Plymouth Tribune, Volume 3, Number 5, Plymouth, Marshall County, 5 November 1903 — Page 7
I Blast AiM SW rto'raice - The Only Perfect Heating Stove Ever Made
ISFOR SHLE IN ÄSTLEY Zbc -TEribune. HENDRICKS & CO., Publishers. Advertisements to appear In THE TKIB ONE mcit be In before Tuesday noon to injure tneir appearance In the issue of that week. Plymouth, Ind., November 5, 1903. I & LOCAL NEWS & f John H. Hay is visiting at South Bend and Goshen. Mrs. M. L. Peter, of LaPaz was a Plymouth visitor Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. E. Green went to the Larwill sanitarium Thursday. Mrs. Dial went to Chicago today to purchase new millinery goods. Mrs. Fred Myers went to Chicago this morning for a visit of a few days. Frank Forbes an 1 M. Hollingshead transacted business in Bourbon today. Captain C. R. Cooper and wife have returned from their visit in Kansas City. During the racing season more than a miJIion dollars a day is wagered on horses. - Miss Kose Wentzler went to Logansport Thursday to visit her brother William. Ilenry Zechiel returned to Culver Thursday after a visit of two days in Plymouth. Mrs, John C. Corbaley of Indianapolis, is spending a few weeks with relatives in this city. Mrs. Frank White, üf Green town ship is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Otto Albert in this city. Mrs. C.-L. Parks, of Bourbon, who is a daughter of Robert Erwin, visited friends in this city Thursday. Mrs. Herman Alleman has returned from a visit of several days with her sister, Mrs. Williams, at Fulton, Ind. Washington Horn, who sold his farm east of Argos, recently has purchased an 80 acre farm near Big Foot, Fulton county. Mrs,- Sherman Rohrer has returned to her home at South Bend, after a visit of several days in this city and vicinity. Henry N. Hand, who has been very sick at his home four miles northwest of Argos for several weeks is still In a ritical condition. Mr. and Mrs. W. II. Turner, of J-atiasf Texas, arrived Thursday for a visit of a week with Mrs. William Scofield in North township. ..... Leyi Jacoby, of Warcnsburg, Mo., who Jbas been visitig relatives here during the p?.st two weeks, went to LaPaz to visit his sister today. Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Pogue, who came here from Georgia to visit relatives in this county, leave for Oklahoma Tuesday where they expect to mak their home. ... Dr. J. W. Smlti. has fifty cents postal currency note of the very first issue after the commencement of the war. Notes of this issue are very rare and it is quite a cuiiosity; Mrs. C. W. Bishop returned to her home in Chicago Thursday after a visit of a month with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Holland. She was here recuperating from a severe illness. ' . - . The time having .arrived for -the frost to be on the ounkln and the fodder in the shock it turns out that the corn crop now being harvested is one of the largest, ever produced in the state. George-D. Stevens, proprietor of the corner hardware store at Arg03, has sold a half interest to Trustee M. I. Brewer. Stevens and Brewer will Czlie a firm cf which any town might well be proud. . Urs. Robert Erwin, of Bourbon, V713 called to Sheeld, Illinois, - this Tree!: to attend the funeral of her trcltcrinbw, Anthony llctrzzzj, t:: 3 quits well known in the c;;t rrc cf this county.
Lo smoke, soot or dirt every thing 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 onlv true air tight principle. Will heat twice the space that can be heated by auy other stove at onehalf the cost. Is the only perfect floor heater ever made. Burns 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. At 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 any other stove on earth with any kind of fuel.
PLYMOUTH BY änd HESS Mrs. Rottmiller, residing north of this city, is visiting her daughter at Chesterton. Farmers are busy hy.sking corn. The crop in this county is better than that of last year. Mrs. Henry Reynolds went to South Bend Friday to attend the funeral of Mis. Charles Shreve. W. W. Hatch the paving con tractor, returned tb Goshen with his wife and daughter Friday. Mrs. A. M. Grav has returned to South Bend after a visit of five days with Mrs. Porter Kleckner. The Church of God has a new furnace and can now have church and Sunday school in any kind of weather. Henry Laudemao, of German township, threshed thirty acres of clover seed that averaged four bushels to the acre. Dr. Martin's statements In the papers will not stamp out smallpox, a rigid enforcement of law is what is needed. T. E. Smith, of Logansport, visited his brother the agent of the Vandalia here today and went from here to Chicago. Miss Mattie Lineback has returned to her home at Mexico, Ind., after a visit of several days with Mrs. Ervin Appleman. Mrs. John W. Wiltfong accompanied by her daughter. Miss Maude, went to Chesterton Friday for a visit of a week with her son, Dr. Charles O. Wiltfong. Mrs. Susan Wallace, who has been visiting the family of Albert Savage and other relatives aud friends in this city, returned to her . home at Tiosa Friday. South Bend was fixed as the next meeting place of the Indiana Retail Merchants Association. The date set for the convention is January 19, 20 and 21. Mrs. Maria A. Shreve, wife of Charles C, Shreve, a former resident of Plymouth, died at South Bend Wednesday evening, October 27, aged 53 years. . " . Andrew and Moses Mast with their wives have returned to Holmes county, Ohio, after a pleasant visit with E M. nostettler and other relatives west of this city. Ex-Postmaster John Brodie, of Valparaiso, a heavy grain dealer, has made an assignment and left the country. He owes large amounts and cannot be located. Guy Etlinc, who lives on his father's farm between Milford and Syracuse, fell 45 feet from the top of a hickory nut tree Sunday. He was not seriously hurt. The nut crof of northern Indiana is short this season, and with the exception of hickory nuts, there is a scarcity. ' Butternuts usually very plentiful are quite scarce. Philip Sick man, of Burr Oak, and his sister, Mrs. Harvey Osborne, of Kendrlck, Idaho, who is visiting relatives in the vicinity of Burr Oak, spent Friday in Plymouth. L. J. Neff, of near Lakeville, returned home Friday. after spending two weeks at the Bourbon Sanitarium where he was treated for dropsy. He seemed very mueh Improved. The deplorable accident resulting In the death of Mrs. Booth-Tucker took from the world a great and good woman who had, by her work, won the love of thousands and the respect of everybody. W. F. Herrold the manager o the telegraph office at the Pennsylvania station, is moving to Fort Wayne to take a position in the dispatcher's office. O. F. Hoover take3 Mr. Herrold 's place here. Mrs. James Lawrence, of Bourbon, who has been visiting her eon, Willi im Lawrence In thi3 city, went to Vanlr7ert, Ohio, Friday. After visiting her son there she will go to Pittsfcurj to visit relatives la tt-tcity and vicinity.
Superintendent Randall is able to be out again. . . Miss Millie GaskiU has returned to her home at Bourbon. Mr. and Mrs. William Davis are visiting in South Bond. Mr. and Mrs. John Jacoby went to Elkhart to visit over Sunday. J. E. Johnson, wife and daughter have moved from Tyner to Walkerton. We say good word about-the weather now aud then just to encourage it. Warsaw has voted bv a majority of over 200 to erc-t a new high school building, Mrs. Lamson came up from Culver Friday and visited until noon of next day with relatives here. David Ilcminger, and wife, of Culver came up Friday for a visit with J. M. Heminger in this city. Miss Mary Patterson entertained the Happy-Go-Lucky club at her home on South Miner street Friday evening. . Miss Luzina Stephenson went to South Bend Friday evenlug to visit over Sunday with ber brother in that city. The Winona football team arrived on the 1:23 p. m., train and playing began at the fair. grounds about 3:00 p. m. Elder J. B. Carter went to Bourbon
Friday to attend the Parks Meredith sale and visit with old acquaintances. Miss Cora Kelver went to Huntington Saturday to take a full course In the well known business college of that city. S. J. Nicoles, of Walkcrton, father of Mrs. A North of this city, has two apple trees which are bearing a second crop jf apples this season. Congressman Bouteli, in his oration at the Fisk anniversary celebration at the Northwestern University Academy, proclaimed the American high school to be the college in which young men should be trained for citizenship. Peter J. Kruyer at the county farm Friday butchered a hog that weighed 50 pounds and the lard after the meat was cut up made 150 pounds. An old toper says there is no reason why all the saloons should not close at 11:00 p. ra. because a man must be vers lazy who cannot get full before that time of night. The mail box for trains going west on the Pennsylvania, has been moved from cast end to the west end of the station and is attached to the side of the telegraph office. Mr. Preston father of Dr. Preston of this city returned to his home at LaPorte Friday. Dr. Preston's wife went home with him for a visit of a few days in LaPorte. The Rochester Bridge Factory is turning out this year two hundred and five biidges. averaging five a week. Tbey employ fifteen men. This is oce of Rochester's chief industries. J. A. Joslin of near Lapaz is visiting relatives and friends in the vicinity of Larwill this week. He is one of the pioneers of Whitley county. Ills parents settled there 67 years ago. v Dr. Arthur G. nail, at one time principal of the LaPorte high school, has resigned the position of instructor of mathematics at the University of Michigan to accept a -position at the University of Illinois. --One of the members of the South Bend High School team who was hurt several weeks ago in a football game, and suffered gangrene in one toe, died Friday from pneumonia, partially resulting from the injury. : Henry Fogleson changed cars here Saturday, on his way to Rochester, his family having moved from Walkerton to that place Thursday. Mr. Foglesong is slowly recovering from a severe illness of several weeks. George W. Hattle, a wealthy coal dealer and hotel proprietor of Goshen, Is charged with sending improper matter through the mails to bis former wife, Dr. Anna Grover Kaufman, who was divorced from him last summer. The brewers of Indiana and Ohio at a conference in Cincinnati, O.. decided on plans to give the saloon business a higher tone. Of course, most people will question the motive, but who ever thougtit the brewers would turn reformers? Joseph Bryan, of Walnut township, has returned from a visit of two months at bis old hörnern Mahoning county. Ohio. His sister, Mrs. Susannah Malmsbury, came with him and will spend the winter witbr daughter near Walnut. Mrs. John Harsch has returned from a visit with relatives in Walnut township. She and her slater Mrs. John A. Yockey visited in South Bend a few days ago and expect to return to their home in Denver,. Col., after a visit of a few more days la- Plymouth. The Tribune job department during the month of October did more printing than any previous nicath during the past fifteen yeari. We certainly appreciations kicdncc3 ehpwa us by our friends and feel satisSed they appreciate Ihz wer!: turned cat et this
Cale Burkett is visiting In Chicago. Prof. Randall has moved to the new residence on Center street erected by Dr. Knott and is very sick at his new home. Dr. Borton was called,
and hopes that he will be able to resumc his duties in the school room before many days. If smallpox continues to spread in this city it will be necessary to establish a pest-house to which everyone afflicted with the disease will be taken. This is t!:e only way the disease can be stamped out where it prevails to any greät extent. Out in Idaho an electrician got. a shock of 33,000 volts, which melted the nails in his shoes, and he has a fair chance for recovery at least that's what the dispatches say, but electricians in these parts would like to see those melted nails. John Miller, of Argos, Franklin Overmyer, Austin Druckermiller, and Beiden Paddock of Burr Oak, who were witnesses in the Calbeck-Ford land case tried at St. Joseph, Michigan, returned Friday. A decision had not been reached wheu they left St. Joseph. In a table showing the fighting strength of nations the United States is credited with an army of 73,000 men.". Just add 10,000,000 possible volunteers, of the historical standard, to that number, and the total will be an approximation of Uncle Sam's real army basis. The Kewanna Herald says the creamery approaches completion, the machinery is being put In place and the carpenters will have the interior wood work finished this week. Messrs. Clifford & Pen rod expect to have everything ready for busiucss about th a 16th. A Los Angeles paper says: Hon. E. V. Long of Los Vegas, N. M., for thirteen years circuit judge at Warsaw, Ind., and for six years chief justice of the supreme court of New Mexico, is now on a visit to southern California. Many Plymouth people recollect Van Long. Edward Kaufman has sold his farm on the west shore of the Lake of the Woods to William Wise, of Wakarusa. This is one of the best locations In the neigborhood of the lake, and it is understood that Mr. Wise intends to build several cottages and prepare for the accommodation of fishermen and summer visitors. The meeting of the state dairy association to be held in Plymouth December 10th and 11th will be one of thf. largest gatherings of prominent men from every part of the state ever held here. A banquet will be given at Hill's cafe on the eveniDg of Dec. 10, and is expected that over a hundred prominent dairymen will be present.' The head and antlers of an elk changed cars here - this morning for South Bend. It was one of the finest if not the very finest, specimen in the United States. The length and number of prongs was something almost inconceivable, and the animal must have had difficulty In getting through heavily timbered land when it was alive. Corn may be king," and some farmers make good money in raising wheat; but not all the money to be made on the farm comes from, these great staples. Farmers in Kosciusko and Elkhart counties have made far more money this year growing onions, tomatoes, and mint than tbey could have made with wheat or corn on the same ground. Bremen Enquirer. John W. Baugher, of Lenior, Tennessee, arrived in Plymouth Thursday to visit his son who is bead :V er at the Morris mills in this city en nlso to shake hands with his hund. üc of friends here. He was on his nay ,o Chicago, where he ' has business in connection with bis saw-mill which is one of the best in Tennessee. John has not changed in the least. He says he is doing well ' and all he lacks to make him happy is the familiar faces of old Marshall county friends. The city and health officials of this city are not doing their duty If reports are true. It is said that Frank Ernst, the boy now quarantined at the, Franklin House was broken out with smallpox Tuesday morning and was still around town.' Other persons exposed to the disease go into crowds evrrr where and very little attention is paid to the matter. If a strict quarantine is not enforced now and the disease stamped out at once Plymouth will suffer in more ways than one. There should be no . temporizing and no foolishness now. Let every officer do his duty. , F. Spangle, flagman on the first section of No. 76 was struck by the mail crane at Hamlet at 7:30 p. m. Friday evening, knocking out,H three upper teeth and misplacing five lower ones, cutting the lower lip clear through and down to the chin and severing the gums.. He was brought to Plymouth on a special engine and taken to the office of the company's surgeon. Dr. Hume, dentist, was called, and replaced the five lower teeth. He feels confident that they will fasten themselves and remain permanent. Dr. Aspinall dressed the injuries taking five stitches in tb.3 torn Up, after which he ws.3 cent tohia home in Fort Wayne.
Owing to an act of. the last legisJature, the present term of court will be in session four weeks only instead of five weeks as here-to-fore held, and some of the cases will be continued until the December term. The fcUting in New York on the result of the election has been much smaller than usual. It is explained that the gamblers have lost so much money during the past year that they have little left to wager. Is the political race in Ohio close? Well, listen. At Caldwell, Ohio, the other night, Senator Hanua kissed all the school girls and rubbed his stubby whiskers against their sweet faces a if he liked it. Ft. Wayne Journal. The winter quarters of the Wallace circus, which tacludes 500 acres of land near Peru, .are being prepared for the home coming of the amusement enterprise, which will close the season m Mississippi ou November 14. It Is reported that several reckless individuals succeeded in getting away with about four gallons of ice cream on James W. Thayer's back porch during the sociable given by the young ladies of the Episcopal church Thursday evening. Mrs. Booth-Tuckpr.leader of the Salvation Army in this country, was reported killed in an accident on the Santa Fe Hallway, near Marceline, Mo., Thursday. Seventeen other persons were hurt, including Colonel Holland of the Salvation Army. The Muncie jail is reported haunted by a ghost of more than usual ghastly appearance; consequently, criminals are very scarce in Muncie and the town has been given a moral uplift such as It never had before. It might be worth while to try the ghost system in other towns. The Chicago Examiner is authority for the statement that Chicago will have a new $2,000,000 passenger station on the west side to take the place of the union depot so soon as a site for the gigantic structure can be cleared by workmen. It is to be built by the Pennsylvania railroad. Thomas J. McClure, the Marion man who murdered his two children, was formerly of Fulton connty. Twenty-five years ago McClure was a pupil in a school iu Fulton county taught
by II. A. Barnbart, now editor of the Rochester Sentinel. One day McClure threatened to kill Barnbart. The great oil well owned b;. George L. Banks, near Independejce, Kansas, is now lowing at the rate of 1500 barrels a day. It was shotwbile the Plymouth oil men were at Independence and is less than two miles from their wells. The owner is a brother of Postmaster Binks of Laporte. K. M. Nicoles and wife, of Massillon, Ohio, are visiting with the family, of A. North. Mr. Nicoles is Mrs. North's brother, was a Plymouth boy and is assistant superintendent of the Wheeling & L. E. & W. R'y. They will ylsit their father, S, J. Nicoles at Walkerton before returning home. In another column will be found an article from the Indianapolis Star on rural mail carriers which we fully indorse. Many other men doing less work for the government with less responsibility get a thousand dollars a year. Rural mail carriers should have an increase of at least one hundred dollars a year. Mrs. William Klntzell, of Mentone, and her sister-in-law, Mjs. Maggie McNeal, of Ogle county, 111., and her grandson, who have been visiting Charles Kintzell and Mrs. Elijah Stinsbury, went to Illinois Saturday. Mrs. Kmtzell will visit at Rockford and several other points before returning home. And now Ellen G. White, the noted leader and prophetess of the Seventh Day Ad vent is ts, has publicly denounced Dr. J. II. Kellogg, head of the Battle Creek Sanltorium, as teach.g rank heresy. The doctor will, notwithstanding this pronunciameuto, pursue the even tenor of his way and continue to do business at the old stand. Farmers have commenced husking and cribbing their core, and as you drive' along the highways tne piles of golden yellow corn in many fieldspresent a very fine appearance. The yield in many fields will be as heavy as was ever raised, In others it is not so good. The early planted corn as a rule is the best. The ears and the corn on them Is solid and well matured. The pi ice of oil Has reached the highest mark in the history of the industry, aud with all the late advances the drill is not . heing pushed to any great extent, as is usually the case on all upward market. The enormous number of wells that have beeu going down steadily In the last nine years has served to drill and redrill almost every rod of ground that has been suspected of harboring a drop of oil. The Rev. D. Charles Little, of the Presbyterian church of Wabash, on Sunday next will complete tnirty-one consecutive years m the service of the Wabash church. He is one of the ablest and most popular divines in the Indiana synod, and ha3 refused many flattering offers from churches in other cities, because of his strong attachment to Yabash, in which he expects to live end die. Mr. Little has often preached in Plymouth.
There are Two
Acme Hygienic Couches And the other kind BOTH CAN'T BE BEST.
Si .i ;.:..
ACME HYGIENIC COUCH
See the ACHE in our Furniture Dept. and choose for yourself. Has four sets of springs against one in any other couch made. Every ACME is sold with a positive guarantee for five years. SARBER'S BIG DEPARTMENTSTORE
Dealers in Everything You Eat, Wear or Use : ARGOS, IND.
HAVE YOU READ WONDERLAND?
If not. send Six Cents at once to Chas. S. Pee. General Passenger Aprnt, Northern Pacific Railway, St. Paul, Minn., for a copy of "Wonderland 1903" 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.
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, 217 General Passenger Aflent Saturday night Is hallowe'en and it Is safe to assume that the usual pranks will be played. Unfortunately many of the boys and girls and some older people do not confine themselves to harmless amusement, consequently police officers are required to exercise more than ordinary vigilance. The prosecuting attorney at Tipton promises to expedite the Indictment and trial of McClure, the child murderer, giving It precedence of all other business, so that he hopes to get a eonviction Indise of two weeks. This shows a tcoru me ridable spirit and will be a good example in the swift punishment of crime. The Culver Citizen says the carpenter work on the fourth story of the military academy is practically completed, the iron stairways have been shipped, and it will not be long now before classes are tramping through its hallways and busy, students In biology, chemistry and physics are seeking out nature's secrets In the new labratories. Indianapolis' papers differ radically in their statements regarding the enforcement of the Sundav saloon law in that city by the new administration. The News states that the saloons, as a rule, were closed. The Journal, on the other hand, says any number of drunken men and women were seen on the streets änd that many arrests were made. " A missionary in China was endeavoring to convert one of the natives. "Suppose t me Christian, me go to heaven?" remarked Ah Sin. '"Yes," replied the missionary. All lite, retorted the heathen, "but what for you no let Chinaman into Amelica when you let him Into heaven? "Ah," sasd the missionary with fervor, "there's no labor party In heaven." The Culver Citizen says an interesting feature of the past week for old cadets has been the wall scaling drill under Captain Thomas; The v?all is twelve fest high and is perfectly
Kinds of Couches
I Williamson Building CLEVELAND, OHIO smooth, and it is something of a trick to scale it without apparatus. The record so far is four men in twenty seconds. The squads bavincr this record are Smith D., Clark, Moe, Moore A,, and Raymond, Heinley, Banks, Rummel. The century plants which were planted in Notre Dame gardens 30 years ago are to be placed on exhibition at St. Louis exposition and 200 plants are now being prepared for shipment by Brother Philip, the university florist. The plants, which are the finest in America, are being crated in the cars on the Notre Dame private railroad and it will not be necessary to handle them until they are luside the exposition grounds at St. Louis. Breech of Promise Suit Miss Henrietta Adair -sl Caseville, Mich., has been given c verdict of $38,000, for breach of promise, against Robert Stuart Baker, a well-known young society man of Grahd Rapids. Served - him right. People who geticto the "smart set" must expect no smart occasionally. LaDorte Ilerald. Deafness Cannot Be Cured, by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by const itional remedies. Ddafnees is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucoua lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tuba is inflamed you have a rumbling found or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, Deaf nees is the result, and unless the inflammtion can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an Inflam ed condition of the mucous eervices, We will give One Hundred Dollars for any casa of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot bs cured by II til's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Props,, Sold by Druggists, Prica 7oc, Hall's Fenily Pills era the tc:t. Sals Blli3 tt Tur: Tiueüne.
