years." Since the democratic city ticket was named it has been evident that the editor of the Independent-Democrat and all the other leaders consider it a very weak ticket. Metsker has devoted two or three columns to the defense of the democratic candidates, although the ticket has not been at tacked by republicans. The fact that Metsker considers it necessary to de fend the ticket before it is assailed is the best evidence in the world that he does not believe its candidates are the equals of those on the republican ticket in capacity to give the city good government even if they are all nice young men. The Tribune only asks every voter to go to the polls and after due consideration to vote for the best men for the various offices. If every voter will do this we shall have an im provement in city government and tzzzz will be reduced. The Tribune furnishes all the lat ent vrir ceus. No:t is tfc3 Urns to
BANK WRECKERS SENTENCED
Broderiek, Collins and Brown Are Now in Fort Leavenworth Prison. J. L. Brodrick, president of the wrecked Iudiana National Bank, at Elkhart, was sentenced by Judge Anderson, in the United States District Court Thursday to ten years' imprisonment in the Cnited States penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kas. W. L. Collins, cashier of the wrecked bank, was sentenced toix years in the same penitentiaay. The judge, in sentencing Colirns, took into consideration his services to the government as a witness and took the ground that be bad been used as a tool. Walter Brown's motion for a new trial wss over-ruled and he was sentenced for eight years. . Two hours after Brown's sentence the trio of bank wreckers were on their way tb the government prison at Fort Leavenworth, leaving Indianapolis at 3:25 o'clock over the Big Four. They were in charge of United States Marshal Henry Petltt, Chief Deputy Marshal Will K: Snavelly and Deputy Marshal Rankin and arrived at Fort Leavenworth at 10 o'clock this morning. Brown sat between bis doctor and attorneys at the table facing Judge Anderson. His face, swollen abnormally and his color unnatural, he appeared on several occasions to be on the point of a creakdown, but after his sentence bad been passed and he left the courtroom he seemed much better. Brown's wife remained with him and went -with him to Leavenworth. Brown seemed in better spirits after be and his wife entered the cars, while Mrs. Brown chatted and laughed,' attempting to keep him cheerful, although it was evident that she suffered as much as be. Brodrick bought an evening paper and entered the smoking car, where was also Collins. As the train pulled out the three men sat at their windows taking a last look at the city of their doom. Oklahoma and Arizona. Iti gratifying to know that the new states will boar the familiar territorial names Oklahoma and Arizona. There was talk some time ag: of renameing one of these territories and calling it Jefferson on its admission to the Union. Had this been done no doubt the other would have been labeled with the name of some historic celebrity. already sufficiently honored, and two musical and significant appellations thus lost. This mistake was made when the State of Washington was given its present title instead of Tacoma, in honor of the wonderful mountain visible from so large a part of Its territory. The name of the father of his country had been given to the capital of the Nation a memorial that was .surely enough and confusion has since existed by the duplication of the name, Washington State" being necessary In speech and safer in postoffice addresses in order to distinguish the two. The country has become accustomed to the Spanish name Arizona, "dry belt," and to the Indian name Oklahoma, beautiful land," and will gladly retaintbem as permanent possessions. Indianapolis Journal.Captain Clemans Killed. Captain D. F. Clemans, who until Jan. 1, was auditor of Wabash county, and who prior to that time bad been joint senator from Wabash and Kosciusko counties, was killed Thursday afternoon on ha farm near Lake ton, in Wabash county, He was hauling a load of stone, when the horses became frightened and ran, overturning the loaded wagon, beneath which Captain Clemans fell. He was dragged some distance and terribly mangled, esjeclally about the face and upper part of the body. His wife witnessed the accident and ran to him and dragged him out, but he was unconscious and died a few minutes later. Clemans was an attorney and prominent in Wabash county affairs. He was sixty live years old and leaves a widow and one son. As to Negro Education. What strikes the northern educator as particularly absurd in current discussions of manual education Versus literary education for the negro is the notion many people seem to have that the two kinds of education are mutually exclusive. Granted that the black man ought also to learn as much literature, mathematics, and science as he is capable of learning: and that the limit of his capabilities, as is the case with white men, is determined not by racial but by individual considerations.' A bright young fellow won't learn any the less bricklaying from having the opportunity to learn a little history and geography, and be is much more likely to become a desirable citizen Boston Transcript." Trade Building. Advertising means getting In touch with the people. There are many men who will spend a large amount of money for a sign to hang over their place of business in an out of the way street who will refuse to spend a cent for newspaper publicity. Tho sign is all right, but there is a method of directing attention to the sign. The beet and only approved way of doing this b by pixels j an advertisement in
Honesty the Best Policy. Representative E.. D. Crumpacker thinks one of the unsolved mysteries of the times is why men of seeming good character will deliberately move toward the penitentiary. "The conviction of W. L. Collins, J. L. Brodrick and "Walter Brown," said the congressman, as he took a comfortable position in the house smoking room, '.'ought to be a lasting lesson to young men in Indiana, but I am afraid it will not be. Year by year the government, which we know is relentless, puts men in prison for wrecking banks, and yet men of the highest intelligence continue to offer themselves as subjects. "The troeible is we have set up some false standards of wealth and of living 'n this country. I have thought about it a good deal in recent years, and it occurs to me that we are in need of a revival of the good old doo trine that honesty is the best policy. If every man could see what he ought to see early in life that an honest, upright career Is the only one worth pursuing, we would have fewer wrecked lives as a result of following the false standards of the day. 'I am preaching that doctrine every day, and every man who has any influence on men ought to preach it," added the congressman.
How About "Ready Pay." Some fifteen years ago John Colvin, ac a time wben he bad a few unused dollars laying around, purchased 4,000 shares in the "Heady Pay" mine of Colorado. There were others in Bourbon at that time who bought some of the same stock, among them Cbas. Vink and Thomas B. Lee. This mine, it seems, went up against some pretty hard propositions, and since that time has not proyed a very successful dividend paying property. But timo has changed in some respects the conditions, and it is now reported that "Ready Pay" is worth about $13,00 per share. This would mean that John Colvin's 4,000 shares is worth in the market to-day $52.000. This, or course, is sufficient to make a man walk on imaginary air. But John Colvin doesn't. In fact, heappears glum, as though adversity had given him a blow below the belt, and he will too, until he reaches his Oklahoma home, and satisfies himself that be did not transfer those identical 4,000 shares of Ready Pay stock to the stove several months ago when he was seized with a cleaning up fever. Eourbon Advance. Righteous Indignation. There will be sympathy, of course, for the wives and children of the Elkhart bank wreckers, but none whatever for the wreckers themselves. Men that, through the machinery of the national bank organization, set about robbing their friends and neighbors who have trusted them with their hard-earned savings deserve no compassion. They are robbers or confidence men" of a peculiar odious kind, and the injury they do to individuals and to a community is most wicked and lasting in its evil consequences. Their crime Is all the worse because of their intelligence and their respectability. The greater the gifts- the greater the obligation and the more beinouos, therefjre, the betrayal of trust.. Judge Anderson was none too severe in his sentence and in his words of righteous indignation which accompanied his pronouncement of doom. Indianapolis News. 0 Worship of the Mikado. Japanese patriotism takes a curious form in its almost idolatrous worship of the Mikado. In concluding his official report of the last naval fight at Port Arthur, in which the Petropavlovsk was sunk, Admiral Togo says: "The fact that not a single man was Injured in these successive attacks must be attributed to his Majesty's glorious virtue. Again, In congratulating Admiral Toga on the victory, the Japanese minister of marine says: "The result was splendid, and while it is attributed to the Emperor's illustrious virtue, the loyal and gallant action of our officers and men of the fleet played a conspicuous part." At this distance it looks as if the victory were due much more to the officers and men than to the Emperor's virtue, but whoknows how much their theory may have inspired them? When it comes to supreme reverence for the Mikado there are no parties in Japan. Indianapolis Journal. An Obliging Georgian. Representative Adamson, of Georgia, recently told a story which illustrated true good-fellow-ship. He had been campaign in Georgia on foot and was twenty miles from home. It became necessary for him to go home, and he tried to secure a conveyance, but all the teams were busy on the farms. Finally he went to a man whom he knew vey well and said: "Bill, I have got to get home and I want a rig to take me. You've got to get me one." "Adamson," he replied, "we are five weeks behind with our work here, and it is next to imposssble to get a horse that can be spared, but there isn't anything I won't do for ycu. I'll tell yeu what I'll do. I'll walk home withyou.'
MORTUARY Andrew Bollinger. Andrew Bollinger, one of the old residents of West township, died at his home one and a half miles north east of Donaldson, at two o'clock Thursday morning, April 21, aged 69 years 6 months and 8 days. Deceased was born in Pennsylvania, went from that state to Ohio and came from Ohio to Indiana almost forty years ago and during all of that time has resided in the vicinity where he died. He was an honest industrious citizen who had the respect of the community in which he lived. He leaves five children, three sons, and two daughters. Death came after an illness of almost a year, hastened by an attack of lung fever. Funeral services will be held at the church at Donaldson. Sunday at 10:30 a. m. conducted by Rev. Mr. Cline. The remains will leave the house at 10 o'clock. WorK of the Salvation Army. Farm colonies under the supervision of the Salvation Army have been established in South Africa, Australia and England. In Rhodesia 3,000 acres have been turred over to the army and western Australia has set apart 20,000 acres for its use. In this country the army has established farm colonies in Colorado aud Ohio. At Fort Amity, Colorado, the colony consists of 2,000 acres, and is perhaps the most successful illustration of the army's plan for drafting the surplus population of the larger cities and enabling it to get a permanent hold upon the soil. The army starts a family on a ten or twenty acre ract with a cottage, a team, agricultural implements and seeds. It advances all this and some money besides. The settler pays it all back in three or four years out of the earnings from the soil, and in the meantime has the benefits that come from living in an organized community. Will He Bolt? In an interview given out this week Mr. Bryan said: "I do not think the instructions will give" Judge Parker any additional strength, but the platform adopted by the convention ought to prevent his nomination unless the democrats, when they assemble at Str Louis, decide to attempt a confidence game on the public." This it seems to us, is a pretty direct intimation that if Judge Parker is nominated at St. Louis Mr. Bryan will bolt the ticket. For he says that, after the adoption of the New York platform, the democrats can not nominate the New' York judge without playing a confidence game on the publicand of course, Mr. Bryan would not consent for a moment to be a party to any confidence game. Well, this makes a most interesting situation, surely. Indianapolis News. Deaths at Soldier's Home. Richard M. Smock, commandant of the State Soldiers' home at Lafayette, has reported more deaths in the home during March than for any month since the Institution was established. Eleven of the veterans passed away and there are still in the hospital 72 patients. Among these are 18 paralytics who are Incurable. The diseases to which the veterans are mostly subject arechiefily old age, paralysis and chronic dysentery: No infectious disease has made its appearance for more than a year. The number of people cared for by the home is now 618. Applications for new members are coming in all the time and they are admitted at the rate of about 29 a month. Car Bam Bandits Hung. Special to the Plymouth Tribune. Chicago, 111., April 22nd, 1904. Peter Niedemeyer, Ilarvey Van Dine and Gustav Marx have paid the penalty of their crime on the bcaffold. Neidemeyer refused to walk or be carried to the scaffold aud had to be strapped in a chair. Ha was hung at 10:14 this morning, Just before the trap was sprung he said to the executioner "I wish Icoald kill you," and he was game to the last. Mart and Van Dine were hung at 10,31. The neck of Marx was oroken in the fall, but he lived eight minutes. Van Dine never quivered. He died almost instantly; Hearst's Candidacy, Gov. Myron T. Herrick, of Ohio, is equally as confident as Senator Depew that Roosevelt will be elected. Of William Randolph Hearst he said: "Mr. Hearst's candidacy puts me in mind of the remarks attributed to the fly as it crawled around the gum bottle. " 'Ah,' it said, 'I have passed through the hatching age, the creeping age and ne w I am in the mucilage' and theu it stuck. There is no doubt that Mr. Hearst's presidential ambition is already in the mucilage, and its a safe bet it will stick there for good." Washington Post. The Tribune furnishes all tho news try it and see.
La
BABY PLAYS POLITICS
At the Same Time Playing tho Mischief with the Filing: of a Paper. LETTEH WRITTEN BY DUBBIN So It Is Alleged at Anderson, 'Withheld Curious Case of Matrimony. Notes. rem, Ind. April 23. The state law, which requires that the chairmen of the political parties must file with the ctly clerk a certificate of the nominations fifteen days before the date of the election, has disturbed somci Republicans of this city, because the certificate of their party was not filed until Tuesday, the fourteenth dny. It Is also claimed by the Republicans that the certificate of tho Democratic nominations was filed in an irregular way, as the city clerk's baby got the certificate fom his pocket and played with it until the next day, before he thought of it again. Prohibitionist Also Irregular. The Prohibitionist filed their certificate on time, and this fact caused shuddering among the saloonkeepers and others until it was found that the nddre&tes did not appear upon the certificate. With all three parties Irregular, it is believed that there will be ix difficulty in having the names of all placed upon the tickets. Alleged Letter from Dnrbln. Anderson, Ind., April 23. Local Republican circles are eagerly discussing a letter aid to Lave been written by Governor Durbin to Kditor Toner, of the Anderson Herald, in which the chief executive reviews the factional troubles, conspicuous In the so-called1 Durbin and antl-Durbin contests, fixing the responsibility upon Indiana Union traction shoulders, which, he says, k determined to control legislation in Its interests, and is therefore determined that none but persons friendly to its Influence shall be elected to party leadership in that county. Hearst Club at Terre Haute. Terro Ilaute, Ind., April 23. The first Hearst club has been organized in this city, -with twenty-eight charter members. All the officers are members of the local Typographical union. FREAK OF AN AGED WOMAN I Married to a Man Half Her Ace, Who I In Jail for the Killing of a Hoy. Garrett, Ind., April 23. Mrs. Lorain Quince, and old resident of this city, went to Auburn, Ind., and married Frank Foltz, of that place, who la in jail awaiting trial on the charge of murder. Foltz shot and instantly killed Edward Swigart, 12 years of age, on the evening of April 5. A crowd of small boys were hissing and jeering at his father, and he became so frenzied that he seized a rifle and began shooting. One shot instantly killed young Swigart, who was at that time passfng the house. Foltz Is 32 years of age. and a painter by trade, while Mrs. Foltz is 02 years of age. The trial will come off at the May term of court. The feeling is very strong against Foltz. Glass Workers Go on Strike. Wilkinson, Ind.. April 23. The preceptory of the Wilkinson Co-Operative Glass company, with the exception of five men. has struck. This company paid the Burns scale for the four first months of the fire and since then has been taking 20 per cent. off. On March 12 this 'scale was cbanged by its president to 28 per cent, off and all factories were notified. The Wilkinson preceptdry refuses to work for this scale. Killed In a Runaway. Wabash, Ind., April 23. Captain B. F. Clemans, who until Jan 1 wes auditor of Wabash county and who prior to that time had been joint senator from Wabash and Kosciusko county, wae killed on his farm near Laketon, this county, by a runaway. He was hauling a load of stone when the horses became frightened and ran, overturning the loaded wagon, beneath which Captain Clemams fell. . Block Cqal Miners to Strike. Terre Haute, Ind., April 23. The block coal miners have voted to reject the proposition of the operators for a two years contract under last year's conditions with a 5 per cent, reduction in wages. The committee has finished counting the vote and notified the operators that work will be suspended at once. The majority In favor of a striLe is about GOO. About 9,000 men will be affected. Man Who Courted frith Dynamite. Kokomo, Ind., April 23. Samuel Michaels, the Burlington man charged with wrecking the farm residence of Aaron Shock with dynamite because of his infatuation for Miss Eula Burns, a pretty domestic In the Shock home, has been found guilty of arson by a jury here and given twenty-one years In prison. Miss Burns was the chief witness for the state. Oh, Kat I v Scottsburg, Ind., April'23. Jennings township, this county, is overrun with rats, the rodents being so brave that live stock has been attacked. A horse btlongtng to Joseph N. Keith was bitten about the head several times. People of the neighborhood fear to sleep at night because the rats may attack the children. Good For Children. The pleasant to take and harmless One Minute Cough cure gives immediate relief in. all cases of cough, croup and lagrippe bacause it does not pass Immediately in the stomach, but takes effect right at the eeat of the trouble, It draws out the inflammation, heala and soothes and cures permanently by enabling the luns to coatributa pure life-giving and life-sust&inics oxygen to the blood and ti:uc3. 09 Iibute Couh Cure fo plcssxnt to Uke and it ib good Iiis for your;; end eld. Sold by J. W. Rissrd.
USERS
rCKMSHED Br GRESSNER & COMPANY Owners of the only Abstract Books In J the couaty. Abstract ef title to all s lands In Marshall county complied promptly and accurately. TO APRIL 20, 1904. Albert G. Olipbant and wife wd to Albert A. Bailey, nw q of neq also . ne q of nw q ex s 20 ft all in s 25 t 32 r 1; $4200. Elijah Sherow wd to Washington VanGundy, lot 19 Tippecanoe town; $100. James V. Coombs and wife wd to Maxinkuckee Assembly, 26 a in lot 1 ins 21 t 32 r 1; $3000. Carl Ebert wd to John Hammel part of lot 81 Cabell's add Plymouth; $390. Heirs of Thomas Hornsby, dee'd q c ' d to Larlna. Hornsby, lot 27 original plat Tcegarden; $100. Lue 11a Lenuert and bus wd to Francis M. Lemert. lot 5 J. D. Johnson's add Teegarden; $63. Silas L. Sberland and wife wd to Wm. L. and Lydia A. Shetland w hf of e hf of sw q ex s 10 a also n ht of sw q all in s 27 1 35 r 2; $3000. Silas L. Shetland and wife wd to Harlow M. Sherland und hf of n 56.32 a of w 63.23 a of s hf of nw q 5 m r 1 $700. Clarence II. Sellers and wife wd to Andy A. Peterson se q ot ne q of s 12 t 32 r 3; $2800. EUa F. Snyder and bus wd to Nelson C. Parker, part of lots 9 and 10 Houghton's add Plymouth; $1500. Jacob Schlosser sr. wd to Frederick Schlosser 5.72 a in n hf of ne q of s 2 1 34 r 3 also 2.13 a in nw q of sit 34 r 3; $628. Catherine W. Stansbury wd to Ira. M. and Maggie A. Gam, lot 46 Ewings add to Plymouth; $1150, Charles Kellison wd to Nelson C. Parker part of lot 9 Houghton's add to Plymouth; $25. Eva Sill etal wd to Joseph Bryan se q of se q of s 19 t 32 r 3: $3000. David F, Snyder, trustee q c d to Lncy E. Molter, lots 77 78 91 92 Cabell's addition Plymouth; $150. Heirs of Simon and Sarah Herschberger, deceased wd to Abraham Holderman n hf of nw q of s 20 t 35 r 4; $4100. Catherine Henderson and hus wd U Emma Walker lot 3 Bock 's add Argos; $850. Julius Shendel wd to Lucy E Molter part of lot 87 Cabell's add to Plymouth; $150. Geo. W. Shrever's estate td to J. A. Molter, lot 3 Conklins add to Inwood; $19. James W. Boyer and wife td to J. A. Molter s hf of lot 1 Conklin's add to Inwood; $447. George W. Saulsberry dee'd by admr admr deed to Andrew Anderson, 19 a in nw cor of nw q s 21 1 33 r 1; $400, Hannah J. Saulsbury q c d to Andrew Anderson 19 a In nw cor of nw q of s 21 t 33 r 1 81. Mary E. Pershing wd to Sarah E. Wiltfong, lot 26 Ewing's add Plymouth; $950. Bad Spelling and Murder. A man now on trial for murder in Danville, Ind., may be convicted by his bad spelling. In order to verify his suspected authorship of a certain letter be was induced by an icgenious trick to reproduce it from memory. Then, on comparison of the original letter and the reproduction from mem ory there was found not only a similarity of writing, but that the writer had misspelled several words exactly the sane way. As bad spellers donot always misspell words the same way, the identity ot the bad spellingin this case makes a strong point against the defendant. Beware of Ointments (or Catarrh that Contain Mercury. As mercury will surely destroy thesense of emell and completely derange the whole system when entering it tLrough he mucous surfaces. Such articles Ehould nevr be ueed except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the dama ethey will dc is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F.J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. Ocontains no mercury, and is taken internally, .acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of theeystem. In buying Hall' Catarrh Cure bs eure you get tbo genuine. It is ta en internally and made in Toledo. Ishio by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. Sold by druggists, price 75c Take Hall's Family Pills for ensstipation. " The Best family Salve. DeWitt's Witch. Hazel gives instant relief from burns, cure 9 cuts bruises, cores, eczema, tetter aod all abrasions of the skin. In buying Witch Hazel Salve it is only necesa y to see that you get the genuine DeWitt's and a cure is certain. There are many cheap counterfeits on the market, all of which are worthless and quite a few are dangerous, while DeWitt's Witch Hazel Silva is perfectly harmless and cures. Sold by J. W. IUnard. Tell your neljhocrs ccout Ihz cc& qualities cf Tzz TmLTJin:. "
