Plymouth Tribune, Volume 2, Number 3, Plymouth, Marshall County, 23 October 1902 — Page 5

LEADER -IN-

B own They Go

Wire

Barb and Smooth Wire

Strictly Pure

Call and see me when in the market. You always find the lowest market prices here. Buck's Gash Hardware Leader in Low Prices

ZEbe ZEtibune. HENDRICKS & CO.. Publishers. Plymouth, Ind., October 23, 1902. . Advertisements to appear In TFJETKIBCNE mujt be In before Tuesday noon to Insure tnelr appearance In the Issue of tba week. 2 & LOCAL NEWS Wood wanted on subscription. Marion Logan spent Sunday at Fort , Wayne. Mrs. D. E. Moore has returned 'from Pierce ton. Mrs. Kershaw, of Argos, visited over Sunday in this city. Eldrige Thompson is now located at the Phoenix cigar 6tore. rf i If you want to pay your subscription in wood bring it now. - Nathan Craige is spending a few days at Larwill this week. Charley Ilitsel, of Argos, spent Sunday with friends in this city. Frank Freeman went to Fort Wayne Sunday evening to vist friends. Edith Jeffries, of near Sligo. spent Sunday with friends in this city. Zach Tanner and Ed Tanner went ,out on their regular routes Monday. Frank nend ricks, of Elkhart, spent Sunday with his mother in this city. Charles Wymer, the Western Union operator at Hamlet, was in this city Monday. Cox and Xlill have sold their box ball business to Harry Hudson, . of Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Kloepfer and Miss Betty Welch visited relatives at Michigan City Sunday. CnarlesP. Marsh, of South Bend, visited his daughter at the home of John Jordan Sunday. Miss Frances Emerson left Monday evening for a tnree weeks' visit with relatives at Cleveland, Ohio. William Jacoby has returned to his home in Missouri after a visit of two weeks with relatives in this county. . Misses Hattie Bissell and Emma Holem, who teach in the Columbia City schools were home oyer Sunday. The new school house in district No. 1, of Green township, is completed and school commenced this week. South Bend's new $75,000 city hall is about completed and the various departments of the city governmet are now moving in. . . P. Bosworth and his brother, Joseph Bosworth, of Wayne county, visited in this county last week and went from here to South Bend Monday. Lewis Black, of German township, visited his brother Joseph Monday and will leave Tuesday for South Dakota where he expects to spend the winter. In spite of the recent reform movement in South Bend, the Tribune asserts that slot machines are again running unmolested in portions of the city. Mrs. Cornelius Pontious, of South Bend, spent Sunday In this city with her sister, Mrs. Emanuel Price, who is lying at the point of death with consumption. Gust Schlosser, W. V. Clifford and J. F. Penrod left for Milwaukee, Wis., last Monday, to attend the national convention of buttermakers which will be In session there until Friday evening. Atraham Rhinehärt r visited old friends' in this county last week and returned to his home in South Bend Monday morning. He was one of Marshall county's pioneers and resided here sixty years. Typhoid fever caused 352 deaths in Indiana during the month of September, while smallpox caused only three. Yet' there is immensely more said and done to guard against smallpov than against typhoid fever. A Hobart man who bought a load of buckeye wood says he thinks that he will have wood the middle of next summer; and he adds that anybody who does not believe his story can be convinced by buying a load of -buck-eye. . ;

LOW PRICES

Nails Linseed Oil Wood wanted at this office. James Deloney is on the sick list. Farmers report corn ripening rapidly. Rev. A. II. Zilmer has returned from his Illinois trip. Mrs. A; W. Jones is visiting in South Rend this week. Mr. II. J. Greenlun has pone to Fort Wayne for a few days. Hon. Charles P. Drummond was a Plymouth visitor Tuesday. Editor Nearpass, of Culver was a Plymouth visitor Tuesday. The little daughter of Charles Wallace is quite ill with scarlet fever. The Lake Erie will run another excursion to Indianapolis next Sunday. The Lake Erie gives a rate of one fare for the Beveridge meeting next Monday. Mrs. Daniel McCarty ahd daughter, Miss Alice are visiting relatives at Fort Wayne. There are still plenty of tomatoes in market and pastures are better than they were in May. Mr. and Mrs. James A. Gilmore are visiting at Indianapolis and attending the Bankers' convention. Miss Bertha Vinnedge and Mrs. Sarah Baker, of Lapaz Junction, were Plymouth visitors Tuesday. The republicans havo mighty good candidates for all the county offices and they should be elected. Mr.' and Mrs. George W. Craige are visiting their son, Samuel Craige and family in Nappanee this week. E. Culpand wife, A. Cordray, Mrs. Baily and daughter, of Lakeville, have returned from their visit to Ohio. Mrs. Charles Rumsey was called to Chicago Tuesday by serious illness of her daughter who is visiting there. Mrs. Chadwick, of Columbus, Ohio, has returned to her home after a visit with Mrs. O. F. Cretcher in this city. Mrs. R. H. Jeffrey, of Sligo, is attending the revival meetings at the Wesleyan church in this city this week. Mrs. William Everly who has been on.the sick list for a long tinio is reported In a very critical condition this week. John Snyder gave William Suit, sr., a severe beating Saturday afternoon, and J ustice Molter gave Snyder eleven days in jail. Dr. Lindquist has unquestionable qualifications for coroner aLd he reresides where the county coroner ought to reside. "Prosperity continues to increase" is a head line in the Cincinnati Enquirer the leading democratic paper of the Ohio valley. Miss Ruth Ann Deardorff who spent the summer with her sister at Cordington, Ohio, returned to her home in West township Tuesday. Vote for Elmer Wilson for sheriff and thus enable Clint Bondurant to do something else before he gits to be a broken down politician. Senator Parks went to Chicago on Tuesday to attend a meeting and banquet of the leading Sunday school workers of the United States. Mrs. Rosenfeld who has been visiting M. Allman's and other relatives and friends here. returned to her home at Marion Tuesday morning Mrs, English, who has been employed at H. Humrichouser's, has returned to her home at Donaldson on account of the illness of her mother. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Taylor and son have returned to their home at Wolcott, Ind., after visiting relatives In the vicinity of Bourbon and Etna Green. Misses Catherine and Mary Anstine and Miss Brubaker have returned to Wabash after a visit of several days with the family of D. D. Peters near Lapaz. Bishop Alerding, of Fort Wayne, will confirm a large class at St. Michael's church in this city next Sunday morning after the usual 10 o'clock services. Township principals of High Schools will meet in Mr. Marks' office In Plymouth Saturday October 25, to form a list of bi-monthly examination questions.

Beveridge, Monday, Oct. 27. D. C. Cole is visiting at North Liberty this week. Mrs. Harry Humrichouser is here for a short visit. Mrs. D. S. O'Brien wis a Plymouth visitor yesterdav. We will pay 'a good price for good

wood on subscription. Hon. II. G. Thayer transacted busi ness at Bourbon yesterday. Miss Flo Gaskill and her little sister are visiting at Fort Wayne. Mrs. C. O. Smith has gone to Roch ester for a visit of a few days. Tell vour neighbors to vote for Peter Ileim for representative. Mrs. Fred Kepler has gone to Burket to visit relatives' until next week. William Gross and family have returned home from the Ohio excursion. Miss Mary Medborne, of Culver, has gone to North Dakota to spend the winter. Robert II. Morrill, one of the old residents of the city is reported seriously ill. The Armours have sold their December com and the price of all grains has declined, Charles Cox has gone to Fort Wayne to work for the Adams Express company. Mrs. A. M. Baker who was here nursing her, sister, Mrs. E. II. Cox, lias returned to Peru. Frank Hering,.deraocratic candidate for congiess will speak at the opera housq Thursday evening. John Layering and Wm. II. Layer ing and wife, of Starke county, were Plymouth visitors today. Railroads give low rates to Plym outh next Monday. Everybody should hear Senator Beveridge. Miss Elnora Masterton, of Bourbon, is attending a Grand council meeting at Indianapolis this week. Mrs. Henry Humrichouser has en joyed the fine weather this week by riding out every afternoon. Senator Albert J. Beveridge one of the world's finest orators speaks in Plymouth next Monday afternoon. Isaac Shutts, of Nappanee, and his daughter, Mrs. Steinmetz, are visit ing: relativesat Bourbon this week. George Hull, maker of the "Cardiff giant" which Hx)led many scientists, died at Binghamton, N. Y. Tuesday. Whispei it not to European powers, but the fact is we are in no condi tion to go to war. The bean crop is short. J. S. Martin has .returned to his home at Fulton, Ind.tla.fter a visit In this city with his brother-in-law, Dr. Loring, .! : Representatives of life insurance companies after investigation say New Orleans frauds will reach half a million. . Mr. Hicks maae a poor guess on October weather, as thus far demon strated. May the fine weather of the past week continue. Mrs. Shambaugh, mother of II. A. Shambaugb, and Mrs. Allen who have leen visiting here, returned to their home at Albion yesterday. . Georgia fruit growers are claiming that the peach crop of their state yields more money to the producers than does the cotton crop. Rather than spend her days In the county infirmary, Mrs. Mary Williams, and old resident of Kosciusko county, committed suicide Tuesday. Is Argos the only place in Marshall county that has democrats fit for county candidates?is a question many democrats are asking now. Mitchell has had hard work getting the miners to agree to go back to work. It was Mr. Baer who said the men were all eager to return but were forcioly kept out. In the new battleships speed is to be sacrificed to armament, but then the navy has pretty clearly demon strated that it would rather fight than run, anyway. The Indiana Land and Investment Company sold the John J. McMaster farm to Elijah L. Sewell, and the John Geib and Philip Kuntz farms to William B. Kirkpatrick. Washington Irving must have been looking on an Indiana landscape when he wrote, "never need an American look beyond his own country for the sublime beauty of nature. ' ' Most of the men on both county tickets are pretty good men but the republican ticket is the best, and just now It is to the Interest of the taxpayers to vote for republicans. W. S. Miles and wife have gone to South Bend to visit before returning to their home near Wiufield, Kansas. They stopped here on their way home from the encampment at "Washington. E. O. Rogers, of Santiago. Cal., who has been yislting bis brother-in-law, C. L. Morris in this city the past ten days, has gone to North Manchester to visit relatives before returding home. Forbes sold David Nunemakerand I. Kirtley of North township a twelve horse-power Case engine this week which they expect to use for shredding corn, sawing wood and threshing grain.

Men will not vote the democratic

ticket to better their financial coLdltion. That much is certain this year. Mrs, Van Tilberry has returned from a visit at Atwood. Her sister, Miss Guy, accompanied ber home for a slu.rt visit. Purinsrthe next two weekseverv re publican should devote some time and efforts to extend the period of prosper ity by helping to get out a full repub lican vote. Mr. and Mrs. William Miles, of Burden Kansas, and John C. .Miles, of Culver, are visiting the family of A. B. Personett and other relatives in Plymouth. S. A. Mow the evangelist has ar rived and will conduct the services at the Wesleyan church in this city all this week. Everybody is invited to go and hear him. Senator Ilanna, of Ohio, will speak at South Bend Friday evening. He will go from Logansport to South Bend and his train will pass through Plymouth about 6:30 p. m. There will be many scratched tickets this year, consequently the scratcters will not feel lonesome. Every democrat ought to vote for some men on the republican ticket. Mrs. Dunnick, of Kosciusko connty and Mrs. Hardin, of Marion, mother and sister of Mrs.Wm. Everly.returned to their homes todav. Mrs. Everly 's condition remains unchanged. Cash paid for bolts, 10 inches and up in diameter. All kinds of timber except gum. Call on us, telephone us or write us. Telephone 128. Plymouth Novelty Mfg. Co., Plymouth, Ind. The sacrament of the Lord's sup per will be observed at the Methodist church next Sunday morning after the sermon. The pastor desires to meet every member of the church at this communion. I On Friday evening, Oct. 31 there will be an election of three trustees for Trinity society, Culver circuit, Evangelical association. All voting members are expected to be present. P. L. Browns, pastor. Rev. Samuel Beck, of South Bend, a former presiding elder of this district was here Monday and presided at the quarterly conference in the place of Presiding Elder Dale who is ser iously ill at his home in South Bend. Benjamin Machlan and family, of nillsdale, Wisconsin, have bean visiting Oscar Machlan here. Mrs. Machlan and the children will visit relatives at Macy this week, and Benja min will visit in Berrien county, Michigan. . , ; . Peter Hahn came up from Bourbon Saturday evening and spent Sunday in this city. He says there are still some democrats in that vicinity, notwithstanding the good times, and we are really afraid that Pete Is one of them. An Indianapolis doctor has willed his body to a medical college. Good idea. The doctors set up the plea that bodies are necessary for the advancement of science. Now if they are In earnest they should be perfectly willing to furnish the subjects. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hand, of Rockford, 111., are visiting relatives in this county. Fred is the son of Henry N. Hand, of Green township, and Is a street car conductor in that city where he married one of Rockford's fair damsels Tuesday of last week. Peter Listenberger, of Hibbard, and his tenant, Mr. Frysmger, got into an altercation last Saturday evening and Peter used his knife in defending himself. Neither party was badly hurt, but the affair created quite a sensation in that neighborhood. i That was a quick case of justice in Texas where a negro was hanged In two hours after he bad pleaded guilty and been convicted of a murder comi mitteed only a few days before, but it was done in accordance with law. There can be no objection to the rapidity with which justice moves if legal forms are observed. The Bourbon News-Minror states that C. M. Parks, of that place,1 realized J39 from ginseng seed and roots produced from a patch of ground ten feet long and three feet In width. The; seed brought him $25 and the roots $14. .The Chinese use large quantities of ginseng as' a medicine, believing it has wonderful curative properties. I. M. Grossman, of Cullom. Kansas, a former resident of this county, made this office a pleasant call Saturday. He says B. D. Crawford is practicing law there and Is doing well. Mr. Grossman has been visiting here for four weeks and returns to his home this week. He has been a resident of Kansas 18 years, likes that country and looks like it agreed with him. We hope the arbitration committee will inquire carefully into the acts of the coal operators, not only toward their employees but toward the public welfare. In the investigation of their dealings as employers of labor they will be very likely ;to g6t some leading strings that will develop the fullness of their rapacity and injustice to the public. Let it be unearthed, and punished In the future.

Clinton Bondurant has been sheriff and deputy for six years. He is too young a man to spoil by keeping him there any longer. Every true friend of "Clint" should vote for Elmer Wilson. Alexander W. De Long, who was regarded as one of the most vigorouc newspaper writers in Indiana, died at his home in the city of Huntington, Ind., Saturday morning, after a lingering illness. Mrs; J. C. Schüler, wife of the former editor af the Bourbon Mirrcr, now residing at Forest, Ohio, is visiting triends at Bourbon and'eame to Plymouth with her mother who was oh her way to her home in Michigan.

No one need to have apprehension that the anthracite miners will oppose the ratification of the plan of settlement accepted by Piesident Mitchell. A vast majority of them are eager to go to work at the earliest opportunity. Judges John C. Capron and Harry Bernetha are the boys that democratic leac ;rshave selected to preside over the courts of Marshall and Fulton counties during the next six years. Will the voters ratify such a selection? . Marcus O. Swoverland who resides ten miles east of Plymouth, and Miss Emma Kettering were married Wed nesday evening, October 15, by Rev. E. Brenion at his residence in Bremen. They will reside on the Swoverland farm. t The voters of this county should go to the polls on Tuesday, November 4, j and vote for Elmer E. Wilson for sheiiff. He is in every way qualified for the position, and six years is long enough for any man to be a part of that office. Foster Groves and John R. Jones the opposing candidates for county clerk were both in Plymouth today. If voters select the best looking man they will take Groves, and if they want the best man for the office they will vote for Groves. The Rathbone Sisters have drawn the color line in their order. Colored women have never ben admitted, but to settle the matter in the word white" was inserted in the list of points of eligibility for membership at the grand lodge meeting last week. Chicago is not altogether bad. Ac cording to a careful count made last Sunday by the Record-nerald, 257,431 people atttended the services at 233 churches that day. They are 666 churches in the city. Can the small er places show as good proportionate church attendance? The barn on the farm of Henry Zumbaugh, in Green township south of Wolf Creek, was struck by light ning and burned to the grouud Friday night. A separator that cost $000 and other farm machinery with considera ble hay was turned in the barn. . Mr. Zumbaugh was insured in the Marsh all Home company. Rev. I. Rothenberger, who was call ed here to conduct the funeral ser vices of Mrs. Detwiler and assist at the funeral of Mrs. Renner, returned to South Bend Friday evening. Mr, Rothenberger was pistor of the the Reformed church in this city five years and has many friends in the country as well as in Plymouth. The Chicago Chronicle says a physician at Wabash, Ind., was sent to a lunatic asylum because he want ed to perform surgical operations on all his patients, and it adds that if all the Chicago physicians of that kind were sent to lunatic asylums there would not be enough doctors left in Chicago to run the emergency hospitals. . C CH CH Vi CR

Press (Seodls Biib

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CR CR CR CR CR cr cr CR 43 CR From 0?

WE say "Good" Shoe Department, for that is what it really is. When we say good shoes we mean good shoesthe kinds that wear and please you, and bring you back again for another pair. If there is anything we hate it is a poor, shoddy shoe in our shoe department. And when a good shoes goes wrong for you, as-the best of them will at times, we always make it satisfactory in every respect. Now try us on your next pair, of , shoes.

8 CR CH

It is said that the railroad companies, will put up the price of coal and force the public to make up the losses of the railroads during the strike. It may be that the public will not be forced. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Miller, residing north of this city have returned from a visit of two weeks at York, Neb. Mr. Miller's mother, Mrs.

Gideon Miller, accompanied them and returned to her home north of Bourbon vesterdav. Every voter should vote for a representative in the legislature who can do the most good for his county. If voters bear this fact In mind and act rceordingly, Peter Heim will get ninetenths of the votes cast 'in this coun ty November 4. It is a sad commentary that the labor leaders who express themselves on the method of settling the strike, measure it by their opinion of its relation to the labor unions and unionism, and forget the higher, broader phase of its relation to the people at large, Mrs. J. II. Johnson accompanied her sister Mrs. Brittenhamto the hospital at Fort Wayne Tuesday, where Mrs. Brittenham expects to have an operation performed on her face. Her many friends are ; glad that she was able to make the trip and hope that her health may be restored. The Indiana appellate court has just aeciaea tnat the statute allowing damages from the township for sheep killed by dogs applies to sheep brought into the township temporarily to be prepared for market, and the township in which the sheep are destroyed is the one liable for the damage. There was a slight wreck near the turn table Monday evening. The construction train was standing on the side track but was not entirely clear of the main track "and it was struck by the 5:45 p. m., train from the west. Both engines were slightly damaged but nobody was hurt. The week before Thanksgiving a sacred concert is to be given at the German church that will be one of the great musical events of the winter. . An organist and violinist have been secured. They with Plymouth's choicest vocal talent promise a program fully up to Plymouth's exacting musical standard. Mesdames Charles Ilaslanger, A. H. Turner and G. E Cimmerman, wish through the columns of the Tribune to express their, sincere thanks for the kindness and sympathy of their many friends in this city who cared for their mother and assisted in the funeral arrangements, sympathized and helped in every way possible. The drillers cf the Wakarusa oil well struck qujte a quantity of oil at about 500 feet, while "rimming out" the well. This is about the same depth at which gas and oil were both found in the drilling, but the oil is in much larger quantity this time It keeps continually seeping out of the rock. A bottle of the crude oil is on display at the drug store in Wakarusa. The South Bend police, in the presence of an angry mob, arrested Wolf Franks on the charge of bi making through quarantine lines and forcing his way into a house to collect In advance a small sum for a week's rent. The house was occupied by a man suffering from black small pox, and the patient died a short time after Frank tried to get the rent. Frank is out on bond. . .

In the New Bank. Block.

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THE OLD RELIABLE

ma ft IPWEHSIS Absolutely Pure WERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE The stockholders of the Bremen fair are feeling well satisfied with this year's exhibition. The attendance was better and the exhibits in all departments better than for man v years past, and a decided revival of interest in the fair was noticeable. -All premiums were paid in full, and the association has a snug sum left, which will be used for necessary repairs to the grounds and buildings. Brilliant Record of a Newspaper Man. The success which has attended William E. Curtis, the famous cor-icspvuucuL-ui iuc nicau m-iuiu- , Herald, is rarely attained by newspaper writers. Begirniusr his career in Chicago as reporter he rapidly rose to the position of managing editor. He resigned that position on receiving a government appointment as secretary of the South American commission. Mr. Curtis traveled extensively in Central and South America while in this position, producing several popular volumes as the result of his literary labors. Afterward co-ope rating with Secretary of State James G. Blaine, Mr. Curtis organized the work of the bureau of American republics, with the result that he was placed in charge of that organization, and at the World's Columbian Exposition he distinguished himself by his labors as the executive head of the LatinAmerican department. As correspondent of The Chicago Record-Herald. Mr. Curtis' travels have carried him into every section of the United States as well as into all quarters of , the globe. Ills China and Japan let ters were published in book form; like wise his letters from England. Germanv and France, as well as those j written during his travels in Mexico 1 and South America. No newspaper correspondent possesses the facility shown by Mr. Curtis In writing on any of the diversified subjects embraced in his correspondence and making it luminous. On his recent trip to the Holy Land Mr. Curtis' letters have been read more closely than ever, and his descriptions of that interesting section of the globe as it appears today have been quoted everywhere. A daily letter from Mr. Curtis appears in The Chicago Recoid nerald. DONT MOVE NOW. Removal from one precinct to another from now until election means disfranchisement. Thirty day's residence In the precinct is an essential qualifi-. cation for voting . To have most delicious, lovely, brown cakes for breakfast, mix any cold water with Mrs. Austin's famous Pancake Flour. ,25c 39c selling lots of 'em. at 49c better quality, being larger and the cheaper grades. $1.00 value,