Plymouth Tribune, Volume 6, Number 24, Plymouth, Marshall County, 21 March 1907 — Page 5

To the Motoring Public of Marshall Co.: I take great pleasure in announcing that I have accepted the agency of the famous BUICK AUTOMOBILE SIMPLE ACCESSIBLE DURABLE The best statement of the excellence ot the 1907 Buick in contained in the simple fact that it has been J jveloped along the lines that gave it : ts great reputation ia former seasons. Buick cars have coma to be the synonim for "The car of certainty" certainty that it will not only take you out, but bring you back. Records count a great deal more than claims. Ask any Buick owner. Buicks do with two cylinders what others do with four. For further information, write rae at Plymouth, Ind. Yours to please, F. H. KUHN.

I LOCAL NEWS I Mrs. Theodore Sherman has returned to South Bend, after a visit with relatives here. Mrs. Sherman, Orr was c?Hed to Akron, Ind., Thursday, by . the serious il'ness of her mother. The Maccabee social Wednesday evening- was largely ittendc.l. It was given by the ladiis of thit order. Mrs. Kintzell has returned to her home at Mentone after a visit of four months with her children in this city. Mrs. Samantha Stair has returned to Elkhart after a visit of several days with relatives in this county. The late John Alex Dowie may have been crazy, but how about the people who turned their money ovei to him? It is rumored that one of Plymouth's prominent bachelors is to be married soon. His bride will be a country lady. Mrs. S. N. Moslander has returned to Dowagiac, Mich., after attending the funeral of Clyde Spitler and visiting relatives here. South 3end Presbyterians have given $1,000 to their old preacher, Henry Webb Johnson, and sent him to Europe for a vacation of two months. Daniel McDonald returned from the legislature in excellent health and says he and Mrs. McDonald had a pleasant time in Indianapolis this winter. The legislature did not do some work that it ought to have done but it passed as many good laws and killed as many bad bills as any prevolegislature, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Black came down from Gorman township, Thursday. They were called here by the death of Mrs. Black's mother, Mrs Mary E. How. Mrs. Will McGIothlin and son, Ralph, went to South Bend Thursday to visit over Sunday with Mr. McGIothlin, who is employed in the Spiro clothing house. The storm in southern Indiana and southern Ohio was severe. Th; Miami river in Ohio roso fouttecn feet in ten hours and all the streams in southern Indiana are bnrfc full. Mrs. Louis Kaufman who was called to this county by the illness of her mother, Mrs. Henry Grossman, has returned to her home in Michigan. Mrs. Grossman's health is much improved. Those Republicans who excitedly proclaim their purpose to see to it that "Governor Hanlv is not re-eleci-ed, by the eternal!" should cool off sufficiently to receive the information that under the constitution of Indiana the governor cannot be re-elected. The statement made that Chester Werntz died of cerebro-spinal-meningitis, came from a general report on the streets. The attending physician has not so reported, and it is said that the spinal trouble which indicated men-in-gitis was probably caused by an injury of the head and spine a few years ago. Senator Tillman is said to be engaged to deliver a lecture on every week day except three between March 5th and November iOth. As his fixed price is $200 a lecture it requires but little figuring to show that the South Carolinian will be ab'e, with the addition of his 17,500 salary, to worry through the next session of Congress without going into debt. Mrs. Charles Ulrich received a letter Wednesday from her sister, Mrs Frank Zimmerman, stating that she and the children reached Bonner, Montana, on time and had a delightful trip, the mountain scenery being grand, impressive and beyond description. They found Frank all right with bright prospects for the futur; in the meat business in which he is engaged. The legislature has put the ranu and fish law in better shape thin it has been. In the first place, dove shooting is prohibited the year round. The open season of squirrels is from July 1 to October 1, and the open season for woodcock rs from July 1 to October 1 and from November 10 to January 1. The bag limi on quails and ducks is cut to fifteen a day, and any person hunting three consecutiv days may have a total of forty-five quails or ducks. The waterfowl open season is from September 1 to the following April 1.

Mrs. S. L. Shakes is visiting at Monterey. C. D. Snoeberger is hunting ducks at Culver. Mrs. Sarah Wolfe of Bourbon, is visiting in South Bend. Mrs. A. Bash of Union township, is visiting at Tyner City. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Beldon art visiting at Wabash this week. Ralph Schlosser of Argos, was a Plymouth visitor Wednesday. Captain Ed Morris of Culver, is transacting business in Chicago this week. Since the thunder showers ol Monday night, the grass and wheat; are growing rapidly. Dial's Millinery display, Friday and Saturday, March 22 anci 23rd. All cordially invited. d3wl A diphtheria epidemic at Goshen has reached such a stage thai the physicians and authorities are alarmed. The month of March during the past three weeks has surprised everybody by giving us very fine weather. Marion Mouow has gone to Logansport. He has a job of work that will keep him there about two months. W. H. Albert made a business trip to Plymouth Wednesday. He is running a cash grocery

(store at South Bend. Dials Millinery display, Friday and Saturday, March 22 and 2.3rd. All cordially invited. d3wl Charles Zentz who has. been visiting at Lapaz and vicinity left for his , home near Williston, North Dakota, Wednesday morn Andrew Samuelson, who resides n:ar Donaldson, has been adjudged insane and an application made for his admission to Longcliff. Daniel Mills of Larwenceville, and P. O. Johnson of Potomac, 111., have been in Marshall county this week. They are prospective land buyers. Andrew Richard made a businerä trip to Argos Wednesday. He is remodeling the residence which he purchased of Jacob Suit near the Vandalia station. Dr. Elev says the death ol Chester Werntz was caused by what is termed contributory men ingitis caused by grip, and is not cere-bro-spinal meningitis. W. H. Albert has sold the property on Miner street, which he recently purchased of W. H. English. J. K. Beatty is the pur chaser. The price is for the pres ent private. Governor Hanly has gone east for a vacation. Before leaving he wrote a letter saying that it gave him great pleasure to sign the bill for Menominee's monument at Twin Lakes. The mercury registered 102 de grees in the shade at Guthrie, Oklahoma, Tuesday afternoon, which is just a little hotter than it ever gets in Plymouth at any season of the year. Patrick Hursen has decided to quit the milk business and will sell all his cows and his polled angus bull at public auction, at his residence just south of the citv limits, Monday, April 1. mch20-d2w2

The remains of Joseph Shelley, the railroad engineer, arrived from Fort Wayne, Wednesday afternoon and were taken to his home west of the Lake Erie station where services will be held Friday afternoon. A spark from a Lake Erie engine caught in the roof of O'Keefe lumber shed Wdenesday afternoon and there was a slight blaze for a few minutes, but it was soon put out before any material damage was done. Ernest Porter Halterman and Miss Maggie Lena Sherman were married Tuesday afternoon by Justice Harry Unger, at the office of J. A. Molter. They are from Lapaz. Mr. Halterman is telegraph operator at Lapaz and his bride is from St. Joseph county. There is nothing of importance in the circuit court this week. The sudden death of Judge Burson's wife made it impossible for him to try the Yellow river ditch case which had been set for this week and Judge Bernetha is cleaning up odds, and ends for a few days.

Mrs. Elizabeth Griffiths has re

turned to South Bend after a visit of several days here. On or before April 10th, 1907, the acts passed by the general assembly just closed will be published and will be laws. It is estimated that the 1907 acts will be a volume of about 500 pages. In all, the book will con tain about 2S0 chapters, each of which is an act. F. M. McCrory and H. H. Bonham have formed a partnership with Branigar Bros, of Iowa, for the sale of Texas lands neai Stratford and ask those contem plating investment there to call on them or write for particulars to either at their home in Ply mouth. Sleeping car privileges will be furnished from Chicago. mch20-d3wl Tony Caruso, an Italian labor er, fell from the top of a seven teen story building in Chicago Tuesday afternoon and the body was a shapeless mass of flesh and bones after it struck the side walk. The dresses of several la dies daintily gowned were spattered with blood and the body narrowly escaped striking some of them. Training Technical Workers. An interesting story comes from Bethlehem, Pa., of the success which is attending the pro ject of a prominent steel man to train skilled workers for future needs. He made a proposition to receive -300 boys and give them special oversight in teaching them all the details of the steel and iron trade, in order that they may be available for service above the grade of mere mechan ic when the company is in need of such helpers. In response to this offer more than 200 boys have appeared. Their ages ( range from 10 to 20 years, about half of them being Germans, a quarter Irish, and the rest mainly of pure American stock. The most of them have had a high school education or have attended a manual training school. Not more than 5 per cent of those who applied failed in their allotted tasks and' decided to quit. The great majority en tered into the work with spirit and are giving complete satisfac tion to the company. The steel magnates invitation was not given in a spirit of pure philanthropy. It was a plain business proposition. It may be paralleled by projects in other industries. There are plenty of la borers who can do routine work, while those who have the administrative ability, the initiative, and the driving power to make successful superintendents of departments are comparatively few. Dry But Not Dead. Since the recent closing of the saloons in Knoxville, Tenn., r. former saloon proprietor has al ready arranged to introduce a new industry. He has organized a company for the manufacture of shirts, is establishing a plant which will call for the services of at least twenty-five persons. the payroll amounting to five times as much as was formerlj paid to the employes of his saloon. To make a town dry does not in this case kill it. It is also reported that since the town has become "dry" real estate values have increased. The Church Responsible. Mrs. Ida Bordenkircher of Co schocton, O., murdered her husband, and when her case comes to trial her attorneys will charge that a church is responsible for the crime. The defense will claim that the woman endeavored to live a pure life, but that she was refused admittance to the church and barred from recognition by the socially respectable elements because of her previous record. She gave up in despair, resumed her evil ways and committed her crime during a drunken brawl. Individual responsibility can not be placed wholly on other shoulders, but the plea in defense in this case may have something to support it. Theoretically the church is for sinners, not saints; in actual practice certain classes of sinners are not welcomed with open arms. Marriage Licenses. Ernest P. Thompson and Myrtle E. Boyce, Miltovi M. Young and Clara E. Dougherty, James N. Craige and Samantha Ruple, Thomas Powell and Mary E. Carl, Mace Rorer and Florence May Snyder, Iden Ward Logan and Edna E. Smith, E. P. Halter man and Maggie L. Sherman, Ray E. Kreighbaum and Flora M. Harsch, John Wynn and Emma Marks, Leonard Cross and Minnie M. Stayton. Can They Be Fooled? We wonder if the politicians and newspapers that are figuring on an advantage for the Democrats in this State next campaign because the minority has succeeded in blocking legislation, to some extent, are not figuring a little too fast and perhaps forgetting that the people of this State are beginning to assert themselves and vote intelligently regardless of politics. Easter Millinery Opening. The newly furnished, brilliantly illuminated millinery store solicits your attention, Friday and Saturday, March 22 and 23. If you paid five times the price you couldn't do better for style, becomingness or taste. The best of material used. You are invited. dlwl Mrs. Styles.

Mrs. Blubaugh has sold her farm west of Plymouth and will move to this city. Louis McDonald is preparing to build a cottage at Lake Maxinkuckee as soon as spring opens. Earl McLaughlin will represent the Plymouth high school in the count oratorical contest, April 12. Mrs. Simeon Blue has returned to Mentone after a visit of a few days with Mrs. Daniel McDonald. Schlosser Bros, are enlarging their creamery building. Their increasing business demands more room. Ira E. Berkeypile, of Bourbon township, is now one of the teachers in the South Bend Business College. William Grooms of West township, has been selected as the chairman jf the Prohibition party in this county. Bargains in farms or city property, for sale or exchange. Money to loan. J. F. Myers. Office with J. A. Molter. 14-w3 J. C. Gordon of Argos, has been made an aide-de-camp on the staff of the commander-in-chief of the G. A. R. David A. Helms of Miami county, was here to attend the funeral of his uncle, E. Helms, who died near Linkville. Milton M. Jordan of Tippecanoe, and Mrs. Elnora Beard of Bourbon, were married . Monday, March 11, 1907. Mr. and Mrs. McFadden were called to Ashland Ohio, Thursday evening by the death of Mrs. McFadden's father. The governor vetoed the new mortgage exemption law and $700

will continue to be the limit of exemption from taxation. The Hammond Times says that Gary will oppose the remodeling of the court house at Crown Point in hopes of moving the county seat to that place. Menominee will have a monument at Twin Lakes and it will also be a monument to the persistency of Daniel McDonald in the Indiana legislature. Orlando Johnson has returned from South Bend where he took an examination for the position of second lieutenant in Company I of this city. J. E. Cormican has disposed of his farm east of Argos and expects to leave for Texas as soon as he is able to close up his business here. Argos Reflector. Leroy Staley and H. H. Bonham returned from Texas Thursday evening. Like others who have been there they say it is a very fine looking country. Frank E. Neeley of the U. S. Census department has received a promotion recently and will travel in the interest of the bureau of statistics. Argos Reflector. Mrs. Arthur Metzler and her two children have returned to Rochester after a visit of a week with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Peter Disher, and her sister, Mrs. Acker. ' All the parts of the dredge that will make the Wolf Creek Ditch excavations have been moved from near Bremen to Green township, and the work will begin in a few days. Lawrence E. Hoffman and Miss Elsie Hartman, were married in Argos Wednesday, March 13. They are prominent young people of Walnut township and will reside in Argos. Wi ':am J&nke of Tippecanoe, Ind., has signed a contract to pitch for South Bend. He played with Plymouth and Bourbon last season. He is six feet tall and throws right handed. W. C. Gordon residing near Walnut had the misfortune of cutting his foot with an ax while chopping in the woods several days ago and has been confined to his home b. the injury. The money stolen from the Chicago treasury included a number of $10,000 bills, and country merchants and editors are warned not to change any bills of this denomination at the present time. The Government's estimate of the country's yield of wheat for 190G is 735,000,000 bushels; of corn, 1,298,000,000 bushels. It would appear from this that national starvation is not imminent. Prof. I. S. Loos, whose resignation as drector of the Laportc band be comes effective March 15, has accept ed the position as leader and instructor of the reformatory band at Jcffersonville, Ind. Thomas N. Bowles, who had been sick for three weeks at the home of his son, D. H. Bowles in this city, was well enough to go to his hpmc in Argos Friday. His son accompan ied him home. R. A. Chase of the St. Charles Ban ner News, is here for a visit of a few days. He -is looking well, but says people have grip and almost all other diseases on the Mississippi riv er in Missouri. Men who have some notion of de serting their wives should reflect up on the new law, under which they may be sent to the penitentiary for three years for the offense, and re vise their plans. Governor Hanly has signed tht bill which compels township trustees, when a school is abandoned to fur nish transportation for pupils living more than two miles from school to which they are sent. Henry Stein of Lake of the Woods, was in Plymouth Friday and said that he had no language that could express the condition of the roads When language fails Henry conditions are pretty bad. George Washington was the richest American of his time, and John D. Rockefeller is he richest Amer ican of his day. It would require a very close observer, however, to dis cover any other points of resemb lance.

Hon. Daniel McDonald is feeling

good. The governor has signed his Pottawottomie monument bill and Marshall county will have a monu ment and chapel at Twin Lakes to show that we have some Indian history as well as other places. The pipe for the gas mains is here. The company has rented the basement and rooms recently vacated by the Kooser Kandy kitchen, and will commence work next week with over 100 men. They will employ about 175 men after they get fairly started. John C. Billheimer, Auditor of State, will call a meeting of Indiana insurance men within a few days and consult with them in regard to bring ing about a cessation of several abuses that some of the Indiana com panies have been guilty of in the past. Jacob Myers, who has been for many years one of the leading farmers and stock raisers of the Rutland neighborhood, has recently purchased some very fine Poland-China hogs for breeding. Jacob believes that for general purposes these hogs are unexcelled. Farmers coming into town and those who have driven out of this city into the country say that Thurs day and Friday March 14 and 15 will be recollected for the worst roads known in Marshall county in twenty years. The ground thawed just enough to put them in that condi tion. Because Misses Belle La Rue and Ella Casey, two students of the Rensellaer high school danced until aftet midnight, Prof. J. H. Gray principal of the high school expelled the young women from the basket ball team of the institution. The two were leaders in Rensellaer's society, and bas ket ball start. Charles G. Kelley, who has just come home from Indianapolis Where he represented Starke, Pulaski and St. Joseph counties in the legislature will go to Indianapolis in two weeks to accept a position in the office of the auditor of state as building and loan clerk and clerk of the state tax board. The salary is $2600 per year. Any resident land owner may hunt on his own land anywhere in the state without a license, and his children living with him and his tenants, have similar privilege. But if he or they hunt anywhere in the state except on his own land license must be obtained of the clerk of the county in which the applicant resides. The license cost $i. The gas plant will be located on three acres of ground in the north part of town just south of the barrel factory. C. H. Geist & Co., are putting in excellent buildings and gas plants in all the cities where they have franchisef, and have also secured control of the electric light plants also; consequently there will be something doing when Mr. Geist comes to Plymouth Both houses of the Indiana legis lature passed the joint resolution of Senator Hugg favoring an amend ment of the constitution to raise the qualifications of lawyers; also the resolutions of Senator Cox to increase the number of supreme judges to eleven and to extend the sessions of the general assembly to 100 days. Albert Pence has returned to Antigo Wis., after a visit of two days in this city and vicinity. Not a Business Panic Business went ahead Thursday morning without relerence to the heavy losses sustained by certain and perhaps numerous speculators on Wall street. Panics may be divided into three kinds currency panics, stock panics and business panics. Only one of these three kinds is neces sarily disastrous to the greeat body of the people. A currency panic may be confined to a narrow circle. though if continuous it will involve ... values, savings, investments and wage funds. A stock panic ma" be limited in effect to those who have sold short on a rising market or bought heavily on a falling. What happened on Wednesday was that men who had bet heavily on higher prices were unable longer to stand the strain. Some of them had to let go and take what they could get. Others had to buy money with what securities they could market at almost panic prices. Some lost, oth ers won. There was a speculative but not actual disturbance of values. What the Great Northern and the Union Pacific were worth Monday they are worth today. People who have bought them for actual investment are not affected by the fall, and will not be affected by the subsequent rise. There was an awful slaughter of speculators in May of 1901, but the tide of general business flowed on undisturbed. Indianapolis Star. Walter Brown's Son. Gilbert Brown, a son of Walter Brown of Elkhart, the founder of the Plymouth Chronicle, .who made a bad record both as a politician and financeer, is now a student at Trinity College, Conn. Friends of the young man are aware that he realizes that he has been handicapped by the disgrace that has fallen on his famil name, and say that he is making a manly effort to prepare to vindicate it ?o far as his own conduct and achievements may prevail. It is said he has developed admirable manly qualities, consistent with his ambition. President's Wishes Prevail. The San Francisco board of e tinea tion, keeping its word with Tresi dent Roosevelt, 1ias unanimously res cinded the resolution of last October by which Japanese were segregated in the. public schools and adopted an alternative resolution in accordance with the understanding reached at the Washington conference between the president, Secretary Root, the school board and Mayor Schmitz.

Personal Liberty vs. Personal Rights. The following article from a correspondent of the Indianapolis Press is published by request of W. H. Craig. "Personal liberty" advocates are found on every hand. They invariably belong to one class of men those who live by plunder, who become rich by making other men poor; who fatten on the virtue of other people, and who want to be unmolested in debauching human kind. The man who is truly free the morally upright and law-abiding is finding no fault concerning "personal liberty.'Every man has unmolested personal liberty in doing right. There is no such thing as personal liberty for a man to do wrong either in relation to himself or his neighbor. The question arises at this point: What is liberty? In what does this coveted treasure consist? When a man takes the liberty to enter your house and help himself to whatever he likes, you are not slow to remind him that he has no right to your valuables. When a man assumes the liberty to barter that which is injurious to the purchaser, the State declares that such an act cannot be consid red as belonging to the rights of men. These illustrations will be sufficient to show that a man may exercise the liberty, that is, unrestrained action, which the universal consciousness declares is not right. What is usually implied by personal liberty is more correctly expressed by personal rights. We affnm, then, that personal liberty is inseparably connected With perstonal rights. A man cannot go beyond what is right in the exercise of personal freedom. If he transcends his rights he abu&eS his liberty, and for the well-being of society must be restrained. The same is true of any company of men, any corporation or State. A State has no right to do that which is denied the individual. Neither has it the right to grant to the individual the permission to do that which is recognized as intrinsically and morally wrong. Where this is done, as in the case of selling intoxicants, the people in any communitv have a moral right to prohibit such traffic by any and every legitimate means. This act is inherent in man's right to protect himself personal injury. Legitimate freedom " begins when rights begin, and ends when rights end. The long struggle for personal liberty has, in reality, been a struggle for personal rights. Has a man a right nt liberty to that which will injure his neighbor or his family? IK is at liberty to light his cigar by burning a $10 bill, but who will say that he has the right to do so? A father is at liberty to abuse his children, but he has no right to do so. A driver is at liberty to beat his horse, but the law says he has no right to do so. The Government is giving men the liberty to sell intoxicants, but the religious world, and everything good ir man, says that to do so is not right. No government has the moral right to grant the privilege to any man or company of men to carry on a business that impoverishes and debauches mankind. No act of Government can make an inherently wrong thing right by permission or legislation. The thing is still wrong and no man has a right to practice it. The advocates of the saloon traffic are loud in their demands for unrestrained liberty to sell intoxicants. If they are restricted or prohibited, they declare that their personal liberties are being interfered with. The Supreme Court of the United States has settled the question as to whether any local community has the right to restrict or prohibit the sale of intoxicants as a beverage and whether a man has the right to engage in the

saloon business. The court says: "There is no inherent right in a citizen to sell intoxicating liquors by retail; it is not a privilege of a citi zen of a State or of a citizen of the United States. As it is a business attended with danger to the community, it may, as ahead' said, be entirely prohibited, or be permitted under such conditions as will limit to the utmost its evils. The manner and extent of the regulation rest in the discretion of the governing author ity." In commeating upon this decision of the Supreme Court, the Washing ton Sentinel, the National Brewers' organ, says: Under this decision tne liquor business is to be dealt with as an evil, or even a crime, to the expression of which the extreme power of the law may be invoked, and in behalf of which no plea of arbitrary enactment upon the liberty of the person and his right to property used and invested can be successfully maintained. "This decision shows that our highest court is no longer governed by constitutional obligations, but has become the hotbed of the craziest puritanical fanatisicm. If it had simply confined itself to once more pronouncing for the police powers of the States to regulate or prohibit the liquor traffic in the above decision, nobody would have had anything to say. But to go beyond that and to outlaw those who sell by the glass as promoters of crime and misery, whose business may be absolutely prohibited without any compen sation whatever, is indeed extraordi nary." It is a self-evident proposition, and one inherent in the very constitution of man, that he has no right to engage in any business or to do any thing that will in any way injure his fellow-man, or interfere with his rec ognized rights, or imperil life and property. City authorities regulate the speed of street cars, steam cars when running through the corpora tion, and the driving of horses, as well as the riding of bicycles. Soap factories and slaughter-houses are not allowed to locate within the city limits. Lotteries, dueling and gamb-

mm ilk ipvbekäi

1

Makes the finest, lightest, best flavored biscuit, hot -breads, cake and pastry Renders the food more digestible and wholesome.

ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO, NEW YORK.

ling are prohibited by law. A man cannot build a house according to his plan unless it coincides with tht city requirements. A parent is not at liberty to keep his child out of school during certain years of the school age. Train loads of people have been quarantined, much to their discomfort and financial loss of passengers. Parents are not permitted to keep their children at home when stricken with certain diseases, but must suffer them to be taken to the pest-house and cared for by strangers. A man is not at liberty to drink the water from his own well, if it has been pronounced impure by the health officers. In some States the sale of cigarettes is forbidden by legislative enactments. These and other similar restrictions and prohibitions infringe upon man's personal liberty quite as much as the prohibition of the liquor traffic. All of these prohibitions are based upon man's well-being. Anything that injures man and society should be pro

im

ANNO

If 1 I Y 1

I if IA

A visit to this store and an inspection of the following specialized lines: CLOAKS, SUITS, MILLINERY, DRESS GOODS, TRIAMINGS, GLOVES, MEN'S and BOYS CLOTHING, SHOES, HATS, CARPETS, RUGS, LACE CURTAINS, WHITE GOODS

Will demonstrate their Superiority in Variety ar.j VALUE. Miinneru, Gioak and Suit opening Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Maren 21, 22, 23 To every lady in Plymouth and vicinity we herewith extend a cordial invitation to attend our display of Millinery a la mode for Spring, and to be present at our showing of Suits and Spring Wraps.

BALL AND

r

hibited. In doing so, no man's right is interfered with. He has a right to do right, but not to do wrong, or in any way to injure his neighbor. Therefore, the prohibition of the liquor traffic is right and should be brought about at any early date. The saloon is evil continually, therefore banish it from our land. Roosevelt's Last Term, In an interview, Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University, said: "President Roosevelt will not run for President again, no matter what pressure is brought to bear upon him. The principles which Roosevelt stand for are greater than the man. The Republican: party must support these principles, no matter who its standard bearer may be at the next election. Whh Mr. Root President and Mr. Taft chief justice of the Supreme Court, conditions would be pretty near ideal. But I hardly look for such a combination to succeed.

New Spring Goods of every description are now on display. Our big store, with its two floors, shows wonderfully the effects of our careful preparation and our efforts to show the correct and right merchandise forspring 1907.

ST ' - .7 5U.

COMIPA 1