Plymouth Republican, Volume 45, Number 32, Plymouth, Marshall County, 27 June 1901 — Page 7

The Republican. WM. O. HENDRICKS, Editor amd Proprietor. G7Advertisenents to appear in The Republican must be in before Tuesday noon to insure their appearance in the S6ue of that week. Plymouth, Ind.. June 27, 1901.

local nrz'svs. The water main gaDtr commenced on Michigan Etreet Thursday. Mr George Naff and daughter Ilazei weet to Auburn to visit relativee. Emory Hess who ha3 been at Wabash college is here visiting his parents. Mips Cora Leonard returned to Bremen a!ter attetidicg commencement. Mrs Daisy Sehnt and daughter Helen are visiting relatives at Findlay, Ohio. Miss Dora Jordan returned to South Bend after attending commencement here. Miss Laura Boss is home from a visit of three months with her sister in Nebraska. A divorce was granted Friday in the suit of Otto Mikels against Ella Mikels. Walter McElrath came Friday from Etna Green, where he has been visiting relatives. Daniel Voreis, deputy sheriff, has pur chased the residence property heretofore owned by Peter 3, Kruyer, Mrs. H. E. Shirley left for her home ia Grand Rapiis Friday after a visit with her brother, N. H. Oglesbte. Maurice Lauer, of Munci, has joined his wife in her visit to Plymouth and will remain about two weeks. The German Reformed church held a festival at the residence of Jacob Foltz ia the country Thürs 3ay. It was a complete success. Ralph Mattingly, who has been at Northwestern UuiveTsity at Evan6ton, III,, has arrived at home for the summer vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Littler and Miss McDonald, who have been visiting here returned to their home at Columbus. Ohio, Saturday. Gideon W. Blain is in this years graduating cla?a of the law department at Michigan University and received his diploma last Thursday, Mr.' and Mrs. Hiram Hervey, w.ho have been visiting at the home of Mrs. Samuel Miller, have returned to their home in Blissf eld. Mich. John Woiford and son Freddie went to Chicago Firday morning to meet Miss Louise Woiford. who has been attending echocl at Morris, Illinois. Mr. Craig and Mrs. McFarland have returned to Ohio after a visit of two weeks with Mrs. Sarah Wade, Mrs. Fire stoDe and relatives in North township, The difficulties encountered in drilling the oil well at Bremen, as related by us compelled the abandomcnt of the first hole and a new one has been started. The Jacox livery barn is receiving a new shinglo roof this week. Ora Jacox has purchased the residence property owned until now by Sheriff Bondurant. Maud Lawton. Nellie Turney, Ralph Foote, James McCarty and John JSabarbro returned to their homes in Chi cago Fr'day a ter finishing the term at St, Michael's Academy. The first of the cedar water mains were taken upThursday on Laporte street and it whs found that after about 15 yeara of eervice hardly 25 per cent of the timber tubes are damaged. About the most unexpected display of enterprise e?er observed by us is the advertisement of a South Bend cemetery, run regularly in the. daily papers with display type and a cut, Here is an unusual tribute to the value of advertising and it should set live men to thinking. W. M. Mann of Chicago passed through here Friday aborning on his way to Twin Lakes to visit his sister, at the latter place who is ill, Mr. Mann is well known here. He taught school in this county a number of years and was in the law office of J. D. McClaren a few years. The damage suit cf David S. Fertig ts. the Pennsylvania Railway Co. which was on trial in circuit court all last . week,' resulted in a verdict awarding the plaintiff $1.200 for injuries in a run-away caused by a train. This is the second trial of the case, the first verdict having been for $1,500. The Rochester Republican complains of inactivity in that once thriving town and says that what they , need down there isfc'an invincible pusher, The paper thinks that if they had one such citizen they might be enjoying city government and a condition of prosperity that every citizen could be proud of. Is it possible that Rochester is in the list of dead towns? , ' Prof. H. A. Stoyle, president öf the Bourbon College and School of Music, accompanied by J F. Newell, of Bristol, who is nDw connected with the institution, W9re in Warsaw on Saturday. The Bourbon College is regarded as one of the best in this part of the conntry. The attendance is constaualy increasing and its corps of instructor? cannot be surpassed. Warsaw Timee.

Mrs. J. E. Manhall and son Harold L.port' Enterprise, went to Hamlet Saturday mornin?, J Tuesday's election in Laporte county Isaac Seavolt, of Bourbon township, on the question of good roada resulted was a visitor in Plymouth Saturday, in a decision by very decided majorities Miss Kitty DeMoss and Miss Stella to have the improvements and bids will Brink returned to South Bend Saturday De advertised for shortly. About 22 miles Forest Pontious returned Saturday ot ßtone Burface wiU be buiU at an Pto Waat Pullman after attending the PM cf of 83,000 per mile, all commencement exercise-. i ,ead,ag lDt0 LaPorte from differeDt . , rectione, The premium list for the Bremen fair, : m rr U I K is 4-v Via Kolrl Hflt fi.11 ia in nrooo I i

and will be distributed next month. I

Miss Verda Karos returned to her ; made the app0Intment of the city comhome at Bluffton, Ind., after a few days ' mir6ionera, who will act in the paving visit with her couein, Miss Edith Covert, j matter if the remonstrances do not preMary Lawrence returned to her home vail. The men appointed are as follows:

at Pierceton Saturday after vlßitiog with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, Humrichouser. Saturday afternoon the motion for a new trial in the Fertig damage suit was denied and an appeal was prayed to the appellate court. The citizens of Nappanee have raised funds, partly by donation and partly by apnropriation. for the improvement of roads leading into the town Mrs, Daniel Miles, formerly Mr. and of Plymouth, have issued invitations for the marriage ot their daughter Elsie to William Rinard. It will occur Sun - day July 7 at twelve o clock at the

house of the bride's parents, corner ofi!"" ctUMU' oc AueQ a"man. m.: a c u ! Mrs. Stillman was born in Kirby. Vt..

Main and Seventh etreet, Miehawaka, Ind. A number of Chicago men interested in the hunting ana fishing club at Davis station have concluded to prospect for oil or ga3 on their Kankakee river prop erty and have one derrick now on the ground. Young "Joe" Leiter is the chief promoter of the enterprise and as he is not hampered by lack of capital the in vestigation will be exhaustive. The tirst issue of a new paper was gotten out at this ofi:ce Saturday. It is 4,The Chatterer," an illustrated weekly devoted to goesip about Culver and the lake and H. S. Wyllie is the editor, artist and business manager. The pictures are new and handsome, the reading matter is entertaining and the printing and presswork, being done by us, cannot be excelled. Peter Koisely'e machinery snd material have arrived from Delong and will be placed at once in the buildings of the old pop factory back of the Windsor

House. There was some misunder- j territory, it may be seated that the cornstanding Friday about the time Mr. I pany has an office in New York and an-

Knisely was to have possession of the property for his handle works, but the matter was adjusted and immediate occupancy given. At the annual meeting of the old eettiers of Laporte county, hela Thursday, Hon. C, H. Reeve contributed a paper, wtich was read by Lafayette Crane. The closing wcrda of the paper were these: "As you go down among the final shadows, and the murmur of the river in the dark valley comes to you, may the clouds on the opposite shore have a golden edge and a silver lining, reflecting or you the hopes -of a happy future." The phenomenal butter producer is at j work in Michigan and may be headed this way. He sei1 county and state rights for an alleged patent which, he says, will produce a poundof butter from a pound of milk. He caught a farmer near Mendon, Mich., last week for $5,000 in a sale of the exclusive right to use the invention in the state and the victim's enthusiasm is chaDged to deepest gloom since he knows that he has been im posed upon. Dr. Ph.. D. Paul, the eminent German eye specialist of Chicago, treats success fully all diseases of the eye and ear deafness and blindness, and maybe con sulted at the home of Mrs, M. lockev Wednesday, July 3 (providence permit ting.) consultation free. Poor treated free. 31t2 Camp Meeting Callek Off. The camp meeting which lias been held for the past years in the grove south of town, will not be held as heretofore announced. July 11-22, owing to circum stances over which we now have no con trol, J. W. Beowj, Pres. of Marshall Co. Association Office To Be Here. The Valparaiso firm of contractors, P. T. Clifford & Son. now engaged in double-tracking the Pennsylvania , road through this county, will shortly open an office in the business part of this city. This office will have charge of the work from Warsaw to Wanatah, including the payment of wages, and will be maintained until the completion of the contrast. The firm has not been able to secure all the men and teams that are required, but the work is progressing as rapidly lb possible. Contracts are Let, The bids for the construction work of the new bank building were opened last wees, Mr. Speicher being present with representative's of the bank and the Masonic lodge, . But two contracts were closed, the iron work going to the large firm of Hanika & Sons, of Celina, O., and Muncie, Ind., and the cut stone work to Ganter t t Smith, heavy contractors of South Bend, The amounts of the bids are not given out but they are as reaeononable as was expected. Ine brick and carpenter work will be let later. The building will be pushed rapidly forward and will be ready for occupancy by autumn.

Who Thy Are.

A 4 O '..1 1- 04 I T I - i William B, Kyle, Daniel K. Harris. William H. Conger, Achilles North,. William H. Youno, It is presumed that all of them will accept. Saw Perry s Victory, Frances Stillman, who stood on the eld i shore of Lake Erie when 5 years t and witceseed Commodore Perry's lhistoric Daal was found deal in "OI "UUJB ,u '"". 3ieruay, 1 b a ighbor who had brought her ; breakfasf An "centricity caused her ' reJecl 108 attention or fcer ooly surOct. 4, ISO?, and was brought to near Cleveland, Ohio, when young, Later her parents settled near Michigan City. Ind., and she was married in 1832 to P, D, öhumway, and in 1810 to J. A. Stillman, since which time she had lived in ; Ejhart; The Stat Life' Business. The State Life insurance company is a local institution that is doing its full share towards keeping capital at home. Its statements show that, taking into consideration its youthfulnese, this company is o-:e of the strongest Ufa insurance companies ever organized in the country. It bringe in o Indiana -every year a half million dollars from outside states, and in addition prevents three or four hundred thousand dollers from leaving the state. Few people realize the magnitude of the - täte Life. It gives employment to thirty-two people in its local office. Agencies are now established in thirty-two states of the Union, As illustrating the extent of its other in San Francisco, Cal. Indianapolis Journal. Wuat Laporte Tblaks or tlxs Tnrnbull Enterprise. D, B. TurnbuH of this city has been in Plymouth loosing over some plants with the view to starting a factory at that place, his proposition to the citizens of that town being that they purchase buildings and then be will bind himself to rent the same for a term cf years, The matter is under considera tion. Laporte should lose no opportunity to secure this factory which Mr. Turnbul proposes to establish. Mr. Turnbull is a Laportean. he is a man of integrity and owns valuable patents on wagon parts. The matter was taken up at the Business Men's club at one time but it was later dropped fr some reason. Since then nothing has been done, but the citizens should take hold of this matter and every effort should be made to obtain the factory which Mr, Turnbull proposes to start. This city cannot afford to let the plant leave here and a committee 6hould at onco wait upon Mr, Turnbull and learn what kind of a prop osition he will consider. Laporte Herald graduating Exercises at the Catholic Academy, The closing exercises of St, Michael's Academy occurred last Thursday in the assembly room of the academy, commen cing at 3 o'clock p. m. The essays of the graduating class were all on subjects of traval in Europe and America inter spereed with music. To each member of the class was awarded a gold medal for merit in study and conduct. Th graduates are as follows: Fred James Morsches Grace Elmers Lillian Victoria Elmers Mary Louise Carabin Ada Elizabeth Hoitorf Theresa Louise Eulalia Hendricks. Following is the progiam of exercises. PROGRAM. Instrumental Duet, k M. McXifF tnd Grace Elmers Chorus. "Happy Wanderer.' AU Paper: Some things to be seen in Europe ana America, Fred Morsches Instrumental Duet, T. E. Hendricks and M. McNiff Paper: Scenes in the Old and New Louise Carabin World, Vocal Duet, Lily and Grace Elmers Paper: All Round the World, i . Theresa Eulalia Hendricks Instrumental Solo, - Ralph Foot Paper: My Holiday Tour, Grace Elmers Instrumental Duet: "Devant les Saints Rayons." Haydn Mary McNiff and Louise Carabin Paper: Some of the Things I Saw on my 1 rip, - Grace Elmers Chorus: "Music of the Birds " Instrumental Duet: "Les Cieux du Seig neur xecontent ae Gloria," M. McNiff and Grace Elmers Conferring of Medals Chorus. "Come Where the Wild Flowers Bloom." '

ALUMNI ET ALUMNAE

HIGH . SCHOOL GRADUATES OF TWENTY-SIX YEARS MEET IN ANNUAL REUNION AT THE BANQUET BOARD WEDNESDAY NIGHT. The Commencement Ball. t'HE annual ban 4 quet of the Alumni association e Plymouth school was j De:ci in toe auaiJ - .Xtorium of theWash jingt on school last ursday ana ss is always true was a most enjoyable occasion. Every class from the first was "l M LAUER "presented except 'äe'w President, those of '82 and 'SO. the two smallest in the history of the school. These classes consisted of but three members each, all of whom live at a considerable distance from Plymouth. - The reunion was held in the high school rooms, where an hour of social iftercouree preceded the banquet. It WAS almost 10 o'clock when the lioes were formed and the banquet hall was entered and the feast of good things, edible, potable and reasonable, continued until after midnight. Tables, decorated handsomely with roses, were placed separately about the room and the guests were thus arranged in congenial groups while . the eataobs were dieccssed.Covers were laid for 100. V. W. Hill & Son were the caterers and Marone's harp discoursed 6veet music through the courses. The boys of the undergraduate classes of the high echool, appropriately jacketed in white, officiated gracefully as waiters under the leadership of Lloyd Hill, who was garbed in black, The menu, which was served in courses, follows: MENU Cold Sliced Tonpve Chicken Salad, Mayonnaise Egg Sandwich Saratoga Chips Sweet Pickles Olives Freach Butter Holls Young Radishes Orange Jelly "Bromangelon" Salted Peanuts Lemon Ice Claret Punch Cherries Black "Tartarians" Nepolitan Ice Cream Strawberries on -Stems Fruit Cake Lady Cake Chocolate Iced Macaroons Coffee When the coffee was reached, the president of the association, K. Frank Bro:ke, '80, rapped for order and the program of speeches and music was opened and carried through as follows PROGRAM. Roll Call Tw.inart S Serenade Ncidlingcr - I 0 Dinah Doe.. .Molloy Mrs. Bertha McDonald, ?85; . Miss Mary Brown, '99; Miss Helen Disher, '95; Miss Edna Yockey, '99; Miss Victoria Cleaveland, '89; Miss Mary Hoham, '95; Mrs. Elizabeth H. Gilmore, '85; Mrs. Maude Houghton, 'S9. Response,. ... ."A Plea for Admission Miss Honore Parks, '01. Duet "The Angel," Bubinstcir Mrs. Esther Oglesbee, '85, Miss Anna Houghton, '84. Response "What Next?" Mrs. Martha Stevens' '88. Solo, "As the Dawn," Cantor Mrs. Maude Houghton, '89. Response, 'Dreams of the Undergradu ate Miss Mabel Jacoby, '96. Solo, Selected Mrs. Esther Oglesbee, '&5. A Mosaic, "PiymouthCommencements." Miss Victoria Cleaveland, 'S9. Quartette, 'Nightingale andRose'JLeA ncrt Mrs. Bertha McDonald, 'SS; Mrs. Elizabeth H. Gilmore, '83; Mr. James O. Parks, '01 ; Mr. K. F. Brooke, '80. Address, "The Expectations and Possi bilitiesof the High School Graduate.' . Mr. Frank W. Boss, '94. Class Song "We Are Waiting'" By the Alumni. It is needless to bay thatthe program held the undivided attention of the ban queters and was enjoyed with keen .:est by those so fortunate as to be io atten dance. Prof. Chase and. Miss Romig were called upon and responded approp riately. The election of officers of the associa tion for the ensuing year placed Leopold M. Lauer, '81, ir the presidency to suc ceed Mr. Brooke, and continued Mies Estella M. Chase, 'S9. as secretary. The rteceDtion. Under the practiced management of Lot Losey the commencement ball was a successful and brilliant f.ffair. John C. Capron and Oscar Simons were the floor managers and Si, Guisepps Marone, he Indianapolis harpist, furnished the music. It was after one o'clock when the grand march, led by Edwin Mayer and Blanche Disher, in which forty couples participated, was formed and nearly five when the program of twenty num bers was completed. The opera house was dec-orated in the national colors and emonade was eeryed during the night at a pretty table in one corner. The banquet of the Alumni associa ion was protracted to an unusually late hour, which delayed the beginning of he hall. During the wait those who were gathered at the opera house en joyed a little mfcrmal dance, the vpiano music being furnished by Miss Warner.

- V Vlof tt

TUB TRUTHS.

DROP of ink will color a whole glass .44

mm

of water. It is an inch ot yeast whicn makes a pan of bread rise, and a single rake of soao containing unabsorbed

alkali can ruin a hundred times its cost in laces and fine embroidery After all, is it wise to take such risks with common soap ? Of course you can get alöng without Ivory Soap. So can a wagon without axle grease but it goes hard. cortaiAHT tm rädert . wiu OO. cimcimuti

I Mrs McKinley Can Walk. Win Go to Texa. to Work. j YasuIngtou. .Tune 24. Mrs. McKinDresser, nld., June 24. Harvey Tor- iey's strength has increased to the exter Layton. of this county, has been i tent that she is now able to walk selected as literary editor and book re- . around her bedroom for some time viewer of The Bohemian, of Fort each dav. Her general condition conWorth, Tex. J tlnues satisfactory.

Collision Will Result in Two Deaths. Hut Irr. Mo.. June 24. Two Missouri Facifie freight trains collided head on In the yards here and were wrecked. John Slawson. fireman on the northhound train, had his le?s cut off, and w.111 die: "Wolfing, p. lirakemnn, was Li:r:ed v.ndir t;e wreckapre and fatally hurt, and S. snyder. fireman of the south-licuTid train, was injured 'badly.

1 lot Little Gents' Tau Shoes, worth S1.00 to 1.25.. ..89c Youth's Tau Shoes, sizes 13 to 2, worth 1.25 to 1.35. 98c Boys' Tan Shoes, sizes 3 to 5, worth 1,25 to 1.35. . . .98c Ladies' Fine Tan Shoes with vesting top, sold at . 2.50, now. $1.98 We have Misses' Tan Shoes and Men's Tan Shoes and prices are the Lowest. Call and see them

J.F.flaPtle'sCashShoeStore Kendall Bloek, Plymouth.

You Take -no Chances When Ton Bay

I Our Own Headache Powders! ?

They are made to cure 5r every time. They are swift, leave any bad after affects. .'headache TRY THEM. You

resemea. x nree rovvaers tor ioc. "S T" TT T T TT7Vrr

-5

SiPhoenix

Cigar Store ' ESSE Is headquarters for everything in the Tobacco and Cigar Line. All prades of Tobacco-three 10-cent cuts tor 25c. We are Sole Distributers for the Celebrated JOHN HARPER 5c CIGAR for this city. We also keep a full Hue of GUNTIIER'S CANDIES. Respectfully,

tut

Boilermaker Quit Work. Terre Hfuite. Ind., June 24.Twelve boilermakers at he Terre Haute Boiler works are on strike for the scale of wages -Tt cents an hour straight adopted ly the union last week. The only other works In town signed the scale, which is an advance of from 2 to 5 cents an hour.

Special Sale of headaches and they do it sure, and best of all do not 5& The uext time you have a s will find them just, as rep: Ü DRUGGIST. tf. Ji. DIBBIiE.

Shoes S