Weekly Republican, Volume 57, Number 36, Plymouth, Marshall County, 7 September 1911 — Page 7

rrr R' 4 i ji m mm i m I t)r.r DAVID JAYiJE HILL LATE ROHlBITiON W LAST WE Arr.tsszzdor to Germrny Expfsir.s His Rcsigrjiticn. 5

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-It! Ag'etable Prcparalioafof Assimilating thcFoodandBcguIating the Stomachr-andBofss-cls of -1 Promotes Digestion.CheerfurnessartdRestConlains neither Opiumforphinc nor rfincraL ot "Narcotic. norm Aperfecl Remedv forConslipaRon , Sour Stoniach. Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Fcverishness and Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of xew YORK. - EXACT COPY OF WRAEEDV GRAIN OF OVER FIVE BULLION DOLLARS MADE IN 1910 ACCORDING TO GOVERNMENT REPORT 18A815SHORTTONS Greatest Production Per Miner m on Record Fifty. Per Cent Was Mined by Machines Indiana's production of coal in 1910 was 18,3S9,813 short tons, valued at Jfr20.313,659, a gainof 3,555.556 tons and .$3,658,978 over the figures for 19G9, according to E. "Y, Parker, if ' the United States Geological Survey. While some of the coal miners of Indiana suspended work in UKJO, in sympathy with the strike, in Illinois, and in the Southwestern Stales, the idleness in Indiana was not senexal nor was is by any means so prolonged as in the other States affected. Of the total number of men employed in the coal mines of Indiana only about 60 per cent quit work on the strike call and these remained idle for an average of but 34 days, whereas in the other-fields the idleness extended from April I to September 15 and the effeets lasted for fully six months. Indiana operators and miners; as a whole therefore benefited from the strike, as is shown by an increase in production from 1909 of 24 per cent. Moreover, on account of the, ' fuel shortage occasioned by the strike, the prices for Indiana coal advanced, the average in 1910 being $1.13 per short ton, against $1.02 in 1909, and the total value of the coal produced in creased 37.34 per cent. Greatest Production per Miner Record on Of the total production in 1910, 8,986,495 tons, nearly 50 per cent .was mined by machines, of which tnere were imj in use. j.ne coai mines gave employment to 21,878 men, who, notwithstanding the aver of 34 d3ys lost by 12,638 me sa strike, made an1 average of 220 irking days each. This was 32 'days better in working time than in the boom year, 1907, and is the best record made in the history of Indiana co&l mining: The average, production per, man was also a record breaker, the the aTer.age for 1910 being 841 ton? to e'ach employe for the year and 3.67 1 tons for each working day.

COAL OUTPUT , OF INDIANA , flilOEASE V

For Infants and Children, Tho ffmrl Vnn Uqiia

A I 1 t T J.T. Bears tue . Signature W For Over Thirty Years Ö) Tms etmM (oaMnr. wn tom errr. M. E. S. S. AT PRETTY LAKE Primary and Intermediate Departments Enjoy Boa,t Hiding, Bathing and Various Games Thursday. About 173 people, members of the Primary and Intermediate Departments cf the M. E. Sunday school, spent a most enjoyable day at Fretty Lake Thursday, The center of attraction seemed to be the lake. All of the children went in bathing or wading and everyone had at least one good boat ride. The Harry llumi iciiouser cottage was used as a general gathering place. The children and their teachers were treated to ice cream and cake by the school and a big picnic dinner was; also served. The entile primary department were present and the classes of the Misses Minnie Swindell and (Jrace Koyce of the intermediate section also attended. Two busses were used to carry the people out to the " lake and back again as well as the Humrichouser automobile. Taken all in all. it was a most pleasing picnic and greatly enjoyed bv everyone. TO READ COIN INSCRIPTIONS. Numismatist Shows Test That Sel dom Fails to Reveal Dates On Worn Coins. Lying on the table in front of a numismatist was an old copper coin. It had experienced hard usage. "Can.vou read the date and the inscription?4' inquired the collector. The visitor inspected the specimen but, although he had the aid of a magnifying glass, he confessed that the words and figures were illegible. "Let me assist you," the collector remarked. (Joing to the kitchen range he thrust an ordinary coal shovel in to tthe fire and permitted it;i'o re main there until red hot. W ithdraw ing it, he dropped the coin on the utensil, and it speedily became as red hot as the shovel itself. Immediately the date 1794, shone brightly in glowing figures on the observe side of the coin, and similar treatment revealed the words United States of America one cent on the reverse. This test, according to the numismatist, seldom fails with any coin, even when the inscriptions have beetf worn so perfectly smooth that they are invisible to the naked eye. i Ideals (or ths Hocsamfe 4 The'American School of Home Economics suggests the following aims which might well be kept in mind by the mother of the family: "The ideal home life for today unhampered by the traditions of the past. "The freedom of the home" from of modern science to improve the home life. l , "The freedom of the home from the dominance of things and their due subordination ( to ideals. "The simnlicitv in material surM. V roundings which will most free the spirit for the more important and permanent interests of the home and of society." , 'SnrcaoQ quiotj oqx V sasioq otrg jo sassup snotxeA 9irj o j pa -pjrfcAiBsq o; sszud qss; in oo00$

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Maine Ant's Think They. May Win the Day.

ElfCTIOII C3MES SEPT. II Temperance Organizations, Churches and Granges Have Ccne United Werk fcr Law Vetera Talk ore Freely. Portlsnd, Me., Sept. 4. As election day, which ccmos cn the eleventh day of this month, draws nearer, the possibility grows stronper that Maine may repudiate prohibition. Two months ago hardly a rcrson at all familiar with public sentiment in the .ate believed Jhat there was more than a c;host of a chance that the prohibitory amendment would be annulled when the people came to vote upon it The temperance organizations, the churches and the granges, all of which are united for the law, got in their work so eailv and with such vigor that they seemed for a time to have j driven completely to cover whatever I anti-prohibition sentiment there m?y 1 have been and the only question asked was by what majority would the amendment be retained. The only thing that caused any uncertainty whatever was the streng disposition manifest on the part ofrthe average voter to keep to himself whatever his sentiments may have Leen. But within a few weeks all this has chaired. Voters arc talking more freely, and with this looseninjr up on their part, there came at first hope, then courage, and now what seems to be absolute confidence on the part of those who have been conducting the campaign against the amendment. With this increasing confidence of the antis. which seems to be sincere, there Is no mistaking the fact that the other side has become correspondingly depressed. CAREER ORR, Q. MILLS L. Famous Texas Statesman Is Dead at Corsicana. Served in Each House cf Congress and Was Author cf Mills Tariff Bill. Corsicana, t Tex , Sept. 4. Former United States Senator Roper Q. 1 ills of Texa?, who died at his home here Saturday, ; after many terms in the lower lious, servrd-in the senate from 1SS2 to 1S00. Then he retired from politics and became interested in the oij nusiness, In which he made a large fortune. Mr. Mills congressional career began in 1S72 as representative nt large from Texas. This was followed by four terms as congressman from the former Fourth district of Texas. Poqer Q. Mills was born in Todd county. Kentucky, and his father was a Virginian. ' He moved to Texas at seventeen, studied law at Palestine, and was admitted to the bar when he was twenty years of age. When the Civil War started he entered the service of the Confederate army as Ite'itenant colonel of the Tenth Texas Infantry, later succeeding to command of that regiment. He was captured in January, 1S63, and for several, months was a prisoner of war at Colombus, O. After his exchange he commanded regiments under Generals Bragg. Johnston and Hood Mr. Mills was appointed chairman of the ways and means committee of the house and in the winter of 1584 he reported to the house the tariff bill which bore his name. Although the Democrats were in the majority the bill failed to pa&s because of the opposition of a few Democrats from New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio. MICHIGAN AERONAUT DROWNS Drops with Parachute into Shallow Artificial Lake. Charlotte, N...C, Sept 4. After making a balloon ascension at Lakewood Park, a pleasure resort here, and making a fireworks display from the car, H. C. Brown, a daring young aeronaut of Michigan, fell with his parachute into a f hallow artificial lake and was drowned before assistance could be given him. Brown, whose home was In Saginaw, Mich., had been giving balloon ascensions here for several weeks. , President Returns to Beverly. , Islsbor6 Me.', Sept 4ir-The president and Mrs. Taft and their quests on the Mayflower returned to Beverly Sunday. Horace Tuft caught an early train for New York Monday. The president has enjoyed. his two days' "house boat" party immensely. Veteran Refere Is Dtad. Denver, Col., Sept 4. Malachy Hogan, referee of over three thousand prise fights, and probably one of the fsatest authorities on pugilism Arner tea 'has ever known, died at his residence, 3957 Grant street, a victim cf tuberculosis. ."." As usually treated, a sprainecT ' ankle will disable a man for l;hree lor four weeks, but by applying Chamberlain's Liniment freely as soon as the injury, is received, and observing the -directions with" each bottle, a cure can be effected in from two to four days. For sale by Dealers. , -

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THIRTY - ONE PERSONS HURT Stesm Treln Crashes into Electric Cir Discharging Passengers. "Xew York, Sept. 4. Thirty-one persons were injured, none cf them fatally, when a steam train from Lcng Island City smashed into the rear cf a Flattvsh avenue electric train that was discharging passengers at Holland station, five blocks from Hammels, Long Island. The engineer of the steam train said after the smash that his irbrakes failed to work. VIADUCT IS WRECKED Bomb Exploded Under N'ew Steel Structure of Railway. New York, Sept. 4. Mount Verr.on was startled at 9 p. m. ly an explosion caused by a bomb placed under the new steel virduct of the NewYork, Westchi ster and Bcston railrod. This viaduct is being" constructed by non-union labor. The force of the explosion blew out four pillars near which it occurred and weakened the bridge for 200 feet cn either side. Kilted In Battle with Negroes. Put ant, Ck!a Sept. 4. Horace Crib bles, a white farmer, was killed in a battle between five white men and five negroes near Caddo. Arkansas Coy Escapes Noose. Little Rock, Ark., Sept. 4 Karl Gilchrist, fifteen years old, sentenced to be hanged Sept. S for the murder of another nere, will rot be executed. I SPORT ON THE DIAMOND NATIONAL LEAGUE. W. U ret. W. L. Pet N. Y. Chi. . Pitts. Phil. 75 44 .630 St. L. .63 57 , .C9 45 .C05 Cin. ..55 63 ..72 52 .581 Brook 47 71 .525 .466 39$ .64 55 .538 Bos. ..32 90 .262 At Cincinnati It. IL E. Pittsburg 00000000 11 5 0 Cincinnati ....0 0 03 00 0 Ox 3 13 2 Adams and Gibson; Fromme and McLean.' At Chicago R. H. E. St. Louis 020 000 0 10 S 8 1 Chicaco 000 00 00 2 02 5 1 Steele and Bliss; Cole, Smith, Needham and Archer. Seccnd game R. U.E. St. Louis .OIOIOOOCO 2 8 1 Chicago 10010 200s 4 9 3 Laudermilk and Bliss; Richie and Needham. AMERICAN LEAGUE. W. I Pet. W L. Pet Phil. ..70 43 :.C48 Cleve 64 60 .516 Det. ...75 49 .605 Chi. ..61 63 .492 N. Y. ..64 CO .516 Wash 52 72 .419 Bos. ...63 60 .512 St L. 36 86 .296 At Chicago " R. IL E. Cleveland 0 00 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 5 7 16 1 Chicago ..0 00200000 00 02 9 0 Mitthell, Blanding and Easterly; Fisher, Walsh, Scott and Sullivan. Second game R. H. E. Cleveland ... .0002001 00 3 8 0 Chicago 10 00 000 0 01 71 Kaler and Easterly; Benz, Baker, Block and Sullivan. At St Louis R. U.E. J)etrolt ......104000000 8 13 0 St Louis 0 0 012 0 0003 7 1 Willett Summers and Stanage. Mitchell, Moser and Krichell. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. ' V. L. Pet W. L. Pet Mlniu .79 58 .576 St P. 6& 71 .478 CoL ...77 61 .558 Mil. ..64 72 K. C ..72 63 '.533 T'ldo 62 75 Ind. ...66 70 .485 Louis. 61 76 .471 .452 .445 At Columbus Columbus, 16: Indianapolis, 2. At Toledo Toledo, 0; Louisville, 3. At Minneapolis Minneapolis, 6; St Paul, 2. , At Kansas City Kansas City Cj tlilwaukee, 2. Digestion and Assimilation. It is not the quantity of food taken but the amount digested and, assimilated that gives strength , and vitality to the' system. Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets invigorate the stomach and liver and enable them to perform their functions naturally. For sale by All Dealers.

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Frosecutor Thinks Jury Will v Have It Friday Night.

DEFE8ÖAST NERVES FOR TEST Goes on Stand in Trial for Wife Mur'der Today Prosecution Not Decided About Calling Beulah Binford. Chesterfield Court House, Va., Sept. 4. Strengthening himself and being strengthened against the supreme test when he is to take the stand to plead for his life, Henry Clay Beattie, Jr., spent rr.r.cy hours consulting with one of his two lawyers. Lewis Wendenburg, commonwealth's prosecutor, indulged In prophecy as to the length cf time still remaining befoie the juiy will get the case for its ultimate decision. He said he thought the defer.se might keep Henry on 4he stand for four hours in direct examination. He did net know how long te wcu!0 be In cross-examination, but he believed that he would not finish with the prisoner before Tuesday morning. Tlxn, the dcfei.s:e having rested its case, witnesses for rebuttal will be put on by the commonwealth and Wednesday night this phase of the trial will be completed, Wendenburg thinks. Thursday will be taken up by .arguments of counsel upon the instructions of the court, according to Virginia practice. Friday will- he occupied by the gumming up on earn side, so Wendenburg thinks, and (he case will go to the jury Friday night. There is little liklihood that the jury will get the case before Friday nicht T.üd it is possihle " that the twelve men will not retire to the little closet in the eld court house called hy courtesy a jrryroom before Saturday. YVendenburg would not say whether or not he will call Beulah Binford to the stand in rebuttal. He admitted that there was a strong possibility that ho would decide to put the girl before the jury after Henry Beattie steps from the stand. . Everything would depend cn what the prisoner himself, states when he is his own witness. There is no mistaking the fact that the prosecution is rot at a?l satisfied what the girl's position would be cn the stand. Henry Beattie must testify without having the benefit of , knowing how greatly or htw little BeuJah Binford might harm him by her i testimenv. He cannct know which of his statements she will be calied upon to refute. He does know that from the mouth cf Eeulah Binford the prosecution has drawn much of the material they have launched against him. J CHICAGO CHAUFFEUR SLAIN Body Found in River at Cary, tu., After Four Days. Chicago, Sept. 4. Fred Wennerstrom, a Chicago automobile owner and chauffeur, was mysteriously murdered and his body weighted and thrown into Fox river at Cary,i 111., last Wednesday night. The body was discovered beneath the Chicago and Northwestern railroad bridge. The v murder is parallel with the puzzling crime committed in 1904, when William Bate, a chauffeur, was ehot in the machine. The mystery never was solved. OMAHA VOTES FOR NEW RULE Adopts Commission Form of Government for the City. Omaha, Neb., Set. t 4. At a special election Omaha adopted the commission form of government by a vote of 5,341 to 2,345. Those opposing theq plan point out that less than one-third of the registered voters of the city cast their ballots. New city officials will be elected under the commission plan in May, 1912. DIGEST OF SUNDAY'S NEWS Three aviators killed; two in Europe, on in America. s Anne Warner French deserted America in search for quiet. Senator Cnllom will kec-i out of governorship fight in Illinois. All northern France Is joined in fight against high cost of living. Roger Q. Mills. of Texas, author of tariff reform hill in 1888, Is dead. Pino Suarez was nominated by progressives for vice president of Mexico. New hope seen for peaceful settlement of labor controversy on the Harriman lines. Seven Toledo residents drowned when steamer sank launch at mouth of Maumee river. Kaiser accepted statue of Von Steuben, which was presented to Germany by United States. ' . Chicago postofllo cade a record by handling 822 tons of mail in one day, exclusive of first-class matter. iToaecuUon planned dramatic con. frontation of Beulah Binford and de fecdant In Beattie murder trial. -. Cardinal Ds Lai, leader of the youni Wtnent in the sacred college, is men Üsne4 a possible tuexssar to' Po3 na X. .- 7 Child Drlnkt Kerosene. Huntington, Ind., Sept 4. The child of Levi Ulrich, near here, is In a critical condition from drinking .a' half cup of coal oil, which It mistook for water. ' Express Office Robbed. Goshen, Ind., Sept. 4. The American express office at Millersburg was robbed. " Two dollars in money and considerable merchandise was taken.

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Aftcr visiting the Eastern Markets also those in Chicago, I am prepared to show anything from practical Street Hats to those for Dress occasions at right prices. Miss Gilfert, who was with us last season is here to assist me in pleasing the public

ALSO HAIR GOODS Dessa T. IVflyeirs 401 North Michigan Street. Plymouth. Indiana

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PLYMOUTH. INDIANA

PLAN A LIQUOR CAMPAIGN Women to Raise Fund to Aid Enforci ment cf Law. Fort Way no, Ind., Aug. SO. Adopting the slogan, "We get them in the end." meaning . by "them" the lawbreaking saloons, the local branch of. the W. C. T. U. has begun the eain1'aign to raise from S3.000 to $10,000 to fight liquor law violators. The campaign includes a letter to thousands of men' and women in order to bring out their views' on law enforcement, and in order that the movement piay bring results the letter promises that the answer may be by number and that the identity of the writer will be known only to cne woman, Mrs. G. M. Thieboldt. and her attorney. The letter breathes the spirit 1 ÄJT-'SÄ,1 keepers as observe the liquor laws t will be resrected. The liquor . men are palpably surprised and disturbed by the movement SHOCKED BY 2.2C0 VOLTS i " Indiana Lineman's Body Struck y Powerful Charge cf Electricity. Terre Haute. Ind., Aug. 30. Frederick Oyerpeck, a linemaif for the Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Eastern Traction company, hung for ten minutes from a pole with 2,200 volts cf electricity going through his body and lived. Overpeck was repairing high tension wires, when he .cam: in contact with a live wire. He fell, but his safety belt suspended him In the air with the wire touching him. Overpeck grasped the wire, but was unable to let go and one finger was burned off before the power was shut off and he was let down. ROAD ROBBER LETS VICTIM GO Declares After Hotdup He Was Not Man Sought. Huntington, Ind., Äug. 30. When Gus Kahn of North Manchester passed Silvertcn Hill, four miles west of Huntington, a masked man stepped out and leveled a revolver, causing the autoist to stop. He then said that he had been looking fcr George Bechtold and allowed the man to depart, feechtold himself passed the spot, a short time later, but was not stopped, and Is at a loss to (inderstand why any one had been waiting for him. GARY NEGRO RUNS AMUCK Slashes One Man and Threatens Several Others Before Being Captured. Gary, Ind.; Aug. 30. Riley Bresloff, a negro, ran amuck in South Washington street. He stabbed S. L. B. Wiggins several times about the face and body, but threatened the life of several other people. The crazed man pursued the Rev. A. BelidgrowBki, head of the Gary Presbyterian foreign mission, for more than a block. When taken by the police Bresloff had a bloody, razor and a large butcher knife in his pos session. t Favors Appeal to Stomach. Columbus, Ind., Aug. 30. In an address delivered before the Household Economics Club Mrs. Margaret M. Ro mine of Mooregvlile, said that the temperance problem could be more easily solved by appealing to a man's stomach rather than to his brain. She also said that poor nourishment is the cause of-the. poor morals and that so long as there, are poor cooks just so long will there be" saloons. s " ,Mlnd Presence Saves Life. Hartford City, IncV, Aug. 30. Carl Bed .vell, a local "steeple Jack," missed death by a hairbreath when,' while working at the top of a sixty-foot smokestack at the Johnson factory, the rope to which : he was clinging parted. Bedwll caught the dangling end and by shutting his fist on it and putting his arm in a hook, was able to hold on until lowered by other workmen. .

SAF3 DEPOSIT VAULTS

are proof against the fingers of the' robber or the flames of fire. We are custodians of the cash and the valuable securities of the most prominent people in the vicinity jTnd we have a sterling reputation for relia- i bility and integrity. The manage-j ment of this Bank is equal to any J in town in solid, sensible, conserva- ; tive business methods. I OS H ABSENTEE "BUYS NEW SUIT Runaway Boy Sends Word to Perents cf Prosperity. Marion, Ind., Sort. 2. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ham, well-known residents of this city, have succeeded In locating their !on. Kenneth Ham. fourteen years old, who was reported mysteriously missing to the rclice cn Aug. 13. The young man went from Marion di-i rectly to St. Joseph, Mich., where he : obtained a position on a fruit boat. A Marien resident met the lad and the youngster sent word to his parents j that he was coins well and had j "bought a new suit" When vcn:; j Ham left Marion ho were no reat and ; took no extra clcthcs with him. ROBBER TAKES WEDDING SUIT j I wears it wnne i rying to sen titner Stolen Gcods. Columbus. Ind., Sei t. 2.-'-The home of John Phillips, a farmer of Harrison township, was entered and robbed in the absence of -the family. Amcng the articles taken was a wedding suit belonging to Theodore Phillips, a son, who was to be married in the suit the next night. After the robbery the burglar was ' seen weari3 the wedding suit, and he was trying to sell some silverware which he had stolen from the Phillips home. He escaped. FOUND IN ARMY BARRACKS Laketon Man Who Deserted Bride Is Finally Located. Wabash, Ind., Sept. 2. Arley Henry of Laketon, who mysteriously disappeared fiom Hammond two weeks ago, deserting his bride of a month, was located at Jefferson Barracks. Mo., where he had joined the regular army. Relatives in this city were apprised, of his whereabouts. Henry married one of the most beautiful girls in Hammond, and visited Wabash on his honeymoon. Four weeks later he disappeared. - Painful Dream of Constable. Lawrenceburg, lr,d.. Sept. 2.-Con-Btable V. W. Whittaker thought a prisoner he had been chasing was standing over his bed, about to draw a razor across his throat. To savo himself he kicked hin an awful belt In the stomach, and broke two small bones in his foot. It was the foot board of the bed .he struck. . Then he ' woke up. Shot In Satoon Affray. Jeffersonville, Ind., Sept 2. In a saloon brawl David Dolan shot Newton Tomlin, who died two hours afterward. Dolan mas' employed as bartender. He had ordered Tomlin to leave the place, but the latter refused to go. Dolan says Tomlin attempted to assault him and he flrcd In seit defense. . Enjoy Dinner an Campfire Princeton, Ind Sept 2. Veteran of Company H, Seventeenth Indiana Regiment, held a reunion here, the features of whlh were a big dinner and campfire. Members of the company from various parts of the state were present and participated 'in the exercises. A f - ' . Farmer Shot by Comradev Brazil,' Ind., Sept 2. Henry C. Cullen, forty-six , years old, a prominent and wealthy firmer residing near Bowiing Green, this county, was shot and ; seriously Injured white squirrel hunting. Thomas Coats, with whom., Cullen was hunting, mistook Cullen'a head for a sqalrrel. s , - : ..CASTOR OA, - Fcr Infiats and Children. p Ki:3 Yea Cm Ab:;s C::;U Bears ths m r

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