Weekly Republican, Volume 56, Number 15, Plymouth, Marshall County, 13 April 1911 — Page 5
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Something Different in Wall Paper :t 4 4 4.,
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People's Druq' Store
Chas. Reynolds Prop., Plymouth, Ind.
OUJk new spring wall paper represents wealth of character and individuality. If you desire exclusive paperspapers of unique, beautiful de?ign,3'0u'll find thetn here. Our paperä will afford you opportunity to carry out in tbe most satisfactory manner any color scheme you may have in mind. See our new goods before the superb assortment is broken. All grades are here and our prices cannot be beaten anvwherer
WANT COLUMN For Sale-For Rent-Lot - I t i c Wanted-Etc.
Dr. Dsnforth, Dentist, phone 4933.
.Dr. Eikenterry's day is Priday of
eeach. week..
Order your Ea.ter decorations and
flowers early. Mary A. Reslar, City Florist. wl3dl3
For sale Cheap bay work hose, weurht aUmt 1200 lbs. Johs Croup, Plymouth, R. FD. 1.
Bulls for Sale. SI ort Horn and Polled Dnrhams pure bred red ano. rt ans. Call, write wire or phone, C. T. Mattingly, PIjtooutb, Ind. xvtn
MONEY TO LOAN On Farm and City property, by Cressner & Co., Plymouth, led,, at lowest rates; quick action, no de lay: time to euit borrower. No. 2105.
"Our baby cries for Chamberlian's Cough Remedy," writes Mrs. T. B. Ivendrieck, Rasaca, Ga. "It is the bst cough remedy on the market for coughs, colds and croup.' ' For 6ale by All Dealers. i
The Home of Values IS RIGHT HERE
NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. This entire page was. accidentally "pied' as we were going to press and there Avas-not. time to reset the news matter it contained, hence the absence of much of our home nev,
HOW TO WjfJ POPULARITY
Surest Method Is to Be Interested in The People One Meets. One of the surest methods of winning popularity Is to be interested in the people one meets. Not a Hp interest merely, but a deep, actual interest that takes one out of one's self njid one's narrow circle and for the moment places one in the midst of another's sorrow or Joy and lets one see life from her stanöpolnt. A girl who can listen sympathetically and with the real Interest to the details of another girl's wardrobe and the list of her admirers has the germ of universal popularity, already developed. It may seem a trivial and tiresome matter and she may feel conscious all the time that she has far more interesting things to tell, but, whether or not she realizes it, she Is laying the foundation stone of friendship. Hearts, after all, are very much alike, and each one has the craving for sympathy securely planted in its depth. But nothing Irritates one more and turns one from another's personality o quickly as the simulated and Insincere interest which, eventually, is always detected. The girl "who says with deep emotion and with the soft pedal stop .of apparent sympathy turned on, "My dear, how dreadful!" to the confidences of a sickening heart, and then hastens to break in with some frivolous fact about her
self or her social engagements, Is not apt to win much affection, and certainly net any lasting love.
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r The heart of value is quality and you get it when you buy our shoes. If you want the maximum of value at the minimum of
J price visit us.
Special Notice. This store will remain open every evening: until 8 o'clock during ihz entire yean RYAN'S CASH SHOE STORE.
Little Willis Acaln.
"Pa!" came little Willie's xrlca from the darkness of the nursery. Pa gave a bad imitation of a snore. He was tired and did not wish to bo disturbed. "Pa!" came the little voice again. "What is it, Willie?" replied Ms father, sleepily. "Tum in here; I -want to ast you sumpinM said the little voice. So pa rose up from his downy and; putting on his bath-robe and slippers, marched into the nursery. "Well, what 13 it now?" he asked. V'Say, pa," said little Willie, "if you was to feed the cow on soap would ehe give shaving-cream?" Harper's Weekly.
Mental Fag. "My brightest pupils," says a your.T tutor, "have occasional weeks cf blankness which resist my most ?u!tle methods, and I have come to' the conclusion that they are suffering at such times from a form of mental indigestion. They have been taught enough and need rest before their minds will receive and stow away any more facts. A couple of days works wonders, and even one day it some times enough. But It is hard to make the mothers understand the import ance of these holidays, and some of them begrudge the loss of even a few lessons."
ffiave You a Worn Out Wash Boiler?
'life
OFFER
For the next thirty days we will pay $1 FOR YOUR OLD COPPER BOILER or 50 CENTS FOR YOUR OLD TIN BOILER. regardless of condition towards the purchase of the Famous $,3.75 Savage EXTRA HEAVY COPPER WASH BOILER. "The Boiler That Wears a Lifetime"
H. E. BUCK'S HARDWARE
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THREE MARYS AT THE TOMB
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F. Wo Boswortli Co,
EASTER W
Finds a good showing in our wearing apparel stocks and including the necessary items to complete the Easter toilet v Women's Waists for Easter FANCY SILK WAISTS FANCY WHITE WAISTS
all in a range of prices from $1 to $5
EASTER GLOVES in all lengths and favored shades. SILK GLOVES in reliable qualities at 50c, etc. - KID GLOVES for $1, $1.50 and $2 00 New line of Easter Neckwear for 25c and 50c
BY L. N. RANDOLPH
When Easter, dawning first to light our earth. Reveals in life a new and wondrous worth, When wondering voices criedi Our Lord is risen. Immortal love now free from Death's drear prison. All nature on that radiant Easter morn Sang as of old when morning stars were born, And angel visions through the brightening year Proclaimed The Lord is risen; Ho is not here. Sacred, because the place where Christ had slept. The tomb where Faith had watched and longed and wept Blest then all earthly paths His feet had trod. Glorious for aye the highways of our Cod. And every Easter morn since that glad hour Nature repeats how broKen was Death's power, And tells how glorious dawn o'ercame the night. And shows the only Way to heavenly light Throughout the world, all in the 'waKening year. Recalling scenes we Know Christ loved when here, Mahes such familiar scenes with meaning fraught They breathe again tho truths the Saviour taught. For when the world's anew with. verdure fair. And wafted fragrance lingers in the air, ' Who has not thought Christ Knew the freshening field' To him its lilies fair their incense yield, And since he marKed them in their splendor clad. Their royal beauty has made centuries glad. When wayside trees spread shelters fsir and green. We say He passed through many a voodland scene, Oft were His sacred words impressivo made Resting far-wanderers 'neath sorr.e grateful shade. When fields of waving wheat, in whispers low. Foretell the harvest later golden glow, Seed-time and harvest both, the voices say. Yielded their wisdom in the Master's day. From rugged mountain and the blacK hill-side, Where straying lamb3 have wandered far and wide, Tho Shepherd's sheltering arms have borne them found?, v.Those barren heights are they not holy ground? Life-giving sunshine and all-quicKening rain, Forever mailing heaven's bounty plain. In blessed truths Christ gently spaKe of you. , We learned our Father's love, unvarying, true. And when tho winds come sweeping from tho sea. Their rushing filled with Life's great mystery. Hearing the sound thereof oh! passing strange, It tells from Death to Life the wondrous change. Through wave and tempest oh! how dear the voice, Storm-swopt-despahlng? Still have faith, rejoice, Oxic more Ho bids the angry warring cease. In accents mild now whispering calm and peaco. Bright standards of the spring again unfurled. And Easter girds with glorious light the world. The radiance falls on paths that Christ once trod. And lifts our hearts "from Natur up to God.""
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Seasons Joy
Helen Bruce Wallace
W M Mm
HERE is an instinctive sense of disappoint1 ment when it rains on Easter. We feel tbat the sun should shine and all nature be at her best and brightest on this day. that is typical both of .spiritual and physical reawakening.
As. far as we can we Toice this Joyousness in the flowers that are saen everywhere. There is a coldness in the church service that Is not brijhtened by at least a lily or two todayj it seems to poorly express the spiritof the Eastertide. - -It is good for us to have one day In the year that is, all Joy. It is no time for yielding to gloom or depression. Life has bo" much of shadow that the road would be darkened did we never come out into the full sunshine. We want life , and light and color around us; therefore we put the blossoms of spring in our windows and wear them as we go to. and fro. Other festal days have their temporal distraction. Easter makes its strongest appeal to the soul side of us. Coming as it does on the first day of the week, when the busy world is resting, there is time to think of the, higher side of life, to ponder on the deeper meaning, of things that be. What means this joyousness of the season that is felt by all, if unexpressed? Is ii.nnt reviving hoce: a. hope
to brighten the dreaneat, most dispirited man or woman? Did not man believe In & hereafter, futur when wroags will be righted and sorrows turn to joy, the world would have stopped trying long ago. Kven with all our faith that deaden In question. "What'i the use?" lurks in wait for us at every obstacle in the road. Did we not believe in what lies on the other side, though unseen, we would turn back like Pliable from our miry Slough of Despond. Take away temporal hope from a man, from a nation what follows? FOr the man discouragement, inertia, despair, then uselessness; for the nation disintegration. How much farther reaching in its' effects for ill is a hopelessness that this rough earthly path leads to eternal life. Axe we discouraged today? Have the worries of tbe mcney-troubled winter hit us hard? Have we trials that none but ourselves may know, the more bitter that they must be hidden? Are we bowed under a weight of illness, oi morbid dread of the future, that will not lif tT Let the joyous mebsage of the Eastertide brlüg healing. Hope is lying voiced on every side today, in the swelhug notes of the organ, in the soaring voices of choir and chorister, in the inspiring message that is proclaimed from every Christian pulpit in the land.. It but remains for us to reach not for that hope and make It our own, to loosen the sordid, depressing etrth, cords that have, us tightly bound. The joyousness of Easter. Alas, for the woman who cannot feel it; who is not lifted out of herself today. . What though the old gloom returns? Is it not something to have stood on the heights and sung aloud with the Joy of living; to have seen the sun piercing the clouds, to have caught a glimpse of the radiance beyond? Never again will the blackness be so dense, for is there not the hope of that joyous day when the sunlit heights will be ours, to inspire us to
NEW
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Fo
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aster Wear
Mixtures
Of Serges Cheviots and
made up iri navy, black and tan serges, in a range of prices from $10 to $22.50. Easter coats for children, very pretty styles from $2.00 to $5.00. Muslin underwear for Easter wear. A splendid stock to show you made up from soft finished muslin, cambrics and long cloths, and priced in a range of prices to suit every customer.
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Let us not be ccctent to keep the season's joy in our hearts. Real joyousness must find an outlet, in cheery greeting, in forgctfalness of old grudges, in taking brightness into the lives of those who may be shut out from it. Wear your Faster flower, typical of hope, be heaitened by the Easter message, but share both flower and message with those w hose need of cheer may be' greater far than yours. EXPERIMENTS WITH SOUND
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Blowing Out Candle With Tuning Fork and Resonator Sand Figures on Metal Plates.
Reporting a physics lectur by Prof. Eylvanlus P. Thompson, the London Chronic! says: "The youngsters who attended were shown how a candle could be blown out by sound. In the first place, you want a Ttry powerful tuning fork and a resonator (a hollow sphere of brass), which Is exactly In harmony with 1L When the tuning fork Is struck It sets up wares of Bound. The resonator, hearing the note, Immediately responds with sympathetic wares, which are strong enough to blow out a candle placed behind It. Other experiments were the forming of what art known, as
Chladnl sand figures on plates of
metal by the Influence of sound. The most beautiful results, as Professor Thompson explained, are obtained with flat plates of bra? 3 of uniform thickness and of a low note. When a bow Is drawn along the edge so as to set up vibrations In one part, there Is discord with the, rlbratlons of the other parts, and the sound immediatelr assumes reometrlcal flcures. The
j greater the discord the better the patr
terns. Hundreds of- patterns can be produced In this way on one plate. Many demonstrations were made to show how, when things are tuned to the same note, they yibrated In sympathy. A big tuning fork was struck and then stopped but another tuning fork, which was of exactly the same pitch, went on humming, though, it had act been touched." A
VALUE OF A STRONG MEMORY
Seme Who Possess It Are Not Otherwise Above the Ordinary Chll'dren Learn Readily. While a strong memory Is a great conrenience, it is not necessarily an adrantage. Cardinal Mezzofantl, whose memory for words "was so retentire that he nerer forgot one after hearing it once,
and which enabled him to acquire more than a hundred languages, was In most respects a very ordinary person. Pliny relates that Mithrldates, king of Pontus. had so excellent a memory, that he -was able to speak fluently 22 languages natlre to the prorinces of his rast empire. Yet he was a cruel barbarian. A well-known peripatetic elocutionist and reciter still lirlng declares that he can repeat, without further preparation, about 3,000 selections in prose and poetry. He probably tells the truth, since he has been training" his mind in this particular direction for many years. On the other hand, such men Sir Walter Scott Macaular, and Glad-
I am the tinted Easter egg, at whose bespangled shell you peg 'hh careful stroke of knife or spoon, regarding me as quite a boon. And as. I feel your lusty stroke I chuckle gayly at the joke, for you I know are in the mesh of placards worded "Strictly Fresh." You trust the crafty grocer man who sells his eggs just as he can and nerer is the least afraid to claim that they are "Newly Laid." The grocer man, he puts his trust In men who are not wholly just, for they sell eggs the ' whole year round and often in deceit are found, because they keep the eggs on ice until there is a raise in price. Howerer, I would adrise that you should turn your happy eyes upon the tintings of my shell tbe hues are laid on so ' well; the dretmy pinks and reds snd blues with which tbe dye my form embues; or possibly I may present designs that for true art are meant a landscape or an ocean scene wherein there are faint hints of green, or maybe, limned with dainty grace there is a most bewitching face that smiles into your joyous eyes which shows the sparkle of surprise. Do as you please, kut it is best to act, perhaps; as I suggest. Put down your knife with which you aim to crush my most aristic frame, and simply feast your inner man upon the pictures that you scan. For all you see and all you know; for all my cunning pictures show I may be of the orsrflow of Eastertime a year ago. Old masters may hare painted me in some fergotien century and left me in some cherished hoard some warehouse where fresh eggs are stored and it might fill you with regret if you should heed me not and let your appetite for works of art gain headway o'er your mind and heart. .0, listen, listen, let me beg I am a simple Easter egg, bedaubed with paint and drowned in dyes, but let me beg of you: Be wise I How often do we weep to see things not what they're cracked up to bet Remember, I have made no claims I leare the dealers all such games; I may bs but a cheat and sham, but I am only what I am. Think orer what i say thiak twice; all men may profit by advice. If you should crack me to your woe, remember that I told you so. Now ail mr little speech is dene. Strike! Strike, but first prepare to run!
stone were not onTy possessors oi excellent memories, they were also men f good judgment. Among human beings children hare the most remarkable memories. Under favorable circumstances they will learn three and eren four languages, so as to be able to- express their thoughts with equal ease in any one f them by the time they are six or seren years of age. And they accomplish this remarkable feat without any aid from the mnemonic derices to which adults are compelled to resort when they undertake a similar task. They learn words and phrases unconsciously, and rarely forget them as long as they lire. On the other hand, grown-ups rarely acquire accurate pronunciation of a foreign language, although they may be able to use It with entire correctness. It is a common belief that the memory Is more tenacious in early life than in later years. That 6eems in depend almost entirely on the , lndl rldual. This Commercial Age. "Are you acquainted with him at all?" "Only in a business way. 1 mar lied hü daughter." Spokcszasa'R flew.
GIVING BELLS- THEIR TONE
All of Them Must Go Through a Process of Tuning, Like Any Musical Instrument. "What a beautiful tone that bell has!" is often heard. There are few however, who know how a bell receives its joyful or solemn tones. All bells after they are cast and finished must go through a process of tuning the same as any other musical Instrument before they respond with a clear, true tone. Erery bell sounds five notes, which must blend together in order to prodkic perfect harmony. The tuning of I a bell is done' by means of sharing thin bits from rarlous parts 0f the metal. It is as easy for an expert bell-tuner to put a bell In tune as' it is for a planotuner to adjust his Instrument to perfect chords. At first thought It would seem thai & bell would be ruined should the 'tuner shave off too much at the last tuning, or the fifth sound, but such is not the case. He would, howerer, be obliged to begin afresh, starting with the first one and and shaving the bell until it gare forth Its harmonious sound at the fifth tone.
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