Plymouth Tribune, Volume 3, Number 2, Plymouth, Marshall County, 15 October 1903 — Page 7
Dflot 13 last Airliiiit ftore OS The Only Perfect Heating Stove Ever Made.
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FOR SRLB IN PLYMOUTH BY ÄSTLEY knd HESS
Zbc TEribune. HENDRICKS & CO., Publishers. Adrertlsements to appear In TBE TKIB DhE meat be In before Tuesday noon to insure tnelr appearance in the Issue of that week. Plymouth, Ind., October 15. 1903. & LOCAL NEWS & Friday, October 16, is Arbor Day. Senator Parks spent Thursday at his farm adjoining Bourbon. Miss Anetta Williams, of Wisconsin, Is visiting friends In this city. Mrs. D. S. O'Brien, of Grovertown, transacted business here on Thürsday. Mrs. A. J. Bowell, of Argos, has gone to Toledo, Ohio, for a visit of a month. Mrs. Ilarvey Osborn, of Kendrick, Idaho, Is visiting relatives hi Union township. Mrs. M.-E. Sanner is visiting relatives in Bourbon and Tippecanoe townships. The Bremen fair had bad weather, but there was a good display in all departments. J. N. Hess of Dayton, Ohio, visited relatives and friends in this city and Argos last week. Mrs. Mary E. Mock, of North Webster, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Ira Mock in this city. Mr. Marvin, who has been visiting his brother Harry Marvin in this city, has returned to his home at Findlay, Ohio. Mrs. Effle Dow has returned to her home at Columbia Citv after visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Tyson. B. W. Parks, secretary of the Bourbon fair, say3 all persons expecting to make entries should do so as early as possible. The total enrollment at Chicago University for the fall quarter Is 1,556 with women outnumbering men in all departments. The wet weather is advancing the price of potatoes because it is claimed that potatoes on low land are rotting in the ground. Mrs.-G. W. Esbelman and Mrs. Zimmerman, of Roberts ville, Ohio, who have been visiting at Mr. Keene's, returned home Friday. The Culver Citizen says hundreds of mud hens are now on Lake Maxin kuckee, and there will be plenty of ducks before many days.; Mrs. Ferguson, of Gallon, Ohio, who has been visltlJg her mother, Mrs. Bushman, and other relatives here, returned home Thursday. A meeting of county superintendents of this congressional district was held at the office of County Superintendent Marks Thursday. Miss Nellie Garn, of Culver, is attending the state normal school at Tallahassee, Florida, and teaching in the musical department of that school. Simeon Harrington, the well known teamster residing northeast gf the Blain b'ridffe hii accepted a position
0 : I hi3 moved his family to Llnkville The little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Walker residing in the east par e of town died on Thursday. She was about one year old. The remains were bo taken to Argos for burial Saturday. lleodames 1. 1, and S. L. Rldenou. tad children of Elida. Ohio, have returned to their home after a visit of several day3 with Mrs. C E. Smith. Urs. 1. 1. Bidcnour i3 lire. Smith's tl-tcr. rillp TLlzlcz-t, who tiled at Bren:n Tiiliy, Oct. 2, and vria burled Zzzlzy, c2 cf ths cccd cca t- w r w. XT 3 vr3 hen..,, ccnccntlzzz izlzztzizzz l'r, Lc-rtcJ zz2 tzü
with the Schixser Bros, creamery anJiKMDPie ie" a6 our ümce Y "am
Lo smoke, soot or dirt everything is consumed. The only jointless leg bottom and base with full radiation and large ash pan ever made in the history of the stove industry. Embodies the only true air-tight principle. Will heat twice the space that can be heated by any other stove at onehalf the cost. Is the only perfect floor heater ever made. Bums soft coal or slack and all the smoke and gases. No filling up of the. stove, pipe or flue with soot. No dirt inside or outside the house. It will burn hard coal and all the
gases which escape from the hard
coal base burner.
It will burn -wood or sawdust, wet or dry, and produces less ashes than anyjother stove on earth with any kind of fuel. Archie Hanson transacted business at Peru today. Mrs. Jacob Suit has returned from her visit in Ohio. Mrs. John W. Parks was a Bourbon visitor Friday. Mrs. II. B. Allen and niece are visiting at Grovertown. Howard Brocke is giving Kewanna an excellent. local paper. Mrs. Anderson Beagles went to Laporte Friday to visit over Sunday. I Mrs. Will Hahn and Mrs. D. C. Voreis are visiting relatives in South Bend. The next ten days is the time pick apples according to the opinion of old apple raisers. Charles Wldamen residing east of In wood, went to LongcliS to visit his daughter Friday. Mrs. Morgan and her daughter, Mrs. Minnie Bennett, of Chicago, are visiting at W. II. Love's. Judge Capron went to Fort Wayne Friday to finish bis work as spicial judge in the Porter circuit court. Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Silvius, of Iowa, are visiting their uncle. Eli Silvius, and other relatives in this county. Miss Myrtle Bowles who has been here several days at the bedside of her sister, returned to Elkhart Friday. Sherman Hull has been sent to Fort Wayne by L. R. Curtis to take a position in the Adams Express office. John Waller, of Chicago, was in Plymouth Thursday looking for a place to locate a factory. He was born in Plymouth. Mrs. Schloss, of Warsaw, who has been visiting at MayerrAUman's went to Laporte for a visit of a few days before return! rg home. - Miss Nora Zimmerman, of South Bend, has returned home after a visit of several days with relatives and friends in this city and vicinity. The Kendallville fah was a great financial success. The Sun says that enough money was made to pay off all the old indebtedness of the association Mrs. Vanhorn. of Valparaiso, one of the first settlers of Plymouth Is visiting at A. P. Elliott's this week. She was a resident of Plmouth sixty years ago. . Prof. Langley's hard luck balloon has finally ended in total collapse, and the public is not half so eager to know the secret principle on which It was to work as it was a few months ago. Mr. and Mrs. J. Melser, of South Bend, who have been visiting at the homes of John W. Thomas and Mr. Holland in North township, went to Argos to visit before returning home. John V. Astley celebrated his birthday anniversary with Will Weaver in South Bend Thurday. Both were born October 8, but John was born " five years eafrller than Mr. Weaver, Oct. 8, 1838. The Hammond School Board has tacitly admitted serious irregularities, but, strange as it may seem, the members do not like Mayor Knotts, who discovered the frauds and insisted on an Investigation, . v There is evidence at every grocery store In town that Marshall county has produced fine potatoes this year and a 1 I.. A. .AI 1 TTtll tr Pomeroy, the oldest settler of Plym outb, shows that he Is not behind any of the younger men In raising big potatoes. Mrs. Eley, mother of Dr. L; D. Eley, who has been spending the summer at the home of her son in this city, returned to her home at Tippecanoe, Mrs. L. D. Eley accompanied her and will visit a few days in that vicinity, Harry Langfelt, who ha3 been employed in Kuhn 's meat market for a lene time left for Fort Wayne Thursday evening to take a pceiticn in a meat market in that city. III3 mother moved to Pert Wayna to rrec-S cjo. Harry nnderctarda ths meat bizizzz3 zzl 13 a c:-t!:inly zzlzzzn.
Mrs. Garrett weut to Bourbon' to visit over Sunday. John R. Jones transacted business in Rochester Saturday. Miss Lillian Anderson went to Chicago to visit over Sunday. Mrs. John Wooten, residing east of Plymouth, Is seriously 111 with appendicitis. Miss Minnie Clarke spent Sunday with relatives and friends at Indianapolis. The outlook for oil at Knox is not encouraging. The well just put down is a failure. -Look for the new Vandalia line time table in another column in to
day's paper. . Mrs. E. Price, Miss Daisy Apple and Mrs. Hatfield are visiting at South Bend. Miss Bertha Staley, of near Inwood. is visiting her sister, Mrs. Ed. Harsch, in South Bend. Andrew Carnegie has given Indiana cities $165,000 for public libraries dur ing the past year. Levi Jacoby, of Warrensburg, Mo., is here for a visit of ten days with relatives and friends. Mrs. Joseph Morlock took her.son, Harry, to South Bend to have his eyes treated by a specialist Saturday. County Commissioner Henry C. Short, of Starke county, died Thurs day at Knox, of heart failure. Earl Bollman, who has been spend ing the summer in North Dakota, came home Thursday evening. There have been several deatns from typhoid fever in Walkerton and that vicinity within tha past ten days. There is not much danger that the ice man will raise prices now but it is well enough to watch out for the coal man. Miss Grace Keeport, who had been spending a few days in this vicinity returned to her home at Mexico, Ind., Saturday. Mrs. Arthur Metzler, of Rochester, Is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Disher and other relatives and friends in Plymouth. The Bremen teachers had a vaca tion during the fair and Miss Laura Boss came home Thursday evening to remain until Sunday. Mrs. Woodward has returned to her home at Walkerton, after a visit of a week with her son, Phay Woodward, the barber of this city. 81 tickets were, sold to Chicago on the 1:40 train; these added to vtbe tickets sold for other trains make oyer 100 excursionists In all. The brick work of the Inwood school house was completed Friday and Contractor C. B. Enyart returned to his home at Rochester today. B. M. Bullock, a former resident of this city, whohasfbeen visiting and transacting business here, returned to bis home at Brutus, Mich., Saturday. Mrs. James McKee. of Bruce Lake, who has been the guest of the family of John Wilson of the basket factory, went to Inwood to visit over Sunday. James E. Anglin, the well known telegraph operator now employed in the message room at Fort Wayne, vissted Plymouth friends Friday evening. Arthur Jones, son of John Jones, living, one and one-half miles north of Walkerton, died Wednesday Oct. 7 of typhoid fever. He was sick only a week. Franklin Keiser and son. Rev. Mr. Kelser, a preacher of the U, B. denomination arrived from Michigan Friday afternoon for a short visit with relatives in this city. Dowie proposes to reach the souls of New York's sinners through their stomachs. Evidently he doesn't believe in going away around, when there is a short cut. H. G. Harding, who has the contract for excavating the Danner ditch and several other big ditches In northIndiana went to' Yincennes to spend Sunda7 at his home. , Mr. and Mrs. W. V- Tascher, of Mishawaka. made an automobile trip to Plymouth and Bremen this week. They encountered heavy roads and deep mud in many places. Diphtheria and scarlet fever still continue tq spread in South Bend. Three children in the family of Frank Pictraszewski, of South Walnut street, are dead from scarlet fever. The rainfall in the northwest this year bids fair to equal that of any year since records have been kept. It was 45 inches up to Oct. I, and there are three months to hear from yet: Sixty-five jives were lost by a record breaking storm In New York and vicinity Friday. The principal streets of the great city were transformed Into raging rivers and all business was suspended. 1 f According to dispatches from Camp Young the Indiana soldiers have made an excellent showing. Regular army officers have complimented thern time and again. This state should be proud of its national guard. J. A. Polk and M. O. Rose, who have been employed with H; (2. HardIcj the ditch contractor and owner cf the big dredge, have returned to their fccme3 in Lawrence county, 111., xrzzl cf Vinclnnea, after six mentis wcrlr.'n wuubf
Mrs. Daniel McDonald Is visiting at Warsaw and Claypool. , Rev. R. P. Burton passed through Plymouth Saturday enroute for Burr Oak to hold tne quarterly meeting for Donaldson circuit, U. B. church. He returns Monday and will bold the first quarterly conference In the U. B. church here Monday night. . Editor Nearpass loaded his household goods last week, to leave for Mishawaka. He says he will soon shake the Claypool dust from his feet, and if the good Lord wills, never return again. Few people here will interfere with the Lord's will. Silver Lake Record. Daniel Overmeyer, a Fulton county
farmer, who advertised for a wife and received fifty replies, has founds a helpmate in Miss Mildred Smith, of Noblesville, whom be met at the state fair. The bride Is 27, while the groom is 60 and the father of eleven children, for all of whom he has liberally pro vided. J. II. Watson, for many years the editor and proprietor of the Argos Reflector, has moved his household goods to Chicago and he and his family left for Chicago Sunday to make that city their home. ' Mr. Watson is a good newspaper man, but we learn that he intends to work as a compos! tor and job printer. The body of Wilson Shannon Bis sell, postmaster general under Cleve land, was cremated Friday, October 9, after funeral services at Trinity Episcopal church in Buffalo. In the days of his prime Mr. Blssell was' a man of superb physique. The illness from which he died, Internal cancer, greatly emaciated him. Dr. John C. Whitten, dean of the department of horticulture of the Missouri agricultural department, says the enormous increase in the production of apples In this country has not been enough to keep up with the de mand. Illinois is now the second or chard state, New York, which was first, having given way to Missouri. Mrs. Harry Müller, of Chicago, was visiting her husband's mother, Mrs. S. W. Miller, and other relatives here last week. Shu has changed very little since her girl-hood days, when she was known to every-body ia Ply mouth as Daisy Benbam. She aud Mrs. Miller visited Mrs. Boggs In Argos today. She returns home Sat urday. Mrs. Joe Davis, of Bourbon, came near being burned to death a few days ago. The gasoline in the tank of the stove took fire and in trying to carry tha stove out doors, the gasoline was splashed on her arm, breast and bead. This immediately ignited but her mother, Mrs. Arnold, smothered the flames with a piece of carpet and saved her life though she is terribly burned. L. F. Wolf raised 2600 bushels of onions from three and one half acres. He sold his crop for f . , nis whole expense, from burins: at i wiug seed to hauling to town, amouute.1 i only $250, leaving him a net profit. 01 $750 from the three and one-half acres. J. E. Noble raised 1500 bushels from two and three quarters acres and realized a net , profit of $500. Huntington News. John Byers,.a Vandalia brakeman, was badly hurt while staking cars at the station about noon today. The pole or stake broke and he was struck on the left thigh badly bruising it and dislocating the muscles. Dr. Aspinall replaced the muscles, bandaged the in jured limb and sent him to his home at Logansport. It will probably be many weeks before he Is able to work again. Governor Bailey of Kansas has in exhaustible faith in the agricultural future of his state. Since his inauguration he has bad numerous offers for his fine farm in Nebama county, but has never been tempted by the figures named. There are se veral hun dred acres in the place and the gover nor hos been offered $75 an acre sev eral tlmeSj but thinks it worth $100 at least. . , David L. Boyd and Adam Boomershine who applied for saloon licenses at Nappanee, were confronted in the commissioners' court with re monstrances signed by more ; than three-fourths of the voters of the township. This would Indicate that Nappanee is pretty well satisfied with its dry condition, and it is folly for men to fight such a strong public sentiment. An evangelist named Barney, a re formed drunkard attempted to deliver a temperance lecture at Elkhart one day last week, but he was so drunk he had to be told to stop. After he left the church he was followed to three saloons. It is the same old story. These reformed" drunkards are .not to be trusted. The only safe way for a man to do is not to get in the habit of drinking. - John G. Bowles, one of the pioneers of Marshall county, whahas been Hying alone in a room in the Brink block, has gone to Kalamazoo, Mich,, to make bis home with his daughters. He says he likes Marshall county and Marshall county people, but his advanced age and feeble health makes It unsafe for him to attempt to live alcne during ths winter. Hundreds of old settlers hope that Uncle John
czy l'va fc-ppily many years yet. 1
Superintendent Kruyer took Fredric Behmer from the county farm to Chicago, Saturday where he will make his home with relatives. Mr. Behmer was a former resident of Rutland, an old soldier and a good citizen. We are glad he is to have a good home. Leonard Dare, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dare of Walkerton, was shot and killed in the railroad yards at Minneapolis. Thursday night. It is supposed that he was killed by thugs or tramps. He was 20 years old and was Industrious and well respected. A man claiming to haye been a Catholic priest, has been lecturing at Tyner, and some other small places, making talks to women only on nunneries, and to men only on the priesthood, lie is said to be an impostor whojls trying to humbug people and pick up a few dime3. The lover of nature is reveling now
in the gorgeous tints which meet his eye in town and country. It is na tures' most marvelous season; tints and semi-tints, combinations of beautiful and startling colors all harmonizing perfectly, make summer's exit the most beautiful of the four seasons. Margaret Wilson died Friday night Oct. 2, at the home of Samuel Cud ney near Tyner. She was 84 years old and had resided for many years in that locality. She was a member of the Brethren church. She is survived by three daughters, one of whom Is Mrs. William Burnside who lived at Tyner until recently. David Boyce, who made a trip of several months through the west, called at our oflice to renew his sub scription Friday. He says there is still much good, cheap land in the west and he believes that many men who are renting here could find good farms in Kansas, which they could pay for with two or three good ciops and keep their families besides. Marlon H. lngrim. editor of the Democrat-Journal, a weekly news paper published at Winamac owns a family Bible that has registered in it the names of the Ingrlm family, their births, marriages and deaths from the year 1669 to the present date. The Bible is 333 years old. Its quaint old style of print and binding makes it a rare and valuable relicof the sixteenth century. The Indiana Grand Lodge, Knights of Pythias, which closed its session at Indianapolis, Thursday, went on re cord as opposed to street fairs and car nivals At the session. Thursdav morning, a resolution was passed de claring that no subordinate lodge, sec tion of endowment rank, or company of tne Uniform rank should own or conduct, or in any way have anything to Q0 with, street fairs or crrnivais. The New York Tangle. At this distance it Is just a bit dif ficult to see why Grout and Fornes,' nominated respectively for controller and president of the Board of Alder men with Mayor Low on the Fusion or reform tlCKet In New York, should be ousted from this ticket because Tammany indorsed their nomination and they were not disposed to repudiate such an indorsement. . If Grout and Fornes were honest and capable men when they were first nominated with Low, their Indorsement by Tammany did not make them either dishonest or incapable and it is to be supposed that the leaders of the var ious parties and factions making up the fusion ticket had looked well into this question before they were nominated. On the presumption that they were honest and capable, why was not their indorsement by Tammany a good thing since it assured their election and made itcertaib that at least these two important offices would be filled with men of the right kind? ' Presumably the new nominees of the Fusion ists are also honest and capable men,' and thus It makes no. particular difference as to which side shall win, as related to these two offices, but undoubtedly it will make a differ ence which wins the mayoralty, and it seems to one not familiar with the details of the situation that the Fu sion ists have lost a distinct tactical ad vantage. So long as Tammany in dorsed a part of their ticket the Tam many people did not have much of an argument, for by thus admitting that part of the Fusion ticket was good the democrats necessarily implied Jhat good judgment had been used all along the line by the Fuslonists in se lecting their nominees, but now the latter have shown that they were not at all sure of their men and stand as having at one time heartily indorsed two of the men on the Tammany ticket. One cannot pretend to fathom the iLtricacIes of New York politics from "out West," but It looks very much as if Tammany bad outgeneral ed its opponents in this particular episode. Indianapolis Journal'. , , . Send for This B00X. No section of the country is devel oping more rapidly than the routes traversed by the Northern Pacific Railway. The Emigration department of that road has just issued an 80-page book descriptive of the towns and cities along the line where busi ness and professional openings exist. It will be mailed free to anyone on application to 0. W. Mott, Gen'l, Emigration Agent, N. P. Ry., St. Paul, Minn.
tRobevte' SUGAR witf)
, Yery best grades of Coffees arid Teas PacKage Coffees, 12c to 35c. Teas, 15c to-60c per pound. We can save you rrortey ori best rrake of Fruit Jars. Stone Jars, laligallon up, at lowest pricey. F4rest Ure of Confectionery. Specialty in Chocolates. Try tre Sanitariurjq Health Chocolate.
(. C. ROBERTS.
New Overland Service Three trains a day, Chicago to San Francisco, via the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul and Union Pacific Line Double daily train service to North Pacific Coast points. Daily train service to Denver. If you are contemplating a western trip, it is worth your while to write for rates and descriptive booklets of this route.
e. g. hayden, 2 1 7 6eaeral Passenger Agent 13
HAVE YOU READ WONDERLAND?
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If not. send Six Cents at once to Chas. S. Fee, General Passenger Agent. Northern Pacific Railway, St. Paul, Minn., for a copy of
I "Wonderland 1903"
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It recounts and decribes a lot of things tells about the Northwest, Irrigation, Indians, Yellowstone Park, Puget Sound, the Columbia River, etc. It is profusely illustrated, and was printed for you to read if you will only send for it, and you will enjoy it once you get your hands upon it.
Pierpont Morgan's Overcoat J. Pip.rnont Morgan was an active figure at the annual convention of the New York Protestant Episcopal dio cese recently. The day was a trifle cool, and Mr. Morgan wore an overcoat worth $100. When the 'session came to an end Mr. Morgan left In a hurry and did not discover until an hour or so later that he had carried off some other man's coat a rather shabby-looking affair it was, too. The only thing he couh3 find In the pockets was a well-chewed toothpick. The owner has not yet claimed the prop erty; Vandalia Line Excursions. Bloomlngton, Ind., and return $5.40 Oct. 13th and 14th, return in cluding 17th. LaFayette, Ind., and return $2.40, Oct. 12, 13, 14 and 15th; returning Including Oct. 16. Must have proper certificate. Louisville, Ky., and return $7.05, Oct. 10th and 12th; returning not ater than Oct. 18th. Dayton, Ohio, and return $640, Oct. 11,12, and 13; return not later than Oct. 18, Detroit, Mich., and return $6.11, Oct. 15, 16, 17, and 19; return not ater than Oct. 23. Indianapolis and return $3.55, Cct. 19, 20, 21, 22; returning not later ,han Oct. 24. Must have proper cerificate. Kansas City and return $18.60, Oct. 16 to 20 Inclusive. Returning not earlier than Oct. 19 nor later than 26; ticket will be extended until Noy. 10 for 50c extra. Indianapolis and return $3.55, Oct. 19, 20, 21 and 22; returning Oct. 24 to persons holdln: proper certificate. Special home seekers rates to Texas, Arkansas,' Kansas, Indiana and Okla homa Ter., on Oct. 20. Good returnng within 21 days. If you want all the news, and n a clear and readable shape
you'll cct it m The Tribune.
: grocery order for $1.00
Williamson Building CLEVELAND, OHIO ' -A. Had You Thaßht ol It? It you were offereu $1000 a year for your services, and were asked to de-, posit $40 as a guarantee that your du ties would be promptly and satisfactorily performed would you accept? of course you would. L $40 is the small amount of money required to take a six month's course In the Huntington Business University at Huntington, Ind., so as to prepare for such a position, and $1000 per year is the salary that the United States government Is offering for stenographers. Business firms in large cities are just as much In need of office help as is the government, yet there are thousands of people who have never thought of how easily they can make themselves capable of earning a large salary. The person who is lazy or skeptical will not give this information a second thought, while the person who has higher aim in life than to merely eat and sleep will investigate this opportunity, and he will not wait about it, either. Young people in this locality are wide awake enough to know a good thing like this and we hope to hear of their giving this matter immediate consideration. O. E. Hawkins at Huntington, Ind., will be glad to furnish information; free, to those who inquire. Doctor Coming to III Sense. PueMo, Colo., Oct. 9. Dr. -C. O. Rice, the prominent physician who, crazed with liquor, shot and killed Policeman Silas Maitz, ia BlOTviy recovering nis mind in the county jail. Policeman Slater, who was accidentally wounded in the attempt to captur H Ice, Is improving Lew Ftrts to Ccl.!cmii Excursion tickets to San Francisco, Cal., account American Bankers' association, will be sold via Pennsylvania lines October 7th to 16th, Inclusive. "For particulars consult local ticket aent of Pennsylvania lines. For tha latest tslcjraphlc reports ths Thetdni:.
