Plymouth Tribune, Volume 3, Number 8, Plymouth, Marshall County, 26 November 1903 — Page 7

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The Only Perfect Heating Stove Ever Made.

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FOR SHLD IN ÄSTLEY Zhc tribune. HENDRICKS & CO., Publishers. Advertisements to appear In THE TKIF5 ONE mujt be in before Tuesday noon to Insure tnelr appearance in the issue of that week. Plymouth, Ind., November 26, 1903. I LOCAL NEWS

Miss Lydia Welch of Chicago is visiting Miss Kate Stack In this city. John R. Jones and Jerome Kali transacted ouslnessat ArgosThursday. John Edger, of Bourbon, Is now employed at the Horton sanitarium in this city. Mr. aud Mrs. James Sherwood who have been residents of Bourbon many years moved to South Bend Thursday. Mrs. Margaret Sprague was in town Thursday and made this office a pleasant call. She has moved from Ober to Tyner. A. P. Kyle, of Fort Wayne, who has been visiting his nephew Vernon Kyle, at Tyner, visited relatives here on his way home. Miss Nora Bodges spent the past three months with her brother, Nelson Bodgers, at Niles, Michigan, has returned to Plymouth. Bev. A. H. Zilmer went to Kempton Thursday where he preached t1 Thursday and Friday night, and at Scircleville Saturday niht and Sunday. Burford Maiks, who has been seriously ill with diphtheria and scarlet fever is somewhat improved but his mother Is now quite ill. Culver Citizen. Mr. Castleman now residing south of Bourbon, has rented the Wayne Jordan farm west of this city near the Thompson school house and will move there soon. The Blackford county farmer who has ten good oil wells on his 120-acre farm, isn't able, somehow, to get up much interest in the dollar-wheat - movement. An excellent program has been arranged ior the eleventh annual Marshall county teachers association to be held in the Washington school building Nov. 27, 28. Harry Armstrong went to Donald4 son Thursday to put up the cornice for the new school house there. The

building v ill not be completed very long bef ore the holidays. The new Lake Shore yards at Elkhart, comprising thirty-five miles of track and 160 switches have been completed and are cow in use. The yards wert) finished in Jost six months. , - Time never was and never will be when all the farmers were prepared for winter, no matter how . lopgf 62ligbtful autumn, weather may. have been granted sinful dwellers here below. Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Funk- went to Primgar, Iowa, Thursday to visit relatives and bring their little boy home who was sent there at the time Mr. Funk was so dangerously ill with appendicitis.' ; On the Jamison farm, in Davis township, Starke county, one acre yielded 1011 bushels of corn. It has not been many ( years since all that land was covered with water from the Kankakee. Horsemen in LaPorte, South Bend, Uisbawaka, Niles and Benton Harbor, including possibly Elkhart and Goshen, are agiUting' the formation of an inter-city snow speeding circuit for this winter. The notices served on parties liable to be assessed for the dredging; cf Yellow river above and through tr ciij vjere found defective by Jcdja vbrnsthaat th3 List tern of court . Lzl net? notices will have to be gives. Farther proceedings in the CS3 may

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Io 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 only true air-tight principle. Will heat twice the space that can be heated by any other stove at one half 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. 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 any other stove on earth with any kind of fuel. PLYMOUTH BY ÄND HESS Mrs. J. E. Hanes was the guest of friends in Bourbon Friday. Mrs. Claude Reubelt spent Friday with relatives in Bourbon. Mrs. Dj,M. Pickerl, of Argos, was reported seriously ill Thursday. Mrs. Gaymon, of Crumstown, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Ed Zum baugh. George P. Kruyer has secured a good position in Kemp's grocery store at Elkhart, m Mrs. Stephen Whited is visiting her daughter, Mrs. E. Marvin at Knox fwr a few days. Senator Parks, Prof. Bailey and O. II. Miller, transacted business at Bourbon Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Jonas Schmucker, of German township, are visiting relatives at Kokomo. Joseph Swihart and family have moved from Tippecanoe township to Brethren, Michigan. James M. Hudson, residing west of Plymouth, went to South Bend Friday to visit until Monday. Calvin Morlcal, a former resident of Tippecanoe, will be married at Blaine, Wash., Thanksgiving day. There has been a cut of eight dol lars in sheet-steel, making the present price the lwwest In years. Mrs. DavW Swigart, of Culver, re turned home Friday after a visit in this city with Mrs. T. E. Houghton. Jacob Garver, of near Walnut, moved Wednesday to Bremen, where he has entered the livery business. Mrs. Horner of this city and her niece, Mrs. Cooper," of LaPorte, have returned from their visit at Warsaw. The Bremen orchestra has been engaged to play fwr the stale dairymen's convention at Plymouth next month. Frank Thomas was elected second lieutenant at the armory Thursday evening. He will make a good officer. William H. Hatch died at his home in Walnut Sunday, Nov. 15, 1903, at the age of 75 years, 10 months and 10 davs. '. Mrs. Charles Snyder, or Dekalb county, who has been visiting Mrs. Eber Deacon, went to South Bend, Friday. . Mrs. Lum, of . Wabash, has been visiting her father, Jackson Glass, at Hamlet and relatives In West township this week. The postoffice at Linkville will be discontinued .December 1. The town will get Its mall from the carrier of rural route No. 1. Harry Marvin and Thomas Scantling have purchased the bowling alley and went to Chicago last Friday ! to get some new fixtures.'' ' T H Dealers are paying twelve cents a pound for best Thanksgiving turkeys. This will make them somewhat expensive when they are dressed and cooked. ,. - Mrs. John Boss has returned from, a visit of oyer two months with her son Dr. Jacob Boss,ln Kansas, and her daughter, Mrs. Charles Wade, at Beaver City, Neb. . f Mrs. Louise Showacker has returned to her home at Kalamazoo, Mich., after a visit of two weeks with her sister, Mrs. P. O. Jones and other relatives and friends here. W. T. Spaeth a cousin of B. C. Kloeprer called at our office Friday. He Is at the head of the company which played here Friday, and like his cousin, Mr. Kloepfer, is a nice man. z Lieutenant Governor Gilbert Tis home from Battie Creek, Mich., after being confined to the sanitarium over three months with rheumatism. He Is now able to walk without crutches Mrs. Barbara Scheetz, better knefjn as Grandma Scheetz, has been lyisg near death's door, at her corns in thb plica for the past vzeek.? Her ci:3 John and Laurence of Kentlind, vrcre at her bed side the latter of last vrsck, 1 Ilyncuth. Ucntcrsr Sun.

Mrs. Elmer Young went to Mentone to visit over Sunday. Lester Dickinson went to -Kokomo to visit over Sunday. Van C. Search has gone to Tippecanoe for a visit of a week. Mrs. Caroline Hamill wenttoMishawaka to visit over Sunday. Mrs. Thomas Sponsler went to Talma for a visit of a week. Mrs.. Emma Walker, of Argos, has

gone to Whiting to spend the winter. Mark ,Uncapher and his mothei, of Grovertown, were Plymouth visitors Saturday, Mrs. Murfin and children and Mrs. Shelby M. Leland are visitinsr at South Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Harsch, of South Bend, are visiting their parents near Inwood. Mrs. Belle Logan is critically ill at her home In this city and her recovery is not expected. George Taylor, residing five miles south of Plymouth has returned from a visit at South Bend. A brakeman named Harris residing at Etna Green got bis thumb badly mashed at Bourbon Friday afternoon. The Ladles' Aid Society of the M. E. church held their social with Mrs. James Keiser on Pearl street Tuesday afternoon. The indications are that the cold wave has passed, aod you may how have a chance to repair the v.recKage of your coal bin. The funeral of Mrs. Henry Humrlchouser was held at the house Sunday at 2:30.p..m. Services conducted by Rev. C. A. Brooke. The grand jury at South Bend has reported that the county infirmary there is not even fit for hogs, and rec ommends a new building. C. II. Foltz, night operator at the Pennsylvaniastation, is again very sick and Messrs Hoover and Cnatterton did the work Friday night. E. B. Milner, who was drawn as a member of the Federal grand jury, went to Indianapolis Saturday to attend the United States court. 'Andy" Molter, who is quarantined on account of smallpox telephoned us to invite all his friends to help him celebrate bis 39th birthday Sunday. William F. Beattie has returned to his home in Fulton county after a visit of a week with his son, the proprietor of the racket store in thiscity. There are six preachers and no newspaper men in the Kansas penitentiary. And yet the modest editors are not disposed to draw invidious comparisons from the fact. Frank Southworth writes that he and Sam Gretzinger passed through snow two feet deep on their way from Cleveland to Buffalo, Thursday, but there w as no snow at Buffalo. Four hundred men employed in the B. & O. shops at Garrett, were laid pff several dasy ago without any explanation, and it is said that the shops are to be closed for an Indefinite period. Mr. and Mrs. John Baxter, of New Ulm, Minnesota, who have beea visiting George W. Baxter and Mrs. J. E. Houghton in, this city went to Bourbon Saturday for a visit of a week. Mr. and Mrs. Jonas Miller, Mrs. O. F. v Ketcham, Mrs. Johj Corbaley. Mrs. Louisa Barnes, Isaac Webb and perhaps others leave for California Thanksgiving day to spend the winter. Mrs. C. Rose, of Napoleon, Ohio, whbbasbeeu visiting Dr. Wiseman, at Culver, Mrs. E. H. Dunham in this city and other relatives in this county, has gone to Goshen, accompanied by Mrs. Dunham, to visit relatives in Elkhart county before returning home. '. : , ; The Logansport sheriff and attorneys have discovered a way of collecting a judgment, against a rail rood without waitihgtwo or three yeara for the" red tape of ''auditing, V by serving a. writ of execution on the.officer in charge of the pay car and getting the strong box open with an ax. . Mrs.';D. S , O'Brien was called to Longcliff Friday, by the serious illness of her husband. A general breaking down of the system had set in and he died this morning, Denny " . was one of the .best operators and most accommodating men ever employed by the Western Union In this city and his wife and parents have the sympathy of everybody. The cold wave was wide spread in extent reaching to all parts of the country and in many parts the temperature has stood at near the zero point, causing a grzat deal of suffering.'. Numbers of deaths from freezing are reported from several of the northwestern states, and there has been much property destroyed by the extreme cold. The funeral of the late Jacob Devcney, who died at his home, 410 East Monroe street, Wednesday Nov. 19. was held from the family home Friday at 1:30 o'clock, Rev. B, H, Beal chelating. Mr. Deveney wi3 a prominent member of the Argos, Ind., lodge of Odd Fellows and the bers of South Bend lodge, No. 29, 1. O. O. F. attended the 'funeral in a body. Burial toe": place at Blvcrvisfr cemetery. South Bend Tribune, .

A. F. ness and con Lloyd left Tuesday morning for Denver, Colorado, to join Mrs. ness who Is there for her health. They will probably remain there through the winter. Argos Reflector. . Mrs Kichler teller in the bank at Churubusco, who had been visiting in Chicago, stopped here today on her wav home, to visit over Sunday with her aunt, Mrs. W. W. Hill and other relatives in this city. The Indiana National bank at Elkhart has failed. The doors were closed Thursday morning. Walter Brown is one of .the stockholders The Goshen Democrat sav J. L. Broderick when interviewed said the failure was due to the mistrust of depositors on account of political matters and Interests involved In litigation. The jury in trial of Truman Beam, charged with choking Martha Lawrence to death at his home neat Valparaiso, last April, disagreed, and a new trail will be necessary. The jury stood ejeven for conviction and one for acquittal. The jurvman who held out for ninety hours in favor of Beam was George M. Elder, ex-clerk of the superiorcourt. Mrs. Emily Adams Stringer, widow

of Rev. T. C. Stringer, who was pas toa of the M. E. church here twenty five years ago, died at the home of her dau-rhter in Fairbault, Minn , of cancer of the stomach, Tuesday, Nov. 17, aged 6G vears and 6 mo'nths. Her husband died in 1SÖ7. She was an excellent, christian lad7and made many friends here who will be sorry to hear of ner death. The corn belt this year includes a little of north-western Ohio, a con siderable strip across no'tli central Indiana, all of northern aud central Illinois, the whole State of Iowa, northwestern Missouri, northeastern Kansas and southern Nebraska. On the map it roughly resembles an elongated kite with the little end in northwestern Ohio and the widest part on the Missouri river. Aleander Johnson, of Ft. Wayne, was elected grand master at the ses sion of the Grand Lodge of Odd Fel lows. Edwin Farrar, of Rushville, was elected deputy grand master; Eller E. Pryor, of Martinsville, grand repre sentative; R. II. Hollywood, of Indianapolis, grand warden; W. II. Leedy, grand secretary; W. A. Morris, Frankfort, grand treasurer, and Judge C. A. Chipman, of Anderson, grand trustee. A schwol teacher near Albion re ceived the follow ins: note from the mother of one of her pupils Monday: "Dear Mis, you write me bout whip ping Sammy. I hereby give you permission to beet him up any time it is necessary to learn him his lessons. He is Just like his father you have to learn him with a clubb. Pound knojege into him. I wante him to get it, and don't pay any attention to what his father says; I'll handle him. A newspaper is always printed in a rush. There is always something in it that should always be left out: something left out that sh mid. have been put in; it is sometimes too quick to judge and often too quick too act, but with all its faults and short comings there is more education in a bright newsy paper than there is in a novel. You will find that the brightest boy on practical sensible every day questions is the boy who prefers newspapers to novels. Exchange. Several days ago most of the newspapers of this section announced that Charles S. nudson of Argos had left his wife, to whom he was recently married and his whereabouts were unknown. Mr. Hudson writes that he is in Pennsylvania and has been in weekly communication wich his wife who will move to Pennsylvania in a few davs. Hudson was for many years a resident of Green township but afterwards moved to Mentone, where be was known "Cyclone nudson, on account of his. windy speeches in favor of free silver. - .r ? Emory Gray, mention of whose death was made In these columns last WeeK, died at White Pigeon. Mich,, Nov. 11, aged 39 years, 8 months and 11 days. He was born in Marshall county and lived almost all his life in or near Argos. ne bought a farm near White Pigeon about two years ago. About three weeks before his death whTle working with some wire with a pair of pliers be cut bis second finger on. the left hand slightly. It was not considered of any consequence whatever as it immediately healed, but later developed Into' a case of Tetanus or lockjaw', which caused his death. . ' Fifty years ago, . Nov. 20, 1903, Wesley Belangee was buried in Oak Hill cemetery. His w i Khe first grave dug in the new ceme;- . which had just-been platted by tho cltj ne was a comparitively young n an : nd was a brother of Enoch Belan'sii-who died seterol years ago. Three of the pall bearers are still living. They are Hon. Charles H. Reeve, Judge Capron and A. P. Elliott.- Since then Oak Hill has become a veritable city-of the dead. It is a beautiful cemetery, has hundreds of costly beautiful monuments worth probably a hundred thousand I dollars. It is rather remorl:abl3 that thrcs pall bearers, are living at the end of fif,ty years. '

ale off Petticoat Special Marked Down Prices

TpjTVERY LADY should grasp this opportunity to purchase an 1 C underskirt at great reuuetion prices. In this sale are also

included our splendid new lines of Flannel

BlacIC Mercerized Sateen Petticoats all new and up-to-date CCr at ....$2.62, $2.42, $1.97, $1.32, $1.12, 89c and ODG A NEW IDEA: Drop Petticoats, in black, made of Spun Glass material, pleated flounce, edged with narrow ruffles with train; made to Kfr fit any dress skirt; specially priced UUL

The Great Linen Sale The great Linen Sale has surpassed our most sanguine expectations. The purchasing public is convinced that economy prices are the ruling spirit during this sale, which closes November 28. BALL AND COMPANY

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We have bought direct from Ab. Kirchbaum & Co., manufacturers of men s fine clothing, Philadelphia, and from G. Lippman & Sons, manufacturers of boys' and children's fine clothing;, New York, the balance of their fall and winter stocks. We have secured these goods at a great sacrifice and are showing the biggest bargains ever offered. The goods are all new, clean, desirable merchandise direct from first hands; no old shop-worn goods

This Sale will save During its progress we Footwear, Underwear, cut from 33 to 50 per bill come to our store Plymouth and vicinity

courteous salesmen to show you tnrougn our rig two-tioor joining store giaa 10 ao so.

3 The deestrect skewl at the opera house Wednesday evening drew a large crowd and everybody laughed more tban they had laughed for a month before. It was a good entertainment and all the actors were stars. George Hess died Monday night at the home of his daughter, Mrs. John Barts, seven miles northeast of town, after an illngss of only a week. He was 83 years of age. Funeral services were held at the Ewald school house Thursday. John Brougher and son Raymond left on Tuesday for Cherry vale, Kansas. Mr. Brougher expects to invest in the ollTielda out there. His father and brother own farms in the very heart of the oil district. Bremen Enquirer. 1 ; , ' ' The big Lakevllle ditch has reached Marshall county, the dredge in charge of Stephen Knoblock being now engaged oo the farm of Charles Swartz. There are about six more miles to be dredged, which will take until' next spring. ' ' " The proposition to lew a per capita tax on the Indiana Odd Fellows, to raise money with which to make improvements at the home, in Greensburg, came up at the session of the Grand Lodge, and was defeated by a vote of 350 to 292. Frederick Knoblock, one of the pioneers of German township aged 83 years, has moved 'to Bremen" to -en joy a well earned rest after. a busy life on the farm, ne came with bis parents rrom Canton, Ohio, 66 years ago and settled near Lake of the Woods, being one of the first settlers in that part of the county. - The ugly statue of Columbus, erected on the lake front In Chicago during the world's fair year in that city, and which received such severe criticism from public and art experts alike Is to be melted over to make a statue of the late President McKlDley in Washington park, Chicago. ; The reports from all over the country are to the effect that? the year of 1903 has been one of the greatest apple years for a decade. Not only are there many bushels of this luscious fruit in Indiana and other surrounding states, but in Michigan the supply Is something wonderful.

LAUER & SON

ONE-PRICE OUTFITTERS : PLYMOUTH

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you 50 per cent, on your Clothing Purchases make cut prices in every department of our store. All Rubber Hats, Caps, Shoes and all the finest grades of Clothing prices are cent. For prices see large bills, or if perchance you fail. to get a see what this sale means to you. It means more to the people of than any sale that has ever occurred. We have plenty of good,

The agricultural statisticians tell us that the chinch bug costs us $100,000,000 a year, the hessian fly $50,000,000, the grasshopper $90.000,000, the potato bug $8,000,000 and the cottoo boll worm $60,000,000, or a total of $308,000,000 for mere bugglness. The remains of Mrs. Elizabeth Kortright Monroe, widow of James Monroe, the fifth President of the United States, have been exhumed from their resting place in the Monroe manor, near Leesburg, Va., for removal to Richmond, where they will be reinterred in Hollywood cemetery. Samuel Gretzinger and Frank Southworth have gone east on an extended visit. They will stop at Toledo and Cleveland, go from there to Boston, New York; Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore and all the principal points of the north Atlantic states. They expect to be gone about three weeks. The farmer is nearer out of the reach of trusts than any other man In the world. He can bum his. own wood, eat his own meat, eggs, mutton and johnny-cake, and sleep under a roof that is not mortgaged to any corporation." Feel ' blue? " No. The farmer is the happiest man in the universe. 1 The Board of Education in Chicago complains that educational standing is injured and athletics demoralized in high schools by the practice of universities in offering, inducements to good football players to enter, despite failure in studies. It begins to look as if college authorities were going too far In encouraging athletics at the expense of. scholarship. - "A run for her money" presented at the opera bouse Friday night was one of the best entertainments ever giyen In this city. There was a fair sized audience, but the opera house will be packed If this show ever comes this way again. All the specialties are good and from the first rising of the curtain until the close of the entertainment everybody was pleased. L E. & W. Excuiticrj. The usual Thanksgiving rates one and one-third fare will be given this year. Tickets sold Nov. 25 and 26, good until Nov. 30.

and Knit Petticoats. 3C Looks Bad for McClellan. Mayor-elect McClellan, of New York, takes oath that he did nut incur a cent's worth of personal expense in the late municipal campaign which resulted in bis triumph by a large majority over the opposition. This, in itself, speaks bad for the young man. Who put up for him? There must have been a great deal of money used by his side. Who is he under obligations to for furnishing the funds? Whose tool will hebe when he assumes the duties of head of the government cf Greater New. York? South Bend Tribune. Meeting of Committee. ' The republican national committee will bold a meeting in Washington on Dec. 11 the same date, by the way, that the state committee will meet in Indianapolis and according to the gossip from the capital, Perry Heath will tender his resignation as secretary. In that event it is believed that Harry S. New, of Indianapolis, will be elected to serve as secretary until the reorganization of the committee immediately following the national convention next summer, and that Mr. New will then be elected to succeed himself. The object of the meeting of the national committee is to select the time and place for holdiDg the next national republican convention. Desfctxs Ctnnct Be Ccred. by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the er. There is only one way to cure deafneee, and that is by constitional 'remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have t rambling eound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, Deaf nec3 u the result, tad unlses the inflammtion can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will bs destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are . caused by Catirrh, trhich ia cotMcg buttaieffcaed condition of the mucous eerrices, We. will give One Hncdred Dolhrs for any case cf Deafness (ct used by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Core. Send for circulars, free. P. J. CS?y & Co., Props,, Sold by Drnisft V Pries 75c, Hall's Fatally Pills are the btzi. v

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