Plymouth Tribune, Volume 6, Number 33, Plymouth, Marshall County, 23 May 1907 — Page 5
COOK WITH
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The Latest and Most Improved GASOLINE STOVES AT
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HEADQUARTERS FOR Gasoline, Coal Oil and Matches.
i LOCAL NEWS 1 Mrs. Mary Powell is quite sick at the home of her sister, Mrs. Caroline Craige. ' Irvin Haag has been quite sick since last week necessitating a physician's care. Joseph Stein is painting and roouing his property on Sophia' street and renovating generally. The Daniel Poor farm, four miles south of town has been purchased by Roy List. The sale was made by Richard Brothers. ! FOR SALE Cheap. Two finest lots at Pretty Lakt. Also a fine cot-, tage for rent. Apply to J. B. Bowell or P. O. Box 131. may22wld6 Mr. James Gibson was unable to attend the encampment at Fort Wayne being quite reduced in health and able only to go about his home. Mr. Henry Smith and daughter, Mrs. Wm. Vanpeh of Monticello, came Wednesday for a visit with their cousint Mrs. Caroline Craige, in west Plymouth. , G. W. Williams came down from North" Liberty to ga with the G. A. R. post encampment. Mr. Williams lived here many years ago , and .worked for-James Gibson whom he paid a visit while here.,, The frequency of notice in daily papers of explosion -of gasoline and loss of life and property following would indicate the need of safety appliances together with the greatest 141 C UJ U91U& I lit. 111. Mesdames Taylor, Cooke and VI inl Mice I" r Ire r( Tirnrbon hive of lady Maccabees went to .Hjuin xciiu vvcuiicsuay iu uc in iuthe good time in the evening. Mrs. H. Iden the representative in1 the grand lodge went Tuesday. G. G. Love and Will Hahn went to South Bend, Wednesday morning, to "root" tor Adam Wise for . the grand commandership of the Knigths of the Maccabees. We are doing our best fron a distance by lending our best wishes that they all succeed. The St. Vincent DePaul society gav; a farewell and surprise party on Mrs. Barney Healey, at the home of Mr Ferd Eich on North Center street,, Tuesday evening. It was a surprise indeed and a nice enjoyable time was had by, all, finished off with ice cream and cake. Rowdies angered at th- victory of Chicago's baseball team over the home team in New York Tuesday, precipitated a riot, attacking the umpire so fiercely that the police with difficulty effected his rescue. Clubs were freely used and guns were fired in the air to quell the disturbance. Everybody is surprised at the continued cold weather. Tuesday morning we were greeted with a white frost that destroyed all tender plants, followed by a warm clear day and Wednesday morning " comes a cold rain. 'Much corn is yet to plant and that planted will likely rot in the ground. The cold and wrtt which we are all called to deplore at this time, extends in this country fron the Rocky Mountains to the Atlantic ocean.1 Even from Germany comes the report that frost, rain and hail have, done much damage and in the province of Alsac the ground was covered well over with hail. Mrs. G. W. Baxter went to South Bend Wednesday to spend the balance of the week with her sons, John and Ed while Mr. Baxter is in Ft. Wayne with his comrades in the Grand Army encampment. .Query: -which one enjoys themselves best, the mother with her boys, or the soldier with his comrades? It begin to look as though Mayor Busse of Chicago, was in earnest about ridding the city of crime, and establishing a regime of decency and safety, having shifted the police to where they could be most effective jn this line and fjiver; orders to do their duty without fear or favor, with justice to all and special priviliges to none. : i ! Among those who went to Fort Wayne Wednesday we noted the following named parties, Jacob Myers. of Rutland, F. M. Welch, E. Price. Jahn Windbigler, Chas. Andrews, Joe White, Morris Agier, J. M. Reminder and J. C. Kuhn. Quite a number of the ladies accompanied the crowd for the outing and the W. R. C. held their meeting at the same time. In another column you will find an article entitled That Was Business." It h an editorial from the Chicago Tribune on the decision of Judgre Landis in the case against the seating trust. The editorial sets up the way the trust worked it to fleece the dear people for which the judge fined them $42000. If there is any way by which to make th? trust people be homest ve believe it is by the route judge Landis has tak
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GASOLINE ! foi Hon. Charles Kellison is having the Grand Hotel repapered throughout. Miss Lucy.Shultz went to Bristol. Saturday, to spend the summer with her sister. Mr. Clarence Mcdbourn of South Bend, is spending a few days here with his mother. : Miss Carrie Boss went to Bourbon Saturday where she will visit' a few days with friends. W. C. Miller returned Friday fror Delphos, Ohio, where he recently engaged in business. Mr. Marttndale, whose meetings at the Christian church 'closed Sunday night returned to his home in Iowa. Miss Alta Mitchell returned to her home at Argos after a weeki here with her sister, Mrs. Frank Tanner. Miss Minnie Keyser went to Valparaiso Saturday to remain over Sun- j day with her sister who is attending school. " I Mrs. Anna Weber stopped Friday night with her brother on her way j from Logansport to. her home in Xappanee. , . . j Stacy Burden made a business trip to Argos Saturday. He likes his new home in West township and thinks he is located just right. Mrs. Albert Frank went to South ! Bend Saturday to spend a week with Kt husband who is mail clerk on tli T-ake Shore railroad. . A car of Kokomo brick was unloaded here this week for the new gas plant and Keller and Jeffirs new building on the south side. Mrs. Homer Watson returned to her home in Chicago Saturday after a few days' here with her parents, Mr. and- Mrs. Paul Butcher Miss Florence Johnson of South Bend, came down to spend Sunday in the city with relatives. She has been selected to teach in our city schools next year. ' 1 Mrs. FV'E. Bücher left Saturtiay morning for a week's visit with her brother in Goshen from where she will go for a vhit in Kalamazoo, before returning tome. Mrs. Pclly Boling returned to her home in S -tilth Whitley Saturday, after a two weeks' stay with her sister, Mrs Sarah Freed east of town, and her brother Eli Gable in South Bend. . Mrs. Myrtle Sheaks returned to Chicago Saturday after a weeks' visit wkh her parents south of town. Her sister, Miss Pearl Ackles, accompanied her to try Chicago life for a time. ; L. B. Stalcy, who is drilling those fine wells at our water works, went to Knightstawn Saturday for a Sunday visit with his daughter, who is in the Soldiers and Sailors orphans' school. . ' - Ca tain Kidd, or fresh word of him has iome to light,, when some boiys chased a rabbit into a cave and found a letter, they claim placed there by the captain, telling of his pursuit and his fear of capture along with socalled valuable information. It will be in order for somebody to find Charley Ross again sooin. When the crusade against the saloon shall reach its height, some of the interested gentlemen who engi neered the defeat of the high license bill in the late legislature of Indiana will wish that they hadn't done what they did. The fellows who engineer-? ed the corrupt bargain by which that righteous measure was defeated will get to see something far more drastic than a $1000 license fee. South Bend Times. Charles Burt of Texhoma, Oklahoma, arrived in Plymouth Saturday for a visit with his relatives and friends. He has been in his new home two years as prircipal of the schools .and in the meantime has taken a home stead in the vicinity, proving up on it last week. He is enthusiastic over the possibilities presented in that country and will return soon. He was re tained in Texhoma as school principal another year. When he died, in 17S0 aged 84 years, this epitaph of his own composition was placed upon his tomb stone: "The Body of Benjamin Frank lin, Printer (Like the Cover of an Old Book, Its Contents Torn Out and Stript of its Lettering and Gilding) Lies Here, Food for oWrms. But tin work shall not be Lo3t, for it will (as he believes) Appear Once Mare in a New and More Eelegant Edition, R vised and Corrected by The Author." Orrin W. Potter, the millionaire president of the Illinois Steel com pany, who died Friday in Chicago, was anather farmer loy who came to the city and succeeded, his success being largely traceable to the les sons of industry and pluck ingrafted into his early life. He took a position with the steel company when a boy and by attention to business, and making himself of worth to his em ployers, he was promoted through the various steps of the business til he became its president, honored by all.
Joseph A .Holzbauer was at home over Sunday. . . - Mr. and-Mrs. John -Boss went to Niles, Monday! George H. Thayer went to Kokomo Monday on business. Mrs. Will Ormond is' the 'guest for a week of friends at Marion. W. M. Nicely, pastor of the M. E. church at Culver, was in town Monday. Hazel Neff returned to Chicago, Monday, having spent Sunday with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. John Yost, from Ca'sapolis, Mich., were guests of Mr. and Mr. Bosworth and left Monday for
Kansas. Miss Mamie Durbin went to Chicago Sunday evening, to spend two weeks with her brother, Ben DurbH and family. Mrs. T. C. Kleckner, who had been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glass, returned to her home, at Terre Haute, Monday. Jesse Thomas, who had been a resi dent for 54 years of Marshall county. came down from South Bend, Mpai: day, where he is making his home with his son, M. it. Thomas. Miss Jeannette Gay, who lives -with her parents a mile northeast of town has bought a fine driving horse and rig, which she purchased with money that she earned in teaching. It may be the President's notion in making his trip tot Indianapolis over the New York Central thus to convev a delicate compliment to Senator De ew, who, as we all know, has been a little short of compliments lately. Washington Kelley arrived hero Sunday night from the National Sol diers' Home in Tennessee, where he had spent the wintr. Mr. Kelley will remam in Plymouth, which is more of a home to him than any other place. Prof. W. E. Bailey returned from Elkhart, where he had been for a week at the home of his daughter. He will leave Saturday for Menominee and Chippewa Falls, Wis.,. toi spend sev eral weeks with a brother and his son Mr. Bailey will march with his broth er on Decoration day, with whom he enlisted and served during the civil war. Hoke Smith, it is alleged, i Bry an's choice for president if the Democrats think there is any doubt as to his own availability. Mr. Smith needs no introduction to the public as they all learned to know Hoke Smith about fifteen years ago! when he was Cleveland's commissioner of pen sions. The gentleman from Georgia is surely well enough known if that is all that counts. A terrible tragedy was enacted in the middle of Lake Michigan Tuesday, by the burning of the steamer, Naomi, plying between Grand Haven, Michigan and Milwaukee. The stearrU er carried fifty passengers a,'l of which were saved by passing steam ers, as "were most of the' crew, though four of those on the loiwer deck were burned with the boat, and one of t'ose rescued was fatally burned.. Sheriff Dan Voreis and Marshal Jacoby made a raid on the Windsor house Sunday, where, it was said that drinks were being sold, contrary to law. They captured two cases oi beer bottles, fifty in all, .which except two were empty-. The. cases' were taken to Justice Unger's office when. if not claimed, they will be destroyed. The mayor seems disposed to enforce the law concerning saloons and does not propose to permit any privileges to other places. We called Tuesday to see our oM friend John W. Siders, who was for sol many years connected with this paper but for the last two months has been confined to his home with grip, pneumonia, inflammatory rheumatism and, a little of. everything in the category of disease, to find that within the past few days- he has had a turn for the better and can get out of doors a little, but a walk the length oi his lot is as far as he can go at one time and now to cap the climax as he becomes a little better! his wife is taken with something like pneumonia and has been quite sick for several days. , The editorial page of Metsker's paper yesterday was adorned with a clipped editorial from the Indianapolis News, , entitled "A Confessed Scoundrel". Now wouldn't that wil: you to) see a -nan who I. under indictment for grtfting, and the clerk .f the" court at his time making up the record of .proceeding in the lowvr court, to be taken before the suf-rem? court on appeal, to punish him foi the same crime for which he cnticises others and holds them up ' to scorn. The average man who is no: wholly lost to decency and lion r would never mention such a matter, but Metsker has become case hardened. Then, too, he oily, did' the graft act in small amounts and Schmitz filched a fortune every time Mrs. Morton Honored Guest., Anderson, Ind., May 21 Mrs, H. B. Stilwell of this ctiy has for guest this week, Mrs. Oliver P. Morton, widorw of Indiana's famous war governor and statesman, and her sister, Mrs. Sarah S. Gill. The women arrived at the Stilwell home from Indianapolis today and will spend a few days with their life-long friend in this city. Mrs. Stilwell's father and Mrs Morton's famil' were neighbor in the village of Ceufcrville and the acquaintance has been maintained . for three-quarters of a century by frequent visits between the families. Mrs. Morton will see the dedication of the Lawton monument on. Memorial day at the special request, of President Roosevcit. Tift President characterizes Governor Morton in the class of great men with Lincoln, and in his sphere he was the equal of the national hero. Mrs. Morton is exceptionally well preserved and active notwithstanding she celebrated her eighty-second birthday last Friday.
Memorial Day Proclamation.
Governor Hanly has sent from Atlantic City his Memorial day proclamation which was given out by his secretary, Colonel Fred Gemmer. It follows: Since the civil war a generation has been born and reared and is now Hearing the zenith of its power. This generation will soon govern the country make its laws and nterpret and execute them and administer its affairs. The beneficiaries of one hundred jind thirty years of unexampled sacrifices, transcendent services and exalted devotion, love of country and of freedom and htankfulness to those who founded and to thotse who preserved the government, should impel us to make acknowledgement of our obligation, give - expression to our gratitude and renew the covenants of our citizenship. Moved by this thought, in compliment to the living soldiery -of the republic, and pursuant to custom grown sacred as the love we bear, the martyred dead, I J. Frank Hanly, governor of the state of Indiana, do hereby designate and set apart Thursday, May 30, 1907, , as Memorial day. and proclaim the same a legal holiday throughout said state. Universal observation of the day i recommended and urged. Public offices should be closed. ' Business should be .-suspended and toil discontinued. Frivolous and noisy apuisements should Gc avoided and the law respected. .In the national cemeteries near tho great battlefields of the southland and about the prison at Andersonville where gaunt and ghastly famine anc' disease and thirst made death a' welcome visitor, there over the graves of all, even of the unknown the forget-me-nots are in bloom today in annual commemoration of their exalted sacrifice, above their formless dust they spread their fragrance sweet as silence. These, all these, gave their lives. and unknown ones gave in addition their identity forever, that "Government of the people, for the people and by the people, might not periih from the earth." We can not forget what they did. Nor can we forget why they did it, We can not be less mindful than the flowers. Of all the brave and gallant hosts who have marched to battle in freedom's cause on this continent and who have died amid its carnage or in the . peace of the intervening years there remains to us nothing visible nothing that the sense of sight or touch can comprehend save narrow graves in scattered cemeteries. - Since these are all we have let us seek them out on this day wheresoever they may be and leave upon them some tribute bf bur love a wreath; c flower, a flag. Let these graves be tc' us as so many holy shrines at whose portals our own lives shall be consecrated. Let no idle ccremoiny there be heard or held. Let' neither music, songx nor spoken word give voice or tongue to' aught but the heart's resolves. The dead may not hear; they may not know; it may be that they will sleep on unconscious alike of bath, tribute and our presence. But we shall hear and we shall know, and our children shall hear and know, and we and they shall be lifted thereby to higher citizenship and our feet turned into holier ways. War; "And, then, think of the deaths and the heartaches. If these men who are crying loudly for war could see and hear a battlefield, and could think of their own sons as there, it might hush their barbaric enthusiasm a little. Think of the hundreds and thousands of men, their bodies torn, mangled in every conceivable vvay, trodden over by the- infantry ridden over by the cavalry, wounded, neglected, cryirg for ä cup of cold water, thrilling through every nerve with pain, dreaming in their agony of the loved ones at home. Then go to the rear and see the surgeons at work see the piles, perhaps, of arms or legs tossed out like wood chopped and piled up :n a yard.' Then go to the hospitals and listen to the moans of the sick and dying; see the pale cheeks and the lack-lustre ces; what wounds, gangrene and decay and remember this is war! No matter how righteous the war may be, it is somebody's fathers, it is somebody's brothers, t is somebody's sons that are going through all this." Maccabees Who Wish a Good Office. South Bend, Ind., May 21. Fraternal politics will be a feature of the State "convention of the Knights of Maccabees, which will open a two days' meeting in this city next Thursday. Milo E. Meredith of Wabash, will preside. The fight is for the office of grand commander, which pays $3,000 a year. Four candidates desire the recognition of 15,000 members of the secret fraternity in a battle which equals in intensity the heated campaigners of 'political parties. Milo Meredith, the present incumbent ;Adam S. Wise, of Plymouth; William Borders, of Hartford City, and Ralph N. Smith, of Laportc, arc the leading cpntcstants. . Old Soldier Disappears. Macy B. Malcolm, an ex-Union soldier, is mysteriously missing from his home in Westfield, Ind, He drew his pension- on Monday and on Thursday left his home, while thv. family was away and did not tell any one where he was going. He was. seen for the last time Saturday walking along a country road near Tipton. Since that time nothing has been heard from him. His family fears that he has become deranged and is wandering about over the country. Logs and Bolts Wanted. Highest cash prices paid for Logs and Bolts. Plymouth Novelty Mfg. Co., Plymouth, Ind., Home Fhone 12S maylGw4
Letter from Oklahoma.
Texahoma, May 21, 11)07. Thinking a word from me to your readers might be appreciated, 1 will try my hand. I was gone from my home just twenty-five months and though I arrived in Plymouth, 1 address you from my present habitation proper. I first went to Blaine county, Oklahoma, where I taught a tern: of school, then went to Beaver county, where I could get a government homestead, securing one lour miles east of. Texhoma. The past two school yeat; were spent as principal of the Texhoima schools. Wages was not the best $60 per month, but my hoane was on my claim, where I remained from Friday night to Monday morning, keeping my belongings in my shack ,and thus was enabled to put in time on my claim, and , teach school too, killing two birds with one stone. I value my nomestead at not less than $500 and having purchased some tovj property that doubled in value, I feel my efforts in the great southwest have not been in vain. This is no more than any young man could have done there, and some have succeeded even better than I. We have had an abundance of rain this .spring - and all crops are cominjr on nicely. The green bug of which you have heard so. much, being unknown to us. Texhoma is "on the Rock Island line be tween the Texas panhandle and the part of Öklahoma", formerly called 'No Man's Land. This count rv hv a few years ago was considered a dry and arid waste, fit only for grazing the great herd of cattle that roamed over the broad expense of fine plain? lands, and I am frequently asked now if we have any rain, just as if that country would be the fine grazing land it used to be if xit didn't rain. They raise all the crops there that are raised in Indiana and several val uable crops besides, any and all of which are raised with much less la bor than is necessary in Indiana. Ail crops produce well, the average for wheat being above twenty bushels per acre, and the markets are fully as good as in Indiana. Land is yet to be had for from ten tol fifteen dollars per acre that must surely increase in value rapidly, being a rich, clay loam prairie soil, from one to five feet deep that wjjen pulverized! well is easily cultivated and retains moisture well. Corn, when I left a week ago, was a half foot high, being held back by cold, and wheat and oats were look ing well but growing slowly. Alfalfa grav s readily on well pulverized soil, sown in April and is ready for cuttin,? the year following. Water is to he h?,d in abundance at a depth of 200 feet and no better water is found anywhere. Without encroaching fur ther on your space let me say to the young man, take Horace Greely's ad vice and don't wait. Texhoma is a town of 800 people. 3300 feet above sea level and the air is dry, invigorating and healthful. 1 expect to return again" to that conn tjry in about two weeks. Chas. L. Burt. . Marriage. Marriage is of a date prior to sin it self the one relic of paradise that is left us a smile of God on the world's innocence, lingering and playing still ipon it. It was first celebrated by God himself aqd thus religion blessed her two children, and led them forth into life to begin, its wondrous history. 'I hey learned to love him a the sealer and interpreter of theit love to each other; and if they had continued in their uprightness, life woruld! have been permanent form of wedded, worship, a sacred mystery of spiritual oneness and communion. Horace Bushjiell. God has set the type of marriage everywhere throughout the creation. Every creature seeks its perfection in another. The very heavens and earth picture it to us. Luther. The institution of marriage keeps the moral world in being, and secures it froan . an untimely dissolution. Without it natural affection and amtableness would not exist, domestic education would become extinct, in dustry and economy be unknown, and I man would be left to the precarious existence of the savage. But for this institution, learning and refinement would expire, government sink into the gulf or anarchy; and religion, hunted from earth, would hasten back to her native heavens. T. Dwight. Marriage has in it less of beauty but more of safpty, than the single life; it hath not more ease but less danger; it is more merry and more sad; it is fuller of sorrows and fuller of joys; it lies under mo,re burdens but is supported by all the strengths of love and charity; and 'those burdens are delightful. Marriage is the mother of the world, and preserve? kingdoms and fills cities and churches, and heaven itself. Jeremy Taylor. Slandering the Cleanly Hog. An exchange prints some of the old rubbish about a hog being filthy, argug'ng that hog meat is not fit for food. A hog is not one whit more filthy than a cow or a horse. Pen up one of the latte- animals, feed it on swill and give it as liittle care as is given a hog and it will become just as loathsome. A hefc? likes to roll in the mud; so' does a horse or cow. The owner of a horse cleans' him off, however, while the owner of the hog lets him clean himself by rubbing against a barn or fence. Allow the hog free range and clean fobd and he is as clean and sweet as any beast of his size. He has a better odor than either the horse or cow and his meat is the best that comes on anybody's table, not excepting chicken meat. Mortuary. Sylvia Samuels died at the home of her parents in Inwood Wednesday morning after an illness of ten days of pneumonia aged two years and six months. Burial will take place at the Hindel graveyard Thursday afternoon.
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Train Speed Indicators. Concul Frank V. Mahin writes from Nottingham that shocking rail way accidentss in England during the last year due to excessive speed at points where the rules required a reduction, has caused a demand that speed indicatoxs be placed on loco motives of all passenger trains. The consul says: "It is argued that the Salisbury ac cident would not havQ Qcuxred if a speed indicator had been before the eye of the engineer. In the Grantham disaster, where the train should have stopped at the station, but rush ed past and was derailed at a switch set for a branch line,- the inquiry turned on the point whether the train brake had been set, but no one was alive who could answer. It is stated that certain speed indicators showing air pressure in the brake reservoirs would have made this clear. Such instruments, it is reasoned, not only help explain accidents and to locate responsibility, but are manifestcdly a check upon engineers who might otherwise speed a train to disaster. "It is said to be a literal fact that not half a dozen English locomotive are provided", with efficient modern recording speed '"dicators, whereas on the continent about 20,000 are itr use. There, it is said, they are practically compulsory on all passenger locomotives and in some countries every main-line freight engine is also provided with one. A law in France and laws about ta be enacted in Holland and Belgium require every pas senger locomotive to be thus equipped within a given time. Speed indi cators, on the continent, it is stated, arc considered as important as steam gauges on boilers and automatic brakes, on trains. The engineer, it is reasoned, would no more disregard the speed indicator than the steam guagc and therefore only as the re sult, of mental aberration .could an accident occur from neglect of the railway company's speed rules.". After July 1 Special Stamp Need Not be Attached to Letters. No special delivery postage stamps will be needed after the 1st of next July to insure the immediate delivery of a letter. Pursuant tor an act of the last session of Congress, PostmasterGeneral Meyer has: issued an ord?r that on and after July 1 next if there is attached to any letter or package of mail matter 10 cents worth of stamps of any demnomination, with the words "special delivery" written or printed on the envelope or covering, in additiion to the postage required for ordinary delivery, the article will be handled as if it bore a regulatio.i special delivery stamp. POSITIVE FROOF. Should Convince the Greatest Skeptic m Plymouth, Hecause its the evidence of a Ply mouth citizen. testimony easily investigated, The strongest endorsement of mer it. ,The best proof, read it: A. B. Personett, barber, living on Garro street, Plymouth Ind., says: "For two years 1 suffered severely from kidney complaint. The nature of my work required me to be in a standing position most of the time and it seemed that the pain across my back became more distressing each day. I would dread to start for work in 'the morning, knowing what I wou'd be obliged to endure and I wonceied if I were not being put to the test merely to see how much suffering and agony I could bear. I acted upon a friend's advice and tried several preparations largely advertised, but failed to receive any benefit whatever. Seeing Doan's Kidney Pills highly recommended for just such troubles as mine I procured a box at J. V. Hess's drug store and after taking them found that the. pain had entirely left me and there has ben no recurrence of the trouble." (Statment made In 1002. CURED TO STAY CURED. -Mr. IVrsonett, on May 22, 100G, confirmed the above statement by saying: "The cure which Doan's Kidney Pills effected in my case in 190S has remained permanent and I can recommend them with renewed emphasis. On account of the satisfaction of my experience with this remedy, I have often taken special pains to speak of this sterling kidney cure to others. I shall alwavs think high1 of Doan's Kidne Pills." For sale by all dealers. Price .10 cents. Eoster-Milburn Co., Huffalo. New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other.
TO GUARD 'SHIPS against the unseen d&nzaftt eta, the United States Government maintains lighthouses. To guard your home against the unseen dangers of food products, the Government has enacted a pure food law. The law compels the manufacturers obaking powder, to print the ingredients on the label of each caa The Government has made the label yoarj protection so that you can avoid alum read it carefuDy.Uf ft dots cot say pure cream of tartar hand it back cad
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ROYAL is a pure, cream of tartar baldsj powd a pcre product of grapes aids me digestion -. adds to the healthfulness of food.
h Miss Helen Axe Brown, For a second time within a few months this talented young lady has appeared before a South Bend audience as a soloist. The first time she appeared upon the stage as a stranger, creating an agreeable surprise; the second time she came as- a popular favorite, adding greatly to her prestige with the mujic-loving public of this city. She charmed her hearers upon her first appearance, Lid more than delighted them upon her second advent. Miss Brown is ann Indiana girl not yet 21 years of age. Her physical development is ia pleasing accord with the scope of her musical talent. She is the eldest daughter of Prof. H. B. Brown, founder and head of the University at Valparaiso. She has a younger sister and two brothers, who, together with her fond parents, rejoice in the splendid progress she has made and is making in the musical world. V - Her musical training began under the tutelage of Messrs.' Butler and Gaskin at Valparaiso. During the past three years she has enjoyed the benefit of Mr. ' HäcKtt's instruction in Chicago. That she has made her mark is evidenced by the fact that she has a regular engagement to sing at Presbyterian church of Chicago and the Sunday services in the 41st Street that in ajrecent contest in the Americonconservatory of that city she was an easy winner. As a further evidence of the high appreciation of her musical talent it may be stated that she has been engaged by the Thomas orchestra to sing in Chicago on the 14th of next month. Miss Brown is a "charming young woman. The success that has crowned her efforts in the musical world is a source of gratification to the friends of her distinguished father, and is justly pointed to as an evidence that talent abounds in Indiana and is by no means confined to any one calling. South Bend Times. Of all the fruits that are in the land That grow on bush or tree, I would give up the choicest ones tl For Rocky Mountain Tea. The People's Drug Store. f-OUE! GREAT- MAY
I Continues with a Grand Rush. 7 y Everybody known why. Qocauno wo do what
wo sax- Just think of it
x your oprmg and oummcr oulto at AFTER CZASOM'3 J S PRICES! 0 i Dnn't Miss this fireat Mnroiv.Cavinn nlo I t
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You ought to see the crowds that have taken advantage
of our special selling. They QPP THRU Tnr r iiium, iV7v. wuii.c, tei Ua ...111 .t a. " tt in a wai iu you; Men's and Young Men's $7.50 Men's and Young Men's $10.00
All our Men's and Youn Men's $15.00 handtailored Suits at All our finest hand-tailored $18.00 and $20.00 Suits at
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DON'T FORGET THAT WE OF YOUNG MEN'S SUITS
In Men's and Boys' Shoes, we shew the biggest line of GOOD SHOES shown in the city, and at prices that are MONEY SAVED FOR YOU.
We want you to share in
and want you to take advantage of this GREATEST SPRINQ j SALE ever attempted in Plymouth. $
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Pneumonia Fatal in April. According to figures compiled by the State Board of Health, there were 284 deaths from pneumonia in the State durif g tha month o April. This disease was one of the most fatal, especially in the esses of elderly people and little children. More people died from it betvven the ages of 70 and 80 than at any other age. Of the total number of deaths from pneumonia 144 were males and 140 were females. Sixty-three of the males wert married, fifty-seven single and twenty-four were widowers. Of the females fifty-five were single, thirty-nine were married and forty-six were widows. Forty-one babies' died of pneumonia under -ne year of age. Between the ages of 1 and 5 thirty-five children died,o pneumonia, between the ages of 5 and 10 thirty-five children died and four died between the ages of 10, and fifteen. Six people died between the ages of 15 and 20, and sixteen died from th disease between the ages of 20 and 30. There were eighteen deaths in which he victims were between th-e ages of 30 and 40 and nineteen deaths between the ages of 40 and! 50. Twenty-five people died between the ages of 60 and 70. There were fifty-six deaths between the ages of 70 and 80 and twenty-seven deaths between the ages of 80 and 90. Two people died, who were over. OO years of age. Armstrong Trial Begins. After struggling over a week to secure a jury for the trial of Rau Armstrong, charged with the killing of his sweetheart, Carrie Vincentt at South Bend, the panel wras completed Monday afternoon, and the taking of evidence begun. Armstrong is cither insane or playing the part well. When he comes into court he removes his shoes and then pulls hairs from his long beard, using them, he says, for violin strings. Every wontan of refinement appreciates a radiant, beautiful complexion, which is so much admired by men. Such complexions come to all who use Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. Tea or Tablets, 35 cents. The Peo ples Drug Store. IIOÄß mi 5 V - - a chnnco in Hay to buy ,1 Himmj-pmimj ülv rf I know good things WHEN THEY M . . V us snow you ountl VALUES Jv f Suits and $11.00 Suits jy $11.25 $15.00 9 9 ,1 9 a 9 A 9 I SHOW THE SNAPPIEST LINE IN NORTHERN INDIANA. the crood thinzs durinr this Sale ,1
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The Good Clothes Store, "Of Ccsrse." i j "The Store that always uzts cc:l" $
