Plymouth Tribune, Volume 5, Number 41, Plymouth, Marshall County, 19 July 1906 — Page 5
GRANITE WARE
The old fashion kind. The best yet, A complete new stock at bottom prices. Call and see at
Busies Gash Hardware
LOCAL NEWS
Mrs. W. W. Ritchey is-visiting at Donaldson this week. Mrs. Eva Collins is visiting at South Bend. ; .'Mis. Anna Samuels is visiting at Donaldson this week. The weather this week has ben delightful in Marshall county. Lewis Beagles and family of South Bend, visited here this week. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. H. Thayer and Paul are visiting at Chicago. Editor Metsker and family are home from Superior, Wisconsin. Mr. and Mrs. Bondurant are spending a week at Lake of the Woods. Lloyd Bowell is working for the Heinz pickle company at Grcv.-town. Miss Harriett Maiks, of Chicago, is visiting relatives and friends here. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hillsman, of Columbia City are visiting relatives here. Mrs. G. A. Mann has returned to Chicago after a visit of three weeks here. Mrs. Barclay and children of Lakevile visited Mrs. N. H. Sheppard this week. i Earthquake shocks were reported this week at ElPaso and Sorcorro, Tertas. Charles Force has gone to Soujh Bend and Kalamazoo for a visit of two weeks. James Stilson had two fingers cut off while working at the basket factory, Monday. John D. Rocerfeller, the famous old man, attended a horse race in Paris last Sunday. C. A. Reeve ana his son, Charles are visiting and transacting business at Buffalo, N. Y., this week. Mrs. E. M. Styles and Mrs. : Jackson have returned to Argos, after a visit with relatives in Plymouth. The pickle factory in this city began, receiving pickles this week and they are now coming in rapidly. Miss Ella Morgan, of Paxton, Ills., spent the past veek in this city at the home of her sister, Mrs. Nuttall. Mrs. Isaac Wilson and children oi Nappanee have returned home after a visit with the family of William Wilson. J. C.- Reslar and son of Chicago who are visiting her, made the Tribune office a pleasant call Wednesday morning. The remains of Mrs. Elizabeth Barden, who died at Goshen Monday riorning, were taken to Walkciton for burial. Mr. and Mre. E. S. Hite, who reside south of Inwood, visited the family of County Treasurer Grant in this city Tuesday. Miss Rov.ena James has returned to her home at Frankfort, after a visit of a week in this city with Miss Mary Cleaver. Fifty dollars reward for the arrest and conviction of any one claiming to represent Burke & Co., South Bend, Indiana. The Woman's Relief Corps will hold a social at the nome of Mrs. SmWi Pomeroy, Friday, July 20. Everybody invited. Mäf'or Darrow has put "the lid" on at Laiiorte and several saloon keepers were' fined for keeping their places open last Sunday. The round trip tickets now on sale to Winona, include entrance to the park, the Winona Assembly program and the elephant show. Senator Piatt, of New York says politics is bad for a young m.vn. He does not say what he thinks relative to politics and old men. W. A. Beldon is now in possessio.! of the Crowder meat market, the old Turner stand. Mr. W. R. Crowder will probably leave Plymouth. The Tippecanoe township Sunday school convention will be held Friday, July 27, in Frank Flöry's grove a half mile north of Tippecanoe.
The Chautauqua season has opened and for several months to come we shall hear a good deal about the way this country should be run and isn't. Plymouth was beaten by the base ball team at Eluffton, Tuesday by a score of six to four. Having won 39 straight games lliey probably became a little careless and reckless. Joseph Butzen, of hicago, was drowned while fishing in the Koontz. lake three miles nortnwest of Donaldson, Monday. He was 24 years old. Tom Taggart says that he does not claim t'.iat the men who shook dice at bis hotel were "holy rollers" but he thinks .here are worse men than they are. Mr. and Mrs. Sigmund Mayer went to Mt. Clemens, Mich., Wednesday, where Mrs. Mayer will try the efficacy of the baths for the restoration of her health. John C. Bunnell, the furniture deal er and undertaker, who has been quite ill for several weeks, is improving slowly and is now able to sit up a part of the time. The Baltimore Sun thinks that despite the doctors, the strasvberry doesn't drive so many men insane as the peach in the white shirtwaist. P'raps not. P'raps not. Sister Valeria, head sister of St. Anthony's hospital at Michigan City is dead as the result of a horrible elevator accident, particulars of which were given in this paper Saturday. Samuel Burns, for many years a resident of West township, but for the past two years a resident of East Sophia street, is critically ill with what seems to be cancer of the stomach. There is a bad drouth . in Shelby county and corn, oats and pasture are badly damaged. Hundreds of head of stock are being sold and shipped 'on account xof a scarcity of grain, hay and grass. , - Plymouth is the best place in the state to get bargains in dry goods, clothing, boots and shoes. Our merchants sell 25 per cent cheaper than merchants in Chicago, Fort Wayne and South Bond. The Rev. William Spurgeon, of London, speaking at the Evansville Chautauqua, declared the four biggest men in the United States, if not in thr4 world, to be Roosevelt, Bryan, La Follette and Folk. Early shipments of celery out of Kalamazoo are larger by a quarter than they have been for several years The business of the express compart ies has increased and extra wagons have been pressed into service. Only 7, applicants for homesteads appeared at Billings, Montana, when the land office opened and it is believed that 5,000 homesteads wilt be left for those who want to file under the regular homestead law after September 15. President Roosevelt pitched hay very vigorously for forty minutes on his farm near Oyster Bay, Tuesday afternoon, in order to get it into the barn before a heavy rain s:orm came up. He pitched a load onto a wagon, rode on the load to the barn and pitched it into the second story as fast as two men could stow it away.
Mrs. Patrick Welsh, of Couriers-,
ville, a paralytic, who has been a confirmed invalid for the last year, believes that she has been miraculously cured by a bolt of lightning. During storm she was stricken unconscious, and after restoratives had beoo administered the woman was able to walk. She is growing strong er each day and believes a modern
The Milford Mail says: "The cement lands south of Milford will be sold in the near future and it may be after this has been done, that new life will be infused and some company will go on with the work. Not less than $50,000 has already been expended on the Milford prospect." The next session of the Indiana legislature will be called upon to enact laws that will enable the State to deal summarily with such institutions as have made French Lick and West Baden notorious, and which from time to time are started by the Chicago sporting element on the east side of the Indiana-Illinois line. Mrs. J. R. Losey gave a reception Thursday afternoon in honor of her sister, Mrs. Belle Strang of Westfield ,Pa. About forty guests were present. The out of town guests were Mrs. Samuel Parker, South Bend; Mrs. Leslie Bell, Manlius, N. Y.; Mrs. Boyd, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Bennett, Chicago; Mrs. Belle Forbes, Nashville, Tenn. Educators are again giving attention to cultivating the use of both hands by children making them ambidextrous. It is a great advantage for man or women to be able to use both hands equally well; and if parents would give a little attention to the matter a large proportion of children would possess this skill. The novelist, Thackery, was an enthusiastic supporter of training both hands. William Masters, a thirteen-year-old boy of Rochester, had his hand completely blown off by the explosion of a giant fire cracker while visiting his brother at New Carlisle during the Fourth of July. The boy picked up a cannon cracker from the street which had previously been lighted but failed to explode though the fuse was burned off. Young Masters applied a match to the cracker and before he could throw it from him the thing exploded tearing his hand completely off. J. G. Phelps, Stokes, the New York millionaire philanthropist, has renounced Hearstism, but avows himself a believer in what he understands to be socialism. Like the man way down in Maine who declared himself in favor of the prohibitory law but opposed to its inforcement, Mr Stokes expresses a high regard for socialistic doctrines but prefers not to divide his worldly possessions with those who share his socialistic tentiments. In this Mr. Stokes is wise, even though his attitude be inconsistent with his professed faith. South Bend Times.
RUSSIA MAY SPLIT UP.
miracle has been worked.
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The Rev. M. H. McMahon, Methodist minister, was forcibly st od on his head Monday at Elkhart to save him from choking to death. A iece of food lodged in his throat and heart action had almost stopped, pending arrival of physicans, when some one suggested this treatment, and it proved to be effective. Mr. McMahon weighs nearly 173 pounds, and the job was a severe task for til.- men executing it.
Dissolution of Vast Empire Immi.nent the Moment Czar's Power . is Broken.
No "Corruption Fund" Likely. Although the bill prohibiting corporations from contributing to campaign funds failed to pass at the last session of congress, there is lit.le reason to fear that the exchequer of either party will be "tainted" to any great extent by corporate contributions this fall. On the contrary, the party managers are likely to be hard put to it for funds with which' to meet the most ordinary and necessary expenses, and there arc many such expenses despite the conventional notion that all money used in political campaigns is necessarily used for corrupt purposes With the accustomed contributions from corporate sources cut off the campaign will have to be conducted with unprecedented economy. There is little doubt that the corporate contributions will be missing, and for obvious reasons. In the first place, the corporations never have, been anxious to give their money away. If they have contributed to political funds it has been because pressure ha been brought to bear upon them to do so. They have Seen cajoled or threatened into contributing. They will be glad of an excuse to discontinue their contribu toins and nobody can deny that they now have excellent reasons. When the politicians come around asking for the usual donation the corporal ion managers can and will point, to the fact that neither party has been especially considerate of corporate enterprises lately and that there is small irdication of greater consideration in the future. Why. they will ask, should the crporations give money for their own unking? It will be hard for the 'collectors to give a satisfactory answer. It will be just as hard for them to argue away the fact that most of the alleged corruption which has bee i so loudly denounced during the last year or two has been laid at the door of the corporations. "If we withhold our contributions we can hardly be accused of corruption," will be the naural assumption of the corporation managers; "you1 will have to get along without our contributions this year." Finally and decisively, the corporation people will remiud the political solicitors that certain coro-at'on managers have been' threatened with
the penitentiary for disbursing the f
money of the stockholders to campaign directors and they will s'mply decline to take .ny such chances themselves. That vill probably settle it.
The dissolution of the mighty Rus ian Empire into many independent states the moment the grip of autocracy is broken, is presaged by the action of the members of parliament who have begun to organize themselves into groups according to nationality with the avowed purpose of protecting local interests. Party lines are giving way everywhere to racial ties. The Armenians Tartars, Georgians and Cossacks of the Caucasus have formed separate groups. The Poles and mem bers form the Baltic provinces were previously organized. The Little Russians, representing a great part of Russia in Europe, also have united. Another feature of the parliamentary session is the fact that there have been no roll call on any of the measures passed. The reason for this is the fear of members that the reactionists may come into power again and make prosecutions on the attitude of the members toward reform measures. M. Makaroff, assistant to the minister of the interior, was howled down in the lower house when, in a speech he upheld the minister in preserving order by force. There was an incipient mutiny in the fortress of St. Teter and St. Paul rhen a whole regiment came to the rescue of two of its members who were threatened with arrest. There will be a court of inquiry. That the Czar no longer can depend upon his Cossacks, who, until now, have been the main bulwark against the people, was shown by the disbanding of several battalions of Kuban Cossacks. They had refused to serve longer on police duty. The identity of the man who assassinated General Koslcv Saturday has not been learned. The assassin readily admitted that it was General Trepoff he intended to kill. The murder produced a great impression on the Czar, who is said now to favor repressive measures instead of yielding on the question of forming a new ministry.Agrarian disturbances in various parts of the empire are reaching serious proportions. In the village of KunikofT 200 houses have been burned, and the crown forests near there have been set on fire in sixteen Jifferent places. In the Mariopol dis trict the peasants refuse to work for the landed proprietors under any conditions. Cossacks have been sent to the district. The nobles and large, landed proprietors held a meeting, at which they agreed to contribute one-tenth of their invented capital to an organization to oppose the aggressions of the peasants and prevent expropriation of theit property by law. Prince Kassatkine Rotkovski was chosen president. In addition to Russia's other troubles an invasion of the Siberian plague is threatened, the disease having ap peared in Bialystok.
At Moscow the police have been ordere'd to break up all meetings at which members of parliament or other persons outside of the organizations licensed to hold the meetingsarc present:,. It is underitood that Admiral Ro estvensky will be given a prominent position on the , technical committee of the navy.
More Lehr Lunacy. That peculiar form of idiocy in which New York society indulged when skirtdancing, wine-selling Harry Lehr was at the height of his popularity along Fifth avennu, and when he spread a Lucullan feast at which a monkey in full dress was the guest of honor, has come to life again. Miss Sophia Curtis of of New York ha delighted her friends by giving a party in honor of the seventh birthday of her. pet horse, Surprise at her summer home, Sheffield, Mas". The pampered animal walked up the front steps into the drawing room, and from, where he indulged in a horse laugh indicative of his great pleasure at beholding the huge birthda' cake, on which were tet seven lighted candles, which had been built in his honor. The horse sat at the table with his doting mistress and a number of her friends. After the dinner one of his women worshippers crowned him with a wreath of red roses and delivered an address congratulating him upon having live J to be thus owned and honored.
Mr. and Mrs. John Smelfzer, of Southern California, are visiting at the home of their brother-in-law, D. C. Smith. They reside about twentyfive miles from Los Angeles, and after a residence of many years in that section, still think it- is one of the best .countries in the world. Mr. Smeltzer was born in Indiana and lived several years in Illinois and Iowa before going to California, and ha visited many other states during the past four years.
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It is a pleasure to hear and witness the satisfaction expressed by every one attending our sale. Every purchaser fully satisfied that they got exactly what they wantedat their greatly reduced prices.
The Lowest Prices Ever lade You
.ere.
EVERYTHING IS REDUCED IN OUR BIG STORE, SOAE TO ABOUT HALF THEIR
REGULAR. PRICE, AND OTHERS NOT SO MUCH, BUT EVERYTHING IS AARKED AT A GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES. We positively assureyou you'll not be disappointed neither in Price nor in the merchandise offered. SEE BIG CIRCULARS. DID YOU RECEIVE ONE? MAILED FREE FOR ASKING.
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REFORM. HERE TO STAY.
Gov. Foik Declares Present Movement Mightiest Ever.
Governor Folk of Missouri, in his speech before the Winona Assembly indicated that a golden age was dawning, for America because of the fact that reform is here to stay. He sajs: "This is the best age of all the world, and there are questions to be
settled today, just as important as any that have come in our national life. Ne'er were greater movements in progress than those. of today, and great tidal waves of reform are sweeping over our land. "Before today there have been in our country great moral movements, but they have been local, and the vampire of graft only temporarily drove them away. But today reform bids fair to be universal and the question asked on every side is "Will it last?" Gov. Folk cited Philadelphia and other cities to show how great was the strength ot the gang, and how the public conscience was awakened "What was done in those cities can be done anywhere" he said. "Twelve law breakers make more noise than 500 law-abiding citizens, and it is easier to serve the law-abiding than the lawless." Governor Folk said he did not care for the support of the lawless or their friends, and that in every county in his state he made that statement, with the result that he carried all the primaries in 100 of the 114 counties of his state. The lawless element declared they wouhl not let him live in the stnte, and his reply was that he "would show them whether the state belonged to them or to the people.
A young lady stepped into a Rochester shoe store the other day and inquired: "What's the price of those white slippers there with the flowers on the toe?" "One dollar fifty," said the proprietor, and the young lady turned to her mother and said: "That's just what we paid Sears & Roebuck and the express and postoffice order besides."
The government Ks refused to render assistance to the town of Indiana Harbor in the matter of making and maintaining a harbor at that pkee, so therefore the people of that place will have to pay for all they have in the way of a harbor.
Ideals are Necessary.
Don't forget your ideals. Everye man has built his aircastles, only to see them vanish like soap-bubbles in a heavy atmosphere. These are ideals. An ideal is never attained, for like the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow an ideal moves with the individual. Say, for instance, a man desires a certain amount of wealth or social position or degree of success. Is his ideal realized? Never It is usually more remote than before. The very best a man can do is to live up to a standard. If -one hopes to be anything in this world one must have standards. No one would think of giving an honest quart, peck or bushel without a necessary standard. So it is in the school
of life. Determine what standard you want to be measured by, and having atttained it, seek an ideal as an incentive to hold the standard at all times. The ideal is to a man's behavior as is the pilot to a sailing vessel. Neither will make the harbor safely without the guide.
$!fv!-&& V
MARVIN EROS., In the DRINK OLOCK, South of tho CtK-o,
DO ALL KINDS OF
h MACHINE REPAflßiMG
A CPECIALTY.
NO CURE, NO PAY.
How The People's Drug Store Sell Hyomei, the Guaranteed Cure for Catarrh.
The People's Drug Store has an unusal offer to make to our readers, one that will be of the greatest value to many. For some years The People's Drug Store has been watchnig the results from the use of Hyomei, a treatment for Catarrh that cures by breathing medicated air, absolutely without any stomach dosing. The results have been so universally successful that they feel justified iu making a public offer to treat the worst case of catarrh in Plymouth with the understanding that if Hyomei does not cure, the treatment will cost absolutely nothing. People who have spent large sums with catarrh specialists, deriving but little benefit, or the many who have swallowed stomach remedies in the vain hope of curing catarrh, have experienced almost immediate relief from the use of Hyomei, while the continued treatment for a short time, has resulted in a complete and lasting cure. The regular Hyomei outfit costs only one dollar, and consists of a neat pocket inhaler that can be carried in the purse or vest-pocket, a medicine dropper, and a bottle of Hyomei. If this is not enough for a cure, extra bottles of Hymei can be obtained for 50 cents. The People's Drug Store guarantee a cure, if Hyomei is used in accordance with directions, or they will refund the money.
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"We also give Special Attention to TRACTION ENGINE REPAIRING.
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We are experienced in OUT line Of htisinne nnrl rrnor T"
't antee all our work. When in need of ronairs tn si.-it.inn. X
ary or traction engines, gasoline engines, or other Vvorii
on general mecnamcal lines, give us a call.
ASSIGNEES' SALE
OF HORSE GOODS,
The Assignee's Sale of the Henry Kraker stock of Horse Goods is now going on, and will continue until Saturday night only. If you are in need of heavy or light harness, collars, whips, robes and dusters, sweat pads, fly nets and find fly covers, stable sheets, curry combs, brushes, harness oil, axle grease, linatnent, stock food, telescopes, suit cases and music rolls or music rolls, do not fail tu call this week. This is an opportunity of a life time. Do not miss it. LIDECKER , HARLEY, Acsignccc.
TEE KDE3UJPlE SO-SOD A TfCiAK
LAUER'S.AWNUAL HARVEST SALE CONTINUES UNTILTUESDAY, JULY 31.
Tiie Greatest Opportunity:' for Baraata Picking Ever öiven the People of TMs Commtiity
VE HAVE PUT OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF FINE CLOTHING FOR MEN, BOYS AND CHILDREN, ALL OUR HATS, SHOES, FURNISHING GOODS, INTO THIS GRAND HARVEST SALE.
Take Aclvantano of this Opportunity to Clotho Yourcelf and Family from Head to Foot at a Saving of ONE-HALF. Wo want tho People to Know that thl
SALE IS ON THE SQUARE in every Particular, car We must move out all our Spring and Sum'mor Goods to make room for tho incoming Foil Purchases.
Come to LAUER'S, "The Good Clothes Store," where oil are treated alike where your "dollars always do double duty."
AUER
Look for--ask for--there Is only one way LAUER'S, Good clothes Store, of Course
