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n p T T Record, JIL jljbl ,ers Office ■1ay06 ,VEH C IT IZ E N LAKE M'AXIXKUQKEE. VOL. IV. CULVER, INDIANA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1906. NO. 29 A BUS UPSET IN A DITCH CHURCH NEWS. Crowd of Chicago Football Boys Encounter a Serious Cli- max to Day’s Sport ONE OF THE VICTIMS SUSTAINS A BROKEN LEG Items Pertaining to the Work of the j Local Organizations. The Rev. Dr. L). A. Senders will: preach in Grace Reformed church on Wednesday evening, Nov. II, at 7:30. Dr. Souder is a district superintendent in the Reformed church. He dedicated the church for the Hungarians in South Bend Sunday enoning. The doctor will speak at Zion Thursday evening. At a recent township Sunday ; school convention at Kewanna Xccident the Result of Darkness Rev. Mr. Klopfenstein made an ad- CULVER ACADEMY Latest News and Gossip of the Big School ;Fine Musical Entertainment Sched- uled for Next Week. | The people of Culver will have ] the pleasure of hearing on Friday ! evening, Nov. 23, at the M. E. ! j church, the Acme Entertainment Morgan Park again proved fatal I press within the last month. As'company in a program of music to Culver's hopes for victory, but; the majority of the selections in and impersonations. The company A RARE TREAT. CREMATED IN A WRECK Frightful Loss of Life in a ion on the Baltimore Ohio Railroad Collis- & and the Unfamiliarity of the Driver with Road Tho strenuous day put in at Cul- ver by the Chicago football crowd on Saturday reached a climax at Hibbard when a bus loaded with young fellows upset on the grade two weeks, at the railroad crossing. It was pitch dark and the driver, a Ply- mouth man unfamiliar with the road, gave his team a pull to one side as he crossed the track. The team obeyed the rein and plunged down the narrow four-foot grade, upsetting the bus. The shock was a severe one, and besides the sore 1 places which a number of the boys discovered after extricating them- selves from the wreck, one of their i dress on the subject “ Sunday School Teachers’ Wages.” The address was received with many comments of appreciation. The Christian church people ex- pect to engage in a revival in about Preaching at the M. E. church Sunday morning and evening. kicked goal and a tied score soon resulted. There was a mad riot on the Culver side lines, for it looked I LOCAL ITEMS the close play and low score give this book are new to the boys they encouragement that in another : will be a welcome variation to tbe year the tables will be turned. Our music already in use. opponents came this year backed ; * * « » by fifty rooters who worked as hard : An enthusiastic mass meeting and as long as the teams to save ■ was held in the chapel Friday night the day. When Morgan Park to work up the. proper support for made her first touchdown Culver; the team in Saturday’s game. The hearts sank. Then the soldiers j yells aud songs were vociferously got their second wind and during! rehearsed, and then the faculty the last ten minutes of the first' wore pressed into the speech-mak- half outplayed the visitors. The ing business, pace was kept up in the opening! s ° of the second, and a touchdown, a | As a curtain-raiser to the big game of the afternoon Captain I ly- ney's proteges, the second team. is first-class, with recoinmenda lions from leading Chautauqua as- sociations. and will furnish an evening of refined and popular en- tertainment. The admission is on- ly 25 cents. Should this engage- ment prove a success, indicating that the community desires and will support a high-class enter- tainment, there will be a movement to secure a full course next season FIFTY PERSONS KILLED AND FIFTY-ONE INJURED won a hard played and closely con- as if the bovs were good for at [ tested game from the team repre- § eonoeoeveveoevcvezc-zozceZ |lea9t l"'° “lorB touchdowns. The I seating the high school at Niles, team couldn’t stand prosperity, I — The windows are being placed : in the new school building this week. — Oyster supper by M. E. Ladies’ Aid at S. E. Med bo urn’s 011 Friday Mich. The score was 12—6. number was found to have sus- tained a serious injury to a leg. When the party boarded the 6:35 train for Chicago it was feared that the limb was broken. The top of - Mrs. Julia Garn has fitted the house occupied by C. G. Replogle with new shades throughout. — Homer Mattox, living north of Poplar Grove, lost a good however, and they steadily lost ground most of the time that remained, allowing their line to be twice crossed. The final score was Morgan Park 18, Culver 6 . The ladies of the faculty were entertained last Thursday after- noon by Mrs. A. F. Fleet at her cottage. A literary turn was given to the afternoon by each guest The plan of devoting a series of reading a favorite bit of verse or the bus was smashed, and ono of ulatohed llorse last week from bow_ the horses fell on top of the other, but neither was injured. Obituary. Rudolph Buehler, son of George and Mary Buehler, was born in Seneca county, Ohio, Aug. 28,1853, and died Nov. 3, 1906, at his home in Richland township, Fulton coun- ty. Ind., at the age of 53 years. Mr. Buehler was united iu mar- riage to Mary Plautz in December, 1876. This union was blessed with two daughters, Carrie L. Mattie and Estella. His wife died Jan. 14, 1900. Jan. 27, 1901, he was married to EmmaS. Gray of Roch- ester who survives. He was con- verted in 1877 and united with the Evangelical church at South Ger- many which he always prized as the church of his choice, in which he held oliices and in which it seemed to be his delight to do tho will of his Master. The cause of his death was appendicitis. He w ’as a great sufferer during his ill- ness, neverthelss his hope was an- chored in God. He leaves a living testimony of a glorious future. A sorrowing companion, two daugh- ters, three step-daughters, an aged father, five brothers, three sisters, seven grandchildren and a host of relatives and friends mourn his departure. The church will miss him but our loss will be his eter- nal gain. Funeral services were conducted by Rev. F. B. W aimer at the South Germany church Sunday, Nov. 11. The largo concourse of people at the funeral showed his esteem and his acquaintance among his friends and neighbors. tbe Y. M. C. A. Sunday night meetings to the barracks one by one was tried last year with such success that Mr. Miller, the secre- Mothers’ Department. The superintendent of the Moth- ers’ department of the W. C. T. U. has planned for a series of parlor meetings for the coming year. Each will be held iu a different part of the town and an effort will be made to reach every woman in- terested in the home. The first of the serieB will be held at the home of Mrs. E. E. Parker on Saturday afternoon, Nov. 17, from 2:30 to 4 o’clock. Every lady is cordially invited. Valparaiso University. Valparaiso University is making extensive improvements this year. Its winter term will open Novem- ber 27. The young people of this county are excellent patrons of the university. You will find the best shoe, both style aud wear, at Porter & Co.’s. el trouble. - The Methodist dominie has laid away his lawn mower for the season, and is hunting around for a snow shovel. — T. H. Wilson of Logausport has sold his lake cottage, “Squirrel Inn,” to Mrs. Helms of Peru and Mrs. Hendricks of Indianapolis. — The apple crop of Marshall county for 1906 is reported by the state statistician to be 51,200 bush- els. Last year it was 6,700 bush- els. — Dr. Parker reports the birth to Ulysses Burkett and wife of Cul- ver, Nov. 10, of a daughter, and to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Easterday, Nov. 14, a son. — The 80-acre Lewis Stahl farm, west of town, was bid off by Frank Easterday at administrator's sale, for about $3,000. The sale has yet to be confirmed by the court. — Jacob Hoham, a well known citizen of Plymouth, a dealer in fruit trees, dropped dead at his home on Tuesday. His wife is a regular visitor to Culver in her oc- cupation as an agent for ladies* wearing apparel. The pumpkin crop of Indiana (usually a source of wealth and pride to the Hoosier farmers) is said to be nearly ruined by the freeze of Oct. 10. The farmers find, when gathering the great gold- en globes, that the shells are soft; instead of sounding “punk" like they’d orter. they go “squash.” T j is means dried applo pies this winter. A Ft. Wayne man wTho is very fond of fishing, while enjoying great sport at Lake Wawasee a short time ago, went to the tele- graph office and sent tho following messago to his wife: ‘T v e got one. Weighs seven pounds and is a beauty.” The next day he received the reply, “So have I. Weighs ten pounds. He isn’t a beauty. Looks like you.”— Ex. - Another touch of winter came on Saturday and Sunday nights, bringing about three inches of snow. On Tuesday morning the mercury dropped to 24, the lowest point yet reached. On ihe same morning the Panhandle was com- pelled to send out two snow plows from Logausport to open the track between North Judson and Kouts where 18 inches of snow had fallen and stalled a freight train. Strength is what you want in horse blankets. Buy o-A of Cul - ver Cash Hdw. Co. story. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Culver and son spent several days at the acad . . . , . . emy last week, returning to St. tarv, has again inaugurated such a [ , . « . , . , 0 4 . , . . , Louis Saturday night, series. A special attempt is made to rally all the men from one of the barracks to each meeting. The series was begun Sunday, Nov. 4, when Captain Glascock gave a practical and earnest- plea for “Academy Ideals” before sixty ca- dets from the South barracks. The gray uniforms have nearly all been fitted to the new men and the majority of them have also re- ceived their overcoats. # * # * Captain J. S. Fleet moved this week into his new house on Facul- Last Sunday night the West bar- ty ,.ow wbich has boou buiUUng racks, uioi) were given a talk by {or sevonJ nl0nths Captain Hunt. That •' Doubting” Thomas was no doubter at ail, but a most loyal, affectionate and praiseworthy dis- ciple was the verdict of Rev. C. L. Stewart who preached at theacad- Tnvitations to the Thanksgiving festivities were issued the past week and already preparations are well under way. * * * * Captain Byroade came down emy Sunday morning. After clear- Saturday to sec the Morgan Park ing the character of Thomas from this unfounded charge1, the speaker went 011 to draw from his attitude some lessons of practical disciple- ship. Rev. Stewart is a member of the faculty of Garrett Biblical institute. » * # * The Y. M. C, A. has just been gatne and remained at the academy over Sunday. * * * * Cadet Boyer of Piqua, O., has been on leave several days, called home by the death of his grand- father, * # # * Dress parade was held last week the recipient of an unexpected gift j for Hon. William E. Mason who from Dr. J. Wilbur Chapman. It 'visited his son at the academy, was in the form of ICO copies of, * * * * the new hymnal,“ Winona Hymns,” which has been compiled by Dr. Chapman and has come from the Among the Morgan Park follow- ing were Of. W. Bliss and H. Guire. both ex cadets of Culver. Corn Show. Historic Hotel Closed. The second annual corn show South Bend, Ind., Nov. 9.— The will be held at the Indiana Corn police to day closed one of the Growers' association, January 14- i most historic hotels in the state of 19, in connection with the corn! Indiana, the old Grand Central, school at Purdue university. This now known as the Osborn House. show being held in connection An investigation into the death with the corn school, is of great \ of an infant revealed the fact that Sale of children's, misses’ and ladies' coats at Porter and Co.’s. educational value. At 110 place in the state will there'be brought to- gether more representative samples of corn than at Purdue. Teachers’ Association. The Fourteenth annual session of the Marshall County Teachers 1 association will be held in the Webster school building, Ply- mouth, on Friday and Saturday, November 30 and December 1. Oyster Supper. The Ladies’ Aid society of the M. E. church will give an oyster supper on Friday evening at the residence of S. E. Medbourn com- mencing at 5 o’clock. Friday and Saturday A 25,. 50 or 100 tb. sack of Gold Medal flour at $2.20 per hundred, CASH o n l y . Dillon & Medboarn. 5-A Horse Blankets are known the world over as the best and strongest. Culver Cash Hdw. Co. the big hostelry has been allowed to fall from its high position into a place of vileness and filth. The place is said to be in such an unsanitary condition as to be a breeder of disease. The building is also said to be unsafe. Twenty years ago the hotel gave shelter to all the leading theatrical stars aud commercial men who visited the city. Congressional Pluralities. Brick Shively Fulton ....................... 87 Starke . . . ................. 174 Elkhart ..................... 718 St. Joseph ................. 216 Kosciusko ................. Marsh all. ................... Pulaski ...................... 81 794 113 Total ................... 1195 Brick’s plurality 988 207 If the shoe we sell you does not give satisfaction come back and — Dr. Rea reports a girl born to Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Bartlett on the East side Tuesday morning. |PERSONALS I Mr. and Mrs. G. R. Howard anc; Bernice spent Sunday and Monday in Chicago. Mrs. Josiah Geiselman has been visiting friends near Argos during the past week. John Sidlo of Chicago spen Sunday and Monday with his daughter, Mrs. Otto Stabeuow. John Keller of North Dakota is here visiting friends. His father was formerly the barber at the academy. Mrs. Julia Mark and Mrs. Ellen White of Fredonia, N. Y., were guests during the past week of their niece, Mrs. A. B. Holt. Orr Byrd has been transfered to another gang, and Orr and Walter will be separated, for one or the oth >r will leave Cleveland soon. Miss Josephine Gard, who has been employed as a trimmer in Mrs. Hand’s millinery shop, left this week for her home in Rossville Mrs. Dora Shupp and daughter, Mrs. Charles Lehman, both of Bu- cyrus, O., left Saturday after a vis- it with their Culver relatives, the Easterday s. Mrs. W. S. Easterday returns this week after a two weeks’ ab sence in Lakeville where she has been giving her new grandson a start in life. Mrs. Melissa Kline and little son Garland of Akron, Ind., and Mrs. Sarah Myers of Vischy, Mo., are spending the week with Geo. W. Kline and family. Oliver Morris, Capt. Ed Morris aud Miss Flora Morris attended the funeral ©f the wife of William Morris, miles outheastof Argos, 011 Tuesday. Deceased was nearly 80 years of ago and had been 6ick but one week. Mrs. William York and her son and daughter left for their new home, Kingbee, Mo., Monday. In honor of Miss Eva the Y. P. S. C. E. of the Reformed church held an informal social on Satur- day night after the society meeting Evangelical Services. Evangelical Sunday school at 10 a. 111 .; \ . P. A. at 6:30; preaching at 7:30 by Prof. I. S. Hahn. Ev- erybody invited. Preaching at Rutland next Sunday evening by Harley Davis; Washington Sun- day school next Sunday at 9:30; Woman's missionary meeting im- mediately after Sunday school; Sunday school at Germany next Sunday. Everybody come. Rev. F. B. Waluier will hold quarterly meeting at Royal Center for his presiding elder, Rev. Dan Kaley, who is pastor of that charge. The reason people come ten miles to buy shoes from Porter & Co. is they have quality, style and price, and their guarantee is worth 100 cents on the dollar. Tho Daisy Automatic Galvan- ized Iron Door Strip keeps out tell us. We will do what is light, i rain, snow and cold, and will last a Porter & Co. Ilifetime. Culver Cash Hdw. Co. Calamity Due to Neglect on Part of Some of the Train Men or the Officials One of the greatest accidents ever known in Indiana occurred at Woodville, Porter county, 4 5 miles from Chicago, on the Baltimore & Ohio road at 3 o'clock Monday morning. A fast freight, and an immigrant train loaded with Rus- sian Jews, met at top speed on a curve during a blinding snow storm. The passenger cars wore badly smashed and the wreck caught fire. Fifty persons were crushed and burned to death, and thirty-five in - jured. The accident was caused by the freight pulling out of a siding after a first passenger section bad passed, ignorant of the fact, that a second section was coming at sixty miles an hour. ELECTION FIGURES. 2877 2476 3082 2288 2932 2361 2388 50 Official Result of the Vote in Mar- shall County. For S ‘cretary of State— James F. Cox, dem ................. Fred Sims, rep ............. ..... For Congressman— B. F. Shively ............................ A. L. Brick ............................... For Prosecutor— John A. Molter ....................... Samuel J. Hayes ................... For Representative— Daniel McDonald, dem ......... Samuel Schlosser, rep ........... Paul Logan, rep. ref ............... For Clerk— J. C. W hitesell ........................ 2917 J. F. Martin .............................. 2349 C. C. Yockey ............................ 60 For Auditor— C. M. Walker ............................ 2842 N. H. Sheppard ....................... 2425 Gilbert Coar ................................ 50 For Treasurer— Fred II. Myers ....................... 2814 Jones Grant .............................. 2481 John V. Astley ............................. 55 For Sheriff Daniel C. Voreis ..................... Frank L. Thomas ................... Joseph M. Black ..................... For Surveyor— Percy J. Troyer ....................... Wm. II. Morris ........................ ? ’red Thompson ........................ For Assessor— W. T.,Leonard .......................... Samuel E Wise. ..................... William White ......................... 62 For Coroner— )r. J. H. Kizer ........................ 2865 )r. Carl D Fuller ................. 2352 Dr. O. A. Rae ........................... 64 For Com. First Dist.— W. H. Troup ............................ 2858 2931 2336 69 2850 2380 69 2861 Heckaman .......................... 2369 vilgore ...................................... 63 For Com. Third Dist.— James B. Sevorns .................... 2859 Win. L. Yantis ........................ 2358 ?hilip Siokman ........................ 63 Councilmen-at-large— Marks (2861), Grossman (2866), Wolf (2859) dem.: Amos Osborn 2343). Dolph (2353), Irwin (2346) rep.; Sick man (63), Gurthet (59), Sherer (56), rep. ref. The prohibition candidates re- ceived from 108 to 200 votes 011 the county ticket. The people's ticket received 11 votes, the socialist 30, and the so- cialist labor 10 . In I nion township the demo- cratic state ticket received 64 in the 1st precinct, 99 in the 2d, 58 in the 3d; the republican state ticket 61, 151, 62. For congress Shively received 83, 112, 96; Brick 46,140, 59. For clerk Whitesell (dem.) 63, 09, 66 ; Martin (rep.) 01, 135, 55; Yocke (rep. ref.) 2, 4, 2; Grooms (pro.) 0 iu the 1 st, 20 in the 2d, 6 I in thrf r.H.

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Page 1: ,VEH CITIZEN - CulverAHS...n p T T Record, JIL jljbl,ers O ffic e 1ay06,VEH CITIZEN LAKE M'AXIXKUQKEE. VOL. IV. CULVER, INDIANA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1906. NO. 29 A BUS UPSET IN

n p T T

Record,

J I L jljbl,e rs O ffic e

■1ay06 ,VEH C IT IZ E NL A K E M 'A X I X K U Q K E E .

VOL. IV. CULVER, INDIANA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1906. NO. 29

A BUS UPSET IN A DITCH

CHURCH NEWS.

Crowd of Chicago Football Boys

Encounter a Serious Cli­

max to Day’s Sport

ONE OF THE VICTIMS SUSTAINS

A BROKEN LEG

Items Pertaining to the Work of the j

Local Organizations.T h e Rev. Dr. L). A. Senders w ill:

preach in Grace Reformed church on Wednesday evening, Nov. II, at 7:30. Dr. Souder is a district superintendent in the Reformed church. He dedicated the church for the Hungarians in South Bend Sunday enoning. The doctor will speak at Zion Thursday evening.

A t a recent township Sunday ; school convention at Kewanna

Xccident the Result of Darkness Rev. Mr. Klopfenstein made an ad-

CULVER ACADEMYLatest News and Gossip of the Big School

;Fine Musical Entertainment Sched­uled for Next Week.

| The people of Culver will have ] the pleasure of hearing on Friday! evening, Nov. 23, at the M. E.!j church, the Acm e Entertainment

Morgan Park again proved fatal I press within the last month. A s'com p an y in a program of music to Culver's hopes for victory, b u t; the majority of the selections in and impersonations. T he company

A RARE TREAT. CREMATED IN A WRECK

Frightful Loss of Life in a

ion on the Baltimore

Ohio Railroad

Collis-&

and the Unfamiliarity of the Driver with Road

Tho strenuous day put in at C ul­ver by the Chicago football crowd on Saturday reached a climax at Hibbard when a bus loaded with young fellows upset on the grade two weeks, at the railroad crossing. I t was pitch dark and the driver, a P ly ­mouth man unfam iliar with the road, gave his team a pull to one side as he crossed the track. The team obeyed the rein and plunged down the narrow four-foot grade, upsetting the bus. The shock was a severe one, and besides the so re1 places which a number of the boys discovered after extricating them­selves from the wreck, one of their i

dress on the subject “ Sunday School Teachers’ W ages.” The address was received with many comments of appreciation.

T he Christian church people ex­pect to engage in a revival in about

Preaching at the M. E . church Sunday morning and evening. kicked goal and a tied score soon

resulted. There was a mad riot on the Culver side lines, for it looked

I LOCAL ITEMS

the close play and low score give this book are new to the boys they encouragement that in another : will be a welcome variation to tbe year the tables will be turned. Our music already in use. opponents came this year backed ; * * « »by fifty rooters who worked as hard : An enthusiastic mass meeting and as long as the teams to save ■ was held in the chapel Friday night the day. When Morgan Park to work up the. proper support for made her first touchdown C u lv e r; the team in Saturday’s game. The hearts sank. Then the soldiers j yells aud songs were vociferously got their second wind and during! rehearsed, and then the faculty the last ten minutes of the first' wore pressed into the speech-mak- half outplayed the visitors. T he ing business, pace was kept up in the opening! s °of the second, and a touchdown, a | A s a curtain-raiser to the big

game of the afternoon Captain I ly- ney's proteges, the second team.

is first-class, with recoinmenda lions from leading Chautauqua as­sociations. and will furnish an evening of refined and popular en­tertainment. T he admission is on­ly 25 cents. Should this engage­ment prove a success, indicating that the community desires and will support a high-class enter- tainment, there will be a movement to secure a full course next season

FIFTY PERSONS KILLED AND

FIFTY-ONE INJURED

won a hard played and closely con- as if the bovs were good for at [ tested game from the team repre-

§e o n o e o e v e v e o e v c v e zc - zo zc e Z | lea9t l " '° “ lorB touchdowns. T he I seating the high school at Niles,

team couldn’t stand prosperity,I

— The windows are being placed : in the new school building this week.

— Oyster supper by M. E . Ladies’ A id at S. E. Med bo urn’s 011 Friday

Mich. The score was 12 — 6.

number was found to have sus­tained a serious injury to a leg. W hen the party boarded the 6:35 train for Chicago it was feared that the limb was broken. The top of

- Mrs. Julia Garn has fitted the house occupied by C. G. Replogle with new shades throughout.

— Homer Mattox, living north of Poplar Grove, lost a good

however, and they steadily lost ground most of the time that remained, allowing their line to be twice crossed. The final score was Morgan Park 18, Culver 6 .

The ladies of the faculty were entertained last Thursday after­noon by Mrs. A . F. F leet at her cottage. A literary turn was given to the afternoon by each guest

The plan of devoting a series of reading a favorite bit of verse or

the bus was smashed, and ono of ulatohed llorse last week from bow_ the horses fell on top of the other, but neither was injured.

Obituary.

Rudolph Buehler, son of George and M ary Buehler, was born in Seneca county, Ohio, Aug. 28,1853, and died Nov. 3, 1906, at his home in Richland township, Fulton coun­ty. Ind., at the age of 53 years.

Mr. Buehler was united iu mar­riage to M ary Plautz in December, 1876. T his union was blessed with two daughters, Carrie L . M attie and Estella. H is wife died Jan. 14, 1900. Jan. 27, 1901, he was married to Em m aS. Gray of Roch­ester who survives. H e was con­verted in 1877 and united with the Evangelical church at South G er­many which he always prized as the church of his choice, in which he held oliices and in which it seemed to be his delight to do tho will of his Master. The cause of his death was appendicitis. He w’as a great sufferer during his ill­ness, neverthelss his hope was an­chored in God. H e leaves a living testimony of a glorious future. A sorrowing companion, two daugh­ters, three step-daughters, an aged father, five brothers, three sisters, seven grandchildren and a host of relatives and friends mourn his departure. The church will miss him but our loss will be his eter­nal gain.

Funeral services were conducted by Rev. F. B. W aimer at the South Germany church Sunday, Nov. 11. T he largo concourse of people at the funeral showed his esteem and his acquaintance among his friends and neighbors.

tbe Y . M. C. A . Sunday night meetings to the barracks one by one was tried last year with such success that Mr. Miller, the secre-

Mothers’ Department.

The superintendent of the Moth­ers’ department of the W. C. T . U. has planned for a series of parlor meetings for the coming year. E ach will be held iu a different part of the town and an effort will be made to reach every woman in­terested in the home. The first of the serieB will be held at the home of Mrs. E. E. Parker on Saturday afternoon, Nov. 17, from 2:30 to 4 o’clock. Every lady is cordially invited.

Valparaiso University.Valparaiso University is making

extensive improvements this year. Its winter term will open Novem­ber 27. The young people of this county are excellent patrons of the university.

You will find the best shoe, both style aud wear, at Porter & Co.’s.

el trouble.- The Methodist dominie has

laid away his lawn mower for the season, and is hunting around for a snow shovel.

— T. H. W ilson of Logausport has sold his lake cottage, “ Squirrel Inn,” to Mrs. Helms of Peru and Mrs. Hendricks of Indianapolis.

— T he apple crop of Marshall county for 1906 is reported by the state statistician to be 51,200 bush­els. L ast year it was 6,700 bush­els.

— Dr. Parker reports the birth to Ulysses Burkett and wife of C ul­ver, Nov. 10, of a daughter, and to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Easterday, Nov. 14, a son.

— T he 80-acre Lewis Stahl farm, west of town, was bid off by Frank Easterday at administrator's sale, for about $3,000. The sale has yet to be confirmed by the court.

— Jacob Hoham, a well known citizen of Plymouth, a dealer in fruit trees, dropped dead at his home on Tuesday. H is wife is a regular visitor to Culver in her oc­cupation as an agent for ladies* wearing apparel.

The pumpkin crop of Indiana (usually a source of wealth and pride to the Hoosier farmers) is said to be nearly ruined by the freeze of Oct. 10. The farmers find, when gathering the great gold­en globes, that the shells are soft; instead of sounding “ punk" like they’d orter. they go “squash.” T j is means dried applo pies this winter.

A Ft. W ayne man wTho is very fond of fishing, while enjoying great sport at Lake W awasee a short time ago, went to the tele­graph office and sent tho following messago to his wife: ‘T v e got one. W eighs seven pounds and is a beauty.” The next day he received the reply, “ So have I. W eighs ten pounds. H e isn’t a beauty. Looks like you.” — Ex.

- Another touch of winter came on Saturday and Sunday nights, bringing about three inches of snow. On Tuesday morning the mercury dropped to 24, the lowest point yet reached. On ihe same morning the Panhandle was com­pelled to send out two snow plows from Logausport to open the track between North Judson and Kouts where 18 inches of snow had fallen and stalled a freight train.

Strength is what you want in horse blankets. B uy o-A of Cul­ver Cash Hdw. Co.

story.

Mr. and Mrs. E . R. Culver andson spent several days at the acad

. . . , . . emy last week, returning to St.tarv, has again inaugurated such a [ , . « . , . , 0

4 . , ‘ . . , Louis Saturday night, series. A special attempt is madeto rally all the men from one of the barracks to each meeting. The series was begun Sunday, Nov. 4, when Captain Glascock gave a practical and earnest- plea for “ Academy Ideals” before sixty ca­dets from the South barracks.

The gray uniforms have nearly all been fitted to the new men and the majority of them have also re­ceived their overcoats.

# * # *

Captain J. S. F leet moved this week into his new house on Facul-

Last Sunday night the W est bar- ty ,.ow wbich has boou buiUUng racks, uioi) were given a talk by {or sevonJ nl0nths Captain Hunt.

T hat •' Doubting” Thomas was no doubter at ail, but a most loyal, affectionate and praiseworthy dis­ciple was the verdict of Rev. C. L. Stewart who preached at theacad-

Tnvitations to the Thanksgiving festivities were issued the past week and already preparations are well under way.

* * * *

Captain Byroade came downemy Sunday morning. A fter clear- Saturday to sec the Morgan Parking the character of Thomas from this unfounded charge1, the speaker went 011 to draw from his attitude some lessons of practical disciple- ship. Rev. Stewart is a member of the faculty of G arrett Biblical institute.

■» * # *

The Y. M. C, A. has just been

gatne and remained at the academy over Sunday.

* * * *

Cadet Boyer of Piqua, O., has been on leave several days, called home by the death of his grand­father,

* # # *

Dress parade was held last week the recipient of an unexpected g ift j for Hon. W illiam E. Mason who from Dr. J. W ilbur Chapman. It 'visited his son at the academy, was in the form of ICO copies of, * * * *

the new hymnal,“ Winona H ym ns,” which has been compiled by Dr. Chapman and has come from the

Am ong the Morgan Park follow­ing were Of. W. Bliss and H. Guire. both ex cadets of Culver.

Corn Show. Historic Hotel Closed.

T he second annual corn show South Bend, Ind., Nov. 9.— The will be held at the Indiana Corn police to day closed one of the Growers' association, January 14- i most historic hotels in the state of 19, in connection with the co rn ! Indiana, the old Grand Central,school at Purdue university. This now known as the Osborn House.show being held in connection An investigation into the death with the corn school, is of great \ of an infant revealed the fact that

Sale of children's, misses’ and ladies' coats at Porter and Co.’s.

educational value. A t 110 place in the state will there'be brought to­gether more representative samples of corn than at Purdue.

Teachers’ Association.

The Fourteenth annual session of the Marshall County Teachers1 association will be held in the Webster school building, P ly ­mouth, on Friday and Saturday, November 30 and December 1.

Oyster Supper.

The Ladies’ A id society of the M. E. church will give an oyster supper on Friday evening at the residence of S. E. Medbourn com­mencing at 5 o’clock.

Friday and Saturday

A 25,. 50 or 100 tb. sack of Gold Medal flour at $2.20 per hundred, CASH o n ly . Dillon & Medboarn.

5-A Horse Blankets are known the world over as the best and strongest. Culver Cash Hdw. Co.

the big hostelry has been allowed to fall from its high position into a place of vileness and filth.

T he place is said to be in such an unsanitary condition as to be a breeder of disease. T he building is also said to be unsafe. Twenty years ago the hotel gave shelter to all the leading theatrical stars aud commercial men who visited the city.

Congressional Pluralities.

Brick ShivelyF u lto n ....................... 87Starke . . . ................. 174E lk h a rt..................... 718St. Joseph................. 216Kosciusko.................Marsh all. ...................P u la sk i......................

81

794113

T o ta l ................... 1195B rick’s plurality

988207

If the shoe we sell you does not give satisfaction come back and

— Dr. Rea reports a girl born to Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Bartlett on the East side Tuesday morning.

|PERSONALS IMr. and Mrs. G. R. Howard anc;

Bernice spent Sunday and Monday in Chicago.

Mrs. Josiah Geiselman has been visiting friends near Argos during the past week.

John Sidlo of Chicago spen Sunday and Monday with his daughter, Mrs. Otto Stabeuow.

John K eller of North Dakota is here visiting friends. H is father was formerly the barber at the academy.

Mrs. Ju lia Mark and Mrs. Ellen W hite of Fredonia, N. Y., were guests during the past week of their niece, Mrs. A. B . Holt.

Orr Byrd has been transfered to another gang, and Orr and W alter will be separated, for one or the oth >r will leave Cleveland soon.

Miss Josephine Gard, who has been employed as a trimmer in Mrs. Hand’s m illinery shop, left this week for her home in Rossville

Mrs. Dora Shupp and daughter, Mrs. Charles Lehman, both of Bu- cyrus, O., left Saturday after a vis­it with their Culver relatives, the Easterday s.

Mrs. W . S. Easterday returns this week after a two weeks’ ab sence in Lakeville where she has been giving her new grandson a start in life.

Mrs. Melissa K lin e and little son Garland of Akron, Ind., and Mrs. Sarah Myers of Vischy, Mo., are spending the week with Geo. W. K line and family.

Oliver Morris, Capt. Ed Morris aud Miss Flora Morris attended the funeral ©f the wife of William Morris, miles outheastof Argos, 011 Tuesday. Deceased was nearly 80 years of ago and had been 6ick but one week.

Mrs. W illiam York and her son and daughter left for their new home, Kingbee, Mo., Monday. In honor of Miss Eva the Y . P. S. C. E. of the Reformed church held an informal social on Satur- day night after the society meeting

Evangelical Services.

Evangelical Sunday school at 10 a. 111.; \ . P. A. at 6:30; preaching at 7:30 by Prof. I. S. Hahn. E v­erybody invited. Preaching at Rutland next Sunday evening by Harley D avis; Washington Sun­day school next Sunday at 9:30; Woman's missionary meeting im­mediately after Sunday school; Sunday school at Germany next Sunday. Everybody come. Rev. F. B. Waluier will hold quarterly meeting at Royal Center for his presiding elder, Rev. Dan Kaley, who is pastor of that charge.

The reason people come ten miles to buy shoes from Porter & Co. is they have quality, style and price, and their guarantee is worth 100 cents on the dollar.

Tho D aisy Automatic G alvan­ized Iron Door Strip keeps out

tell us. We will do what is light, i rain, snow and cold, and will last a Porter & Co. I lifetime. Culver Cash Hdw. Co.

Calamity Due to Neglect on Part of Some of the Train Men

or the OfficialsOne of the greatest accidents

ever known in Indiana occurred at Woodville, Porter county, 4 5 miles from Chicago, on the Baltimore & Ohio road at 3 o'clock Monday morning. A fast freight, and an immigrant train loaded with Rus­sian Jews, met at top speed on a curve during a blinding snow storm. The passenger cars wore badly smashed and the wreck caught fire. F ifty persons were crushed and burned to death, and thirty-five in­jured.

The accident was caused by the freight pulling out of a siding after a first passenger section bad passed, ignorant of the fact, that a second section was coming at sixty miles an hour.

ELECTION FIGURES.

28772476

30822288

29322361

238850

Official Result of the Vote in Mar­shall County.

For S ‘cretary of State—James F. Cox, dem .................Fred Sim s, rep ............. .....

For Congressman—B. F. S h iv e ly ............................A. L. B rick...............................

For Prosecutor—John A. M olter.......................Samuel J. H ayes...................

For Representative—Daniel McDonald, dem .........Samuel Schlosser, rep...........Paul Logan, rep. re f ...............

For Clerk—J. C. W h ite se ll........................ 2917J. F. M artin .............................. 2349C. C. Y o c k e y ............................ 60

For Auditor—C. M. W alker............................ 2842N. H. Sheppard....................... 2425Gilbert Coar................................ 50

For Treasurer—Fred II. M yers....................... 2814Jones G ra n t.............................. 2481John V. A stley............................. 55

For SheriffDaniel C. V o reis.....................Frank L. Thom as...................Joseph M. B la c k .....................

For Surveyor—Percy J. T royer.......................Wm. I I . M orris........................?’red Thom pson........................

For Assessor—W. T.,Leonard..........................Samuel E W ise......................William W hite......................... 62

For Coroner—)r. J. H . K iz e r ........................ 2865)r. Carl D F u ller................. 2352

Dr. O. A. Rae........................... 64For Com. First Dist.—

W. H. T rou p ............................ 2858

29312336

69

28502380

69

2861

H eckam an.......................... 2369vilg o re ...................................... 63

For Com. Third D ist.—James B. Sevorns.................... 2859Win. L. Y a n tis ........................ 2358?hilip Siokm an........................ 63

Councilmen-at-large—Marks (2861), Grossman (2866), W olf (2859) dem.: Amos Osborn 2343). Dolph (2353), Irwin (2346)

rep.; Sick man (63), Gurthet (59), Sherer (56), rep. ref.

The prohibition candidates re­ceived from 108 to 200 votes 011 the county ticket.

The people's ticket received 11 votes, the socialist 30, and the so­cialist labor 10 .

In I nion township the demo­cratic state ticket received 64 in the 1st precinct, 99 in the 2d, 58 in the 3d; the republican state ticket 61, 151, 62. For congress Shively received 83, 112, 96; Brick 46,140, 59. For clerk W hitesell (dem.) 63,

09, 66 ; Martin (rep.) 01, 135, 55; Yocke (rep. ref.) 2, 4, 2; Grooms (pro.) 0 iu the 1 st, 20 in the 2d, 6

I in thrf r.H.

Page 2: ,VEH CITIZEN - CulverAHS...n p T T Record, JIL jljbl,ers O ffic e 1ay06,VEH CITIZEN LAKE M'AXIXKUQKEE. VOL. IV. CULVER, INDIANA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1906. NO. 29 A BUS UPSET IN

THE CULVER CITIZEN,A R T H U R B. H O L T , P ub lis h e r .

CULVER, - - INDIANA.

Exercise of the Franchise.

Edward L. Thorndyke, ’writing on education, especially high school edu­

cation, in the Bookman, says a knowl­

edge of the duties and privileges of

tho exercise of the franchise ought to

bo one of tho cardinal teachings of

our high school.

"The exercise of the franchise," he

tells us, "is no longer chiefly a mat­

ter of honesty and good-will and wis­

dom in choosing between two clear

lines of party policy or between two

sets of officials. It Is a matter of

more or less expert knowledge.

"A future voter ought to know that

for a city to give a traction company

tho use of its streets is identical with,

giving a neighbor the use of part of

your house, wise or unwise, according

to who the neighbor Is and what he

pays you; he ought to know that laws

can do more against consumption than

medicine can; he ought to believe that

one man’s gain need not bo others'

loss, as surely as hc bclicvos that two

and two are not five; he ought to

understand as clearly as he under­

stands addition that a man’s contribu­

tion to the world is to bo measured by

the number and worth of the wants he

satisfies, and that a man’s cost to tho

world is to be measured by the depri­

vations he causes. Is it not silly to let

the youth of tho land spend twelve

years in school and at its close bo

unable, even though he wishes, to

protect common property as well as

his own, ignorant of the simplest rudi­

ments of public hygiene, possessed by

the fallacy that what others have has

been taken from him, and burdened

with the superstition that a man gives

to the world what ho spends in it and

takes from it the wealth be acquires.

13 it not a calamity that although

eight out of ten of our high school

graduates will live in cities or city

suburbs, there is apparently in no

high school a course on municipal

problems?”

NEW YORK LEADERSA SK COUNT OF VOTES

R epublicans W ant Courts to Order Production o f A l l Void and P ro­tested Ballots, W hile Dem ocrats M eet to Devise M eans to Protect Interests o f State Ticket.

Election returns show that the next i Ilearst showed his greatest strength congress will be Republican in both | in the cities throughout (he state, and branches. The political complexion of took out of the Republican column a (he senate shows a Republican gain j number of the more important inuni- of one in Col -rado. There are two or cipalities which heretofore have been three elose legislative contests, but Republican. Among the cities which they are chiefly between individuals, gave Hearst a plurality were Buffalo, and the senate will stand nearly as at Rochester, Utica, Troy. Elmira. Rome, present, with 58 Republicans and 32 Little Falls and Johnstown.

Democrats, leaving a Republican ma­jority of 26. The returns indicate a Republican membership in (he house of representatives of aoout 223, which is a majority of 64 over the Demo­crats.

H E A R S T IS O N L Y LO SER .

Rest of Fusion T icket Appears to Be

Elccted in New York.

H igher Education.

In his Chancellor’s Address at the

fourth centenary of Aberdeen Univer­

sity, Lord Strathcona compared higher

education in Great Britain with that

in Germany and the United States.

While praising Aberdeen, he held that

the Old World has much to learn from

the New. lie was convinced that on this side of the A«antlc our institu­tions of teaming adapt themselves

more cas:3-v and readily to the n ced3 Gf ^ e ir constituencies. “They found

out long ago that law and medicine and

theology are not the only legitimate

points of academic study; and in their

faculties of applied science they are

training their young men to do work

that is most loudly called for. They

have never accepted the view that

universities must necessarily be insti­

tutions cloistered and apart from the

main current of public life and serv­

ice.” In this country there is, indeed,

little danger that the college-bred man

may sacrifice practical utility to re­

mote ideals. But, as Mr. A. C. Benson

lately remarked in his paper on "The

Uselessness of Knowledge,” tho pur­

suit of knowledge as an end is not

inconsistent with practical activity.

This is easily to be seen in Germany,

which, with her high university stand­

ards, has combined advanced and suc­

cessful methods in industry and com­

merce. Give a youth a trained mind,

and then, if ho chooses to be "practi­

cal,” he can be more intensely so than

any oi your rule-of-thumb men.

The Velocity of L ight.

Light moves with the amazing vel­

ocity of 185,000 miles a second, a

speed a million times as great as that

of a rifle bullet. It would make tho

circuit of the earth’s circumference, at

the equator, seven times in one beat

of the pendulum. For a long time the

light was thought to be instantaneous,

but it is now known to have a meas­

urable velocity. The discovery was

first made by means of the eclipses of

Jupiter’s satellites. Jupiter, liko the

earth, casts a shadow, and when his

moons pass through it, they are

eclipsed, just as our moon is eclipsed

when passing through the earth’s

shadow. Jupiter’s shadow far sur­

passes in magnitude that of the earth.

His moon revolves around him more

.rapidly than our moon revolves around

the earth, and their orbits are nearly

in the plane of the planet’s orb. Con­

sequently, says the Hesperian, they

all, with the exception of the fourth

and most distant satellite, pass

through the planet’s shadow and aro

eclipsed at every revolution.

A Danish estate has boon purchased

by tho dowager empress of Russia.

Evidently sho recognizes the neces­

sity of providing herself with a place

in which she may retire after sho

aud Pobledonostseff find it impos­

sible to go on running things In Russia.

New York. Both parties are pre­paring to demand a recount of ballots. Already tangled, the situation offers vast possibilities of infinite further complications if tho courts lake in hand the work of straightening out the result of the election.

Applications will at once be made by the Republican campaign managers in the supreme courts o’’ all adjoining counties for orders compelling the pro­duction in court of all void and pro­tested ballots. These number 15,000.

Chairman Connors of the Demo­cratic state committee issued a call for a full committee meeting to “de-

j vise means to protect the interests of : the state ticket.” From telegrams I I have received,” said Mr. Connors, “it ; is plain that the Republican machine is resorting to its old thievish knavery

j in order to beat our ticket. There is i absolutely no doubt that the returns are being hold back. We are going to get. an honest count, of rho vote.”

The latest returns indicate the fol- , lowing result of the vote for candi- i dates for state offices other than gov- i ernor:

Chanler, lieutenant governor, 3.S9S.! Whalen, secretary of state, 6,522.

Jackson, attorney general, 3,859. j Hauser, treasurer, 3,63$.

Glynn, controller. 8.043. i Skene, state engineer, 10,37.0.I Hughes’ plurality for governor is j now placcd at €0,432.

The vote in Greater New York j shows that Hearst was slashed un­mercifully by tbe Democrats. lie ran

j so far behind the rest of his col- j leagues on the Democratic ticket that his defeat looms up all the larger. He is 63.000 votes below the lowest man on the Democratic ticket and 70.000

I votes below the highest, j W illiam K. Hearst has hail little to | say since his defeat. Ho showed a cheerful front to callers that went to his home in Lexington avenue to con­gratulate him “on making a good fight, anyway,” and pur. in several hours reading telegrams from all parts of the state and all over the country to the same cffeet.

He has refused to follow Chairman Ihmsen’s loud cry of “Fraud!” and “Robbery!” and “stands pat” on the statement he issued, which conceded defeat, and was virtually a promise to abide by the result.

Hearst to Continue Fight.

At 2:15 Wednesday morning Mr. Hearst made the following statement:

“In view of the result I have only to repeat what I said in my speeches. I am enlisted in this fight, against the control of the government by the trusts and corrupt corporations, and 1 will fight it to the end.

"But I will serve in the lead or in the ranks, just exactly as the people desire, and as earnestly and loyally in one place as in tho other. The people havo decided to retain the Republican

All of these except Utica and Romo were Republican two years ago. Mr. Hughes did not gain a singie city. The Republican ticket was successful, but sustained serious losses in Syracuse, Gloversville, Amsterdam, Ithaca. Schenectady, Watertown and Platts- burg.

As a result of the scratching and the voting for the same candidates under different party emblems, the re­turns for the subordinate officers on the various state tickets arc compli­cated.

Fusion Judges W in .

Great interest centered hero in Now York in the campaign waged for the judiciary ticket named by a commit­tee of lawyers, headed by Joseph H. Choate and former Judge Alton B. Parker. The Tammany and Independ­ence League joint ticket has won over the nonpartisan candidates by big pluralities.

State Senator Thomas F. Grady, of Tammany hall, has been reelected over Thomas Rock, who has been known in tho campaign as “eight- hour” Rock, and who claimed he had been ''tricked” by tho Independence League.

Throughout (he state there has been a notable falling off in the vote from 1904. which was a presidential year. The Republican ticket, showed the greatest loss in this respect, espe­cially in tho citios.

In claiming the election of Mr. Hughes by a large plurality. Republi­can State Chairman Woodruff said:

"1 knew all along we had lost the labor vote. Every possible thing was done to recover it, but I think with­out avail.”

D A V IDSON W IN S IN W ISC O N S IN

Entire Republican T icket Elected by Good P luralities.

Milwaukee.—The entire Republican state ticket was clooted ia Wisconsin by pluralities of 50,000 and more.

Indications are that ton Republican congressmen have been elected in 11

districts, and that the next legislature is overwhelmingly Republican. Most counties report the election of Repub­lican county officers.

Returns show Gov. Davidson ran ahead of his ticket and that Connor was scratched considerably.

Tho situation in some of the con­gressional districts is close, but indi-

Gov. Davidson.

cations are ten Republicans will be returned to ^Washington.

In the Third district a hard fight party in power. I will make my fight was made by La Follette men, many

of whom scratched Congressman Bab­cock, former congressional chairman, aud supported the Democratic nomi­nee, J. H. Murphy. Babcock probably has been defeated. Murphy's plurality is estimated at from 300 to 400.

GOV. H OCH R E E L E C T E D .

in the ranks, therefore, and as a pri­vate citizen do my host to promote the interests of my fellow citizens.”

Hearst Carries Brooklyn.

Tn Brooklyn, where Senator Patrick H. McCarren made a bitter light against Hearst. tho latter carried the borough by a small plurality, probably 4,000. At one time it seemed that Hughes had been successful In Brook­lyn. but the late returns were all strongly in favor of the Democraticcandidate. Topeka, Kan.—The reelection of

Mr. Hoars! has been given a ma- Gov. E. W. Hoch, Republican, seems joiity of nearly 70,000 in Manhattan reasonably certain, although the Dem­and the Bronx. Queens county, which ocratic committee still claims the state

Later Returns Show Republican Can­

didate Ahead in Kansas.

includes Long Island city, has gone for Hearst by from 6,000 to S.000. and Richmond (Staten Island) has also given the Democratic candidate a plu­rality.

As was generally expected, Mr.

A football player was killed in Michi­

gan the other day, which shows that

tho new rules are not nearly so un­

satisfactory as people supposed they were.

Sum m er Earn ings of Students.

The Columbia university committee of students reports that out of 581 who applied for positions during the recent summer vacation, 213 reported earnings aggregating 140,240. .Most of the men received positions as tu­tors. but some worked as secretaries, clerks and salesmen. Their earnings averaged $113.43. The law students averaged $334.59. and the medical stu­dents $202.19. The women of Barnard wore employed as clerks, stenograph­ers, comp&aions and governesses.

for W illiam A. Harris by a plurality of 2,300. According to figures received by the Republican committee, 97 coun­ties out of 105 give Hoch a plurality of 4,150. The Democrats claim that their figures on the same counties

Princeton A lum n i.

Exclusive Of the class of 1906 there are 7.190 living alumni of Princeton. Of the 6,522 classified according to their occupation, 2,285 are in business, L49S in tho law. 02-1 in the ministry, 899 practicing medicine, 133 teachers. 290 engineers, 104 journalists. 50 ranching and farming, 50 gentlemen of leisure. 41 students, 31 in the army, ol civil service, 26 architecture, 19 chemists, 10 artists, 9 authors, 7 in the navy, 5 librarians. -1 musicians and 4 dentists.

give Harris a plurality of nearly 2,000 and that the official returns will give him over 3,000. The eight counties still missing are in the western part of the state. The Republican figures arc partially confirmed by spccial press dispatches.

Marion county, Hoch’s homo, was carried by Harris by a majority of 139 votes, while Douglas county, Col. Har- r>S home was carried by Gov. Hoch by a majority of 130.

Aside from the head of the ticket, there is no question as to the election of the entire Republican ticket.

Big Democratic gains have been made in the lower house of tho legis­lature. but that body will still bo

overwhelmingly Republican, and a member of the dominating party will bo elected United States senator to succeed A. W.,Benson. who himself is a candidate for reelection. Other can­didates are Congressman Charles Cur­tis, of the First district, and Joseph L. Bristow, formerly fourth assistant postmaster general, who won promi­nence a few years ago, by his activity in suppressing postal frauds.

R E P U B L IC A N S H AV E IN D IA N A .

Entire State T icket and Legislature

W on by Party.

Indianapolis. — Republicans have elected their entire state ticket in In­diana by an estimated majority of bc- between 40.000 and 50,000. The next legislature will be Republican. Re­publicans have elected six congress­men in the First, Sixth, Seventh, Ninth. Tenth and Thirteenth districts. The Democrats have elected two, iu the Third and Fourth districts.

Frederick Landis, Republican can­didate for congross in tho Eleventh district, is defeated, his Democratic opponent, J. A. M. Adair being elected by 1,800. The defeat of George W.

candidates, W illiam T. McMillan, of Detroit: Congressman W illiam Aides Smith, of Grand Rapids, and Arthur Hill, of Saginaw, will claim a majori-

MHO BUSTS FISH

W S a T /M

W mm

■i

3 ■ t ,

IV ammv - :'

J . T. H A R A H A N B E C O M E S H E A D

O F IL L IN O IS C E N T R A L R A IL ­

W A Y SYST EM .

Gov. vVarner.

ty of the legislature chosen are favor­able to them. Congressman Townsend is also a candidate for Senator Alger’s place.

IL L IN O IS IS R E P U B L IC A N .

Chicago Democrats Overw helm ing ly

Beaten in M unic ipal Contest.

Chicago.—The Illinois Republican state ticket has been elected with a plurality of 320,000 for John F. Smul- ski. Cook county famishing 50,000.

All the Republican state candidates have been successful, Smulski run­ning a little behind Francis G. Blair for superintendent of instruction, who has a plurality of 130,000. according to first returns— the largest Repub­lican plurality ever given in an o f year election, with one exception.

H arrim an Believed to Have Accom­

plished Task of Securing Control

of Railroad System from the A tlan ­

tic to the Pacific Oceans.

New York. Nov. 8.—By the election Wednesday of J. T. Harahan as presi­dent. of tbe Illinois Central Railroad company, to succeed Stuyvesant Fish, it is believed that E. H. Harriman has at last, realized the fulfillment of his plan to control railroad line from the Atlantic to the Pacific oceans.

In this great plan the Illinois Cen­tral was the one link missing to com­plete a line of track from New York to San Francisco and Portland. Ore.. from the Great Lakes to th« Gulf of Mexico, and from the gulf to the Pa­cific again.

Moves w ith a Purpose.

Until within a few months eastern terminals of the Harriman system were at Kansas City, Omaha and Now Orleans. The first important step in the direction of securing the desired outlet on the Atlantic seaboard for the Uunlon Pacific and Southern Paci­fic railroads is believed to havo boon taken by Mr. Harriman several weeks ago when it was reported that one of. the roads under his control had taken over control of the Baltimore &, Ohio by purchase of a block of 40.000 shares of tho Baltimore & Ohio company, which was sold by the Pennsylvania Railroad company. This would give Mr. Harriman a route from Chicago and St. Louis to Baltimore and New York.

Central Is Connecting L ink .

To complete the ambitious proposi­tion for a continuous line from ocean to ocean, it was necessary only to con­nect tho western terminals of the Bal­timore & Ohio with tho eastern ter­minals of tho Southern Pacific and Union Pacific, and this purpose the Illinois Central serves amply, its line from Omaha to Chicago ties together the Union Pacific and Baltimore & Ohio, while the Illinois Central branch from Chicago (o New Orleans gives tho Southern Pacific entrance into Chicago and the seaboard.

Taken together this ss’stem. if uni­fied, pyts under one control more than 23,000 miles of track, capitalized at more than $1,700,000,000.

L IST O P STATE E X E C U T IV E S

Successful Candidates f ir Governor

and Estim ated P lura lities .

C H A R L E S E. H U G H E S .

Cromer in the Eighth also is conceded by Republicans, and the election of Watson in the Sixth is in doubt. Cro­mer ran 3,000 behind in his own coun­ty.

The Republican state ticket carried several Democratic strongholds, which elected Democratic county and legisla­tive tickets, and in other places the opposite was true. The vote in the state was surprisingly light. In In ­dianapolis not more than two-thirds of the full vote was polled and the shrinkage was largely in the Republi­can wards.

Tho Democrats have elected (he prosecuting attorney and probably the auditor in Marion county. Repub­lican majorities have been reduced from the figures of two yeahs ago.

M IC H IG A N 100,000 R E PU B L IC A N

Gov. W arner Reelectcd by a Large

P lura lity .

Detroit.—Gov. Fred M. Warner and the entire Republican state ticket are reelected by what will probably bo the largest plurality ever given a state ticket, in Michigan. Warner’s plurality, based on present returns, will exceed 100,000, with the rest of the tickot slightly lower.

The Republicans also elect a solid delegation to congress, with hardly a j

semblance oi a contest. In fact. In four of the congressional districts the Democrats did not. take the trouble to nominate a candidate.

The state legislature is almost solid­ly Republican, with the possible excep­tion of two or three men. This legis­lature the coming winter will choose j a United States senator to succeed Russell A. Alger. Three prominent

A total of 825,000 votes were cast throughout the stale— the smallest vote cast in a state election in 14 years, and 251.000 loss than in the presidential election of November 8, 1904.

Congressman Henry T. Rainey, the only Illinois Democrat in the Fifty- ninth congress, has boon reelectcd. Ben. F. Caldwell, tho Democrat de­feated two years ago by Zeno Rives, the young Republican of Litchfield, has defeated Rives in turn. In the Twenty-third district Foster, Democrat is elected over Congressman Dickson.

These, with the district regained in Chicago, give back to the Democrats three of the districts they lost in 1904.. and the Illinois congressional delega­tion stands 21 Republicans and three Democrats.

In the legislature the Republicans will have S9 house members and they have elected 23 of the 27 senators. They had 21 of tho 24 hold-over sena­tors. The joint ballot which will re­elect Shelby M. Cullom to rho United States senate will poll 1S3 Republican votes out of 204.

Gov. C um m ins Safe in Iowa.

Des Moines, Ia., Nov. 8 .— Gov. Cummins has been re- clected by a plurality close to 15,000 votes. For 2-1 hours the result was in doubt because of the heavy gains In the Democratic vote.

The Democrats, while still insisting that official returns may possibly elect their candidate, do not speak hope­fully.

Congressman Lacey, in the Sixth district, was defeated. Late unofficial returns indicate the election of Ken­nedy in the First district by a plural­ity of 150 votes, although there is still some doubt.

France’s Last Am erican Colony.

Some 50 miles off the southern coast of Newfoundland lies the last remnant of the colonial empire of Franco in North America—three islands, small, rocky and barren, that are, nevertheless, Important as the center oi the French cod fisheries and because of the sentiment associated wlt.h them as a bit of ground over which the tricolor may continue to fiy. The colony Is administered by a gov­ernor, and has a deputy in the French chamber.

Wonders of Nature.

As a weaver, nature produces fine work. Certain i ree barks and leaves furnish excellent cloth, as. for in­stance. the famous tapa cloth used in the South Sea islands. Nature is a glassmaker. too. By discharging her lightning into beds of quartz sand she forms exquisite little pipes of glass. She makes valuable ropes of various kinds in tho shape of tropical vines and creepers, aud sho is even a laco maker, as witness the lace trees o2 the Y*rest indies.

Following is a 1,8t of the governors elected in the vaiious states, together with estimated pluralities:

Alabama—B. B- Comer, Democrat,

25.000.

California—J. N. Gillett, Republican, 8,976.

Colorado- H. A. Butchel, Repub- i llcan. 12,000.

Connecticut—R. S. Woodruff, Re­publican, 20.000.

Idaho—F. R. Gooding, Republican,7.000.

Iowa—A. B. Cummins, Republican, 15.V00.

Kansas—E. W. Hoch, Republican. 4,150. *

Massachusetts—C. Guild, Repub­lican. 31.662.

Michigan—F. M. Warner, Repub­lican, 100,000.

Minnesota—J. A. Johnson, Demo­crat, 40,000.

Nebraska—G. L. Sheldon, Repub­lican, 15,000.

Nevada—John Sparks, Democrat,1.000.

New Hampshire—C. M. Floyd, Re­publican, 50.

New York- C. E. Hughes, Repub­lican, 60,432.

North Carolina—J. Burke, Demo­crat, 55.000.

Pennsylvania—E. S. Stuart, Repub­lican, 68,000.

Rhode Island—.T. H. Higgins, Dem­ocrat, 1,238.

South Carolina—M. Fansel. Demo­crat. 50,000.

South Dakota—C. I. Crawford, Re­publican, 25,000.

Tennessee—M. R. Patterson, Dem­ocrat, 18.000.

Texas—T. M. Campbell, Democrat, 250.000.

Wisconsin—J. O. Davidson. Repub­lican, 50,000.

Wyoming—-B. B. Brooks, Repub­lican, 6,000.

N IN E M EN K IL L E D IN A C C ID E N T

Hotel Bu ild ing at Long Beach, Cal.,

Mass of W reckage.

Long Beach, Cal., Nov. 10.—W ith no warning, save the cries of the workmen who first felt the floors sag beneath their feet, five stories of the central wing of the new $750,000 Bix- by hotel collapsed at 9:35 Friday morning, carrying nine ’men to death in tho tons of tangled wreckage. About. 150 artisans and laborers wero scattered through tho structure at the moment, it fell, and of these nearly 100

were carried diwn in tho ruins.Five bodies have been taken from

the mass of debris in tho basement and ono of the injured died at the Long Beach hospital.

Three other bodies have been lo­cated in thi! ruins, making nine the total known dead. Thirteen men on the contractors’ rolls are unaccounted for and nine injured are being cared for at the hospitals. None of the in ­jured will die.

Page 3: ,VEH CITIZEN - CulverAHS...n p T T Record, JIL jljbl,ers O ffic e 1ay06,VEH CITIZEN LAKE M'AXIXKUQKEE. VOL. IV. CULVER, INDIANA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1906. NO. 29 A BUS UPSET IN

THE CULVER CITIZEN,A R T H U R B . H O L T , P ub lis h e r .

CULVER,

L a v e n d e rC reighton’s

L o ve rsBy O L IV IA B. S T R O H M

( C o p y r i g h t , 1905 , b y O l i v i a B . S t r o h m ) .

CHAPTER x x r .—C o n t i n u e d .

vooutn relaxed in a half smile. And, Indeed, why not? She had often taken long walks with him as guide, and he

, was ever faithful, interesting. Besides.;i it suited her defiant mood to be ab

IN D IA N A *sent when Gonzaga should return.She extended her hand. Owatoga

assisted her to the ground, and led the way at once into the forest—a dense cavern to the south. On he strode into the heart of the wood, nor paused until the river lay before them —a great glass imaging the sky. She gave a gasp of delight. “Oh, the view; it is indeed beautiful.’'

She stood on a gentle rise of ground, with the Missour;. rolling its muddy torrent at her feet. Silent, secret-bur­dened It lay. a Sphinx, with giant paws of sand encroaching on the world

about it.“And you brought me to sco the

view, Owatoga? It in so lovely, so vivid! But I am tired, I shall take time to rest a moment,” and she caught up the folds of her muslin dress, looking about for a seat. This was Owatoga's opportunity. “Sit in the boat; see,

She only said: “ I understand,’' and they went on in silence to where the horse was tethered by the wayside.The old gig, its dusty sides Happing in owatoga has it ready,” and from the wind, stretched empty shafts, likelong, hungry arms, across the road. Lavender climbed into the seat to await the return of Gonzaga, who had taken the horse to drink from the hol­low iog at the rear of the church. Alone and unobserved, Lavender drew the slip of paper from the little black bag that hung at her waist. Through tears which dimmed the scrawling characters she read the words;

“She will be there; she needs you: ■come secretly—I ask this favor by my double right. Belle Price.”

Unnoticed she sat apart from the •crowd which was dispersing now with jest and banter.

Unnoticed—save by two men. who, starting to walk to the village, looked back, and stopped at sight of her. Winslow shaded his eyes. Even a: this distance he recognized the grace­ful heap of muslin in the dusty gig. He stared long, but said nothing, and made no move in her direction.

“My brother will not go, then?” for Owatoga had divined his master’s in­decision—knew his desire to join her ■whom his eyes held thus in mute gaze, admiring, tender.

“Then he known nothing of this? The Indian shook his head. “He can trust Owatoga.” And this was the bur­den of his speech,and it vaguely cheered her.

Latc-r she ventured the question: "Shall we not land soon?” “A t th# swamp where grow the tamaracks.” She shivered at ths gloomy prospect— which was not relieved when he add­ed: “We are going to the old man of the woods.”

But though she met with only frown­ing silence when, she asked definite questions, lie was considerate of her physical comfort. He had brought an extra cushion and a heavy blanket, and, arranging them in the bottom of ihe boat, bade her lie down. But she de­clined. sitting bolt upright, with a tense look of alarm that seemed to touch her companion's pity. He murmured now and then a phrase in his own tongue that gave her encouragement and cheer, though in the words themselves lay r.o meaning.

When at last the land was low and swampy, and the horizon serrated with tamaracks, the Indian turned the boat, shoreward. A cold breeze sprang as the sun sank. The girl, crouching de­spondent over the boat's edge, shiv­ered. To her the river was gloomy enough; the land worse—that gray land darkening now with twilight

all nameless evils might lurk, brooded over by tamaracks and a starless sky.

At the sound of sand against the keel. A cushion in j she gave a nervous scream. Owatoga inviting; the rose, extending a hand to help her.

sheltering cove he dragged a light,Strong canoe. Back in the shadows was another—a smaller boat. She laughed. “Why, you have a whole fleet, at hand.”

The shrewd eyes narrowed, and he replied, with a grunt of hidden mean- shadows where ing: “The other is for him.” Then giving her no time for question, he pointed again to the boat he had first dragged forth. “Sit.” the stern looked mostboat was apparently secure on the but sue sank back, overcome at last,beach. Into it sho sprang, seating her- her frame convulsed with a strongself with a sigh of comfort. “There! 1 sobbing.the view is charming; the seat is soft. Her companion stood motionless—I am not in danger of being made love perplexity and distress on his darkto—altogether, I am quite—way, Owa- face. Then he crept softly to histoga, what arc you doing?” for the knees beside her. and his voice—usu-

arirt the other’s white as th« heron'swing. Both dark—one with the blood of an alien race, the other with more than half a century of forest sun and snow.

For a few moments they talked, then Owatoga returned. “The old man waits for you,” he said, and. signing her to follow, led the way to the fire.From cut its circle the hunter stepped and extended his hand, as the girl went timidly up lo him. His voice and man­ner were full of hospitable intent, and with the simple words: "You are wel­come, girl,” he brought a low stool near the fire, yet out of its light.

Though Lavender had dreaded meet­ing this stranger, she found it—in the calm strength of his presence—easy to talk, and in a few words told her story. “Now, sir, you know why upon you is thrust, the shelter of a helpless woman.” The old man laughed low. “Owatoga tells me he would not have you the ‘squaw of the yellow man.'And tell me. will you, who is this ‘yel­low man?’ ”

Even in this dim light he could see that his guest flushed as she replied:“A Spaniard, sir—one Senor Gonzaga, to whom I am betrothed,” she con­cluded, with sudden inability to parry truth with this man, upon whose brow sat a fearless honesty.

“And Owatoga will not have you marry him? I see; Instead, he brought

gaunt you for safe-keeping to the ‘old man of the woods.’ Owatoga and I have been friends for many weeks; you see, we " j" ~ both love the forest, and in our ram- blings have often met.”

Then he turned to the Indian, who

MADE RIDER A HERO THE NEWS iN BRIEF.

BALKY M ULE GAVE SOLD IER

FIRST STEP IN CAREER.

Kasterlitzky’s Animal Refused to Re­

treat and Charged the Enemy,

Action Turning Defeat

Into Victory.

One of the central figures in the riots and battles between Americans and Mexican miners at Cananea was Lieut. Col. Kasterlitzky of the Mexican

<1 rmy.This daring fighter is not a Mexi­

can, but, as his name implies, a native •>f Poland. Coming to the United States at 15 years of age, he gained a good knowledge of English and drifted into Mexico.

There he joined the Mexican regu­lar army, and now, at -15 years of age, is known as one 01* the most intrepid soldiers the republic has.

l t has been claimed that Kaster­litzky was t rained in the United States army, but officers of tho department of Colorado say that he never was in the army. Ilis love of personal lib­erty and his instincts as a soldier of fortune was developed here.

Col. Kastorlltzky Is a tall, wiry, strongly built man. trained in all the art of his calling, a.nd one of the best

in the Mexican army. Ho isprobably the besi man in that country

to cope with a mob.■ The colonel, who is a Pole of noble

sat by, grim and satisfied: “And what bloo(J (.am0 t0 the United States at is the ‘old man- to do with her?” an early age a:uI unlisted in the reg-

(To Be Continued.)

SMALL FLASKS UNKNOWN.ular army. While stationed at El Paso, so the story goes, he struck an officer of ihe army for a fancied In­sult. Knowing the severe punishment

latter had given the light skiff a vigor- ally gruff and harsh—was softened by But When Size W as Left Out There ; wMch woni(1 |)9 visited on him he fled j 0n board.

The American consulate general ha* been opened at Mukden, Manchuria.

Fire has destroyed much of Sharn- eon, the island suburb of Canton, China.

The Hell & Coggeshall Planing & Box factory in Louisville, Ky., was de­stroyed by fire. Loss, $75,000.

Higher cost of labor and materials has sent the wholesale price of lead pencils up from ft to 25 cents a gross.

Indications point to the retirement oi Chancellor von Bulow and the ap­pointment by the kaiser of Count von Moltke.

Edmund H. Miller, 28 years old, pro­fessor of chemistry at Columbia uni­versity, is dead at his home iu West Nyock, X. Y.

Strikers, strike breakers and police fought near the Jeffr* plant in Colum­bus, 0., aud the police and strike breakers were routed.

President Horace Porter, at the ban­quet of the Navy league in New York, advocated a stronger fleet of war ves­sels for the United States.

Harry Stein, of Ne\« Y'jrk, has been convicted of being a “Fagin” upon the testimony of a boy, who said he had taught 100 lads how to pick pockets.

H. A. Edgar, a farmer, was found dead north of Owosso, Mich., and it is believed he was murdered. He was shot, but no weapon was near the body.

The British steamer Madawaska, from Galveston, October 13, for Em- den, Germany, is ashore on the east­ern coast of Norderney island, Ger­many.

The steam whaler, W illiam Baylles has arrived in San Francisco from the Arctic. Her catch amounts to two whales. She has 2.965 pounds of bone

ous push. It grated a moment on the sand, then off ou the rivers turbid crest, with the Indian at the oars The girl gave one glance at the ever- increasing passage of water between her aud the shore, then sprang to her feet in a panic. But the dangerous rocking of the boat recalled her, and she sank to the cushion, calm -but with a face blanched to the whiteness

W as Suddenly an Embarrass­

ment of Bottles.pity and affection. “The white maiden must not weep; she will be safe—theGreat Spirit hears Owatoga swear it. --The old man is good; he will be kind A young attorney who had been ad-to her.” | mitted to the bar in Ohio, removed to

These and more disjointed sentences Lexington, Ky., and, after the ncces-he kept repeating ia time to the sooth- sary formalities, was granted permis-ing lap of waves that rocked tho canoe, sion to practice before the courts ofThe tears seemed to relieve her over- Kentucky.

To his surprise, the answer was sud-; of the foam that curled ia their wake. <lea, vehement. “No. Owatoga, I wjl! | “W hat does this mean? is it a

not go. It would only make me feel trick—a jest?”more the lool of fortune when that Spanish bravo blusters up with his air of ownership. Some day, I shall find out why he dares.”

“Owatoga knows,” said the Indian, oracularly.

Winslow looked up. “You think it is because of what the preacher said? He thinks to marry her?”

‘Then as the other gravely nodded:

‘We are going to tho old man’s; he

charged heart. Owatoga’s words and manner, too, had effect. W ith mien almost tranquil, she rose and sac on the bank, while he disposed of the canoe in a near-by cove. She even

In his first case before a jury of 12 Kentuckians, tried and true, he bad occasion to demonstrate a point.

“Now will somebody kindly loan me

a small flask of whisky?”

is Owatoga’s friend. He will take the laughed a little when he set about No attention was paid to the ro- white maid; he will not let her be the ! preparation for supper. He had brought quest.squaw of the yellow man.” 1 in bis game bag some cold corn bread “Will somebody kindly allow me the

across the Bio Grande into Mexico. He found it impossible to get a com­mission ln the Mexican army, and. as the privates in that country are re- crufted from the criminal classes, ha

could hardly enlist.Knowing ail about horses he was

finally attached to the army in the capacity of a horseshoer. When on a campaign In Siona his company was attacked by a band of Yaqui Indians. The commanding officer of the Mexi­cans ordered a masterly retreat. The horseshoer was mounted on a mule, which, with true obstinacy, refused to retreat, but broke into a gallop, head­ed inward the enemy. Kasterlitzky

Owatoga’s friend? But no, it could an<i scraps of dried venison. “Eat.” ho use of a small flask of whisky?” rc- c0v]lj ROt chock his steed, so he drew

not be; he would not call Winslow an “old man.” His mysterious manner, his strange words, and. above all, his rapid rowing away from shore, teiul-

commanded, and spread them before her. A flask of elderberry wine com­pleted this unique feast, which, laid on the ground, with plantain leaves for

■“Let his thoughts beguile him. then,” effort to hide her fear. Leaning for-ed to unnerve her, but she made great vessels, and this tawny savage for cup-

and a harsh laugh grated through the shut teeth. “He shall never have her! We must prevent it, Owatoga; he must not marry her;” and he turned swift­ly down the road with futile anger in

his heart.He failed to note that the Indian did

not follow. Intent upon his unhappy thoughts, he did not hear the sig­nificant repetition of his words: “He must not have her,” with which Owa- the wagon. —straight to the girl in

At the Indian’s approach, she slipped the yellow envelope with its—to her— ominous revelation, again into the silk bag.

“Good morning. Owatoga. I feared .you were not going to grant me as much as a nod of your feather to-day,” she said, with forced lightness.

But he had no time to waste in pleasantry; the Spaniard might return a t any moment. He placed one great

ward, she placed one hand playfully on the oar-lock, and said: “Let us go

Senor Gonzaga w ill beback now.. .. . f , .

" aiHe will have long to wait,” was the disheartening reply, a shiver passed over her; the hot wind was a breath of ice; a clammy hand on her brow. Then she mastered the horror, and only two helpless tears betrayed the struggle.

“You frighten me, Owatoga, yet I know you would do me no harm. Ex­plain, then, why we are going—why you are taking me away.” There was command and pleading in tho voice; he responded by a less rapid rowing, and a fathomless smile. “You are safe with Owatoga; more safe than with that other.” The dilated nostrils and

bearer, was unreal, fantastic. It was dark when they finished the meal to which Lavender brought the appetite which, in youth, follows fasting,in spite

of "rlef or care.W ith the darkness came a creepy

feeling. “It is night, Owatoga,” she said, simply, but there was a world of dismay and reproach in her tone.

The reply came promptly. “We will soon be with tho old man. See,” and he led her to a little opening in the grove. She followed the direction of

; his finger, but at first could see nothing, j Before them lay a few yards of muddy.. weed-grown soil; at its farther edge j a rise of ground covered with thick growth of scrub oaks and sumach. Finally in the semi-darkness, she dis­cerned a dark blue reek of smoke curl-

peated the attorney The SO spectators in the courtroom

remained at inattention, as before.The attorney for the defense raised

on his heels and asked in a loud voice: “W ill somebody please allow me to

use a small flask of whisky for a mo­ment?”

As before there was not a response. In discomfiture, the attorney once

again appealed in hasty words:“W ill somebody please loan me a

flask of whisky?"Immediately SO hands dove into SO

rear pockets and 80 flasks of whisky, all holding a full quart of bourbon were tendered.

contemptuous curve of the wide mouth i" ? fa.t, ^ .e baf e .of lh® ,M|1; then afaint light, and the outlines of a cabinor rude shack. She gave a gasp of

“HE SHALL NOT HAVE HER! WEM U ST P R E V E N T IT . O W A T O G A ."

tawny hand on the dash-board, and his eyes were on a level with her own. “Tiie white maiden come with yonder one?” and he pointed down the way the Spaniard had taken.

Lavender bowed without speaking.“The white maid will be with him—

always?”

To gain time, she feigned ignorance of his meaning. “Be with him?” she echoed, inquiringly, and he repeated: “He will take the white maid for his squaw ?”

Lavender winced, and her laugh was high and forced, as she replied: “We do not call it that; wo say ‘wife/ ”

“ It is the same,” the other insisted. Then as she had not answered him: •“You will be his wife?” he demanded, sternly.

There was a moment’s hesitation, while Lavender stared into the woods opposite. Just then her hand touched the silken bag, and the paper she had crushed into it rustled a reminder. This was the feather in the scale. She raised her head. “Yes,” and she met his stolid gaze defiantly. To her sur­prise. he only said, with utmost ir­relevance: “Come with me—Owatoga has something to show.” Then as she i hesitated. “It is a boon Owatoga j craves; he would take a walk with j tb e white m aiden ,” and his stern'

conveyed plainly the speaker’s opinion of his master’s rival.

Lavender was beg inn ing to under­stand. “Then you wish to take me away from Senor Gonzaga?” “Yes; this is the only way,” and he seemed

to gather fresh v igor with h is word3,

and tugged stronger at the oars.When they came in sight of the scat­

tered cabins of St. Charles, a new hope sprang in her heart. “ You are taking me to the village?” For answer the Indian rowed harder toward mid­stream.

Soon all human habitation was left far behind; the two were alone on the wide river.

As calmly as possible, Lavender ex­plained that her worst alarm was for her mother; of the anxiety she would feel. And the other said—less gruff­ly than he had yet spoken: “Owatoga has thought of that; he has told all to the woman a t the inn; she will tell them that the maid Is safe with Owa­toga.” Again: “ It is tho only way; trust Owatoga,” lie repeated, with mo­notonous insistence.

And she did trust him. She could not lose faith in the man who had been their friend for so long. And they had ever found him faithful. If, then, as ho said, her mother's anxiety would be relieved, tho chief load was lifted from her heart. Whatever was his reason for taking her away—freak, whim, or savage fancy, she felt sure it would not be for long, and, above all, she need have no personal fear. This security was much; it helped her to bear tho suspense and fatigue. Dumb aud tearless, she watched the shores glide by; the southern bank a vague blur of bluffs, tree-topped. The canoe

SHAKESPEARE SHOWN UP.Western Critic Dilatos in Characteris­

tic Phrase Upon tho Bard's

Shortcomin gs.

a pistol and shouted for the Mexican soldiers to follow him. They did so. and the enemy was put to flight. For ■his act of involuntary valor Kaster­litzky was made an officer and has steadily advanced until he is now u

colonel.r> *- *•Once at Magdalena, in the slate of

Sonora, where the colonel was in. com­mand of the barracks, he entertained an American friend. The next morn­ing, while dressing, the visitor heard some gun shots. When he met his host, at breakfast he asked the caus* of the firing, and the colonel told him he had just had three soldiers shot He was asked what they were charged with, and replied: “Nothing in par­ticular. We just shot them to keep up discipline.”—Indianapolis Star.

American diplomats are anxious over the question of promotions grow­ing out of the advancement of Mr. Meyer and the departure of President Roosevelt.

Mrs. Fannie Dunbar of Chicago and her aunt, Mrs. Bond of Laporte, Ind., were rescued at Laporte at the point of death from suffocation by coal gas, generated in a stove.

Attorney General Sturdevant, of Wisconsin, announced that he would b#.ig suit against the Burlington, the Illinois Central and the Green Bay & Western railroads to collect back li­cense fees.

Mrs. Robert E. Peary, wife of Lieut. Peary, the arctic explorer, announces her belief that her husband will make another attempt to reach the pole. Is in Portland. Me., awaiting his return from tins north.

Frederick Schaffliauser, a civil en­gineer in the bureau of water of Phil­adelphia. was shot and probably fatal­ly wounded by Frederick Hornberger, a fireman. The attempted murder was the outcome of domestic affairs.

BOY BANDIT HOLDS UP A TRAIN

O tThe following is a criticism Hamlet” by a critic out west:

o _____ ^ “There is too much chinning in th#

pleasure; here was light and fire—- p‘°,co' 1 ,le aulJlor is behind the times.here was a hearth-a home! an'1 aP!>€ars t0 for-et what we

Owatoga gave a grunt of triumph. 'va:u no'va<la.vs i!* hair-raising situa- "Thero is the hut of the old man of | lKJ“s detectives.

In the hands of a skillful play­wright a detective would have been put upon the track of Hamlet’s un­cle, and the old man would have been hunted down in a manner that would have excited the audience out of their No. l l ’s.

“Tho moral of the piece is not good. The scene where Hamlet, cheeks his mother is a very bad example to the

T h r* fm n 7 w ^ risins Generation, and it is not im­proved when the dreary old ghost comes in and blows him up.

“Our advice to the author is a lit­tle more action, a little more fine senti­ment. and a fair share of variety busi­ness In Jiis next piece. In the specialty arts of the play scene he has entirely missed his opportunities.”

the woods—let us go.” From the ?ee- ward they approached. “The old man has a no3o like the deer,” Owatoga whispered, as they slipped quietly over the boggy ground to the hut—a half­faced cabin of the rudest construc­tion.

The roof, which sloped from front to back, was of skins stretched on stakes, and fastened lo a large log at the base of the hill, unindoscd, and before it smouldered a low fire. Upon this a man, rising from the background, threw an armful of fagots, which, as they blazed, re­vealed tho interior. Picturesque, primeval it looked in the fitful light, the moss depending from cracks in the sides; the skins scattered about; the bed of leaves in the corner.

And for the man himself, this was a jfit s e t t i n g . .........................hind him, gazing at the fire. Of ath­letic proportions, a giant in stature, only the seamed brow and snow-white hair told of the storm and stress of years. He was dressed In the shirt, leggings and moccasins of the hunter. A cap of skins was pushed far back from his forehead, as though giving free range to tho wary eyes.

Instinct seemed to warn him of the

Effects of Love.. , Francis Wilson at a wedding break*

“ ° . stood; to lh hands be- fast m New York talked about thestrange effects of love.

“I used to know,” he said, “a young law clerk. No steadier and more re­liable workman than this young clerk existed. Like a machine he rose at seven in the morning and retired at ten at night, and like a machine he executed all his employer’s tasks with silent speed and accuracy.

“Then it happened that a beautiful presence of strangers, for he listened girl moved into the house next door

Seth Got His Store Boots.An ex-mavor of one of our Massa­

chusetts cities not 1,000 miles from Chelsea recently related to me an Interesting story of his early days, says a writer in the Boston Herald lie was born and spent his boyhood in York county. Me. It was the cus­tom in those days to have leather on hand and employ a local shoemaker to come to the house and make up and repair a supply of shoes for the coming year. Col. Bay, tho man em­ployed in that section, was not a very stylish or finished workman, and as the country stores had begun to koep boots, the future mayor informed him that he need not make him any boots, as he should get a pair of store boots.

Day was angry, and said: "You are getting d—d stuck up. T want you to know that better men than you

Lone Youth Forces Pullman Crew to

Collect His Booty.

-- - Booty.

Chicago, Nov. 10.—A lone boy ban­dit, weighing scarcely 110 pounds, held up the Golden State limited, the fast Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific train, Thursday night near Slater. Mo., and, telling the passengers that he was from Missouri, robbed the rear Pullman car, forcing the porter to collect in his cap the booty from the occupants of each berth. He allowed the women in the car to go unmo­lested. saving that "Jesse James never robbed ladies.”

After securing about $70 from the passengers he lined up the Pullman conductor, flagman and porter, and prepared to invade the other ears, but was thwarted by the conductor, who. as he entered the forward car at the head of the line, snapped the lock aud Shut out the bandit. The youth then pulled the bell rope, shouting: “Good night, kiddos,” and disappeared in the gloom.

Professor Dies.New York. Nov. 10.—Edmund H. Mil-

wear my make ol boots. John Ham. at Co,urabi:>of ,,n,vcrsit>« his home in West

, Nyack of typhoid fever. He was 3Sour representative, wore a pair my make to Augusta last winter.”

But Seth got his store shoes just the same.

years old aud a graduate of Columbia.

THE MARKETS.

intently for a moment, looking askance into the thicket near; then backed slowly to whore his rifle rested against a tree. Suddenly the girl watching him started as tho Indian, who was

now hugged the northern side so close ci°se at her side, gave a cry, shrill and it seemed she could almost wade ashore, sharp, like the hoot of an owl. The They were rowing westward; and once man hy the fire brought the gun toOwatoga said: “We follow the sun; he, too, will rest soon/’

Sho gave a start. “You must turn back before sunset,” but the savage rowed on unheeding.

The afternoon wore away, and still he plied a tireless oar.

At length Lavender nerved herself to ask: “Doe3 your friend—the man you call ‘master’—does he know you have taken me away?” The man shook his head. “My master knows nothing.” After a pause, he added: “He only said: ‘The yellow man must not have her.’ He did not say more. What could Owa­toga do? There was no other way.”

his shoulder, and the gleaming barrel was aimed directly at the spot where they stood in the darkness.

“Wait—stay here,” her guide com­manded, and alone he stalked boldly

to him, and lie fell in love with her.“And now behold the strange effects

of love.

“ ‘Jenkins/ said tho clerk’s employer > one morning, ‘have you finished draw­ing up the briefs of Hoskin and May- bury?”

“ ‘Yes. ducky/ the young man an­swered dreamily/’—Philadelphia Rec­ord.

Success Easier Than Failure.

The principles that win success are forward, repeating tho owl s cry—this very simple and few in number. They time with a peculiar intonation. The j are easily remembered.hunter at once relaxed his alarmed at­titude, and, resting easily on his rifle, returned the signal, and stood apparently awaiting Owatoga’s ap­proach.

Here they are: First, industry, but not overwork; sec­ond. willingness to profit by the ex­perience of others; third, ability cou­pled with modesty; fourth, simple and correct habits; fifth, honesty, polite-

By the glow of the campfire Laven- ness and fairness. Anyone of ordinary der could see tho meeting of the two . ability who practices these rules can-men. Both were tall, both seeming of an age, savo for the Indian’s raven hair.

not avoid success. Success is eaaiai than failure.—Atchison Globs.

Tramps Resemble Apes.There is a striking resemblance be­

tween tramps and apes, according to Dr. J. Wilson Rhodes, chairman of tho central committee of poor law conferences, says ihe London Ex­press.

“If.” he said, “you walk with an unemployed procession for about, half a mile and study the tramps you will see that a great many of them are of the degenerate type.

“They have a peculiar walk with them, and it is like that of an an­thropoid ape.

“I have watched the tramps in England, on the continent, and in America, and all the world over there is a great similarity between them.

“We must discourage the growth of the class of men who more nearly resemble apes year after year.”

Site for Charlemagne.Charlemagne, though interred at

Aix-la-Chapelle, and regarded as an ancestor by the German emperor, is nevertheless claimed as a Frenchman by the majority of modern Gauls. Their interest in the great emperor, however, does not extend to the point of providing a definite site for his monument, which for 20 years has occupied a temporary wooden pedestal 011 the banks of the Seine, within the precincts of Notre Dame. A movement is now on foot to have an appropriate pedestal set up for the statue, which is covered with watornroof canvas.

New York. Nov. 10. LIV h. SUOCK—Steers .

Hogs, State ............Sheep .......................

PLOUK -Minn. Patents WllKAT—December ....

May ........................CORN M ay ..................... .ii i' K—- .\u. 2 Western.........BL'TTKU ..... .f:HE KS:% .....EG4iS ............

Ch ic a g o .CATTLE Choice Steers

. . 45 0 0 & 5 70. . . r. .so <ff. « fK). . . 3 50 H 5 50. . . 4 15 M i 40

81% $ SW*8S% ®51 % © C lliG9%$j) 7019 26%

13. . 24% ® 25

Common lo Onn<l Steers. 4 Si ti 3i>e’earljngs. to Choice 4 f.O ft <5 25Iiulis, Common to Choice 2 25 $ l iX>Calves ............................. ..3 oti <*ji 7 75

L ijjs it M ix e d ............. ...G 20 a u 3 7 ^Heavy Packing ............ ..5 75 @5 95

SG S5 <ft, 7 35 4 554 r.o

ilOtfSII C.i . _______ _Mixed Packers .............. 5 93 & 6 2m

BUTTER—Creamery ........ iy q £,14Dairy ............................. is«£&

EGGS ................................. 21 ftLIVE POULTRY...............POTATOES (bu.)........ ;.... 34 %W11 EAT—December .........

5?^’ • • ■ ..........................Oats, May...................... 35&@Rye, December ............ 61 vis?

MILWAUKEE.GRAIN—Wheat, No. 1 Nor'n $ 7$

December .......................... 72-s 'Corn. December............ .... 42V«$>Oats. Standard ............Rye, No. 1...........................tifj fy

KANSAS CITY.GRAIN—Wheat. December. 5

May ............................... 71?**Corn, December............ 3Oats, No. 2 White......... 1

2:523It4373*47Si,i35%CZ

s<i73%

3066%

ST. LOUIS.

CATTLE—Beef Steers....... ?3

<17 71% 37% : .

Texas Steers H O G S —P a t ke r 3 .

Butchers .....S H E E P — Natives

3 00 C Cm C 10 3 CO

OMAHA. C A T T L E — N a t iv e S te e rs . . . S3 75

Stockers and Feeders..,. 2 7iC o w s and Heifers........ r. ii,

IIOGS—JJeavy ................... gSHEEP—Wethers ............. l 70

'x c 90<fl r, .’/>U 6 25'a i> 2--><& 5 01/

$1 f, ?o5: I 7'.V. -i 50a 6 io& ’> 50

Page 4: ,VEH CITIZEN - CulverAHS...n p T T Record, JIL jljbl,ers O ffic e 1ay06,VEH CITIZEN LAKE M'AXIXKUQKEE. VOL. IV. CULVER, INDIANA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1906. NO. 29 A BUS UPSET IN

THE CULVER CITIZEN (DANGERS OF DIETINGAltTHUK B. HOI.T. Pnhli-hrr.

S U B S C R IP T IO N K A T E S

O ho Year. in a d v an ce .......................................... $1 . 0 0Six Months, in advanco............................... 50T hree M o u th s , in a d v ance ........................................ i j

ADVERTISING Ruins- for homo and fu reign advertising mad*'

known on application.L es jil n d rc r rU in g a t t.hc rates fis« :l by law .

C u l v e r . In d ia n a . N o v . 15, 1906.

SMALL FARMS PAY.

Question of Interest to Many Mar­shall County Farmers.

‘‘Can a small farmer live?” is ihe title of an article by a professor. O f course, it depends on the far­mer. Probably the most success­ful farmer in the world lives at Paris, and he has a small tract of land, but every acre produces more than is usually raised on a great farm. The fact is, that the pro­duction of soil is quite unlimited. Labor and braius and science used in tilling a piece of grojnnd will ira k e th e yield beyond apparent possibilities, as we now look at it.

The ground yields a beggarly pittance to what could be raised from it. A small farm is a fortune if the very best is made of the ground. W heat makes men rich because they have boundless acres to devote to it. T hat fact does not warrant the claim that only great farms pay. Small farms will make them rich, too, if they can get from the ground what it can yield. A man told us the other day he sold §HfO worth of tomatoes from his garden, which didn’t amount to an eighth of an acre. Had he put it in wheat the proceeds would have been about $3.50.

B ut it is not so much thc selec­tion of crops as the getting out of the soil the resources that are in it. We heard a man say one time he put $140 worth of fertilizer on a n acre of ground and got $1,000 worth of production from it. It is the two things that will make the small farm the gold mine and the Eden of the future the selection of the right product aud then mak* ng the soil do its best. Ex.

| IN MARSHALL AND

g ADJOINING COUNTIES |

Oscar Fuller, aged 12 years, a newsboy in Plymouth, fell under the wheels of a locomotive on Thursday and was instantly killed.

W hile driving a cow home from pasture, an 8-year old son of Rob­ert Frisinger of Argos, was struck by an L . E . <Sc W . train and his foot crushed off.

Mrs. Jane C. Gunn died Tues­day at her home near Ober. She had suffered for a year from a com­plication of diseases. She is sur­vived by a husband and three daughters.

Two young men were arrested the other night while seining in the Lake of the Woods near B re­men. They had 150 pounds of fish Each plead guilty and paid $32 as line and costs.

A sanitarium is projected near San Pierre. T he water analyses the same as that of the famous French Lick Springs. The pro­jectors expect to have a spur track either from the Erie or Monon railroad and perhaps both to the grounds and to expend at least $1,000,000.

There are more onions stored in Kappanee this fall than ever be­fore in the history of the onion business. A t present in the d if­ferent storages along the B. & 0 there are about 76,000 bushels, an increase of nearly'35,000 over last year which at the time was thought to be a record breaker. Laughlin Bros. Op. own and control over half of the 70,000 bushels. Nap- panee News) '

Bargain in Flour.

Famous Gold Medal flour, F ri­day and Saturday only, $2.20 per hundred, c a s i i , in 25, 50 or 100 lb. sacks, every .one warranted. D il­lon & Med bourn.

W hen tho- t ip o f a- d o g s nose is co ld aud m o i> l. th a t- d o e -is n o t s ic k . A feverish d ry nose m eans sfclcnoss w ith a d d s . A n d so w ith ih t; h u m a n . ips. D ry , crocked a nd co lorless l i { m e a n firvcrishness. riii'l, a re as w e ll i l l a p ­p e a r in g . T o have ije au tifn J^ p in k , velvet- like lip s , a p p ly a t t icd tfm e a c o a tin t; o f D r . S h o o p ’s G w n Sa lve . I i w il l so ften a n a : hea l any sk in a i lm e n t . G e t a free. t r ia l box a t o u r s to re a nd be conv inced . L a rg o n ic k e l capped « lass , 25 cents. T. E . S la tte ry , d ru g g is t .

Old newspapers at Citizen offijco.

U\DERFEEDING LIABLE TO WEAKEN

HEART’S ACTION.^

X’M i a l l y A p p e t i t e I k it M e a s u r e o f

H e a l t h , a n d ( t i e F i r s t S i g n o f IH -

I n a M n n o r a n A n i m a l l.s l<osx

o f t h e D e s i r e F o r l- 'ootl.

Professor Alexander Ilnig. an Eng­

lish dietary expert, lias written from

London to tho medical fraternity of

New York warning Americans against

the popular belief that the average

man eats too much. He says that the

increasing number of deaths from heart failure is largely due to underfeeding.

The notion that science is a more unerring guide than is nature Is con­stantly gaining ground. In the good old days men drank when they were thirsty and ate of whatever they wished until their hunger was satisfied. Now science condemns such foolishness as primitive. It prescribes one glass of water one hour before meals and one glass one hour after meals—no more, no less. I f you happen not to be thirsty at those times, no matter, drink that amount anyway. I f perchance you are lliirsty arid would like two glasses you must, not yield; it is only nature that prompts you, and nature is an unsafe guide. Or. you may be “abnormally” thirsty at meals; nevertheless do not drink then.

As to our amount of food, we are directed to consume so many grams of the proteids, so many grams of the carbohydrates and so many grams of fat. while we hear learned discourses upon large calories and the supreme importance of exactly maintaining our nitrogen balance—whatever that may mean.

I have purposely not mentioned thc precise numbers of grams of the differ­ent food elements, for the simple rea­son that our eminent authorities have not yet agreed upon this important point. All give different figures.

Scientists, however, following the lead of Russell II. Chittenden, Ph. 1>., LL. IX. Se. IX, have pretty well agreed that the average man eats twice more than he needs. I f half his customary amount of food does nor, satisfy him it ought to. they say, and it will even­tually. provided he keeps on suppress­ing his natural and therefore unscien­tific instincts.

But just here lies a danger. It is true that one can accustom himself to a much smaller quantity of food than lhat to which he has been habituated and that eventually he will desire that smaller quantity and no more, but when he attains to this condition his digestive power will have been re­duced by one-half. As a result hs will lose from ten to thirty pounds in weight; that is to say, his muscles and organs will decrease by so much iu bulk and strength. Now, if the heart decreases considerably in strength there will always be danger of its col­lapse, particularly if it be subjected to any extra strain, as when one runs for a car or rapidly up a flight of steps. Excitement alone may be fatal to a weak heart.

Rigorous dieting to reduce weight is j always dangerous. A better plan is to work off the superfluous flesh by ex­ercise.

Lack of sleep has a depressing effect on the heart, for during sleep cerebral circulation diminishes, when the blood can devote itself to the rest of the body.

Ealing before going to bed, particu-

PROSESSIONAL DIRECTORY.

£ )R . Q, A R E A ,

P h y s ic ia n and S urg eo n

■n iTnnm— TTTyrwio-< -----> o

H

OFFICE: M a in Street, opposite Post OiJice

C u l v e r . I n d ia n a .

P>:v TrsT.

T w o D</ors ?<< ! h o* I ’opto ftico— P ho tic 23 1.

C U L V E R , IN D .

[7^ E. P A R K E R ,

P h y s ic ia n and S u rgeon

Special attention ffiven to Obstetrics and Diseases of Women. Orilce over Cr.lvor Ex­change Bank. rvcsidmice, corner Main end Scott Streets, Office hours, 8 to 10 ». in; 2 to 4 p. m. and 7 to So. m

W . S . W IS E M A N , M. D.

P h y s i c ia n a n d S u r g e o n

C u l v e r , I n d ia n a .

N. J . F A IR C H IL D ,

L i v e S t o c k a n d G e n e r a l

A u c t io n e e r .

Terms Reasonable. Satisfaction Guaranteed Write for dates, Residence. 2 miles east of Max- uikuckoo Lake. CULVER, IND.

T rustee’s Notice.After April 1st. rny wrcfcly office days, for the

transaction of town, hip busines*. will ho as fol­lows: Tuesdays at my residence, and Satur­days at my otlice ove- the Ezebnniro Vtnhfc. Cul-

FRANK .M. PARKER.Trustee.

-.Copyright,lWS,by McClure, Phillips & Co.j

.Toe Peters was a bad one, but a thoroughbred. He had seen better days.

Colville was five miles from Fort j Yuma. Colonel McClentoek used to ig- ID R. N O RM A X S. N O R R IS ,nore the town’s laws and go for tres- i ----passers against his command himself.He had had t-!(s with Joe Peters and had declared that he would some day pet him dead to rights. He thought the day had come when a paymaster was robbed, and the finger of suspicion pointed strongly lo ihe gambler. Over to Colville he went, with half a com­pany at his back, and I’eters had just live ininui.es lo prepare himself, lie “made good’’ by walking out to meet thc colonel and holding a revolver to his head until he gave the order for the soldiers to turn back. When the colo­nel had got back to his parade ground he took the biggest kind of an oath that he wouldn't die until he had got even for the humiliation.

When fall came it was known that Joe Peters was out of health. Dissipa­tion and a strenuous life were begin­ning to tell. lie was so financially well fixed that he could have gone in any direction, but he remained right there.He had thc cough of a consumptive ou him and men had begun to notice that his grip was growing weaker when winter, which had been holding off in a wonderful way. set in with a bliz­zard. It began Mowing and snowing soon after noon one day. and an hour after dark the driver of the up coach rolled off his horse at the Black Bear hotel and was carried into the barroom more dead than alive. He reported that he had been compelled to abandon his coach in Panther pass, five miles below. He had cut loose one of the leaders and had been three hours mak­ing his way into Colville against the gale and the drifts.

“And the passengers?” some one asked.

“There wasn’t but one, and, God help me, I had to leave her In the coach!’’

“A woman, and you left, her behind!” exclaimed Joe Peters as be came for­ward.

“But what could I do?” whimpered the man.

His ears and nose and fingers and toes had been frostbitten, and had he had half a mile farther to ko the cut­ting winds would have had his life. If he had abandoned the woman he had at least reached some spot from which help could be sent.

“Who Is the woman?” asked Peters of the driver.

“She’s the colonel's wife. That’s what makes It so bad. Nobody can get through to the fort in this storm. Ev­ery cut will be blocked five feet deep.”

Peters rose up and walked about for a moment and then said to the land­lord :

“Have the boy saddle my horse. I also want a couple of blankets aud a bottle of brandy.”

“What the devil’s afoot, Joe?"“I ’m going after the woman.”There were vigorous protests from

the score of men in the barooui. They were not a selfish lot, and chivalry was not dead in their breast, hut it was one chance in a hundred, and they did not feel like taking it. I f a rescuer succeeded In forcing his way through the drifts It would bo to find the wo­man frozen to death. They argued

SLATTERY’ST H E P L A C E

to buy Drugs and everything else

one has a right to esped in

a >:irst~class Drug Store

B a b y N eeds- N u rs ing Bottles, Nipples, Brushes for bottles, Fresh Baby roads and Rubber Host).

C o u g h art<S C o l d M e d i c i n e s We have ail of the very best kinds.

Rubber G o o d s - H o t Water Bottles, Syringes, etc., made of pure rubber and guaranteed.

C a n d i e s - Only the pure, high-grade Candies, and a tempting assortment. •

New line of Souvenir Post Cards---:, Books and Fancy China.

0 < ~r

larly if one is up late, is a good prae- aud protested, but Peters quietly wentlice, it being most favorable to thor­ough body repair that the blood at night be rich Iu nourishment.

Accustoming the digestive organs to a small amount of food results in a de­cline of appetite, whereas our object should be to increase appetite aud thereby strengthen our digestive pow­ers by judicious exercise in the open air or in a well ventilated room.

I f the doctriue that a small appetite is preferable to a large appetite be true—and this is what “economy in nutriliou” teaches—then open air ex­ercise, which manifestly Increases ap­petite, must be Injurious to health. Or why should we exercise to increase ap­petite if we may eat. only so much?

The notion is v,-holly absurd. The first sign of illness in a man or an ani­mal is loss of appetite. And usually appetite Is a measure of health.

To build up the heart and muscular system generally we must vigorously exercise the muscles.

It is not enough that one should stuff himself; it is all important that he should desire every morsel he eats, aud this1 he will do only if he under­goes general physical and mental ex­ercise. Food that is ingested, aud even digested, will be absorbed only by those organs that need it—that have been exercised. This fact explains why many persons that are good "feed­ers” are yet Inadequately nourished. I f they are brain workers and take no physical exercise their brains absorb wbat nourishment they need; the rest is excreted.

Magnificent as are the results of brain work we must bear in mind that there could be no result without the co-operation of the body, and that the body in its turn depends primarily on the integrity of Its heart, lungs and stomach.—G. Elliot Flint in New York- World.

M en o f t h e P e o p le .The American tradition is the expe­

rience of the world everywhere. There is Washington and there is Hamilton, gently born and gently bred, but some­how the heart turns rather to Franklin aud to Lincoln, as of more, hope for the common men “God made so many of.” Mr. Howells in Harper’s Weekly.

It requires a great deal of boldness and a great deal of caution to make a great fortune, and when you have got it It requires ten times as much wit to keep it.—Rothschild. ■

ou with his preparations. When they saw that he was determined to g:> man after man offered his company.

“I ’m game to try it alone,” replied Peters. “You know I ’ve got a little ac­count to settle with the colonel. Have things ready to thaw us out when we turn up.”

“There’s a man for you, and we are a lot of curs!” announced on individual as Peters rode away In the storm and darkness, aud no man turned to resent his words.

No ono has ever told how the gam­bler’s horse buffeted his way through the drifts until the stage was finally , reached. W hat seemed Impossible was j at last accomplished. The three stage horses left behind had fallen stiff in , their tracks and were hidden under ihe snow, and the vehicle was simply one ' of the many snow mounds.

“Is anybody iu there?” was shouted ! by the man on horseback.

“Yes, but I am perishing with the cold.”

“Drink half this bot tle of brandy and then wrap these blankets around you. Now give me your band, and get you on the saddle in front of me. No more talk now.”

■ - “ ......

Two hours down to the stalled coach, two hours, back to Colville, and the thermometer had gone down twelve de­grees in that time. There were men who swore in admiration, and there were others who turned away with tears in their eyes at the sight.

“The woman is all right and will be chipper in a day or two.” said the doc­tor, “but Joe Peters has played his last j hand. I t ’s the most cruel thing I ever saw. He can’t be disturbed for a day or two, but: after that you want to form ' In line aud ko softly in and bid him goodby.”

Three days later the colonel came down from the fort to find his wife up and about and playing nurse to the man waiting iu the shadow. He heari1 the tale aud took one of the limp hands In both .of his, and with tears stream­ing down his cheeks ho said:

“I can’t begin to tell you how I feel about this.”

“Cut it.out. colonel.” answered Pe­ters. with a weary smile. “Perhaps it’s a bit of offset for some of my shady things. Yes; cut it out and send Che boys in to shake hands. I ’m not much on sentiment, but I ’m going a long Journey, and .1 want a good sendoff.”

M. QUAD.

Uw-rr--- -

]E carry one of thc largest stocks of men’s, boys’ and children’s clothing

in this vicinity. It represents a greater variety of styles and patterns than you can find if vou were to travel miles.

IY IS THIS? If we were not able to satisfy cus­tomers, if we did not

have the goods they were look­ing for they would go else­where. Every time a merchant loses a sale he makes a tfood customer for one of his com ­petitors.

HIS is reason enough for our putting forth thc

utmost efforts to keep a stock of thc most up-to-date clothing as regards style, qual­ity a n d correct sizes.

D5SN’T it reasonable to ex­

pect that you can do

better in buying of us than you could elsewhere?

MITCHELL &STABENOWTHE ONE-PRICE CLOTHIERS

M. R. CLINEC on t ra c to r and B u i ld e r

Rcsidcace— HaxliiKBCfcce.

For the Finest Bakery Goods71L W 71 V S G O T O

HOWAUDce Cream to Order—Meals Served

T E L E P H O N E 23*2

W. S . E A S T E R D A YFU R N IT U R E and U N D E R T A K IN G

Tw o P h on os—Independent and H ellD a y and N igh t Gal ls R e c e i v e P r o m p t a t tent ion

Garry a Complete Line of Furniture

Next Door to Postoffice , Culver , Ind

John S . G a slT IN N E R

Spouting, Tin Slid Slcel Roofing, Steel Ceiling, W arm Air

Healing, Etc.

I keep on hand at all times a full

line of Valleys, Ridge Rolls. Ridge

Boards and Crestings.

<y?,zo

General JoD anti Repair Worft.

D . Er. O v e r m a n

o p t ic ia n

JEWELER

1 am a graduate optician and know how to lit glasses to every form of defective vision, and I keep a full: line of eye glasses and spectacles. I

«£ jc v*

A s an expert watch and. clock rc- j pairer and jeweler 1' am qualified to do all work in the repairing line.

V* &

A t Department Store,C U L V E R . I N D .

STEAM BOILEDSORGHUMWe are selling a limited amount of our steam boiled Sorghum at

r i m r c e n t s p m

at the factory at Leiters’ Ford, Indiana. Don’t wait too Ion* or it will all be gone : : : ; :

ALSPACH BROS

P ennsylvan ia

CU LV ESJ C IT Y

MeatMarket

DEALERS IN

FRESH Sc SMOKED MEATS

SAUSAGES, ETC.

ce& o

WALTER £* SON, Props.Cor. Main and Wat-hinefenn Sts.,

CULVER, IND.

LINESE X C U R S I O N S T O

West—North-west

South—SouthwestHoinc-Seeker*' Escur.-uons in October

California

Oregon Montana

Washington

Idaho Mexicoand Intermediate Territory

One-}Vay Socond-Class Colonist Tickets on sale daily until October 31 $(

For information abont Fares and trains, iuquire of

S. J . LENON, TicKei agent. Culver, Fnd.

Steam-boiled sorghum is the best J that- is' made. Ailspach Bros. t'3

ie s i Prfisfie^ $ fiie Cliizen Office

WSLLBAM CbK U B B

P L U M B E R All wgpK Guaranteed to be saaUanj

SDop In Reap ol Tin Sftop, culver

M axinkuckce Hour for sale by Porter & Co., Stahl & Co., The Surprise ana Saine & Sou. Every sack guaranteed to be first class.

I Try a sack.

Page 5: ,VEH CITIZEN - CulverAHS...n p T T Record, JIL jljbl,ers O ffic e 1ay06,VEH CITIZEN LAKE M'AXIXKUQKEE. VOL. IV. CULVER, INDIANA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1906. NO. 29 A BUS UPSET IN

THE CULVER CITIZENARTHUR 2. HOLT. Publisher.

E nte red a t th e posto tliiv ' a t C u lv e r , In d ia n a . ft3 sficoud-cla.-.s m a i l m a tte r .

C ulveB, Indtana, N o v . 15, 1906.

HEN FRUIT.

A Trip to ArSunsas.

On Oct. 10 Joseph Castleman, wife and little son Rudy and m y­self took tho train from Culver for the state of Arkansas, arriving at. Austin on t.be evening of the 17th. finding our friends residing therewell and much surprised to see us

Scarcity the Result of Hens Moult- as we had not written them thating Late Xnis Year. j we were c0mi0g.

Hena arc on a strike. N ot th a t , 0m . route from g t _ Louig wason they have organized a «mon with , thft In>n Monnt.,in road aIld the chanticleers tor walking delegates,, (.r part o( the way ot 300 milesor anything of that sort, but they | waB desolate and mountain-j have all postponed their m oulting; ^ traveliug ,llollg a singgish riv. for somo unknown reason, and in- ^ for 50n)(. mile8j an(, again a lo n g | stead of moulting in August the the skIe of a mountain. On one ‘•ornery critters” chose the latter side w(,redeepravincs without hab- part of October this year ;>s the nations winen reminded us y j- t j1(, time for shedding their feathers. hold-up stories we bad read in days * Owing to this fact hens’ eggs are past. For a couple of hours the

price has as r0;' s" au the train was delayed on account ofmark in no time at all. to the 25- dangerous portions o f ' track and

Cold-storage men are piling „ p | detecl® lnJ ihe e"»'ine whioh leak<*1 a big supply, just as they did last | f teara' For * to v days w0 vi8ited winter, but if the weather is open in Austin where my

his daughter reside.brother and We took aas it was last season, they will re­

ceive another jolt, for eggs will be plentiful and cheap after this moulting period is passed.

Not in many years has the hen fruit famine come so earlv, and not oven within the remembrance!1X!mtentlary' wl,ere Mr. OastUnujn ot the oldest, inhabitant has moult-1 ,wa? " lcaIcer“‘«d until his bother­

ing been so late. 1 m-law 8ot bim on t He si,?s thatI experience was enough for the bal-

A Good Paste. i anc© of his lifetime, as a dozen

Nephew Isaac, and on Sunday vis­ited Little Rock cemetery which consists of forty acres of ground. About a quarter of a mile from the common cemetery we came to tho national cemetery, established on April i), 1S(»B. The number of in­terments is 5,425; known, 13,092; unknown, 2,333. Every grave was marked with a two-foot slab all in rows as straight as a line could make them. The national ceme­tery is inclosed by a stone wall four feet high and three feet through, and near the center of the grounds stands a tall pole with the stars and stripes floating in the breeze. There has been a sentinel standing guard, but time has about obliter­ated it. A s we stood and viewed those silent tombs we thought of the strife between the North and South and rejoiced to think the t'VO sections had become cemented in peace.

Return ing to Austin we finished our visit. Mr. Castleman took

hand at picking cotton, then took part in coon and opos-the train for L ittle Rock, about 25 j 8UU1 huuU< ° ne niShfc a Part.v of miles, where Nephew John resides! tweut>’ men anc} Hfteen (J° g s and near the site where the new state soine Jamaica ginger took part inhouse is being erected and near the

M A T R IM O N IA L .

Lucius Lockwood Married to Eva

Mitchell at Rochester.

On Sunday, Nov. 4, at 2 p. m , at the home of the bride’s sister, Mrs. Carl Shumaker of Rochester, Ind- occurred the marriage of Lucius Lockwood to Eva Etneline M itch­ell. in the presence of a large num­ber of relatives and friends. After the ceremony, which was per­formed by Rev. J. P. Rogers, all partook of a sumptuous wedding dinner. The day following a deli­cious infare dinuer was given by the groom's parents. Mr. and Mrs.

i Seymour Lockwood, at whioh a host of friends and relatives were present and all had a delightful time. About seventy-live gnest-8 partook of the infare dinner. young couple were the recipients

* of many beautiful presents. amonw which was an elegant water set. They will reside with the groom’s parents for the present. The hap­py couple have the best wishes of all who know them.

the hunt.

Hibbard. M b s. E. J. R e e d .

Culver a Peaceable Com munity.

There are no “ factions” iu this i little city of ours. Every improve­ment made enhances the value of all property in and surrounding our town. We should live as one big family. W e have as few ‘ black sheep’’ in our place as any flock iu the state. When there is

A good paste which is yet in- bloodhounds at a little distance expensive is a necessity in any from him will go a good ways with home where there are children,, him. Nephew John gave us a since many a rainy day can be put I street car ride out to Forest Park, in happily with the paste jar, a )3 miles from the city limits, to pair of scissors aud an old maga- view tho zoo, the route being a cir- zine or two. Purchase 5 cents leuitous one on tho mountains look- j L S(ord *n family there is little worth of gum arabic and turn it ing down into ravines 50 and 1001 P-°«ro88' ^ hen there is a united into a wide-mouthed pint jar hav- feftf deep, but we enjoyed it to the j t*;oro *s little we Cannot ae- ing a screw top. F ill the jar two- fullest extent. jcomplish. Envy, jealousy aud

thirds full of cold water and set A fter visiting Nephew John we hatKf PU/* U.S aM down> K,,vy is away over night. In the moruiug went to E ast L ittle Rock where we “ 7 , gnaws at,.the heart a smooth, transparent jelly will bo | visited another nephew. Isaac. aiK mak^ 8 0,10 st>ur; disgruntled the result, and this should be well i thence to D uval’s B luff where an- unh»PPy- Jealousy makes stirred up from the bottom with a other nephew resides, 45 miles , ln pa8S,n» Judgment;stick. Lot it stand for three j from Little Rock. ‘ We passed! T™, Y ‘°r ? ay cv®n from a nights this way, stirring it up through some fine country. The I f P?H l ? Vie" ’ u* aI1each morning. Then add a few products are principally corn, cot- ? * T ,P drops of wintergreen, to scent it ton and rice. T he cultivation of ! , v our what a largenicely, and it is ready for use. rice is a new feature in farming in ! a“ d harr^ ° ^ U8 famibr can accom- Turn into a small je lly tumbler for | that part of the state, being in its h m k h l^ UP a town-immediate use, keeping the large j second year, and has proven suc- jar air-tight. This paste is not at cessfu! so far. The crop was a all sticky and can be applied with j heavy one aud of line quality this the fingers, if necessary, without j year.disagreeable results. 1 » . . . ,, Rl „ v ,_____ _______ Arriving at Duval s Bluff, Neph-

— W e hate to throw cold water j ew James being a physician and on anybody’s scheme, but we hope very busy, we had to bide our time that no one in Marshall county for sight-seeing. On our second

L et The Citizen do your \ rint ing, and you will get the best.

The Youth’s Companion

F O R E . V E R Y

M E M B E R O F

T H E F A M I L Y

Important to Housekeepers.Friday and Saturday we will sell, I

FOR CASH, a 25, 50 or 100 lb. sack ' of Gold Medal flour at $2.20 per hundred. Dillon & Med bourn.

The new pure food and drug law will marl; it , on the .mIk-1 oi every cough cure containing i opium, chloroform, or any other stupefying or

- . poisonous drug. But it; pastes Dr. Shoop's

will be foolish enough to buy stock ! day we started. Our first place Iin any so-called Chicago-New York was to the river where men were | f f telectric rad road company.

other fellow get stac„ iIV« n W , ,| W ig rs «>w liwgu ue rn eK S . v v o i tho law be your protection. We chocrfully

were sighted across the river to a !co,M,uoua uud-£ l.lc:

!IIE volume for 1907 will give for $1.75 an amount

of good reading equivalent to twenty 400-page books—history, fiction, science, biography and miscellany costing ordinarily $1.50 each. Sample Copies of T he Y outh ’s Companion and Announcement for 1907 will be

sent to any address free.

— ........ .............v.uuuii i-> niMoiucciy sail? t*von for Miepany. Let-the j unloading sawlogs and ties from i :

ic k - y o u keep I barges with large derricks. your money in your pocket. T . P.. S la tte ry . d ru jjg i* t .

— Sheriff-Elect. Dan Voreis h a s|hi«h b ,u ff where daring the war selected Frederick Schroeter of wa8 sic»ated a confederate fort. I Bourbon township as his deputy, h^ve forgotten the name of it.

Preventics,.as the name implies, prevents all we s‘lw V. liero d battle wascoids.BudBnp ,>e when "tukcn ac ihv .uceze fought, soldiers of both sides wore p \ p t W ayne Ind

I b,,ried thore and 90me of the bones j ........................n l "3 (10 3 2)

Live Stock Show at Chicago.Low round trip rates via Nickel

Plate Road Nov. ;$0, Dec. 1, 2. B and4 ,good returning Dec. 10 Call ou agent or address C. A. Melin, T.

yo.u 11 fc,cl.lliat acoki is coming were washed out and lav exposed ------------------ --they cbcck a u d p reven t th o m . P reven tic s a r c ! • T i V \ 1 i * 1thoroughly safeifor children, aud ai o(Ti-otiial N ext dav we returned to lOast T t . Alspach s sorgnuui.toror adult:;. Sold anu recommended in 5 uud _ “ ' | — _

Old papers at the Citizen office.- - - - - --------- recom m ended isi 5 a u d . _ i

cent boxes by T. B. Slattery, druggist. i tie Rock, stayed over night with I

Every New Subscriber «

w ho cu ts ou t and sends th is s lip a t once w ith nam e and address and

S t . 75 w i l l receive

FREEA ll the issues of The Companion for the rem a in ing weeks of :qo6 . Thiuiksglv- in g , Christm as and New Y ear's Double Numbers. The Com panion 's Four-Leaf H ang ing Calendar for 19 0 7 in 12 colors and go ld, and The Companion for tbe 5 a weeks of 15 0 7 — a library of the best reaalng lor every member of the fam ily .

PECIAL INDUCEMENTS AT W. E. HAND’S GROCERY

Remember I am closing out my line of Ernia and Forget-me-not chinaware, and everything I have in footwear, at less than cost, if I can fit you I’ll save you money

SO DO NOT FAIL TO SEE ME

M IcLAN iE £ . C O .

Feed M sale

Special attention given to travel­ing men. Terms reasonable.

FRED C O O K

THE CULVER BLACKSMITH

Barn R ust o f the Pos to f f i c e

$16,290 la ca6*1 0!:(t rrn tty otJtcr spec ia l — . aw a rd s to s u b sc r ib e rs w h o petne w su b sc r ip tio n s . Send fo r in fo rm a tio n .

T he Y outh’s Companion. Boston. Ma s s .

General >>? Blacksmithinti______— — 11 1 i i — —— — nan

H o r s e s h o e i n g a n d R e p a i r sJ* &

FIRSTCLASS W O RK A SPECIALTY

Prices Guaranteed Reasonable & ^ &

South M a in S t., Qu ive r . Ind.

Get your visiting cards printed in the latest stvles at the Citizen

HORSESHOEING A SPECIALTY

Ail kinds of Kepair Work neatly and promptly done.

EAST OS MACHINE 5HCP

eat at Plymouth

stop at ti\e

J . R . S o w e l l P r o p r i e t o r

N e w su b scrip tio n s re c e iv e d at this office. office. Call and S e e 9aUlpleS.

Abso lute ly the 15E.ST ME ALS and the BEST SERVICE in the City

Page 6: ,VEH CITIZEN - CulverAHS...n p T T Record, JIL jljbl,ers O ffic e 1ay06,VEH CITIZEN LAKE M'AXIXKUQKEE. VOL. IV. CULVER, INDIANA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1906. NO. 29 A BUS UPSET IN

\\L\fd f

EVENTS OF GREATEST INTEREST

THROUGHOUT THE STATE

R E C O N C IL IA T IO N IS D E A R

Petersburg Farm er and W ife Re­

united A fter Entering Into Pecu­

liar Agreement— No Atheists

in Fort W ayne.

Petersburg. — George Elkins, a

wealthy farmer east of this city, has entered into a peculiar agreement. Several weeks ago Mrs. Elkins left his roof, alleging that he drank to ex­

cess and that she would no longer live wil.h him. She retained attorneys to institute divorce proceedings. Iu

the meantime Mr. E lkins began mak­ing overtures looking to a reconcilia­tion. He purchased a line horse and buggy, which ho offered to his wife, but she refused to accept it. Then he offered to deed her «S0 acres of his finest land, together with $2,000 cash, and further promised to forfeit all of his real estate and personal property to her in case he should resume his dissipated liabils. This appeal had its effect, especially after it was reduced to writing and signed, and the princi­pals arc again united. They were

married 20 years ago and have adult children.

Held to Be Not a G ift.

Indianapolis. — Merely tolling an­other person to take any particular

article or series of articles and “go to bhiy.es" with it or (hem does not le­gally constitute a transfer of prop­erty rights. This was the opinion handed down by W. C. Smock, justice of the peace, who had been informed that W illiam Case had told his wife Lydia to take their household goods

and "go to blazes w ith them." <:I do not believe that Case legally gave the goods to his wife,” said Justice Smock. “Such a statement would hardly be regarded as attending a gift." So, regardless of whether or not sl'.e obeyed her husband’s injunction

as to the furniture and its destination, the court decided that Mrs. Case was not entitled to the disputed articles.

W ill Not Pipe Illino is Gas.

Indianapolis.—The subcommittee of the business men who investi­

gated the Illinois natural gas field, with a view to bringing the gas to Indianapolis for domestic consump­tion, has made its report to the gen­era! committee. One sentence of the report sums up its conclusions as fol­lows: “It is the opinion of your com­mittee that, while gas is there (in the Robinson field) in large quantities, it would not be feasible for the commer­

cial organizations which we represent to undertake the building of a pipe

line." .

Hickory Nuts Are Scarce.

Newcastle. — Lovers of hickory nuts in Henry county will long

look in vain for them this year. Ten years ago they were plentiful, but woodworking factories have made a heavy onslaught on the supply of hickory timber, with the result that

there are few trees left. W hat trees remain have failed to bear nuts this year.

School Teachers P lan Lobby.

Richmond. — A determined fight for a m inimum wage law on the

part of school teachers in Indiana, led by those of Hancock county, has

been inaugurated. Resolutions have been drawn up and will bo sent to each of the county organizations and a strong lobby will also be sent to theli legislature.

Cane Leads to Rescue.

Terre Haute.— A miner leaving work a t Vandalia mine No. 3 no­

ticed the cane of Mitchell Daly, a crip­ple, leaning against an entry. Daly was found bleeding and unconscious in the shaft and but for the return of the men would have bled to death dur­ing the night. lie had been injured

by a powder explosion.

Dreams of Big Quake; Dies.

Logausport.— Conrad S. Kraut, a

Southern Pacific railroad clerk, who was unharmed by the San Francisco earthquake, died after a

nightmare recalling his experience.

In iiis sleep he kicked the bedpost so violently as to snap the ligaments in his leg. Pneumonia set in during con­

valescence.

Elks Building a $20,COO Home.

Crawfordsville. - The Crawfords- villo lodge of Elks has let the

roii! rat:t for a new $20,000 horue. The

site is directly opposite the handsome home place of the late Senator Lane, and two blocks distant from ihe busi­

ness center of the city. The lodge home wili be ready for dedication in the spring.

Auto Scares Horses; Three Hurt.

Hammond. — Three persons were injured, two perhaps fatally, in an accident, at East Chicago, caused by

a spirited team owned by a brewing company of Chicago taking fright at a motor car twned by the W hiting Foundry Equipment company of Har­vey, 111. Gottfried Loetscher, years old. driver of tho team, of Hammond, had both legs broken and was inter- ; nally injured. Raymond Ranscher. 14 j yeard old, and Edwin Ranscher, nine j •years old, both riding with Loetseher,

were injured internally. I

Distilleries to Denature Alcohol.Torre Haute.— The report from

Peoria that the Atlas and the

Monarch, two of the whiskey trust's big distilleries idle for some time, wouid be started soon, caused inter­ested persons In Terre Haute to be­lieve the trust’s big distillery here, the Majestic, was not to be operated, but there is creditable information that on January l the rebuilt and new­ly-equipped plant will he put in op­eration. lt has a capacity of nearly 10.000 bushels of corn a day. It i3 un­derstood that at Peoria the trust will make denatured alcohol. The common mistake is In thinking that, this re­quires special preparation and single­

ness of purpose ln the operation of a distillery. Tho Majestic will make both spirits and denatured alcohol, as also no doubt will both tho independ­ent distilleries now in operation In

Terre Haute.

T H A N K SG IV IN G CO.YlluC

Car Shortage Raises Price of Coal.

Terre Haute.—The price of coal

at the mines ln the bituminous field of Indiana has been advanced 25 cents a ton. Again operators explain that it is the operation of the law of supply and

demand and is due to the ear short­age. The operators south of Terre

Haute, with their output now perhaps two-thirds of capacity, have suffered severely from Ihe shortage in the last two weeks until at some mines not more than two days a week have they been able to hoist coal. They say now that :he Big Four and the Vandalia. after delivering coal at Indianapolis and other points, send the “empties” to mines on their roads instead of re­turning them to the Southern Indiana

and Evansville & Terre Haute from which the loads were received. This w ill probably be referred to the state

Railway commission.

“ P lanted” Poles W ithou t Perm ission.

Fort Wayne.— 1The Central Union Telephone company has entered

a plea of guilty to three charges of violating city ordinances regarding the “planting” of poles without first obtaining authority and also Tor tear­ing up sidewalks. The city has nearly 50 other complaints on which to base charges. City Attorney Guy Colerick preferred the charges. The Central Union (Bell) has been getting many new subscribers, and it was in “plant­ing” poles outside the lim its of its franchise that the misdemeanors wore committed.

Toughs Trounced by a Teacher.

Bedford.— Benjam in Morgan, teach­er in the Island City schools,

gave a pie supper in the schoolhouse

for the benefit of t.ho school. A num ­ber of Island City “ toughs" patron­

ized the supper, and, their conduct becoming unruly, they were requested to behave themselves by Prof. Mor­gan. and they showed fight. In quick succession Morgan whipped four of their best fighters and compelled them to leave the building. After this les­son there was no further trouble.

Fortifies H im self Against Poverty.

Shelbyville. — For a considera­tion, named at $1,000, Thomas

Heating, a veteran m iller a t Adams, near this city, has deeded to the

Preachers’ Aid society of the Metho­dist Episcopal church eight town lots

and three ami a half acres of land ad­join ing the town of Adams. In return the society will care for him and his wife tho remainder of their lives. At

his death a large amount of other real estate that he owns will go to tho church.

Preacher W arns Girls.

Knightstown. — In a sermon to young men. Rev. Fred T. Thorn­burg, pastor of ihe Methodist church,

denounced the practice of “spooning,” and warned the young women to have

a care of their relations with young men who show such a tendency. The subject of his sermon was, “The Young Man and Il is Sweetheart.” The sermon was one of a series treating on the young man in his relations to the world, society, his home and his Lord.

Bank Cashier Found Dead.

Salem.— Charles B. W illiams, book­keeper of the Citizens' bank and act­ing as cashier, was found dead in the vault of the bank.

A load of shot from a shotgun had penetrated his heart.

The gun was kep'; in the bank vault and it. is believed Mr. W illiams in changing its position accidentally dis­charged it.

He was a son of former Auditor J.

L. W illiams, of this county.

Church Dedication at Lawrcnccburg.

Lawrenceburg. Trinity Episcopal church, recently dedicated in this city, was erected as a memo­rial to the late Bishop Kuickerbacher. It is built of cement blocks, with slate roof, electric lights and other con­veniences, and the Rev. W illis D. En­

gle, of Indianapolis, is rcctor. The dedication services were conducted by the Rt. Rev. Bishop Francis, of Indianapolis.

Pays for Funeral; Ends Life.

Kokomo.— Miles Morgan went to

a local bank and deposited $100, which he said was to be devoted

to funeral expenses. An hour later he throw himself before a trolley car and was killed almost instantly.

Man Fatally Injured in Fight.Bedford.— Ezra K inser struck and

fatally injured Edward Deckard w ith a

club during a fight ac a resort in the H ills in the northern part, of this coun ty. Kinser is being search? I for by

the authorities.

V/yrrL. ■=> V' capolti journal..Mints:

H E CHARGEC O M E S S IS REPUBLICAND EM OCRATS H AV E G A IN ED 23

M E M B E R S O F H OU SE .

Senate W ill Remain Practically as It F E D E R A L G RAN D JU R Y VOTES Has Qeen, w ith MaJority in Lower

B IL L S AGA INST M IN N E A PO ­

L IS C A R R IE R S .

A llegation Is Made T hat Refunds

W ere Given to Grain F irm s and In­

div idua l Shippers Doing Business

in Northwestern Metropolis.

Minneapolis, Minn., Nov. 9.—Eleven indictments were handed to Judge Lochren in the United States district court at 'i:H i p. m. Thursday, and they cover the giving of rebates by certain railroads and the receiving of the same by grain firms and individuals. The list Of corporations against which, the indictments were voted, as given out, by Assistant District Attorneys

Ewart and Dickie, who have had charge of the cases, were as follows:

The Great Northern Railroad com­pany. four indictments and about 75 counts.

•mo Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis it Omaha railway,one indictment and 50 counts.

Wisconsin Central railway, one in­dictment and 17 counts.

Minneapolis &. St. Louis railway, one indictment and five counts.

The indictments against the rail­roads charge the giving of rebates, and under the head of receiving re­bates the following true bills were re­turned :

W . P. Devereaux company; Me- Canll-Dinsmore company, Minneapo­lis; Am os-Brooke company, of Duluth; Duluth M illing company.

Rebating Is Charged.

Some of the Specific charges con­tained in the indictments against the Great Northern railway were two in­dictments for giving rebates to tho Spencer Grain company, «ne for giv­

ing to the McCaull-Diasmorc company and for giving rebates to the Spencer Grain company.

The Omaha railroad, the Wisconsin Central, the Minneapolis & St. Louis were charged with favoring the Spen­cer Grain company. The companies indicted who are not railroad compa­nies are charged with receiving re­bates.

Besides ihe corporations, indict­ments were returned against 11 ind i­vidual officials of the railroads named, hut United States District Attorney Houpt said lie would not consent, to the names being given out for publica­tion owing to the fact that no serv­

ice had as yet been obtained upon them.

Allege Absorption of Charges.

The general offense alleged iu the railroad indictments is the absorption of grain elevator charges.

After the bunch of indictments had been given out to the court the jurors were excused for the term and told to convene again in St. Paul.

That a further and more searching investigation into the rebate question will be made is not denied by Assist­ant United States District Attorney

Ewart, and further revelations are ex­pected to be made at the next sitting of ihe grand jury.

Perhaps the most surprised people or all were the railroads, for none of those interested expected indictments to be brought. Each company had made its best endeavors to disclaim any crim inality in its relation with the grain companies.

Branch Cut Do-vn.

Returns show that the next con­

gress will be Republican in both branches. The political complexion of the senate shows a Republican gain of one in Colorado. There are two or three close legislative contests but they arc chiefly between individuals, and the senate will stand nearly as at. present, with 5t> Republicans and 32 Democrats, leaving a Republican ma­jority of 20. The returns indicate a Republican membership in the house of representatives of about 223, which

is a majority of <51 over the Demo­crats.

M A K EU P OF NEXT CO N G RESS .

House. Senate.

1901. 1906. 1906.

States. p.a*Ala .........

f [ <5 a CS Q....................... 9 9 2

Ark ......... • • • • • • 7 7 2Calif ....... . . . . s 8 9

Colo ___ ....... 3 3 1 1Conn . . . . 5 , , 5 2

1 2Fla ......... ....................... 3 3 2Ga ........... • • t • • « 11 11 2

. , 1 1 11 19 6 2

Inti .......... --- 11 2 4 2Ia ............ ---11 10 1 2Kan ........ ___ 8 8 2Ky .......... . . . . 2 9 4 7 2

7 7 2Me .......... . . . . 4 , , 4 2Mil .......... . . . . 3 3 3 *>0 2Mass ___ ---U 3 11 3 2Mich . . . . 12 . # 12 9

M inn ___ . . . . 9 8 2Miss . 8 S 2Mo .......... . . . . 9 7 4 12 1 1

. . . . 1 , , 1 1 1N e b ......... . . . . 6 5 1 ■>

Nev ........ . . . . • . 1 1 1 1N. H ........ . . . . 2 . , 2 *>

N. J ........... . . . . 9 1 6 • 4 2N. Y ......... . . . . 26 11 23 12 0aN. C .......... . . . . 1 9 10 2N. D.......... . . . . 2 , , O 2Ohio ....... . . . . 20 1 17 4 2Ore ......... _______ 2 . , 2 2Pa ........... . . . . 31 1 26 6 2R. I .......... _______ 1 1 1 1 2S. C.......... • • • . 9 • 7 7 2S. 1)......... . . . . 2 2 , , 2Tenn ___ . . . . 2 8 0 8 2T e x .......... • • • • • • 16 , . 16 2Utah . . . . ___ 1 1 0iiVt ........... 2 2

9 1 9 2W ash — ___ 3 3 2w . V a .. . . . . . . 1 1 5 2W is . . . , 10 1 9 2 2

1 2 . ,-- -- -- -- --

Totals . Majority .

. . 249

....112137 223

64163 59

28

21

Case of Rank Injustice.Not in years has rank injustice beer

dealt to a man as it has been to J. T Harahan, vice-president of the l i l i nois Central railroaJ, since the sen­sational meeting of the stockholders of the company a few weeks ago. The

ethical m istreatment accorded Mr. Harahan has been through press re- , ports emanating from unreliable sources. During the past ten days all sorts of rumors regarding the future presidency of the Illinois Central have been circulated, the chief allegation

being the selection of Capt. Grammar [ of tbe New York Central lines to suc­ceed Stuyvcsant Fish. This story was j out of whole cloth ar.d was written by a traveling newspaper space writer. | It was offered to a number of papers :

and refused, and finally accepted' by one from which it was telegraphed throughout the country. The only ex­

planation is that the man who wrote needed the money, for Capt. Grammar was never offered the presidency of

the Illinois Central. I f Mr. Fish were to decline another term as president it is quite certain that J. T. Harahan

would be elected to succeed him. It has been Mr. Harahan more than any ha lf dozen others who has popu­larized the Illinois Central. He has worked while others slept; has trav­eled over the big system continuously, and knows its patrons, passengers and shippers, the newspapers and legisla­tors. He never countenances a crooked deal; has been on the level with everybody, and back of everything is the fact that ho is one of the best operating and traffic managers in tho country. The silly space stories have worked harm to all concerned— Fish. Grammar, Harahan and Stubbs- -and furnished no news, and there will be

no real news until the directors meeL

Kaiser W on Bride for Officer.

A curious instance of the active part the kaiser takes in arranging the marriages cf relatives and friends is recorded. A personal aid-de-camp of

his majesty was very much depressed by the lady of his choice giving him a refusal. The same afternoon the

kaiser drove to the house of the young lady, the daughter of a wealthy

Berlin banker, and pleaded the cause of his aid-de-camp w ith such elo­quence that the marriage took place a month later.—Reynolds’ Newspaper.

Deafness Cannot Be Curedby lcca ! applications, a* ihoy cana<it rom-h r.he <ji> caROd portion o f U ie ear. Th ere U a a iv one w a r to cu re dearness, and tba t labjr coum lim iu iia ; :« :iic ijlc » . I>oofne»H is causod by «n fn .liin etl condition o f tho mucous Kuln# o f the k ut.icul.iu Tube. W hen thin t u b e ] » lotla ined you lia ro a rum bling Bound <;r l-n- jio rfcc t hearing, aud wheu l t I* en tire ly cloned. D ea f­ness is tb e resu lt.and uuleaa ihe Inflamm ation run bo tuWijnOutond th 1a tube restored to ( t i normal condi­tion , hearing will bo deatrvyed lu re v e r ; n in e case* out o f ten *xo caused by Catarrh, w h ich Ik : iv M n g ba t an Inflamed >ndltlon o f the mucous surfaces.

W e w ill g ir o One Hundred Dollars fo r any case o f D e.afm v* (iw.incd by catarrh; that cannot hs cured by U a ll'x Catarrh Cure. 8*nd fo r c ircu lars, free .

F . J . C H E N E Y i i CO ., To ledo , O.Sold by T>rup?I*tA, 7.'r.Tate Hall's Family l'JU» tor constipation.

Some men take chances on board­ing house hash it: preference to matri­mony.

Lewis’ Single Binder straight. 5c cigar ia good Q u a lity all the time. Your dealer or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, 111.

A lame excuse is sometimes the re­m it of having one’s leg pulled.

Sculptor Alleges Injustice.

Information comes from France, where George Gray Barnard is work­ing on the marble groups which are to be the chief adornment of the new state capitol at Harrisburg, that the sculptor has told intimate friends that he will wreck his creations before he will let them be taken across the ocean without a fa ir compensation for his sicveral years of labor. He was to have $100,000 for the work, but the payments have been delayed. An order to prepare replicas of his statues for exhibition at the opening had bcc-n nearly completed when it. was coun­

termanded. although Barnard had ex­pended 5-1,000 upon it.

H A R D TO SEE .

Even W hen the Facts About Coffee

Are P lain.

D ip lom ats to Be Changed.

Washington.— Diplomats who are watching prospective changes in the American diplomatic service must wait until after the president's return from Panama and Porto Rico to have their curiosity gratified. Secretary Root announces the state department w ill not take any action during Mr. Roosevelt’s absence.

The Democrats lost three and gained

31 congressmen, as follows: Illinois, 5; Indiana. 2; Iowa, 1; Maryland, l ; Minnesota, 1; Missouri, G; Nebraska,

I ; New Jersey, 3; New York. 1: North Carolina. 1; Ohio, 3; Pennsylvania, 5.

Republicans gained one each ..i Maryland, Ken Lucky and West V ir­ginia. making the net Democratic gain 28.

DISCUSS IN JU N CT IO N M E A SU R E

President Promises Fa ir Treatment

to Representatives of Labor.

Wades to His Death.

MonUcello, Minn., Nov. 10.—Theo­

dore Mochell, aged 65, a wealthy farm-j er near here, left his homo Thursday ; morning and deliberately waded out into tho Mississippi river to a point i beyond b.ig depth and was draw ed.

Washington, Nov. 8.—The measure introduced at the last session of con­gress known as the Pear re anti-injunc­

tion bill was the subject of a confer­ence Wednesday between President Roosevelt and Samuel Gompers. and several other representatives of the American Federation of Labor.

The president promised the commit­tee to delegate four officials identified with the legal work in the govern­ment. service to meet a sim ilar num­ber of labor representatives w ith their attorney to go over the whole matter and to preesnt their conclusions to uiv.i.

M r s . W i n s l o w 's S o o t h i n g S y r u p .For children tceiium;. j-otwn* tn« guma, >cuno<.< tn. liai.uuttUon »..»V3 P&in.cures v/ind colic- 2J*c a Sott.n.

To keep a house warm in winter have the cellar coaled.

Lived 1 0 4 Years.

A Rule and an Exception.

According to the New York Trib­une, a country paper lays down this

rule of etiquette: “W hen a lady and gentleman are walking in the street, the lady should walk inside of the gentleman."

It seems a little strange that this simple rule, so long current among the cannibal tribes of the Andaman and other Islands, should find its way into a rural journal of more or less civilization. It would appear that the etiquette editor of tho paper in ques­

tion either too careless or too hurried to note any exceptions to the

rule. Otherwise he would have ex­plained that when the gentleman was thirsty and desired to enter a cafe, tho lady would walk on the outside.— Cleveland Plain Dealer.

Old Dr. Yernest, whoso fame Is known the world over, was a remark­able example of robust manhood. He lived 10-1 years, and had it. not been for an accident which resulted fatally, there is no telling how many years he would have survived.

He is known to fame chiefly from the fact that lie prescribed a remedy of roots and herbs known as tho Swedish Essence of Life.

This remarkable medicine has an action that affects the entire system. It tones up the stomach and creates an appetite; works on the liver and has a mild, continuous effect upon tho bov/els, thus cleaning out the entlro system; it makes new rich blood, reg­ulates the hoart and kidneys and rids the body of all waste matter.

It is not a secret patent medicine, but one composed of Roots and Herbs, the names of which are on every bot­

tle.In the south and in malaria districts

it has proven a great remedy for tho cure and prevention of fevers.

If you have rheumatism, catarrh, constipation or backache, you can test its curative virtues a t absolutely,

no expense.

your name and address to M. R. Zaegel & Co., Chemists, 161 Main street, Sheboygan, W is., and they will m ail you free in plain wrap­per, securely sealed, a trial bottle of the genuine Swedish Essence of Life that may restore your health and add many years to your life. W rite to­day for the free trial bottle, stating the nature of your complaint.

T R A D E M A R K R E G I S T E R E D .

A PositiveC U R E F O R

Ely's Cream Balmis quickly absorbed.

G ives R elie f a t Once.

It cleanses, soothes, heals and protects tho diseased membrane. It cures Catarrh and drives away a Cold in the Head quickly. Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. Full size 50 cts. at Druggists or by mail; Trial size 10 ets. by mail.."Sly Brothers, 50 Warren Street. Now York.

I t is curious how people will refuse to believo what one can clearly see.

Tell the average man or woman that the slow but cumulative poison­ous effect of caffeine— :he alkaloid ia tea and coffee— tends to weaken tho

heart, upset the nervous system and cause indigestion, and they may laugh j at you if they don’t know the facts.

Prove it by science or by practical demonstration in the recovery of cof­fee drinkers from the above condi­tions, and a large per cent, of the human fam ily will shrug their shoul­ders, take the drugs and— keep on drinking coffee or tea.

“Coffee never agreed w ith me, nor with several members of our house­hold,” writes a lady. It enervates, de­

presses and creates a feeling of lan­guor and heaviness. It was only by leaving off coffee and using Postum that we discovered the cause and cure

of these ills.“The only reason, I am sure, why

Postum is not used altogether to the exclusion of ordinary coffee is, many persons do not know and do not seem w illing to learn the facts and how to prepare this nutritious beverage. There's only one way-—according to directions—boil it fully 15 minutes. Then it 13 delictous.” Name given by Postum Co.. Battle Creek. Mich. Read the little book, “The Road to W e ll

ville, in pkgs. “There’s a reason.”

CURES GDNSTIPAHONI t is just about impossible to bo

sick when the bowels are right and not posssible to bo well when they are wrong. Through its action ou tho bowels,

Lake’s Fam ilycleans the body inside and leaves no lodging place for disease. I f for once you wish to know how it feels to be thoroughly well, give this famous laxative tea a trial.

Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c.

There is no satisfaction keener thao\ being dry / y / and comfortable ,/ 1 ** when out in the hardest stormYOU ARE SURE OF THIS IF YOU

WEAR

j

w a t e r p r o o f j t O IL E D /,

C L O T H IN GBLACK O R Y E L L O W A

On sale everywhere 4

Page 7: ,VEH CITIZEN - CulverAHS...n p T T Record, JIL jljbl,ers O ffic e 1ay06,VEH CITIZEN LAKE M'AXIXKUQKEE. VOL. IV. CULVER, INDIANA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1906. NO. 29 A BUS UPSET IN

° m b

Thousands of v,- o m e n suffer

d a i l y backache,

headache, dizzy

s p e l l s , languor,

nervousness and

a dozen other

symptoms of k id ­

ney trouble, bu t

lay i t to other

causes. M ake no m istake. K e e p

the kidneys well, and these aches

and troubles w ill

disappear.

Mrs. A nthony

Cadrette, 77 M echanic street, Leom in­

ster, Mass., says: “My s igh t failed,

1 had sharp pa in in m y back and

bearing-down pa ins through the hips.

I was nervous, fretfu l and m iserable.

The urine was greatly disordered and

I began to have the swellings of

dropsy. I was runn ing down fast,

when I started using Doan's K idney

P ills . A wonderful change came and

a fte r us ing them fa ith fu lly :o r a short

tim e I was well.”Sold by a ll dealers. 50 cents a box.

Foster-M ilburn Co., Buffalo, N . Y .

Keeping Parents fn Subjection.

In the life of the very ..rich some

parents still seek to resemble those

curfews Incarnate in hum ble life who

keep the g irls :it home and the boys

ou t of the barrooms. M iddle life and

old ago are too hidebound to get ac­

customed to the m anners of tho new

generation of young men who are old

and worn before they graduate and of

young women who w in or lose large

sums a t gam bling. Children have a

r ig h t to expect rrom the ir parents do­

cile obedience. A t first th is may bo

difiicult, but. as A risto tle says, “V ir­

tue is a hab it,” and it can be acquired. — N. Y. Even ing P o s t

SK IN E R U PT IO N S 35 Y E A R S .

Suffered Severely w ith Eczema All

Over Body— A Thousand Thanks

to Cuticura Remedies.

“For over thirty-five years I was a

severe sufferer from eczema. The

eruption was not confined to any one

place. I t was all over my body, limbs,

and even on my head. 1 am sixty

years o ld and an old soldier, and have

been exam ined by the Government

Board over fifteen times, and they

said there was no cure for me. I have

taken a ll k inds of m edicine and have

spent large sum s of money for doc­

tors. w ithou t avail. A short tim e ago

1 decided to try the Cuticura Reme­

dies. and after us ing two cakes of

C u ticura Soap, two boxes of Cuticura

O in tm ent, and two bottles of Cuti­

cura Resolvent, two treatm ents iu all,

I am now well and com pletely cured.

A. thousand thanks to Cuticura. I

cannot speak too h igh ly of the Cuti­

cura Remedies. Jo a n T. Roach, liich-

mondale, Ross Co., Oh io , Ju ly I t ,

1905.” _____________________

Propcs.il to Honor Engineer.

A proposition in honor of John A.

Roeb ling ’s memory by the erection of

a m onum ent in Trenton. N . J ., is tak ­

ing a new turn and thc citizens may

bu ild a new school of Industria l arts

and dedicate it in h is name. Mr.

R oeb ling was the builder of tho

B rooklyn and other suspension

bridges, and one of the foremost en­

gineers in the country in h is day.

"C a t T ails" Have Value.

M ake extra money by gathering the

downy o r fibrous part of cat tails.

S trip the down clean from the stem

and be sure it is dry. A fter the first

frost it peels from the stem very

easily. It/s worth 2\.i, cents a pound,

f. o. b., Chicago. M arshall F ie ld &

Co.. Dept. S, buy it. W rite them for particulars.

Charity uses a lot of whitewash for tho benefit of her friends.

THEY CORE RHEUMATISMA Particularly Painful Form o f This

D isease Yields to Dr. W illiam s' Pink Pills.

O f the m any form sw hich rheum atism takes. that, w h ich is popularly know n as

sciatic rheum atism probably tortures its

v ic tim more than any ot her. T hat D r. W il l ia m s ’ P in k P ills have cured th is

stubborn as w e ll as pa in fu l trouble is a

fact proven by the fo llow ing statement,

aud no sufferer w ho reads th is can a f ­ford to let prejudice s tand in the way of

try in g these blood-making pills.

Khan m utism is now generally re­cognized as a disease of the blood. D r.

W illiam s* P in k P ills m ake—actua lly

make—pure blood. W hen the blood is

pure there can be no rheum atism . Mrs.

Thom as Brestiehau, o f 0-4 M ill street., W atertow n , X . Y . , says:

“ M y trouble began w ith a severe cold

w h ich I took about a week before Christm as in 1.904. I began to have

rheum atic pains in m y back and lim bs

and after a tim e I cou ldn ’t straighten

up . i suffered tho most aw fu l pa in for

m onths and m uch o f the tim e was u n ­

able to leave the house and I had to take

ho ld of a cha ir in order to w a lk and some rimes I could uot stand up at all.

“ The disease was preuouuced sciatic

rheum atism aud , a lthough I had a good physician and took h is medicine l’aith* fu lly , I d id not get any better. A fter some six weeks of th is terrible pain and suffering I tried Dr. W illiam s ’ P iuk P ills and tha t is the medicine tha t cured me. A fter a few boxes I lie pain was less intense and I could see decided im ­provement. 1 continued to lake the pills u n til I was entirely cured aud I have never had any return of t he trouble .”

A ll druggists sell Dr. W ill ia m s ’ P in k P ills , or the remedy w ill be mailed post­pa id , on receipt of price, 50 cents per box, six boxes for $2.50, by the D r. W il­liam s M edicine Co., Schenectady, N . Y .

TEXANS SHOT FROM AMBUSHA W A K E N E D FROM S L E E P

V O L L E Y O F BU LLETS.

BY

Rangers K ill Four of A ttack ing Party,

Fatally W ound One and Cap­

ture Two.

Laredo, Tex., Nov. 10.— Four Tex­

as rangers sent to R io Grande C ity

to quiet turbulent, po litica l conditions

there and investigate the assassina­

tion of D istrict Judge W elch, which

occurred the n igh t before the elec­

tion, were am bushed by a body o?

armed Mexicans between Fordyce

and R io Grande C ity late Thursday

n ight. The rangers were asleep in

camp when awakened by a volley of

shots from the darkness. A pitched

battle ensued and four of tho attack­

in g party were killed, one fatally

wounded and two captured. The

rangers escaped unscathed.The s ituation in S tarr county was

brought about by alleged election ir­

regularities. due t * po litica l clubs

supp ly ing Mexican residents w ith poll

lax receipts <?nd in s is ting th a t they

be allowed to vote. Judge W elch, who

was assassinated M onday n ight, had

gone from bis home in Corpus Cbristi

to be present at R io Grande C ity on

election day in an effort to prevent

disorders, l ie was assassinated while

asleep at n ight. It is charged that

armed representatives of politica l

clubs contro lling the Mexican vote

patro lled (he voting places on election

day and refused to allow m em bers of

the opposing faction to vote. Several

shooting affrays occurred, bu t no one

was k illed or wounded. It is charged

hv one faction that Judge W elch was

m urdered by a hired assassin and th a t

the am buscade of the rangers was in ­

stigated by the same faction w hich

insp ired tho m urder o f .Tudze W elch.

President Appoints A ttorney General

lo Position on Federal Bench.

W ashing ton. Nov. S.— The president

W ednesday announced the appo in t­

m ent of A ttorney General W illiam

H enry Moody, of Massachusetts as

justice of the supreme court of the

U nited States, to succeed Justice

Henry B illings Brown, who retired some tim e ago. Mr. Moody has filled

the office o f attorney general since Ju ly 3, 1904. Previous to th a t tim e

he had served for m ore than two years as secretary of the navy. He

had also represented his state in the fifty fourth, fifty-fifth, fifty-sixth and

fifty-seventh congresses. Ji is gen­erally expected that Mr. Moody will

retire from the departm ent of justice

the la tter part of December.

Fire Loss Is Heavy.

New York , Nov. 9.— Fire Thursday

n ig h t in the bu ild ing occupied by the Federal L ithograph company, at 91-97

,H oratio street, caused a loss of about $150,000.

MOB IS C H E C K E D IN W ISC O N S IN

Officers Prevent Lynching of Prisoner

at Spring Green.

Spring Green, W is.. Nov. 9.— Prompt

and decisive action by the local au ­

thorities Thursday prevented the

lynch ing of Thomas Balf, who is ac­

cused of assau lting Mrs. Edw ard

Frank.

Ba lf. who was captured at Madison

W ednesday, was brought here a t noon

Thursday for h is hearing and the

! tra in w ith the officer and prisoner

was m et by an enraged mob, which

only needed a leader to carry out a

lynching.B a lf spent m ost of the afternoon in

ja il, and du ring much of the tim e

there was a crowd about tho ja il ye ll­

ing, “H ang h im :” W hen it came

tim e to catch the 4: SO tra in , however,

the officers braved the mob. and then

they were forced to run from the

would-be lynchers. The constables

and B a li reached the tra in safely.

PR E S ID E N T OFF FO R ~ PANAM A

Roosevelt Party Goes to Inspect W ork

on the Canal.

W ashington. Nov. “Good-by, 1 am

going down to see T?ow the ditch is

ge tting a long ," shouted President

Roosevelt, as he stood on the after

starboard deck of the yacht Mayflower

a t the W ash ing ton navy yard, as tho

vessel was leaving thc dock w ith tho

president for his Panam a trip.

Accom pany ing thc president, were

Mrs. Roosevelt and her m aid , Surgeon

General Rixey, of the navy, and M. C.

Latta . one of the assistant secretaries

of the W h ite House. The Mayflower

took the p*rty to W o lf Trap light., at

the m outh of the Rappahannock river

in Chesapeake bay, where a transfer

was m ade to the battleship Louisiana,

which is to convey the president to

and from the isthmus.

R E P R IM A N D S W E A T H E R C H IE F

President Directs Censure be A dm in is ­

tered to V/ ill is L. Moore.

W ash ing ton , Nov. 8 . — President

Roosevelt has directed that, a repri­

m and be adm inistered to W illis L. Moore, chief of the weather bureau,

for h is action in the case of a prin ter

named Cooper in his office who had

been expelled from thc Typographical

union for not paying his strike assess­ments.

ftir. Xibore, It is alleged, urged Coop­

er on two occasions to pay his assess­

ments. bu : the latter refused and ho was expelled from thc union. Follow ­

ing th is Cooper was transferred to

New Orleans, and he claim ed lh a t th is

action on the part of Mr. Moore was intended as a pun ishm ent for h im for

no t com ply ing w ith the demands of

the Typographical union.

M O ODY TO BE SU PR E M E JU ST IC E

Carnet raps dyed -with PUTNAM FADELESS D Y E S will remain bright and beautiful. “No trouble to use.

H e who steals a watch should not

be surprised if he has to do tim e later.

Lewis' Single Binder cigar—richest, most satisfying smoke on the market. Your dealer or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, 111.

Before beg inn ing to w a it for a dead

m an ’s shoes it m igh t be well to in ­

duce some easy m ark to board you

w hile you wait..

Romance in W riters ’ Lives.

A strange comedy and tragedy was woven into the lives of Ibsen and

Bjornson. As young m en they wcro

great friends; then politics flung them

apart; they quarreled and never met

for years and years. Strange fate

brought, tho children of these two

great w riters together and B jornson's

daughter m arried Ibsen's on ly child. The fathers met after a quarter of a

century of separation a t the wedding of their children.

FROM GIRLHOOD TQ WOMANHOOD *3.50 & *3?<OOShoes

Thc Ideal Fam ily Laxative.

Is one tha t can be used by the en tire

fam ily , young and old, weak and

strong, w ithou t any danger o i harm fu l

effects. I t should have properties

which insure the sam e dose always

hav ing the same effect, otherw ise tho

quan tity w ill have to be increased and

finally lose Its effect altogether. These

properties can bo found in tha t old

fam ily remedy, B randre th ’s Pills, be­

cause its ingredients are of the purest

herbal extracts, and every p ill is kept

for three years before be ing sold,

which allows them to mellow . W e do

not believe there is a laxative on tho

m arket th a t is so carefu lly m ade. *

Brandreth 's P ills are the sam e fine

laxative tonic p ills your grandparents

used. They have been in use for over

a century and are for sale everywhere,

either p la in or sugar-coated.

Uncanny Chinese Legend.

There are the two celebrated tow- j

ers of the im peria l city, the Bell tow* j

er and the Drum tower. As to the i

casting of the bell in the form er there j

is th is legend: There had been two

unsuccessful a ttem pts and the life of ! the founder was threatened in ease of j

a th ird failure . I l ls daughter discov­

ered by occu lt means tha t no th ing but

the blood of a v irg in m ing led w ith

the m olten m etal would insure sue-

cess. So a t the next casting she sac- !

rifieed her life by throw ing herself j

In to the m olten m etal, leaving only

one shoe behind. The casting was perfect. B u t when the bell was first

struck “a ll were horror-stricken as,

after thc heavy boom of the bell,

came a low wail, as of a g ir l in ag­

ony. d istinctly saying the word ‘heish,’

shoe. And to th is day people when

they hear it, say, “There’s poor Ko-ai's

voice ca lling out for her shoe.’ ”—

Shanghai Times.

SICK HEADACHECARTERS

Positively cured by these L ittle P ills .

They also relievo D!s- jggjTj tress torn Dyspepsia, In-i p i T T L E digestion and Too Hearty gc-d B \ ff (£• {£)} Eating. A perfect rota- 5ph G w &■ ink « !y for Dizziness, Nausea,

1 P i i L S . Drowsiness, Bad Taste J j a g a in tho Houth, Coated

5 Tongue, Pain in tlie side.----- 1 TORPID I.TVPJR. T2iey

regulate tSc Bowels, purely Vegetable.

SMALL PILL SHALL BOSE, SMALL PRICE,

Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature

REFUSE SU B ST IT U T E'I’itn tx jrnn d Jta rcufm rLauds;

H U t lU i J good so il; conve n ie n t tx> ruil- ro iia»: nc .ir L i« ly im ;::i. W is ; C uun ty S ea l; w ill tu n . is h O.O.'J Ic-ei i>: .n jr ;>or'.o 1'iifln !>urc!m »er i«ncs P10loS15p«;r»cro: easy Mirni.i. K Nt L'f’l l i .A N D C \ 1 15 D earbo rn S -.. t im cA ^o .a tid i.u iiyvm ii li. W is. A G E K T S H ’ A S T K M ; l . l b e r : i t C o iu m ls n lo n .

Mothers Should Watch the Dsvslopmsnt of Their Daughters— interesting Experiences ef ftlisses Borman anil Mills.

s3.50&*3.00 ShoesBEST IN THE WORLD

W.LDouglas $4 Gilt Edga line, csnnotfce equalladatany price.

To Stic* Dealers:W . I* Job-

U n * TTnusu l:j r,bO rr.V t coEiipic oin t'lia country

Every m other possesses in fo rm a tio n w h ich is o f v ita l in terest to h e r young daughter.

Too o ften th is is never im parted or is w ith he ld u n t i l serious h a rm lias resu lt­ed to th e g ro w in g g ir l th ro u g h h e r ignorance o f nature 's m ysterious a n d W onderfu l law s and penalties.

G irls ’ over-sensitiveness and m odesty o ften puzzle th e ir m others and bailie physicians, as th ey so o ften w ith ho ld th e ir confidence from the ir m others and conceal the sym ptom s w h ich ough t to be to ld to the ir physic ian a t th is c r itica l period.

,W hen a g ir l ’s th o ug h ts become s lug ­gish, w ith headache, dizziness or a dis­position to sleep, p a ins in back or low er lim bs , eyes d im , desire fo r solitude; ■when she is a m ystery to herse lf and friends, her m other should eomo to her a id , and rem ember th a t L yd ia E . P:nk- h am ’s V egetable Com pound w i l l a t th is tim e prepare the system fo r the com ing change, an d s ta r t th is trying- period in a young g ir l's l ife w ith o u t p a in or irregu larities .

H undreds of le tters from yo ung g irls and from mothers, expressing the ir g ra titude fo r w h a t L y d ia E . P iu k h am s Vegetable Com pound'has accomplished for them , have been received by the L yd ia E . P in k h am M edic ine Co., a t L ynn , Mass.

M iss M il's has ■written the tw o fo l­low ing letters to Mrs. P inkham * w h ich w ill be read w ith in terest:

Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— (First Letter.)“ I am but llfteon years of age, am depressed,

havo dizzy spells, chills, headache and lack*

ache, and as T have hoard that yon can give helpful advice to girls in my condition, I ain writing you.”—Myrtle Mills, Oquawka, III. Dear Mrs. P i n k h a m ( S e c o n d Letter.)

“ I t is with the feeling of utmost gratitude that 1 write to you to tell you what your valuable medicine has done for me. When I wrote you in regard to my condition 1 had consulted several doctors, but they failed to understand my ease and I did not receive any benefit from their treatment. 1 followed your advice, and took Lydia K. Finkham’s Vegetable Compound and am now healthy and well, and all tho distressing symptoms which I had at that time have disappeared.”— Myrtle Mills, Oquawka, 111.

M iss M a tild a B orm an w rite s Mrs, P ink h am as fo llow s:

Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—“ Before taking Lydia E . Pinicham’s Vege­

table Compound m y periods wore irregu­lar and painful, and I always had such dreadful headaches.

'• But since taking tho Compound my head­aches have entirely left me, my periods aro regular, and I tun getting strong and well. I am telling all my girl friends what Lydia E. l ’inkhaiu s Vegetable Compound has done for mo,”—Matilda Borman, Farmington, Iowa.

I f you kno w o f any young g ir l w ho is sick and needs m othe rly advice, ask her to address Mrs. P in k h am a t L ynn , Mass., a n d te ll h e r every de ta il o f her symptoms, and to keep n o th in g back. She w i l l receive advice abso lu te ly free, from a source th a t h as no r iv a l in the experience o f w om an ’s ills ,a n d it w ill , i f fo llow ed, p u t he r on the r ig h t road to a strong-, hea lthy and happy womanhood.

L yd ia E . P inkham 's vegetab le Com­pound ho lds the record for thc greatest num ber o f cures o f fem ale ills o f any m edicine t h a t the w o rld lias ever k no w n . W h y don ’t you try i t ?

Lydia E. Pitibha&’s Vegetable Compound Makes Sick Women Well.

THE CANADIAN WEST S THE BEST WEST

T U c leg tliu on y o f t lion - Curmtr the past

vea r is ilnr. Ih e Can uinvn W e n t th c best W e « t . V ea r by y e a r the agri­cu ltu ra l returns have in­creased in vul a:i<J In vu lue, ■•loasr.iu ih o Cana­dian G overn m en t inter? 1*10 n o i v * J-'1C K K :o e v e ry bona UU«j settler.

Some of the AdvantagesT h e phenom enal in crease 5u ra ilw a y m n .a g o —

m am lin es And b ran d ies—h as p u l a lm c ftto ve ry i>or- t iu u o t the w u u ir y w ith in easy reach o f <n>iircn<*$, schools, m arkets, ch eap fu e l anti e v e ry luoaera conven ience .

T h e S IS ICTY M I f .U O N l i t SU1CL W H R A T CH O P o t th is y e a r m eans i<»J,OK).(0 ) tu th e Ign ite rs o f W estern Canada, a p a r, Iru a i t lie resu lts o f o th er Kraius in d ca ttle .

F >r !id v tc « and in fo rm a tion address th e S P P K lt - IN T K N D K N T O K IM M IG R A T IO N , O ttaw a, Canada, Or any A iillton zod tiOvernm cnt. Auent.C. J. BROUGHTON, Room 430 Quincy Bldg., Chicago. IU.; W. H. ROGERS, third floor, Traction Terminal Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind.; or T. 0. CURRIE, Room 12 B, Callahan Block, Milwaukee, Wis.

NO FEEfoI OUR SERVICESSend for tiooklct. M ILO D. STKVT.NS & <X>.. IK*» H th St.. W ashing ton . 1>. Brwiiclie* Chicago. C leveland » u il I>w(roit. E a tab .is t l.

P R O T E C T Y O U f t I D E A G

SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL PRICES. Mon's Shoos. $5 to Sl.60. t o $1.25. T ?o iu en ‘e Shota, 3 4 0 0 to S i.SO .

fie C lu ld ron ’:; SU jl-s. S~ .25 t o S I.C O .Try W . T,. Douglas Women's. MlSfte* and

(Jhildron’s shoes; for style, f it and wear they excel other makes.

If I co u ld take y o u In to m y large factories a t B ro ck ton , M ass .,an d show you h o w care fu lly W .L . D oug las shoes arc m ade , y o u wrou !d th e n understand w h y th e y h o ld th e ir shape , f i t be tter, w ear longer, and are c f greate r va lue th an a n y o ilie r m ake .

Wherever you Jive, you cad obtain W . L. j Doojjlns shoes. His name and price stamped

the bottom, vvhlch protects you aRulnst high j :• no substt* , Douglas shoea

onprices and intcriar tthbeat. Take" no substl*

’ ' our dealer lor W . L. I u jx

f a s t Color f.'/i

ta te . Ask your dealer for and insist upon having them.

_ i/e le ix u sed ; theu w ill n o i w ear brassy. Write for llluctrr.tcd Catalog of Pall Stylo*. W. L. DOUGLAS* DepL 12* Brockton, .Mass.

SPALDING'S ATHLETIC LIBRARY.Tho Rtanrtard A»Met:C T.fhrftrjr of <hf V.'oriii. Kacb|

hook 0<>mpleie in u*<’if. «..%•».•*« twome proiicicut m nr.v iviri iciilar -|W>r*Viv -tu.ij tnjr th-.. text of any one or tin-.o book*. Price, caeh book, to cents.

No. |*S—TndtiVfi ClntiA Anil I)i:nil> Kellr, No. 3M— Box- ini- r.uicU*. S'*. ICC—How !<■ Swinjr Ind ian Clubs. No. ;k»—I>ft)rh H int*. N<">- IKD—IVinnb Beil*. So.yW- ilow to Become a ^Kxrer. No. 8JS—vAI Health Answers. No. 814—Graded Calisthenics and D um b Bell D rills. No.2SS—i J i'iJ itM ii No. ‘fri—School (md Vtizo Hnnnlng.,No. SIS-!lOw to W w : i0 . ‘' l i—Association Pont UalL- No 2SS--.Uusole B uild ing . No.ttf—Athletio T ralnsnfftor Sfihoolbovfi. NO. 21>—How- to Become n llow ier. So. MO—Official Bosket B a il G u ido fo r W om en. No. » : i— TcnswirExercif*.-#. No. SW-leo Hceaey and loo J'oto. *.•>. 2;:j The O lvm pJc Games at A t:u : i '. 1 IK«J. No. &b— Official Fooe B a ll Guide. No. 2'flJ Go lf O utdo »n d How to 1*1 uv G o lf. No.JSJO Omi'itU Bucket Ea.I Onlde. Prion,, pur hook, lvct'iils . F o r siilu by dealers, o r nonl b y mall..

Every boy .FREE, a fully 1 Sports.

A . G . S P A L D IN G & B R O S .

Now York Chicago Philadelphia S»n Fnuicteooi Boston Buffalo Pi'tibum St. Louis Kansas City Washington Baltimore Syracuse Cincinnati New Orleans MtuneupoJIii Denver

Monti .’a I, Canada J.ondon, Kitgland

shou ld send a postal card nnd rcc'-ivo r iilu r lra te ii a nd u ite re /lin g cu ta lo y ue o t

Y o u C a n n o t

all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con­ditions o f the mucous membrane such as n asa l c a ta r rh , u te r in e ca ta rrh caused b y fe m in in e i l ls , so re th r o a t , soro m o u th o r in f ia n te d eyes by simply dosing the stomach.B u t yOu surely can cu re these stubborn affections by local treatment w ith

P a x t in e T o i le t A n t is e p t ic

which destroys thc disease germs,checks discharges, stops p:tin, and heals the inflammation and soreness.Paxtine represents thc most successful local treatment fo r fe m in in e i l ls ever produced. Thousands of women testify to th is fact, 50 cents at druggists.

Send for Free Trial BoxT H £ R. PAXTOK CO .. Boston. Mass.-

S M O K E S M E L L MUSS OR SPATTER

r e a d e r s de- any-

th ing advertised in its colum ns should ins:st upon hav ing w hat they ask !o r, re fusing a ll iu t& ti- tutes or im itations.

/f£- l/v E S T A T E .

OLD SO LD \ ERSOf the U nion A rmy, honorab ly dtei'tiair-r^il. w ar of IMl.-An. anii cx-S|*nl>li W ar soldiers, or th e ir w idow*.

Kj entitled to IW Aon’!, o f Governm ent la nd 1n New rn-O.AMd cn'i have m e l<ic»lo ttuil-lllo Ou t lie saioo

by 1 ‘ o w t i - o f A t t o p u e y .Lamis now ob ta inab le in Union County , on the head

C im arron R ivers. V e i-v OU In he tna. Close to two

Of fum ed Canadian and

[> ro d u e t l v e . Adjoin*Ines or ra ilroad . Hon.I fo r particu lars .

C. I> . C I F F T X , I . a n t i I . s c a t u r , STKKirrEP., D A Y CO., OKLAHOMA.

Q0I HiFRQ ATTENTION I So ld iers o f W a r 1812, OUi-UICnO, ]no .a ii u:n3 A lux leaii W a r . t In n r •virf-f.r.vs o r heirs. recfliv9 M i.lta ry l.»n<l W nrranto. C iv il W a r V e ien tn r i i r w K iw s w i in m ade Uomestc-.iij fo r ’ h is than H’-Wneros p rior to 1>74. o r th e ir h e ir* a re en- rn.lcrt ro S o ld ie n - A rto iriona i Uotne&'.eads. S P O T C A M IS : o r a b ove . U 20. W . O N k a i. . H a rrison , A rS .

n P f t n M ,N A R K A N S A S , S a t l d IOI r .X v n k H n l t i iJ r.ercs IT. tnoii-.bly p iymi-n-.s, \vi I rctSiM.UO to fl.OCO.Oi> y ea r iy . N o t a specu lation. In vesrm ent st-eureii. seud tor our iru s lin -e d hOok. F i t L I T BELT L A M ) CO.. Oshkosh, w .scon sln .THE FARMER’S PARA0ISE.

03 fc4'iS<l8d3« 3 U lfl Nobllzzaixl*, no cyclones, no eai thiitlalidf. no storm -, nr. ex. .'n-ivp iir.it, no extreme Cold, nopests.no crop f»l)!irt':(,frood water. Uiiuutit-.il

itoikI price*. Fine#chaob*,churches,aiitihappy li. ■ ■ it . Farme-s tfr->win« rich. 1.- -i<i eh car vilioior our bulletin. Croat Northern i_indCo , Spi.i.ane. Waslt

N O M O R E M U S T A R D P L A S T E R S T O B L I S T E R .THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL dOUNTER-JKRlTANT.

CAPISICUMV A S E L I N E

EXTRACT O F T H E C A Y E N N E P E P P E R PLAN T

A OUICK. SURE. SAFE AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PAIN.—PRICE 15c.— IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES AT ALL DRUGGiSTS AND DEALERS. OR BY MAIL ON RECElrT Or 15c. IN POSTAGE STAMPS. DON'T W A IT T IL L T H E P A IN C O M E S - K E E P A T U B E H A N D Y . A substitute for und superior to mustard or any other plaster, and ’viil not blister the most cdicatc skin. The paln-allaviug nnd curatLvc qualities of thc article &re wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve Hcadachc and Sciatica. W i recommcnd it as tlie best and safest externa! counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in thc chest and stomach and all Rheumatic. Ncuralgic and Gouty complaints, A trial will prove what ws claim for it, and it will be found to be invaluable In thc household and for children. Once used no family will be without it. Many people say “ it is the best of all your preparations.” Accept no preparation of vaseline unless the same carries our label, as o:herwiss it is not genuine.S E N D Y O U R A D D R E S S A N D W E W IL L M A IL O U R V A SE ­L IN E PA M PH L E T W H IC H W IL L IN T E R E ST YOU .

C H E S E B R O U G H M F G . C O .17 S T A T E S T R E E T . N E W Y O R K C IT Y

MONEY IN RAILROAD STOCKSIT IS A MATTER OF COMMON KNOW LEDGE THAT MANY OF

THE GREAT FORTUNES OF TO-DAYHad Their Origin in Railroad Slocks, Purchased When the Pricc Was Low and Sold

Later On When the Pricc Went Up. That is Why the Man To-Day Who Has Money . to Spare Will Be More Than Interested in ihe Present Stock Offer oi the

Chicago-New York Electric Air Line RailroadNever ficlorc Was There So Favorable an Opportunity lor Laying the Foundation 0! a

Future Fortune as There is Right at This Tiuic.

T H E FA C T S A R E T H E S E :Thc Chicago-New York Electric A ir Line

Railroad is now building 11 lino hrrw<!.‘t! t he two great cities of Chicago taut New York, which wtien completed w ill be :?30 miles shorter than tho Lake Shore and New York < lonlrat roads and ISO miles shorter than the Pennsylvania s.v stem.

It- will be a road without prude crossings, material curves or excosHivc prudes and w ill be operated by electricity, covering the d:s- tance between these two great centers of

! W hat we invite you to do is to digest the few facts we have hero given you and ask for more information il you are foteresUHl. I .et us tell you how you can become a part owner in this great work of providing rapid and cheap transportation. ‘ Let us te ll yon how you can invest a dollar today aud'gefc throe and four dollars and perhaps more for It iu tho near future. These aro the things you may leant by writing your name on tho attached coupon and mailing it. to us.

Aud right now, too, is the time to do it.

O n e o f th c H u r.d red -M iie -a n -H ou r E le c tr ic E n g in es th a t W i l l T a k e a T r a in to Nev.- Y o r k iu 10 H ou rs .

commercial activity in 10 hours, compared w ith the present, schedule o i is t.o 24 hours.

By reason -f those advantages the revenue o f theroad will be greater than existiug steam roads, its operating expenses material y less and its dividend earning capacity corres­pondingly great. Ttie entire capital stock of the road is common slock. There w ill be no preferred stock ami no bonds, thus placing every shareholder on the same footing and giving nil an opportunity to share alike in the profits according to their holdings. I t is iudeed a i l unusual opportunity for invest­ment and is being rapidly availed of by those who are familiar with the favorable terms of on r offer.

Tlie present price of the stock is $37 per share of the par value of $10(i, fu 1 paid and lion-assessable, and if iiesired, it may bo pur­chased on very oasv terms, namely'$8.<0 per share with vonr order and AJS.IO per share 011 t .o 15th day of each mouth thereafter until paid lor, or if paid ia fu ll at time of purchase, a discount of two per cent w ill be allowed.

To postpone i‘ might mean to forget SL and to forget it-would cause you to miss an op­portunity that may not come to you again. 1)0 IT ^ OW that you may fully protit by the more than ordinarily favorable conditions that are available to you ri#ht at this tune. A ll information furnished FREE .

In fo rm a tio n C o u p o nFrederick H . W ood, Sales Agent,

Chicago-New York Klectric A ir Line R . R . Hfcock. 544-545-546 Monadnock Block, Chicago.

Flense send me fwOior particulars or the Chicago-New York Electric A ir Line K. l i.

jYi

Ad dr as.

Page 8: ,VEH CITIZEN - CulverAHS...n p T T Record, JIL jljbl,ers O ffic e 1ay06,VEH CITIZEN LAKE M'AXIXKUQKEE. VOL. IV. CULVER, INDIANA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1906. NO. 29 A BUS UPSET IN

N O R T H B E N D N O T E S .Mrs. June Castleman. Correspondent.

Harry Kannels and wife and M iss G ust spent last Sunday with friends at Bass Lake.

S. D. Shanks and Henry Vergine each drove to Winamac last week with a wagon load of fine potatoes.

James Terry returned home to Winona from North Dakota last Monday, and with his little sou Ivalph visited over Sunday with friends in this locality.

Several farmers in this locality drove to Monterey Monday with sheep, as Mr. Cowan, the Letter's stock dealer, loaded and shipped stock from that place that day.

Little Gladys Leopold had the misfortune to get a fall last T ues­day in which her left arm was dis­located at the shoulder and her collar bone broken. Although seriously hurt the little one is g et­ting along nicely.

Newton Unit'/and wife of Ora drove to Culver Friday to visit a sick friend, Mrs. Abraham French.

Solomon Wolfram and wife of Monterey visited a t Harry Leo­pold's Sunday.

A lvin Good and family visited Sunday with Watson Rom ig and family.

Jacob Stryker was a Monterey visitor Monday.

Misses H azel Brown and Fern and Iva Good spent Sunday at Wm. O ’Connor’s.

Jacob Castleman and fam ily of Delong visited Sunday with Joe Castlemau and family.

Ilen ry Turn was a Monterey bus­iness visitor Saturday.

G O O SE A L L E Y G A T H E R IN G S .

Chas. M cGaffey has made a big improvement by putting a new roof on his silo and making some additional improvements on his barn.

Frank Joseph and wife called on W m. Farrar and wife Sunday even­ing.

M iss Laura Fechnor was a Knox visitor on Saturday.

Albert W right has moved from the Doyle farm over in W ashing­ton township to tho Jess Stanton farm.

Miss Bessie, the niece of Mrs. W m. Cox, from Mentone, is here making relatives an extended visit.

Albert Odell had his corn fodder shredded Friday. A fter finishing shredding there the neighbors did a kind act for George Kiefer, who) is lying very sick, by gathering at| his home and shredding his fod­der and storing the feed awayin the barn in the dry. . , .

. ” paid her IMrs. Chas. M cGaitey visit Sat-

only sou of near Culver a

Everything is moving along nicely in our A lley since the elec­tion. Many of our burg were sur­prised when the returns of the ] election were reported.

Two more of our young men have been made happy by inatri- j mony. T he grooms were the • Messrs. Glen Cox and Ed James, j and the brides were the Misses! N ellie and M argaret Quinn of near Hainestown. A fter the wedding, in the evening the boys gave the j married couples a “chilvary” which will be long remembered.

Wilder Cox, who has been work-1 ing a t Lacrosse, has returned to , remain at home. No placo like ' Goose A lley, is there, W ilder?

Wm. Folkers is expected home soon. G et your bells ready, boys, j

N O R T H U N IO N N U G G E T S.Miss Ruth Castleman, Correspondent.

Geo. Osborn, Wm. L eighty and Daniel L eighty went to Nebraska to look at the country and if they like it they expect to take a claim . . . . Mrs. Phoebe Chapman is vis­iting her daughter in Plym outh. . . Miss Myrtle Grove was entertainedby the Misses K latt Sunday.........IT he minister preached at the church to a very small audience. There will be service again Nov. I 2-> at 2:30. Everybody is invited

Mr. and. Mrs. Wm. Castleman j and Mr. and Mrs. Grover Castle­man were Knox visitors Wednes­day . . . . Samuel Cooper spent a few I days with Geo. Osborn and family !---- Don't forget the box socialthat will be given at the Castleman | school next Saturday evening N o v .!1 *. There will be a program, two i plays will be given entitled “Axin* I Her Father,” a darkey play, and “ Fun in a Photograph Gallery.” T he ladies are requested to bring boxes and the gentlemen to bring! plenty of m oney. . . . Several people of this vicinity attended tho box ' social at Hibbard Friday n ig h t .. . I The pupils that have neither been * absent nor tardy and have not whis- pered during the past month are: Harold Grove, Letta Turnbul, Lo- ' ona Geiselnian, Laura Overmeyer, j 'Verna Geiselnian, Chloe Joseph, Chester Geiselnian, Elva Joseph and Ruth Castlem an. . . . Mr. and ' Mrs. Clarence Smith of Ohio were guests of George Osborn and fam i­ly last week.

M A X IN K U C K E E M U R M U R S.>1 is* Ooklft Thompson. Correspondent.

Mrs. Sarah Adamson is very ill.Geo. Peoples is having a furnace

put in his house. 'Mr. and Mrs. Howard Loring are

the proud parents of a baby girl since Wednesday, Nov. 7.

The Ladies’ Aid society will meet with M rs. Sarah Rector ou Thursday afternoon, Nov. lo , to sew carpet rags.

Dr. A . X. Caple and family moved into their new home at A r­gos Wednesday. There are now four vacant houses in town.

Jacob McCullen of Chicago, an uncle of Dr. Stevens, was killed last Monday in an accident caused by the breaking of an elevator rope.

Miss Fanny Walsh fell down a ten-foot stairway that leads to the basement of their store Friday night. She received several bruis­es. but nothing serious resulted.

M O U N T H O P E M A G N E T S .Miss Delia Edtfinjrbou. Correspondent.

Mrs. W illiam Merbiing of near Leiter s departed this life last Sat urday e v e n in g .. . . Elmer Sturgeoi of Logan sport visited relativesthis neighborhood Sund ay...........Cleo Patsel o f Culver is visitingfriends in this neighborhood----Protracted meeting is iu progressat this p lace__ Mrs. John Brughis no bettor at tiiis writing.

H IB B A R D H A P P E N IN G S .Mrs. E. J. Rccii, Correspondent.

Bert Yoreis was driving oil our street last Monday.

Ilenry Schmidt made a business trip to Plymouth last Monday.

Lawrence Voreis, who is work­ing in Chicago, was shaking hands

onin

with old friends in this place last Monday looking hale and hearty.

Mrs. Wm. Louther, who has iil for a few days past, is better.

Budy Banks has been making some improvements about his premises.

Mrs. Louisa and Lucinda Lich- tenbergervisited friends in Argos, last Sunday.

Miss Pearl Petcher of Plymouth was visiting her friends in this place over Sunday.

The widow and daughter of Geo. Weirtnan of Missouri were the! guests of Isaac Weirman and fain* ily last Sunday.

The box social held at the H ib ­bard school house Friday evening proved to be a success financially, the receipts being $37.01. Thanks to all. ______

A ll persons are prohibited, under penalty of law, from hunting on onr land, b mile north and m ile' east of the academy.

A n d r e a s B r o s .

CULVER M ARKETS.E ggs.................................B u tte r .............................F o w ls...............................Roosters.......................Spring chickens, per lb.Turkeys (old tom s)----Turkeys (hens)..............Lard.................................

Ky Billon & Medbourn.)

W heat, new.....................O ats..................................Rye per b u .....................Ciover seed, per b u . . . .

,24 .18 .07 .04 07 ,09 .11 .10

.70

,80 1 55 i o6 .7 5

Piles «iiiiekly aud jiosilively cured with Dr. Shoop’s Magic Ointment. It's made for piles :ihin<—amid it dtu-s the work snnjly and wi'.li ; satisfaction. Itching, painful, protruding or blind i>il,\s di?ai>ear like ma^ic by iu. n Large nickel capped glass jars. 50 cents. So.d and recommended b> T. K. Slattery, druggi.-’ i .

Cole'S Hot B la s tWILL SAVE $25 .00 IN FUEL THIS WINTER

CoSc’S H o t B last is a great value. We sell it under a positive guarantee. It burns soft coal, lignite coal, coke, hard coal, wood or any fuel without any change ia tbe stove. You only need

one stove for the entire year, Spring, Fall or dead of Winter. Strikes or coal combines cease to be a terror if you have a CoIe?S H o t B last.

F i r e N e v e r O u t

It is the only stove that keeps tho house warm all night and gives the family a warm

break:^sl room in the morning without kindling - a new lire. Guaranteed to hold fire from

Saturday night to Monday morning.

S a v e s t h e D o l l a r s

I f you feel poor it saves ha lf you* v fual bill, while giving the abovs

beautiful results. It will even make a ton of cheap slack soft

coal, do more work aud hold fire better than your neighbor gets out of a ton of hard co.'.l in his $50.00 stove.

Scientific and A ir-tightconstruction throughout. A patent^ ed stoel co llar connects tho elbow draft to the stove body and cannot open by action of the fiercest heat. Tne paten ted com pound hinge ou the lower draft cannot warp and the draft door closes air-tight by ils own weight. The guaranteed

sm oke*procf feed door prevents smoke, dust or gas escaping when fuel is put in the stove. Perfect results, therefore, from any fuel. The heavy fire box protects the points where other stoves burn out first, and insures great durability.

Ask to see the patented dust less ash cover for re­moving ashes. Our method

s the only clean way.Cole’s Mot B last makes

’$5.00 w o rth of fuel give m ore heat than $10.00 w o rth in any other stove. Sold on a positive guar­an tee . Investigate today.

CAUTIONSee the words, “ Cole’s H ot B last from Chicago” on the feed door of

each stove. None’ gcnuiue without it.

Sold by the Culver Cash Hardware Co. S

P e e r l e s s Maxinkuckee

f l o u rN o b e tte r fo r the m oney can be

bought in Indiana

Recent improvements in our mill enable us to turn out a finer quality of Flour than ever before,

If you have never tried it give us an order and let us show you what it is like.

C O L L IE R BROS.

G r e a t e s t S h o e B a r g a i n

o f t b e Y e a rM e n ’s Soft Finish B ox C alf L ace Shoes; M e n ’ s G un M etal Blucher Cut L ace Shoes; M e n ’ s Old T im e Comfort Plain T o e Kid Shoes; all actual $3 and $3.25 Shoes; built for winter wear, solid double flint oak soies; we are sole agents

c h o ic e PER PAm

M e n ’s Mackinaw Coats, M e n ’s Hunting Coats, M e n ’s Sheep-Lined D u c k Coats, M e n ’ s Black A ll-W o o l Cardigan jackets, M e n ’ s Black and G un Metal G rev G o l f Jackets, worth $3.50, at $ 2.50 for choice. D o n ’ t pay fancy prices.

C u l v e r ’ s Bif> D o u b l e S t o r e THE SURPRISE P h o n e N o . 2 5

C u l v p r , I n d .

Sensational Selling of Women’s Coats, Suits, Furs

Never in the history of South Bend has such interest been centered in the cloak, suit and fur selling ol one house as has been the case at Newman’s-W illiam s this fall We sell more fine Suits, Coats ami luirs, than any other store in South Bend. T h is great business did not come to us through accident, but was actually secured against odds, because we carry the largest stock: be­cause v.e are constantly showing tbe most beau.iful styles; because we are giving alsolutely the most extraordinary values ever offered; because we are one price firm and reliable.

A personal investigation of our merchandise will prove to you conclusively, that the above are tacts and will also give you the reason why we sell more coats, suits and furs than any other store in South Bend.

L o o s e B a c K K e r s e y C o a t s , § 1 0W e are now offering another Coat at the above price. Our first coat was t)ie town talk. This one will be even more popular. Fifty-inch loose-back kersey coat lined with satin to waist. fl he front and back as well as the collar aud calf effect are trimmed with braid. The best value in South Bend. P rice..................... vpsU

N o v e l t y M i x t u r e C o a t s , $ 8 . 9 5Long loose-hanging coats o f brown or gray plaid novelty material. Made collarless anti inlaid with broadcloth to match. A ll sizes, t f o rwr a S 12.50 val ue. Our Special p r ic e ..

O u r T e n D o l l a r M i x t u r e C o a t sA s a special inducement we offer any A

812.50 mixture coat in tho house f o r . . . .

T i g h t F i t t i n g ' C o a t s a t $ 2 0 . 0 0W e are showing a handsome t ight-fitting kersey coat, finished down front and back with tailor- stitched self straps, and lined throughout with gray satin, a 325 garment, Special v

T i g h t F i t t i n g C o a t s o n l y $ 1 3 . 7 5Black kersey coats, tight fitting front and back, 50 inches long, velvet coat collar aud turn-back culls, lined to waist with gray satin; $13.75coat buttoning through in front, Spl

N e w T i g h t F i t t i n g C o a t s , $ 1 7 . 5 0The rarest value we have ever offered is a fifty- inch tight-fitting coat of good black kersey cloth. The body aud sleeves are lined with good satin. The coat is buttoned through in front, has a velvet collar and two side C f"7 C A

pockets; also a small top pocket.Only 4** /

A l l - S a t i n L i n e d K e r s ’ y C o a t s a t $ 1 3 . 9 5

Women’s black kersey coats, 50 inches long, lined throughout with satin. The collar effect is inlaid with velvet and trimmed with braid. 'Plie sleeves are pleated at end and A rhave turn-back cuffs. Worth §18.50

T i g h t F i t t i n g C o a t s a t $ 2 2 . 5 0 ,$ 2 5 a n d u p t o $ 3 5

The garments quoted at the above prices have no equal. They are in a class absolutely alone— both as to their wonderfully low price and the general high standard of excellence of materials. They are designed to fit perfectly, and their graceful lines plainly show the splendid tailoring.

H A N D S O M E V E L V E T C O A T SNew velvet pony coats, elaborately braided down the fo n t , back and sleeves in the most beaut ful design— lined with softwhite* silk. P rice.............................. . / D\ el vet blouses, with collar effect outlined with nile green panne velvet, trimmed with beautiful braid. T he cuff effect and pleated girdle are made of pea.ii de soie. Blouse I ned with line white peau de chene. Price Smart pony coats o f velvet, all exclusive gar­ments finished in neat design with silk braid and lined with rich cream white c o o r A silk. P rice ........................................... C p O Z .D U

B e a u t i f u l E v e n i n g C o a t s o fC l o t h a n d V e l v e t

$25.00, $27.50, 830.00, $35.00, and up to *50.00; colors, can, pearl grey, black, champagne, white aud ref I.

R a re Va lues in W o m e n ’s T a i lo r e d Suits. ^ ith our stock in its present excellent completeness, we have turned our attention to value

g iving with telling effect. W o offer a discount of 10 per cent on any suit in the house. Only suits of the latest styies and materials will be ollered, which will prove well worth investigat.on.

E xc lu s ive S ty les in F in e F u r N e c k w e a rW e are showing an endless variety of Novelty F ur Scarfs in all shapes and all

Siberia gray squirrel scarfs...........................S2.95Blended squirrel scarfs..................................S3.95Natural gray squirrel muffs...........................S5.00Blended squirrel m uffs....................................$7.50Blended river mink scarfs..............................$2.95F ^ J R C O A T S Special 21 inch Electric Seal Coats, lined with skinners satin. A A

large rever— front, and hand blocked collar, full sleeves and cuffs, guaranteed. Price 'P Z o .U U

Natural mink scarfs............................Natural mink muffs............................F ine chinchilla scarfs.........................Beautiful black lynx sets..................Fine royal ermine sets.......................

furs....... $15.00........ $30.00........ $22.50...... $26.75__ $ 100.00