Plymouth Tribune, Volume 1, Number 26, Plymouth, Marshall County, 3 April 1902 — Page 7
TLhc tribune.
HENDRICKS & CO., Publishers, Plymouth, Ind., April 3, 1902. Advertisements to appear In THE TKIBDNE ncit be In before Tuesday noon to lniur tnetr appearance in the issue of tba fet . LOCAL NEWS D. Metzgar and family have moved from Argos to Plymouth. Mrs. W. E. McKenzie returned from Florida Thursday noon. Thomas O'Conner, of Culver, went U SoutbiBend Thursday to visit relatives. Charles Kintzel went to Mentone Thursday to visit a few days with his mother. Almost everybody is making garden and spring now seems two weeks earlier than usual. The Brightside Training school placed four children in hones near Valparaiso Thursday. p. S. Alleman has packed his household goods and will move to Mankato, Minn., in a few days. Tred Logan arrived from Marietta, Ohio, Thursday morning, where he has be n employed for the past year. The Weekly Independent is out under its new head, but there is nothing new about it except the head. Philip Herald and his mother, of Argos, passed through here Thursday on their way to South Bend to visit relatives. Stephen Jackson of Sophia street, is contemplating removing to Chicago to more centrally locate himself for his work. Mrs. Anna Kinsey and daughter, of Burr Oak, went to South Bend today where they expect to soon reside permanently. Mrs. Petcher has returned to her home at Bourbon after a visit of several days with her daughter, Mrs. John Sullivan. Mr. and Mrs. I). S. O'Brien, returned to their home at Grovertown Thursday after visiting with the former's parents in this city. A. J. Eramerton who was taken to the Epworth hospital at South Bend tor treatment several days ago, is reported much improved. Miss Maude Kingsbury, who came here to attend the funeral of Mrs. Dunlap, returned Thursday morning to her home in Iowa City, la. The jury in the case of Murray vs Houghton found for the plaintiff. It was a case in which the lines between farms were in dispute. Oscar Bomig Wednesday moved his familv from near Inwood to Jacob Bentschler's property on the river bank near Sophia street. "Workmen are unloading timber at the P. F. B. B., bridge over the river preparatory to remodeling that structure for the double track. Mrs. O. L. Tapley returned to her home in South Bend Tnnrsdav morninpr after visiting with the family of P. S. Alleman, in this city. Mrs. Harry Harris and little son Boss went to Tiosa Thursday morning to attend commencement exercises and visit a few days with relatives The democrats of Fulton county held a big convention Thursday and E. C. Martindale w ent down to see if Fulton county democrats want him for circuit judge. At the meeting of the National Retail Hardware Dealers' Associated which was lieldjin Chicago last week, M. L. Corey, of Argos, was re-elected to the ofMce of of secretary. Mrs. Charles Ilively, residing, near Columbia City, was seized with a spasm while boiling sugar water Wednesday, fell into a tank of boiling hot water and was scalded to death. Jchn B. Jones, of the Argos Bellect :r, is a candidate for county clerk subject to the democratic primary election. Mr. Jones, like Mr. Metsker, publishes an independent paper. John McMaster, who has spent the winter in Chicago, St. Joseph and Laporte,is visiting his xother and sisters in this city for a few days. His health is much better than it was a year ago. B. A. Marchant and family, of Chicago, arrived in Plymouth Thursday to make this city their home. Mr. Marchant has purchased the former Gast property in the north west part of town. Mrs. R. E. Brown and children left Thursday morning to join Mr. Brown at their new home in Quincy O., Mr. Brown was the operator at tha Vandalia stat ion in this city and the family made many friends here. Mrs. William Edwards, Plymouth's oldest lady and one of the first settlers of the county, has gone to South Bend for a visit of a few days before going to her new home ih Minnesota wit h her daughter, Mrs. P. S. Alleman. On this bright warm day comes F. M. McCrory and reports that twentylive years ago March 26, he closed his first term of school his brother coming for him in the evening with a sled and the children came to school in the morning on. the crun on the snow.
Ea Hillsman made a business trip to Inwood this morning. Mrs. Charles Kintzel returned from St. Joe, Michigan today. John W. Parks made a business trip to Bourbon this morning. Charles Shadel made a bussiness trip to South Bend today. Miss Belle Waters, of Culver, transacted business in this city today. David Buchtel, of Lapaz, transacted business here this forenoon. Mrs. Joseph Moorelock left for Elkhart Friday to be the guest of relatives. A marriage license has been issued to Francis W. Susdorf and Maud Sickman. Mrs. Ed Whitwer, of Mishawaka, is the guest of relatives and friends in this city. Henry Yost, of Mishawaka, visited a few hours last evening with Miss Dollie Eich. Mrs. Chas. Hite went to Elkhart today to be the guest of her sister, Miss Dora Warnes. Miss Bessie Allman returned last evening from a visit of a couple of days in Chicago. John Baxter, of St. Joseph, Michigan, is visiting his parents and old friends in this city. Mrs. M. Moullenhour went to Tippecanoe Friday mcrning to spend Easter with her parents. Bev. Peter Budnik, of Walkerton, passed through here Friday on his way home from Ft. Wayne. Miss Maude Keiser left Friday for Bochester to be the guest of relatives for a few days. Mrs. James Hoffman and Mrs. Sophi Myers went to Hanna Friday to visit relatives and friends. Charles LaBrnsh, of South Bend, has seccured a position at the Novelty works and will move here in a few davs. Mrs. Emma Alderfer has returned to her home in South Bend after visiting her brother, Frank Liggfett, in this citv. Mrs. Ed Thomas, of Elkhart, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Harry Buck and other relatives and friends of her girlhood home. Mrs. H. Horner was called to Warsaw Friday morning on account of the sickness of her aunt, Mrs. S. C. Thompson. Oliver and Sherman Mickey have sold their sixty-acre farm south of Tippecanoe to Daniel Leighty, of Kosciusko county. Mrs. MaFy Holdridge returned home Thursday having spent the winter with the family of an uncle at Ypsilanti, Mich. Bussell Ault arrived from Michigan City Friday to spend Easter in this city with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Crawford. William Bolinger went to Donaldson Friday morning. He and Mrs. Bolinger will leave for their home in North Dakota next week. The state meeting of the Elks will be held at Logansport June 23 23, the occasion marking a street fair carnival and the unveiling of a monument. Judge Scott, of the New York supjeme court, has decided that if a woman has a husband her ' dressmaker must look to him for payment and cannot sue the wife. Before J. Pierpont Morgan lays off his winter clothing he should examine all the pockets carefully to see if there is a forgotten memorandum of some ten:million-dollar-deal. Nearly eight inches of water fell during 24 hours ending Thursdav evening, at Vicksburg, Miss., and the damage by the flood is estimated at tens of thousands of dollars. It is reported that Mrs. Hartman or Bauman of the lunch room, found the men in Argos who buncoed her Thursday and compromised with them for a part of the money they got. Colonies of Dunkards are being formed in central and northernlndiana for the establishment of settlements in northern Michigan, where large tracts of lands have been acquired by purchase. A Lake Erie & Western train ran into a fire department hose wagon at Indianapolis Thursday and the newspapers are accusing the company of running too fast. It can prove an alibi up here. Dr. Eley, secretary of the board of health has notified all the physicians of the county, that any failure to report births will oe prosecuted, as the state board demands a rigid enforcement of the law. The twentieth annual meeting of the Northern Indiana Teachers' association, will be held in the Stüdebaker Auditorium and theAuditoriumAnnex at South Bend, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, April 3, 4 and 5, 1902. The west, northwest, southwest and south is suffering from floods, and storms, and railway traffic has been seriously interrupted while here in Indiana we have had the most delight
ful weather ever experienced at this season of the year. ' -
B. W. Healy and family went to Logansport Saturday to visit relatives. . Rev. C. X. Curtis has arrived to take charge of the Gospel Mission. Lulu and Erma Pence went to Donaldson to spend Easter with relatives. Mrs. Frank Cromley went to Culver to be the guest of friends over Easter. Fred Bluebaugh, of South Bend spent Easter with relatives in this city. Mrs. L. G." Harley went to South Bend Saturday t j spend Easter with relatives. Mrs. Maggie Roberts, of New Waverly, Ind., is the guest of friends in this city. George W. Keiser, of Chicago, stopped here Saturday to visit his father, James Keiser. Mrs. II. II. Miller spent Easter with relatives and friends at her old home in Bremen. Morris Agler has been very ill with lung fever for several days at his home near Twin Lakes. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver C. Chase were here to spend Eastjr with Professor Chase and family. Mrs. Henry Kraker and Miss Ida Ulrich spent Sunday with relatives and friends in South Bend. Arthur Ball, came down from South Bend and spent Easter with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Adam Ball. Mrs. Riley Dawson went to Argos Saturday to be the guest of her parents, Mr, and Mrs. David Waltz. The finest supper and the best time is assured at St. Joseph's hall Tuesday evening. Everybody welcome. The annual meeting for the election of officers of the Farmers Insurance company will take place next Saturday. Miss Nettie Seiler, daughter of Chris Seiler, of Bremen, died Friday from serious burns of several days ago. George II. Bevnolds returned to his home in Hibbard Saturday after visiting with the family cf W. D. Lillybridge. Mrs. Clinton Bondurant went to South Bend Saturday to be the guest of her brothers, Everett and Chauncy Fields. Frank Yocum, who is employed here says houses are so scarce in Plymouth that he has to leave his family at Lapaz. Potatoes, peas, onions and lettuce have been planted in every section of the county and many farmers are plowing for oats. Marriage licenses have- been issued
to John W. Kellogg 21 and Pearl E. Bland 20; Charles W. Start 27 and Gertrude A. Perry 23. The society ladies of Elkhart are preparing . to give a swell minstrel show in the near future and rehearsals are being held daily. The Baltimore man who was struck dumb 'while cursing his wife is not able to say whethej it was done with a flat iron or a mop stick. John Kelley, of the soldiers' home, who has been visiting here, went to Warsaw for a visit of a few days before returning to the home. Tlr rain of Friday came at the right time, in the right way and in the right quantity to do the most good. Everybody is pleased. Clinton Bondurant, L. G. Harley and Henry Kraker went to South Bend Saturday to visit over Sundav with relatives and friends. Mrs. M. Altman and two daughters. Fay and Floy, of South Bend, visited with the family of Ed Gibson in this city and went to Ft. Wayne Sat urday morning. The high school classes from Teegarden and Tyner will hold their commencement exercises in the M. E. church in Tyner next Tuesday evening, April 1. A tour of the city shows almost every house occupied, and new buildings are contemplated. The coming summer promises to be the best that Plymouth has had in several years. The Goshen Democrat says thccommittee on resolutions at the Elkhart county prohibition conventional was given power to insert a clause declaring -the Nicholson law a cheat and a fraud. George Foss, wife and son, who have been visiting friends in Marshall county during the winter, returned to their home in North Dakota Tuesday. They were accompanied by II. B. Foss of Culver. George Sullivan and wife, Mrs. Boggs and her son, Frank, of Bremen and Samuel Shock and family, of Lapaz, w-re among those who went to Dako.ta from the northern part of this county. Easter is the time of hope. We turn to it as the flower to the sun; all the discouragements and disappointments of the year seem to lie behind us, and they should become helps to the new year whose birth is the spirit of Easter promise. The strike of the Singer employes at South Bend Is still unsettled, and when the Singer company attempted to move some of their machinery from the old factory to the mammoth new plant, the strikers interfered and prevented the removal.
Mrs. C. L. Post was struck and instantly killed by train No. 35 on thö Lake Shore road Tuesday night ac Mishawaka. She is the eighth victim of the same train within ashoit time. Railway men are growing superstitious concerning No. 35. The Wabash College is preparing to erect a large bronze tablet oa which are to be inscribed the names of 300 or more men she sent to the war of the rebellion. Among the Marshall county men are C. Tv Mattingly, A. T. Metcalf and A. W. Bill. Mrs. William Freisinger died Friday morning at her home near Rutland. She was 71 years old and an excellent woman who had many friends in the southwest part of the county. Her husband and several sons and daughters survive. Funeral at Poplar Grove church at 10 o'clock a. m., Sunday. The Elkhart Truth says Editor Louis McDonald presented his valedictory in th3 last issue of the Plymouth Democrat which he has edited ove thirty years. Louis will probably deny the allegation as to the length of time he edited the Democrat, but there is no doubt about its being the last issue of that paper. The whisky manufactures and whisky dealers of the country have been furnishing money for many years to keep the Prohibition party alive, but thev now find thatthev have done the whisky cause more harm than good and the leading distillers and dealers have organized to fight all temperance organizations. The citv council is troubled as to the best method of cleaning paved streets which get nasty and dirty very rapidly. Cleaning with a force of men and brooms is very expensive and the city dads are considering the purchase of a two horse sprinkler and sweeper. The matter will be taken up at the next meeting of the council. A large number of women in Denver were invited to witness a prize fight, that they might see for themselves the harmlessness and healthfulness of the sport and cease their opposition to it. Thev saw the prize tight, but they now complain that it was a ,4fake," just exactly as men do when the prize fighters stop short of tearing each other into shreds. When the Brazil school board dismissed Rev. Emery Muncie for hugging and kissing a 15-year-old gir pupil, all the other attendants at the school went on a strike. The future may require that applicants for teachers' licenses in Brazil be cultured in osculation and hugging as well as being erudite. South Bend Times. Democratic delegates to the state and congressional conventions were chosen today. The delegates from this city to the Ftate convention are Wm: Everly, Samuel Parker, C. W. Metsker and M. A. Bland; to the congressional convention, John Wolford, John Capron, Wm. O'Keefe, James Bettick, Dan McDonald, P. J. Kruyer and Charles Porcher. The Elkhart Truth edited by Hon. C. G. Conn says a practical education with a knowledge of how to put it in practice is better than a college course for ninety-nine one-hundredths of the human race. An ability to foresee results, to measure consequences, to grasp opportunities, to discriminate between the right and wrong way, to to use common sense is the key to all success. A party of boys while seining in the river at St. Joseph Thursday caught one of tli largest sturgeons ever known to oe caotured in the lake and atributary rivers. They caught it in a seine, and after having landed it made it fast in the water with a rope. Then they called on some men, who helped them drag it to land. The fish weighed 225 pounds and measured six feet and seven inches. Rev. .Samuel Snyder, well knuwn in this county, is now located in Wabash county. Bcturnihg home from a prayer meeting Wednesday evening, his horse became frightened and ran away. In going down a steep hill the animal missed the bridge at the foot of the incline and dashed into the river, where it became entangled in the harness and was drowned. Mr. Snjder escaped without serious injury. The progress of the building that Wm. Davis was moving to the north side of town was stopped Wednesday by an injunction secured by the B. & O. railroad. Davis swore by the great horn spoon that he would Cross the tracks,, and people waited with some interest to see the sparks fly when "an irresistible force met an immovable barrier," but bloodshed was averted by II. M. Garver purchasing the building, of which he will make a bam. Bremen Enquirer. . It is reported that a petition numerously signed has been presented to the school board asking that B. A; Chase be not re-employed as superintendent of the city schools. Whatever action may ' be taken will not hurt Professor Chase. His 32 years at the head of the Plymouth schools is his best vindication, and if the time has come for him to quit it does not in anyway reflect on his character or ability. There are many persons who believe 32 years is too long for any man to remain in any public position
The family of Charles Förster, the harness maker, has moved to North Manchester where Charlie is now employed. They have been residents of this city for many years and have many friends here who wish them success ia their new home. The rainfall in Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Arkansas since Wednesday morning has been unprecedented, and the melting snow has caused reat floods in the northwest, while there has been a heavy fall of snow and sleet in the Black Hills. A dispatch from St. Joseph, Mich., says! The first spike was driven in the new electric line from South Bend to this city Tuesday. Work will be pushed from both ends of the line and the superintendent of construction says that the road will be running cars by October 1st. Grand Array posts have sent resolutions to the Presideht approving his vetoes of bills pardoning deserters. Nearly forty years after the war it is not remorse or the sense of disgrace which leads deserters to ask to be relieved of the odium of the offense, but the hope of a pension. William Brummit, of New Carlisle, received word from England that an uncle of Mrs. Brummitt had died and left his estate to bo divided between 18 heirs. Mrs. Brummitt will receive her portion as soon as the work of dividing the estate is settled. The estate is said to-be one of the largest in England. The dominion of Canada certainly teaches this and other countries a good lesson in the matter of the sacredness of the marriage vow. Statistics show that in the city of Montreal there are but three divorced men and eight divorced women. What civilized or i .icivilized city of the world can short' up such a record? Nearly every Indiana" newspaper is suggesting that girls after receiving a common school education be given a thorough course in roastology. boilology, stitchology, darnoloogy, patchology aud general domesticology. Yet, it may be well to add that a little more spankology at the start will help some. Indianapolis Sun. John Hush, an inmate of the St. Joseph county infirmary, was born in New Jersey in 1793, and is therefore 108 years old. He came to Berrien county, Mich., from Ohio in 1825. Last Sunday he walked from the infirmary to New Carlisle and back 28 miles, going to New Carlisle to pay an annual visit to a daughter. With the exception of his hearing, which is almost gone, he is in possession of al his faculties.
Judge Capron Is the Man. The convention to nominate a dem ocratic candidate for judge of the 41st judicial district will meet in Plymouth May 28. There are a number of aspirants for the position but it now seems probable that all the men who are scrambling for the nomination will be left and Judge Capron will be renominated. He is not a candidate, but will not refuse if the nomination comes to him unasked. A Big Vandalia Improvement. The Pennsylvania company has set aside $400,000 to be expended in improvements on the Logansport division of the Vandalia, the money to be used in double tracking sixteen mills additional, making forty nine miles of double track, and the erection of several interlocking plants. It is also rumored that within a short time two additional passenger trains will be placed in service on the Vandalia, both to be through trains. jobbers in Plymouth. The old envelope game was successfully worked on Mrs. Hartman, at the railroad lunch roomThursday forenoon. Two men came in, called for a lunch and after eating, asked her if she could give them large bills for $40 in small bills, as they wanted to send that amount awav in a letter. She gave them the money and one of the men handed her a roll of small bills while the other put her money in an envelope. On counting the money she found only $39. The man then handed her the envelope saying that they could probably get two twenties somewhere else which would suit them better than the bills she had given them. When she opened the envelope she found that it contained only blank paper. Telegrams were sent to the surrounding towns but the' thieves have not been found. Wooden Swearing. "There is one kind of swearing which we never heard of until recentty,n says Rev. William Galpin in the April Eagle, "A certain lady called it 'wooden swearing.' And a good many people are given to this swearing. Instead of giving vent to their feelings in oaths, they slam the doors, kick the chairs, stamp on the floor, and make all the noise they can. They do not swear, themseh-es, but they make the furniture do the swearing for them. So a good name for it is 'wooden swearing.' " Dr. Paul, of Chicago, treats successfully all diseases of the eye and ear, and may be consulted at Mrs. M. Yockey's Wednesday. Consultation free.
I X :
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