Plymouth Tribune, Volume 6, Number 1, Plymouth, Marshall County, 11 October 1906 — Page 4
TEbe tribune. Only Republican Newspaper in the Count. HENDRICKS & COMPANY OFFICE Bissell Building, corner Laporte and Center Streets.
filtered at the Tostof&ce at Fly mouth, Indiana at second-class matter. Plymouth, Indiana, October 11, 1906. REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. For Secretary of State, FRED A. SIMS. For Auditor of State, JOHN C. BILLHEIMER For Treasurer of State, OSCAR HADLEY. For Attorney-Genral, JAMES BINGHAM. For Clerk of Supreme Court, EDWARD FITZPATRICK. bor Superintendent of Public Instruction, F. A. COTTON. For State Geologist, . W. S. BLATCHLEY. For State Statistician, JOSEPH STUBBS For Judge of Supreme Court, First District, JAMES H. JORDAN. For Judge cf Supreme Court, Fourth District, LEANDER J. MONKS. For Appellate Jtidge, Krst District (two to be elected) - . G. C. HADLEY. WARD H. WATSON. For Appellate Judge, Second District (three to be elected) DANIEL W. COMSTOCK. J. M. RABB. FRANK ROBY. COUNTY TICKET. For Representative in Congress, ABRAHAM L. BRICK. For Prosecuting Attorney 41st Judicial Circuit SAMUEL J. HAYES. Representative , PAUL'rLOGAN Clerk CLINTON C. YOCKEY Auditor GILBERT COAR Treasurer JOHN ASTLEY Sheriff JOSEPH. BLACK Surveyor FREDERICK THOMPSON County Assessor . WILLIAM WHITE J Commissioner, First District EDWARD LAUDEMAN Commissioner, Third District PHILIP SICKMAN Marshall county is the only county in the United States in which a state chairman has attempted to hve bolters ticket placed under rty emblem. It will soon begin tc wn on the Republicans of Indiana that Jim Goodrich and""Carl ' Riddick are bending all their energies to elect the Democratic state ticket and a majority of Democrats to Congress in this state in order to further a scheme which they hope will advance their own interests. J J J Secretary Shaw said in Cincinnati Sunday that the Republicans are in no danger of losing the national house of representtaives. He is right. A few Republican congressmen will be defeated because they do not rep resent the people. The defeat of such congressmen is really a victDry for ihc party and even if the Democrats should have a majority in the lower house the Republicans have the pres ident and the senate and the Demo crats in the house could do no harm & Five years ago when William OKeefe treasurer of Marshall county, turned the interest on the public funds in his hands back into the county treasury, he was the subject of ridicule by politicians of all par ties. Now a candidate in Indiana, who will not pledge himself to do what O'Keefe did, has no show of election in any county in the state. And over in Illinois John F. Smuiski, Republican nominee for . state treasurer, reiterates his pledge to turn all interest on public funds back to the state, if elected. J J Jfi Bolters Knocked Out Again. t The suit filed by Merrill Moores and Senator Parks in the Marshall circuit court to mandate the election commissioners to put the bolters' ticket on the ballot under the emblem of the eagle was decided adversely to' the bolters Tuesday. Judge Bernetha threw their case out of court because the law says plainly and positively that the election commissioner have' to decide this matter, and the courts cannot interfere. Hendricks Wins Agaia. Judge Bernetha Tuesday morning rendered another "decision in favor of Hendricks in the county chairmanship case. He threw out of court the petition for a mandamas against the' election commissioners deciding that it is the duty of the election commissioners to decide which ticket shall go under .he .emblem of the eagle. Indianapolis News. Center Township Convention. The Republicans of Center township are hereby requested to meett in Bissell's hall Saturday, October 13, 190G, at 3 o'clock for the" purpose of nominating a township ticket. C. O. -Trib'bey, Chm'n Center Township.
Card of ,Jh.insA W ewish to thank out kind friends and neighbors for 1 heir assistance and sympathy during the illness and death of our dear mother also for the beautiful flowers. We also wish to thank the singers. Mrs. Ocker, Mrs. Renner.
Asks Bid for Canal. Invitations for proposals to com
plete the Panama Canal were issued Tuesday by the canal commission and the form of contract under which which the -work is to be done was made, public, by Chairman Shönts, who also gave out a letter written to the Secretary of War giving the commissioner's reasons- for adopting the contract plan. . The contract provides that each bidder must undertake the entire work of construction. No bar . will be offered to corporations associating in the undertaking, but they must be legally organized into a single body with which the government can deal. Bidders will not be considered who do not have available capital of $5,000,000. A certified check for $200,000 is required with each proposal and a bond of $3,000,000 will be required from the successful bidder The chief engineer of the canal commission is to be chairman of the engineering board. The engineering board will also estimate a reasonable time for the completion of the canal, and will agree upon a system of premiums ,and penalties to be paid to the contractor according as the work is completed within or beyond tht estimated cost and time. All the government plant for actual construction work, including railway, is to be placed at the disposal of the contractor and is to.be maintained by the government. The contract specifies that the commission is to retain control of all engineering work in connection with the construction of the canal, also municipal engineering, the police, sanitary, hospital and comissiary departments, messhouses, quarters, construction and maintenance of buildings, operation of the Panama Railway, an auditing department to which contractors' accounts are to be open, and a department of materials and supplies. Sixty days after the signing of the contract actual work is to begin on the isthmus, and the contractor is to take over all employes on the isth mus which the commission does not wish to -retain. No American employe is to work more than eight hours. , Cost May be Too Great As to the bill providing for a State colony for the treatment of cons:inptives which was carried into the background two years ago by the epileptic colony bill having the right-of-way, the time is now favorable for the introduction of the subject of this new State institution. The fact that the State has just added three new institutions to its burden a Girls' Industrial Home, the new Epi leptic Colony and a fifth hospital for the insane and is. now rebuilding, at a cost of a million dollars, the insti tution for the education of the deaf and dumb, -cause many to urge a check in the demand for more State institutions or even changing the character of the present institutions When the institutions now building at a" cost of $2,500000 are com pleted the total number of institu tions will be raised to sixteen and the amount of money support' annually drawn from the ' State and now amounting to a milloin and a half a year, will be mMerially increased The number of State wards in the thirteen present institutions is ap proximately 10,000. The plan to create five or six State workhouses also probably will have materia bearing on the plan for changnig the character ot the Knightstown Home Laws Tie Official Hands. In a stirring address, which mark ed the opening of the campaign in Adams county, Attorney Genera Charles Miller declared that the laws of Indiina are inadequate in that they prevent the prosecution o trusts. Comparing the laws of Indiana with the laws of Ohio and 'Mis souri the attorney general showed conclusivelj' that no such prosecu tion as - has characterized the work of the attorney general's office of these two states is possible in Indi ma. The speaker also reviewed the fight on the "gambling hells" which were maintained at French Lick, and scored Tom Taggart, chairman of the national Democratic committee Funeral of G. W. Hill. George W. Hill's funeral was held Monday forenoon at Fairmount. The deceased was born in Washington County, Md., Feb. 13, 1834 and di;d last Saturday near Tyner at the home of a son. The funeral services were conducted by Rev. Martin Lutherer Peter. Mr. Hill was a citizen highly respected by all who knew him. He leaves an invalid wife; tw3 sons, M. F. Hill and William Hill; two daughters, Mrs. Jennie Miliar and Mrs. Alice E. Emerson; thrc: sisters, Mrs. Anna M. Kizer, of Argos; Mrs. Martha Byers and Mrs. Susan Jones, of Hagerstown, Maryland and a brother in Oklahoma. Mr. Hill was a citizen well and favorably known. People Have Chance. The speeches which Gov Hanly is making are somewhat different from the usual flow of campaign oratory. He talks about his administration. The affairs of state are his topic. The Indianapolis News, relative to the unusual tone and quality of the governor's speeches, says: "This is because he has .something to explain. It should be understood that explain,, as here used, means to point out, to elucidate, to define. Like the president that this country now has, Indiana has a governor who gets things done. Were this not so, perhaps we should have from him the regulation 'spellinbinding' splutter about ' the 'flag', 'our glorious country,' and--so forth and so on." Thus the reason for the addresses which are stirring the people is apparent. They are a recital of deeds performed and not a list of promises for the future. Pouth Bend Tribune.
GREAT LAKE FORMING.
Salton Sea Wiping Towns off the; Map in1 California. ' ' . . , Vi j, . . ; t t - Who is responsible for the crea tion of the. Salton .sea In southern California which' .already covers "an area of 400 square miles and Jhre.itens to spread over 2,000 square' miles if some means of diverting the Colorado river cannot be devised. This question) is perplexing Mex ican and American diplomatists, but for the time being diplomatic, representations have been suspended ; nd both the United States and Mexico are bending every effort to check the river which has been accidentally turned from its course through the efforts of the California Development company to irrigate, lands in northern Mexico and southern California. ' ' Interesting complications of' an in ternational nature are threatened when the two governments attempt to settle their differences and make good the damage which has been wrought by diverting the Colorado from its old channel. The Colorado Development company originally tapped the river below Yuma, Ariz., and carried water from Arizona through a canal into northern Mexico and back into a great valley in southern California. In 1904 it was found that this canal was inadequate to supply water required for the irrigation project and a Mexican cor poration, controlled by the California Development company was authoriz ed by Mexico to take water from the Colorado in Mexico a short distance south of Yuma. The irrigation canal was only onefourth of a mile from a river at the point in Mexico where a ditch was cut through the sandy bank of the river connecting -with the great irrigation canal.. No gates were pro vided and with the high water of 1905 the Colorado river was diverted from its channel, cut away its bank, and went raging into the low lands in California far below the'sea level. Repeated attempts have been made to turn the river back into its old channel but without success. Again and again the Southern Pacific railroad has been compelled to move its tracks which ran through the Salton sink and have been forced on to .the ot hills surrounding the 'great basin whiifi is being converted into a sea. : Several .small towns are now beneath the waters which ihc Colorado has poured into the basin and in many places only the tops of the railway telegraph poles indicate where the roadbed formerly was.. In the lowest part of the sink the water is now 70 feet deep. For a time the water from . the Colorado raised the sea at the rate of six inches a day and it has been estimated that granting the failure of engineers to check the river in 40 years' all the basin located be neath the main course of the Color ado wil be ' covered with water! A nart of this basin is in Mexico and the -failure to-control thenttrerYOtjld give this country and Mexico a lake comparable to the great laTces sepa rating the.'. United States and Can ada. . At present the lake is greater than any body of water wholly within the United States except Salt lake and Lake Michigan. ' ; High American Peaks. Announcement in press dispatches that a Brooklyn scientist has climbed to the top of Mt. McKinley in Alaska calls attention to the fact that this peak is the highest in the United States and ifs possessions. It reach es an altitude of 20,464 feet, which is'3,9G2 feet' higher than MC'VVhitney in California, which heads the list of high, mountains in the States Statistics , compiled by the . geo graphic branch of the United . States Geological Survey name twelve mountains exceeding 10,000' fcitTm height. The Bianca peak in Colora do is 14,404 feet, and Mt. Tacoma or Mt. Rainer the name depends on whether you look. at it from; Tacoma or Seattle is 14,363 feet,.and others in the 10,000 class are Mt. Hood in Oregon Mt. Emmons in Utah, Ftont Peak in Wyoming, Cerro BUncho in New Mexico, Wheeler'in "iei vada, Hyndman Peak in Idaho, r.cd San Francisco Mountain in Arizona The famous Matterhorn of Switzerland is 14,835 feet high, and to' have accomplished this climb gives a def inite and coveted reputation to the fortunate adventurer..,. .Mt. McKinley exceeds this by. 5,629 feet, so. the Brooklyn man has every reason to be proud of his ascent. The highest peak in. the world, Mt.' Everest uf the Himalayas, is 29,922 feet Jn height, and has attracted the attention ;qf .'determined climbers. 7777 is coli ni The season's first cold may be slight may yield, to early treatment; but the next cold will ' hang:pn longer; it will, be more troublesome, too.7-3 U h1necessary to take chances on that second one. Scott's Emulsion is .a preventive as well as a cure. Take J if 2 l i i ) . sdfln's eioo when colds abound and, you'll have nö cold.Take it when the cojd is contracted and it checks irifiarnmatovi heals; tbemembtaäö oOhe Jkroat. jmd-Junga J and drives the cold out. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemist' 50c. and $1.00
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Mu Hair is ExtfaLonq Feed yöiir hair; nourish it ; give ft something to live on. Then it will Sstop falling, and will grow long "arid heavy. Ayer's Hair Vigor Is the only hair-food yoii can buy. For, 60 years it has been doing just what we claim it will do. It will not disappoint you. Mr hftlr nt to Vry short. Bnt artr using Ajrer's Hlr Vigor short time It beRn to r row. and now It is fourteen inches Iour. This seems a splendid result torn after being almost without any hair." MB8. J. H. FircR, Colorado Springs, Colo. bj J. o. Ayer Co., Lowell, lso manufaotarera of SARSAPABLLJL PILLS. CHERRY PECT0SAL. Mers oo 0 rUKMMBKD BT ' GRESSNER & COMPANY 3 W PwUKract thcwlj Abstract Rooks, In f CUP V4 AMrct öt title & n V raoCn fn Ebri3tan ciuioqr eumpflea A a prtrmjjlly una acou newly V Michael R Lacy 'arid wife to JuluA J. Vinall, n hf of' lot 99' brig Ply mouth $4550. Isaac Weaver' ;nd wife to A. B. Wickizer and C A Bondurant, part of lots 82 and 83 Rose's add Plymouth;' $G00. Lovina Koch et al to Lincoln L Koch et al 11 acres in sec 11 tp 33 r 1; $500. Lovina Koch et al to Lincoln L Koch 14 acres in lot 2 also all of lot 3 in sec 11 tp 33 r 1; $4000. Lovina Koch et al toWillis Koch, east IS 1-2 acres of lot 2 also part of lot 1 in sec 11 tp 33 r 'l also lots 1 to 15 inclusive Koch's plat Pretty Lake;' $4000. i ' ,r Christopher itatfield and wife to Harney J. Hatfield, e hf of e hf of nw q of sec 36tp 34 r 3; $2400. Abraham Holderman and wife to Jonas J. Yoder, ,n hf of nw q of sec 20 tp 35 r 4;' $4500. . William H. Huff and wife to Peter Mosser, lots 1, 2, 3 Blk 11 Wm Huffs 2nd add Bremen. $367.50. Chaff Instead of Wheat The dangerous results of immature expression on questions of public import have often been pointed out, especially as they relate to teachings of the orator, the press and the teacher's platform. But the evil is not fully apreciated, and the following from the South Bend Times will help to emphasize the lesson because it is uttered by otie who thinks soberly and philosophically on such questions. The Times says: "An everpresent danger in a republic is to be found in the expounders of visionary ttoefrwip y ni-dr99ermnators-iof delu sive theories. They Incubate fanciful nptions.aifd hatch ct impracticable schemes. . These - expounders, of fallacies and champions, of follies are particularly dangerous when they possess melodious voices, and have the power, la, generate ench&nting rhetoric With their fallacious and captivating declamations,' their nicely rounded -periods and -their resonant voices they are enabled to sway th? minds of a good many 'well-meaning people who require iome . time to learm that what tliese charlatans scatter broadcast is not wheat but simp ly chaff:' Woman Readies 'Century Mark. 'The one-hundredth anniversary of the birth of Mrs! Mariah Pell Drake was celebrated Tuesday by the mem bers of Trinity M. E. church at Elkhart, Mrs. Drake j being , an honored guest. The member took" their dinner to the church Afi?.. spent the day. Mrs. Drake told the" story of her life. Her, memory seems almost as keen asr eV; and', she"-vividly, recalls the stirring scenes 'of the war of 1812, when-she more than once heard the sound of , distant .battle on the New Jersey, plantation where ' she was born Oct. 2, 1800. Her father, .Elisha Dilts, and - her mother. .Mary . Pell Dilts, reared five children and they aTl lived to be oyer 8D years of age. Mariah Dilts begän-teaching school when she was 17. She was married to Samuel Drake, , who died in Elkharr in i872. Of the five children born to them four survive.- . To Examine State Books. i .. . Gov. Harily wants an officer who would examine the books in the state office's at'" fixed time, and who, by investigating would protect the peopte's" linterests against, unscrupulous men. Tjie governor ;haf outlined his plan!in hte: campaign speeches arid has stated his 'wishes-in the following langnage:-H want a general assembly elected this fall that will cnactie'lawwhicty will give the administration an accounting officer, invested -wit (the, authority to examine the books of our state officials once every thee months and will - make tepört bf the true condition of affairs." i Transplant Trees Now, ' is' a' good month to transplant trees with the exception of the vrgreeirst-' says Farming. The important things are these: Keep the robtl-tfrojh"iIdrying out, prune off those roots that are bruised or broken, see that-the 6oit is -well-packed arpund 5 the,, fre, and ; cutback the head of the'tVee to .balance up the (osf; H the fpt jsystnv; At first, cut" ting back a shapely fruit tree 6ften geers tv be a misakbt the. chance otlViftg tht ''free? will fab doubled H it .k-done Sheep for Salp Thirty-two fiead of Ewes for sale. On the Montgomery & Williams jtarm 1-2 mDeswest dl Plymouth on Lap'orte road.
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Ve have that unbounded confidence in our mercharidise, Ii'sjcuaranteed :to be. bright in Fabric j Color, make and, in fact, in every way MaiuyoÜ .WahtVitv' or we will, refund the purchase price. (You be the. judge .you take W risk : whatever, Again we give youhe'opporturiityVofelecting from the largest and most complete line in Plymouth, and guarantee to save you from 20 to 30 per cent on each :puithasc. It's worth Looking into. Gome in and take Advantage of Our Grand Fall Opening Sale Prices. J The price on every article in our bigv2 Floor Störe has bberf Clif. liräiid:
150 AWs gray 25 dozen Akn's
50 dozen men's wool Sox, per pair..1: 500 doz men's heavy cotton So, per pair ..il.. r,500 doeri men's heaviest GloveVextra good................ ....... fr 50 dozen health fleece Undervvear..: ........J: 100 dozen sanitary fleece UndenVeatvat...... ........
Don't fall to take advantage of our BIG OPENING SALE. Come to us expecting more for your money than elsewhere. Come to us for fair and square treatment. COME IN AND LET US SHOW YOU
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: For Clean Elections. Thee is no tiore. . interesting movement in progress int Indiana at the present time than that , of antiboddle agreements .between the authorities of the Republican and Democratic parties. Its spread is phenomenal,' and one of its most encouraging features is the fact that there is an increasing strictness in the agreements, which shows that practical politicians are using -their ingenuity to make the compacts absolutely binding. This tendency is notable in thi Rush county agreement, which is on? of the latest. It provides against almost every imaginable form of unlawfully or improperly influencing a voter by means. 'of 'any 'payment, or thing of value, or promise of anything. It prohibits the establishment of places where; voters may congregate ?n election" day where ' there would be oportun'ity for corruption. ThelcWtilate?. for prosecutors agree to prosecute any ' arid v all 'offeh'ses against, the election law, and the newspaper editors agree to give full publicity to any offense. But the most striking feature of the Rush county compact is the determination.. to submit it to every voter fn the cpunty for signature. This not only puts every voter in a position where he must declare for honesty in elections or publicly refuse to do so, but it enlists an army for .law enforcement. Every signer pledges' .'himself ? to dox all he can to detect and punish ' any' violation of ttie'laW Vitha'rf honest living up to this there can be no violation that will' go' unpunished. . Return of Billheimer, - - ' Johii ' Billheimer, candidate on the Repii)lican ; ticket for Auditor1 of State has' returned to'Indianapolis aftcr,. a week's "ofganizationM trip in the "4ntnr Twelfth ' and: Thirteenth districts. He siys that in -his mind there? is5 no question that Clarence Gilhams will be re-elected Cohgress-man-in the Twelfth, which, until two years ago, was a Democratic district. "Gilhams is a trong' man, and his Democratic opponent, vMorr, is' not very strong. There is no question that Gilhams will be elected. And of course,.yöu 'cart count 'on Brick in the ' Thirteenth , and Crumpacker in the Tenth," aid Billheimer, as he started over to the State committeerooms to getThis assignment for this week, "Poor Old Piatt" Poor old Tom Platt I It is ''both pitiful and ghastly: ' There seems nothing but the carcass left and' the buzzard space-writers are having1 a picnic. Yet, as the'rold woman said with I pride of her spouse dying 'of alcoholism, "he j was a hös's In his day.T What a are'e'r 'for the moral platijudinizer no pun intended! fof the .yellow journalist, for the laypreacher, the tory-teller and ' the' apostle : of ' reform! In public, the soul of "the amen corner," irt private the source and '.resource at 'örtee öf corrupt political and evil ' passions'. No 'one A remains now to pas's ' the plate for a' campaign fund,' Which does net concern him, to pas's' itie cup in answer jto his ' sinister and ghostly "let the canakin clink Thc; very chorus-girls arc gone. Ther"placr is empty. And, as the darkness falls and he Clutches' at'" the shades of Tweed' and Qua, he seems' to say iri strange, sepulchral voiced "''Me toot" r I . r ; He Died Like, a Christian. " Literally fcöoked alive in a boiler at Vincennes, ! Indiana, . Tuesday, intoi' wbich steani was. .turned, by mistake, "Gustave f. , Friend, ,30 years old and -recently married, hved .five hours with his (flesh-, dropping from himj in chunks. Ie remajnpd cqnsciou and. arranged , all ris worldly affairs, bade his people goodbye, a'nd theti. prayed with his pastor till death came.
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Specials thr OU ghoU t ! t
Covert Work Coats, the $2.00 kind, at.:.-r...;...;$Üfti;'tf lined Duck Work Coats, at :..tz
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Great Railway Station . A railway station that will take its place among the great transportation centers of the world, is to be built for the terminal of. the Chicago & Northwestern railway in Chicago. The plans for the station which will be on the West Side, between Madison, Lake, Canal and Clinton streets have been ' made public by AV.. A. Gardner, vice-president of the road. The' work of clearing the ground and constructing the building will begin next spring. , J The Northwestern company . is prepared to expend on this I'mprpvement $20,000,000.; From an architectural point of view the station,-' it is promised, will surpass anything of the kind in this country. : vVThe plans of the Northwestern officials teem with' hitherto unheard of facilities for the handling of a tremenduous volume of traffic. One of the most striking novelties of the station will be ' the fact that it will tfpart' fwtT'c'ntire 'streets Washington and Randolph-rWithout interfering with traffic or requiring' a change' of grade in the thoroughfares. Street car and other traffic will', pass through' great ornamental archways and an illuminated tunnel a block long. This arrangement is said to be without a precedent in this cbuutry.' ' ' . - r ' The' new station will have -a ca-r pacity of several trains a minute, whereas the present statical camlian,dle only one train every two minutes. Kentucky Marksmen. ' The decadence of .markmenship in Kentucky is almost a national calamity. The American victory at New Orleans in 1815 was due to the splendid shooting of Kentuckians but now comes -the humiliating report that the Hall-Martin factions had 'a collision and fifed sixty shots, but killed only- one' man. At this rate these 'two ' gangs of modern Kentucky fighters will "not be 'exterminated in a century. Kentucky should send a regiment or two of them, to, our next army post encampment- to learn how to shoot. Indianapolis Star. " J SPEGIAIi 15
.Beginning Saturday, October 13th; Eniino Saturday, Cctotor 27tCi ' GREAT SHOWING OF PALL AND WINTER CLOTHING AND FURNISHINGS AT remarkably OW PKICES. The best opportunity you will ever have to buy your winter clothing. jA great saving; on every purchase. . ; MEN'S AN p YOUNG MEN'S SUITS AND pVERCOATS.
$8.00 Suits and Overcoats, m tho tfc A A Now Styles and Patterns. . ... . . . .PyU $10.00 Suits and Overcoats, or in fancy or plain colors. . . ........? $12.00 Suits and Overcoats, äa jc . in fine patterns, stylishly made.. .Py4
Two-piece Knee Pant Suits; . .$1.50 value, .at. .... . Two-piece Knee Pant Suits; $2.50valuo, at ......
Men's heavy :fleeced Underwear, double ' back and front; 50c value, at . ...... it. Men's heavy Jersey Shirts, 50c value, 'ICkX at.:....; ...;........;......,yt Monarch Shirts $1.00 everywhere fVc hero only. ; . ,.OOt;
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Men's Shoes Flörsheim $3.50 ,eo r I Monarch
and'4.00 Qualities, at . Men's high1 tut Calf Shoes, tap" solej $3.00, at....-:'...;. 1 m. 1-..;
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The Store that Roosevelt, Bryan and Jefferson. There are today, more Jeffersonian Democrats in .the Republican party than there are in the so-called Democratic party. The Republican party is more democratic in the Jeffersonian sense than the present day Democratic party is. . Therefore, when Mr. Bryan itef-: ates and reiterates parrotlike, thatl President Roosevelt and the ' Republican 'party are practicing democratic principles he says what is measurably true. Jeffersonian democratic principles are and have been - the principles of" the Republican party since its foundation. The Republican party, like the true Democratic party, is an offshoot of the Jefferson party. The difference is that while the Republican party has held to Jeffersonian principles the titular Democratic party ,has re lapsed into poljcies wnich . are . the very antitheses of . Jefferspnism. t Thomas Jefferson did not teach so cialistn. He. did hot advocate govern ment ownership bf prfvktc 'enter prises. He did not preäch that' pater nalism which is ' the very keynote of the Bryanite Democratic structure1. Consequently, when Mr Bryan Vo ciferates that the Republican party i practicing Jefferson's teachings he iright to the extent that the Republican party reprehends the things that Jefferson reprehended and advocates certain of the policies that Jefferson advocated. Chicago Chronicle. Hurty Not Always Right ' There is reason to fear that Seer? tary Hurty of the State Board of Health is becoming a sanitary anarchist. In his agitation for light, pire air and sunshine, as enemies of tu befculosis, he not only assails bon nets and , parasols, but tells the peo pie of Rochester that they would be better off if they would cut down half their shade trees. They should not be hasty. There is pot a city ot town in Indiana where anybody wh wants sunshine can not get to it. It is much more abundant' than shade Let the people with microbes take to the middle of the road and leave some protection for those who are subject to sunstroke. Indianapolis Star. - " - OAY SÄltE AT
$15.00 Suits and Overcoats; ! j hand tailored; very:ine garrhent3.v"V" $18.00 and $20.00 . Si its and Overcoats perfection in style and tailoring ' Cf ! 2 C Men's Cravenetto Rain Coats, - ' Vy c $10.00 value, at J) .OÜ
BOYS' SUITS 85c Two-piece ivnee dDU value, at Two piece Knee . $5.00, value, at Cl OC piKJU FURNISHINGS.
Aiens worx niris )iacK pauns " on. ( and all colors; 50c.. quality . . ( I . i . . . .7 C Men's Leather and Corduroy '',., - C A c Reversible Cöa-ts,f6.00.valuk,,. ,P4P?
Our Furnlshlnos BOYS' S Ii I TC ' " ' onarch Dress ....
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BoysVPatent Leather, ShoesrSSj value . . J f , 35 , First quality rubber Boots at j 'i'.V'.'S1.
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;vf., ..;ri; ; '"i -'Km i -; 'i',. ''.i.. Lauerst y - --.--IIC ... :u5c -.-.:5 c ..25 c ,....3ffc . Clothes, Store, if 1 ).. always malte b good " ; Noted Indiana Woman Dies. , M.rs. Jane , B Newkirk, , a - wellknown : Indiana; writer," died at LaPrtefc ;aged . .03 years! Within ten years she hzd published two books, "The Captives,"- a ; narrative of the Algerian enslaveriient . of her' father, James Leander Cathc'art, who afterwards became United Statee consul at Tripoli, Tunis, Leghorn, Madevia, and Cadiz, and 'Tripoli and Tunis' an account of the American negotiations with the Barbary powers for the abolishmentj of piracy, in which also Mr. Cathcart was concerned. A brother, Charles W. Cath cart, served two terms in the national house of representatives. and was Unitfd States- senator by appointment. The Law's Appeals' and Delays. The Outlook fhas recently'rhad m examination made of the court records in several- states 6f appeals in criminal cases during the decade. 1890 to. 1900. In - Indiana there: were ' SCO appeals and 151 ' reversals.! fllli nois had 232. and 100, respectively; Iowa 83. and 127; W'isconsin.. HI and 4:. Most of the reVersals are on technical grounds-frequentiy "errors" that could not have affected the result; but all, tct?d to the delay and defeat of justice. In. English jurisprudence an "error" to cause reversal, 'must be shown t affirmatively to have been responsible for the .conviction. Hence. England has fewer appeals or reversals than has this country. South . pend Times. Polk Township Ticket The Republicans of Polk township met in convention.. at Tyner, Ind., Saturday, Oct. Cth at. 2.00 p. m. for the purpose, of jnomihating a. township ticket. In ifhe absence of .Chairman Nash," Jarnos M. Schroeder, acting pro tem., thg following men were nominated: Justice of. the Peace, precinct No.' 1, ' ' :: ; Constable, precinct No. lRirtuldon Beck; Justice of the Peace precinct No. 3, ; Constable 'precinct No. 3, Adtisory Board - precinct No. 1, Albert .Burke;. No. 2 jlsaac. Miilcr; No. 3, Mor.roe Maureri ,.. " James M," ochroeder, Chmn. v ,M, F. Beck, Sec. ""TMllIlß" l;ant buits; " jo y-..v. 7 Pant Suits; J : rl "7C ,. .i . ..v). t are r.sw zr.j ol-ths hzsx qualltu. 1 - Sboesj CS.SÖjViuue,, t,
