Plymouth Tribune, Volume 4, Number 44, Plymouth, Marshall County, 10 August 1905 — Page 9

HEADQUARTERS FOR Tin and Glass frii 6is, PARAFFIHE, ' -

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EALING- W AIL,

OAH RUBBER

ücIc's lash Leader in SUPPLEMENT TO THE PLYMOUTH TRIBUNE. Plymouth, Indiana, August 10, 105. I LOCAL AND PERSONAL I Miss Bessie Smith went to Bourbon yseterday. mts. ii wie riosmer, ot I'lymoutn. : is the guset of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rouch. Rochester Republican. Miss Rose Wentzler went to South Bend yesterday to visit friends for several weeks. Miss Erma Cummins went to Warsaw yesterday to visit her grandmother, Mrs. M. C. Harter. The South Bend Machine Manufacturing company has been incorporated and will build automobiles. The Eleventh Indiana Battery met in reunion at Robinson Park, in Fort .Wayne, yesterday. The gambling casinos at French Lick and West Baden have been closed and will not be reopened during the Hanly administration. The Bell people are making'a desperate effort to rehabilitate their subscription list at Mishawaka and are offering provisional free phones. The first number of a unique publication, "The Erie Magazine," gotten up by the employes of the Chicago and Erie Railroad, has just been issued. Mrs. Wright, who has been the guest of Mrs. League of Jefferson street, for the past week, returned to her home at Englewood, yesterday. Wiliam M. Brown and Zona Deardorff, both of this county, were married Tuesday afternoon, in the office of the County Clerk by Mayor Logan. Willie Plummer was a Plymouth visitor last Saturday. He will go to that place to finish learning the baker's trade as soon as his hand gets well. Etna Green Messenger. Wabash has just seen the finish of a carnival week and is proud-of the distinction of being the only town in this section of the country that has had a carnival week free of burglaries. Supt. Rodgers of the Logansport asylum, announces that he now has 'one more patient than he can provide for and all applications will have to be suspended until there is more room. The Elevator" men are "very busy now, buying and weighing grain. As the crops have been abundant the farmers come to town with a wagoa load of oats and go home with a pocket full pf money. Ripe crabapples on the south half and hundreds of blossoms on the north half, such is the unnatural condition presented by a well-developed crab-apple tree on the farm of Geo. rge Geyer, three miles south of Millersburg. Monday was the fiftieth consecutive day on which the "Pennsylvania Special" the eighteen-hour train from New York, arrived in Chicago on time. The record attests the efficiency of the operating system of the Pennsylvania company. A dispatch from St. Joe, Mich., says more" than 1,000,000 bushels of peaches representing 1,000,000 will be handled by Berrien county fruit growers this fall. The crop this year will be forty per cent better than last. The Eagles' carnival, which closed at Wabash Saturday night, was profitable from a financial standpoint, the order clearing" about $2,000 on the week's .festivities. The money goes into the building fun 4 for the new theater, which it is hoped to have ready to open by December 1. . Fourteen thousand dollars is the salary offered to Dr. A. V. Raymond, by the First Presbyterian church, the . wealthiest congregation in Buffalo Dr. Raymond has been filling the pulpit for several months without pay, but he declines, to give up the presidency of the Union college, at Schenectady, N. Y.; which pays him $3,500 a year, to accept the pastorate. The thirteenth irrigation Congress will meet in annual session at Port land, Oregon, August 24 . and 25 Among the delegates to represent Indiana Governor J. Frank Hanly has appointed County Surveyor, W. J. Dillingham, of Kosciusko county, and the latter will, in all probability, accept the compliment from Indiana's executive.

iartoe. Low Prices. Miss Nellie DeMoss spent yesterday at South Bend. H. A. Yarrick, the Walkerton undertaker, was in Plymouth yesterday, on business. Mr. and Mrs. Will Hampton, of near Hamlet, were shopping in this ity yesterday. Miss Ethel Yockey returned yesterday fro a three week's visit at Chicago, where she was the guest of Miss Bessie McDuffie. Caroline Hartman has brought suit n Justice Molter's court against Ed ward Butcher, on account, to the amount of $16.20. Mrs. Ada Peters of Quincey, 111., visited old friends here yesterday, while on her way to Argos, where she will visit her mother, Mrs. Emma Walker. Mrs. Widman and two children, went to Monterey Saturday, to visit a few days with old friends and neighbors. Mrs. Harry Bennett of Chicago, who is visiting at C. Firestones, is sick with bloodpoison caused by be ing cut by a fin of a fish which she was cleaning. The Misses Mattie and Minnie Pogue, Mrs. Ida Machlin, Mrs. Net tie Conger took advantage of the M. E. picnic excursion to Winona and spent the day at the park last Tues day. B. F. Machlin, principal of the Boggstown academy, while on his way home from Berrian Springs, Michigan, stopped off and stayed all night with his brother, George Mach lan, east of this city. Indiana University. t We are in receipt of the catalogue of Indiana University for the year ust closed.' The institution has had a remarkable growth in recent years. The attendance for 1904-5 was fifteen hundred and thirty-eight, two-thirds of whom are men. Of this number eighty-.'ix were graduate students who wee working for advanced degrees. S'udents from twenty states and foreign countries were enrolled. Catalogues will be sent on applicatoin to th; Registrar, Blornington, Indiana. Those in attendance from this county during the last year were: Cremen, Maude Effie McKinney. Argos, Aaron Kline, Earl Railsback faber; Culver, Irvin Schuyler Hahn, William S. Rea. Big National Banks to Enter Merger. A business consolidation that means much for the future of Fort Wayne will be consumed within the next ten days, when t;n, final steps will be taken for the absorption of the White National Bank into the First National Bank. The two great financial institutions will combine their resources which aggregite more than $4,000,000, and their com bined capital and surplus is $750,000, John M. White is president of the AVhite National and John IL.Bass is president of the First' National. Band Concert August 10, 1905. March "Stars and Stripes Forever".. ...Sousa Serenade "Evening" .Bugalore Two Step "International Vaudeville" .Alexander Grand Medley "Bits of Remicts Hits" (Popular) arr LampTwo. Step "Yankee Grit" ..Halzman Waltz Suite Selected. Song and Dance "My Marguerite . . 4 Fulton' March "Citizen Soldier" ....Taylor MARRIAGE LICENCES. Fred L. Hill Dorothy Calloway William M. Brown Zona Deardorff 21 19 24 21 ADVERTISED LETTERS GENTLEMEN: Raymond Jones Henry Lewis Clarence S. Mast Carl Stansbury LADIES. Mrs. Katherine Clouse O .Miss Ginevra Daughtrty Mrs. A. Lundgren . Mrs. Sarah Ward A fee of one cent will be charged for advertising. In calling for these Utters please say advertised. J. A. YOCKEY, P. M.

Commissioners' Proceedings. The Board of Commissioners met in continued session, Tuesday, Aug. 8. The-board accepted the report of Dr. J. S. Martin, Secretary of the Board

of Health, for the quarter ending, June 30. Henry Schlosser, Trustee of Ger man township petitioned to have the Bellman bridge repaired. The board ordered it repaired; the township to pay $75 of the cost and the county the remainder. William II. Matthew, attorney for Margaret Acker, et al, presented a motion to dismiss the proposed ditch petitioned by Margaret Acker, et al. The board sustained the motion at Jhe cost of the petitioners. Charles Porcher, Sherman Orr and Jacob Ringer, the viewers appointed in the -William Grooms, et al road petition presented their report. Louis P. Hudson, by his attorney, E. C. Martindale, filed a ;imonstrance against the establishment of the pro posed highway. The board then appointed as reviewers, Charlse Reed, Morris Reed, and Byron Carpenter to meet at the office of William J. Benner, at Argos and qualify, Aug ust 19th, after which to proceed with the said review. The Board ordered the Simon Atha ditch in Tippecanoe township estab lished. William J. Benner was ap pointed superintendent of construct ion of said ditch, and his bond fixed at $400. The report of the Christian Kreiger, et al ditch, in Walnut township was .referred to viewers as drainage commissioners in this cause. Fred Corse, Trustee of Center township, petitioned for an iron bridge two miles north of Inwood, to cost not to exceed $300. It was or dered constructed after plans and specifications are made and same is advertised and sold. Center town ship to pay $75 of the cost of con struction. The Listenberger ditch in Union township was ordered established, according to the report of the Surveyor, now on file. D. E. Vanvactor was appointed Superintendent of con struction and his bond fixed at $400. Ephraim Ashcraft was appointed constable of Bourbon township to fill out the unexpired term of Frank L. Carl. C. A. Reeve filed and presented a petition for a franchise to build a telephone line over certain highways leading from Plymouth to Culver. The franchise was granted on the condition that all poles be set one foot from the fence and not allowed to interfere witht egress or ingress from premises of any land owner. Bids for supplying coal for county buildings were received as follows: F. E. Garn, for Court House deliver ed $3.95 per ton; same for asylum at yard $3.S0 per ton; Linkenhelt Coal Co., Court House, delivered, $3.75 per ton; same for asylum, $3.75 at yard. The bid of Linkenhelt Coal Co. was accepted. The Auditor was ordered to coniract for seven tons to be delivered at jail and balance of 100 ions delivered to court house. Also 50 tons for County Asylum. Board then adjourned until Wednesday. BIG CHUNK OF AMBERGRIS. Whitley Man Thinks he has Found $50,000 Worth of it. Russell Brenneman, of Whitley county has found in the wilds of Alaska 153 pounds of what is said to be ambergris, a substance found in the sperm whale, and which is said to be worth $320 a pound. It is used in the manufacture of high-grade per fumes. Mr. Brenneman has reached Seattle and sent a sample to Wash ington for an expert opinion. If it is ambergris he will return to his Indiana home and make his parents comfortable for the rest of their days. If it is not ambergris he will go back to Alaska and stay until he has made his fortune. THF, PLY MOUTH MARKETS Following are the quotations of local dealers on. the various products named: Wheat $73 Oats 24 Rye 54 Corn :v. 60 Potatoes 30 Lard S2 Hens 9 Tnrkevs 10 to 12 Old Gobblers 8 Old Roosters 5 Ducks 8 Geese 6 Eggs . 15 Butter . 15 Itchiness of the skin, horrible plague. Most eveybody afflicted in one way or another. Only one safe, never failing cure. Doan's Ointment. At any drug store, 50 cents. A Warning to Mothers. Too much care cannot beused with small children during the hot weather of the summer months to guard against bowel troubles. As a rule it is only necessary to give the child a dose of castor oil to correct any disorder of the bowels. Do not use any substitute, but give the old-fashioned castor oil, and see that it is frseh, as rancid oil nauseates and has a tendency to gripe. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, and then a dose of castor oil and the disease may be checkfl in its incipiency and all danger avoided. The castor oil and this remedy should be procured at once and kept ready for instant use as soon as the first indication of any bowel trouble appears. This is the most successful treatment known and may be relied upon with implicit confidence even in cases of cholera infantum. For sale by all druggists.

EARLY COUNTY HISTORY.

...(Continued from first page.).... in his family and didn't like the result. He sued the doctor and It proved to be 'the most remarkable case ever tried in the Marshall County circuit court. There are some people living yet that are familiar wiht the case. A. H. Buckman was a very early settler and bought a large tract of land from the government and lived on it many years. He was a great man to argue the scriptures and took exceptors to Carl's teachings and they got together one day. There was an old pioneer present who said Carl was no match for Buckman. I never heard of Buckman grabbing from a white man more than his salt would pay for. 'Squire MoKec settled on land now owned by Gilbert Ooar. One day there was a suit brought before him for trial. The plaintiff and defendant had their attorneys. When ihe trial got in progress the attorneys commenced abusing each other and the old 'squire warned them that he would fine them if they didn't stop their abuse, but took no heed and kept on tramping on the d'gnity of the court. The old 'squire couldn't stand it any longer, and springing to his feet said: "I'll give you the full extent ol the law. I'll kick you into the road." Grayson Parks settled on the land .low owned by Simons. He did farming and practiced law. Joseph llosTord settled on the land now owned oy Roan Nye. He sold his land to Ecklastaffer. They run a brewery for ome years. John Elkins was a pioleer and a fine man. Hinse'n McDufie was a pioneer he lived on his firm several years then sold out. Daniel ind Calvin Woods were pioneers and first class men. Levi Holloway was also a pioneer, he settled on land now owned by Flory. Dr. J. F. Parks was i young practicing physician in pioicer days. He was an uncle to Dr. John F. Parks of Bourbon. North and northwest of Bourbon, John Greer built a house in June, 1836 on the land where the Bourbon school house, now stands. He moved ;n it in September and lived there six weeks before a white man' came to the territory to live. Solomon Linn settled on land half a mile north "f the main corners of Bourbon on he west side of the road. The front .s now mostly covered with town. He came here in 1836, erected buildings, cleared a good farm and lived here many years, and died there. James O. Parks settled on the land tow owned by Jennie Weaver and da Parks, i i 1S3G, and cleared several farms. He was elected to the .egislature twice. Hi sfirst opponent .vas John L. Westervclt, of Plymouth. His second opponent was C. II. Reeve of Plymouth. James Miner settled n the land now owned by Eli Shafer. The first ten acres of land he cleared ind fenced, he split the rails and carried them on his shoulder, and built 3n eight rail fence around the ten teres. He didn't own any team. He "was a bachelor at that time, tmt he .vas not invincible, for Sallie Burnett .vooed and won him. Schuyler Min?r settled on the land now owned by Charley Fribley, and lived there a lumber of years. lie shot Cathran's dog and got into a law suit. Andrew Bearinger's house stood on a knoll on the east side of the road from Gi ah am Ro?.e's. He had a son David, f.vho became enthused with a girl. He had a rival. The girl was pivotal. The one who got there first had an option on her company. One Snuday there was church in a log school house. David's rival got around first and got the girl's consent to let him walk home with her.. David walked along behind them for a hundred yards or so, until he became so jealous that he couldn't stand it any longer. . He struck his rival, then they went into adogfight. Some of the old pioneers parted them. J. Johnson, Moses Mann, Jacob Barca, Jacob Klinker,George Williams, Win. Bennett, J. E. Mooney and Robert Piper settled on the land now owned by Wm. Bates. The Mooney's were good choppers and expert hewers. East of Bourbon, George Monroe settled on eighty acres of land in the southeast corner of Bourbon. His" house stood where Mrs. Mary Plummer's now stands. He lived there a while and then sold his land to James O. Parks and left. His team was a very large j-oke of spotted cattle. Jabez Burnett and John Kelly settled on land one half mile east of Bourbon on the north side of the road. Jabez liked his dram pretty well. Kelly did ;onie preaching of the gospel. James Parks father c: James O. Parks settled on land now owned by Owen Unger. He bought -a large tract of land of the government, nearly one thousand acres. He came there in 1836, died August 28, 1839. He was buried on his own land known now as the known as the Parks graveyard until that he was the first person buried in what is now Bourbon township. In 1S53, Isaac A. Parks sold eighty acres to Ganshorn, excepting the graveyard and the' right to go to it. It was known as the Parks grqaveyard until 1853. Wm. Elder settled the land now owned by Ebed Huflcr. He was an industrious and honest man and a fine rail splitter. He wore a knit cap the year around and was so badly tanned that he had a complexion like the red man of the forest.. He would pccasionally imbibe a little of the extract of corn. He said he didn't like the taste of it but liked the funny effect it had on him. He was grand father of John W. Elder, the natural violinist. Pap Sparrow settled on land now owned by Frank Miller.

Pap Sparrow's wife's maiden name was Moss. It was said after the knot

was tied which made them one, the minister said that sparrows love to build their nests" in the moss. John Fuller settled the Lewis Huffer farm and afterwards went to. Nebraska. There were three of the. Taylor brothers, Joseph, William and George. They were stout men. 'Joseph started one morning before day to help one of his neighbors plant corn. While passing through a woods he was attacked by two- wolves. He heard them coming and backed up against a tree, and fought them tili daylight, when they left him. He was wet with sweat keeping them at bay with an eye hoe or a "nigger hoe" as they were sometimes called. James O. Parks and Solomon Linn went to the woods to locate some land, when night came on ar.d they had to climb trees and stay there till morning to protect themselves from the wolves. I am inclined to think that they got lost. The first road or crooked trail that was traveled to Turkey Creek prairie went south of the Shakering prairie. James O. Parks and some of his brothers found a narrow place in the prairie and bridged it, shortening the distance five or six miles. Turkey Creek prairie was an Egypt to the pioneers. They got their grain there, hauled it down past Hoover's mill and got it ground. In an early day Hoover built a mill on the outlet of the lake, three miles east of Etna Green. He ground grain for the pi oneers for many years. It was known as Hoover's mill and lake. . Turkey Creek and prairie was settled In 1S34, two years before any attempt was made to settle Bourbon township. Turkey Creek prairie was settled by the Halls, Anglins, Thomases, Rumlies, Woods, Coliers, Plummers, Wallaces, Smiths and Moores. S. D. Hall was a large land owner on the prairie. He was elected to the legislature and was honored, loved and respected by everybody that had the pleasure ol knowing him, as he was an all-round first class man. Hirom, if you are built on the straight lines that your grandfather Hall was, and I am in clined to think that you are, you will never run away with the fnuds of the Bourbon State Bank. No, never. My father was elected to assess Marshall r.nd Starke counties for four consecutive years, and the counties being sparsely settled he knew every nan in the two counties. He moved onto land one mile east of the Mich igan road. . Plymouth was a trading postat that time. tGilson Cleveland and Rose had a store in Plymouth. They hauled their goods in wagon from Michigan City. The goods were shipped around on the great lakes and it took four or five days to make a trip with a team. Pioneers from Bourbon and Tippecanoe township would go to Plymouth and trade and nay their taxes. They invariably got back as far as father's, stopped all night and went home the next day. That is the way I became so person ally acquainted with the pioneers of Hourbon and Tippecanoe township. I was a small boy at that time but was big enough to know what I am talk ing about and honest enough to tell the truth. The pioneers were ever welcome guests at father's house, There is a great contrast between the pioneer sixty years ago and the people of today. The pioneer worked to live, and the people today have to work to pay their extortionate taxes. Bourbon township is a summit lev el, the water being drained into Yellow and Tipecanoe rivers. Before there was any ditching done Bourbon township was dotted over with frogponds, cat-swamps and marshes. The pioneers made the start that has made Bourbon township one of the grandest townships in the county. I be lieve that in time there will not be an acre of ground in Bourbon township that will not be good, fertile soil. I have spared no pains. to have this authentic. Anything that Is not true is immaterial to what I have written. James M. Greer, Sr, A VACATION TRIP. To Niagara Falls at Low Fares. Ticket Agent J. E. Haines will answer inquiries about the annual excursion to Niagara Falls over the Pc:.isylvania Lines, which offers excellent opportunities for a delightful vacatoin trip at small expense. Round Trip from Plymouth, Ind., via Pennsylvania Lines. August 9th to 30th, inclusive, excursion tickets to Rome City, account Church of God Interstate Assembly and Universalists Interstate Assembly will be sold via the Pennsylvania Lines from ticket stations in the states o Ohio and Indiana. For particulars a?ly to Local Ticket Agents of those lines. I A Smooth Article. When you find it necessary to use salve use DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. It s the purest, and bes for Sores, Burns, Boils, Eczema, Blind, Bleeding, Itching or Protruding Piles. Get the genuin DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. Sold by J. W. Rinard. . $15.00 Round Trip to Atlantic City August 17th, via Pennsylvania Lines. This summer's excursion .to Atlantic City, Cape May and seven other ocan resorts will leave - Plymouth, Indiana Thursday August 17th. Twelve days' outing. Stop-over at Philadelphia. See J. E. Haines, Ticket Agent, Pennsylvania Lines. Plymouth, Indiana. Try the Daily Tribune 10 cents per week.

Hundreds of thousands of people

usellollisters Rocky " Mountain Tea as a family tonic. If taken this month it-will keep the family well all the year. If it fails get your mon ey back. 35 "cents at The People's T- O. . Lirug oiore. . $100 Reward, $100. , The readers of this, paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one deraded disease "that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the onlv oositive cur now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucofts surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, -and eivincr the mhnt strength by building up the constitu- . : i . . nun aiiu assisting nature in Going its work. The proprietors have so much offer One Hundred Dollars for any case mat it tails to cure. Send for list of test Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. bold by druggists, 75c. Take Hall's family, pills for constipation. Try the Tribune. The best County Paper. They Appeal to our Sympathies. ! The bilious and dvsoentic are con stant sufferers and appeal to our sympathies. There is not one of them, however, who may not be brought back to health and happiness by the use of Chamberlain's Stomach and iver tablets. These Tablets invigor ate the stomach and liver and strengthen the digestion. They also reguate the bowels, ror sale by all drug gists. Sick-headache results from n dis ordered condition of the stomach and is quickly cured by Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. For sali by all druggists. The Daily Tribune 10c a week. DE fill Thornbura & Alathews. PROPS Always on hand. Also Fresh and Cured Meats. Free delivery to all parts of the city! Call Phone No. 154, and give us your orders. Eues Examined Free! and Headaches Cured by Drs. Burke & Lcmontree. 230 S. Mich- t. South Bald. Ill Prices' Steel U lasses, from 25 cts at.d up Uold glasses, from 12,50 and up. C. F. HOLTZENDORFF, Physicians and Surgecns, Oorner Michl'Ztn nl JefferftnnStr NltfhtOilH .t n rl. G F. HITCHCOCK, DGNTIHT. Rom 1 Corbin Block. PLYBGUTH. IND. JOHN W. PARKS LAWYER YOUR BUSINESS SOLICITED. TELEPHONE 237 S.C.LORING.M.Dl Offca over Bosworth A ShamtnuglT In fat Ban! block. PhM205. All calls promi.tlv Answered. Office kouri to 4 a ud 8to8i. m. Fboue204. Residence, 314 Center st. PLYMOUTH. - INDIANA Dr .F. II. BURKET, ! DBNTIST i Plymouth, Indlaoa. j Promptly oUiW. or FCC RETURNED. M Y;j' EXPEMCAOC Our CHAftOCS AM . TftB LOWCSTi Bend model, pboto t ketei. for expert search aod fro report on pufapfabfttty. . Ml rittN CEMENT raits eoaducted before all eoarta. Patents obtained shirrapi xi AOVEHTrSCD and SOUMrsa. TmAMlAMW, Ptpk IONS and COPYRIGHTS quickly obtained. Opposite U. 8. Patent Office, . irMMi-.'NJ PROCURED AND DE rCNDEp. draw uur or uhoto. I or pert amKuli ana rto Krre Trke, how to ootata patent trada mark, copyrights, etc f All. COUNTRIES. JSuslmtss direct vki Washington saw tume, money and of ten tht patent. Patent and Infrlngtment Practle Exctusfvaty. write or Mm to ua ttS Zat Etmt, vp. Vnlt t falsa CSsa. WASHINGTON, O. C For Fine Job Printing try the Tribune. .

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Groceries

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ANNUAL EÄSH OR EXCURSION : ' ' TO ATLANTIC CITY AND RETURN Cape Uay, N. J., Ocean Cijy, N. J., or Sea Isle, N. J. Tuesday, Aug. 22, 1905 VIA n II i Through Buffalo and Philadelphia: Train leaves Plymouth (0:47 a. m., Aug. 22. 1905. Rate, $15.00 Tickets good to return until Sep tember 2d. 1905, with stop over at Fhlladeiphla, liufialo, Glen Summit and Westfield, on the return trip. tor tickets, sleeping car accommo dations, and full particulnrs call oa Agent L. E. & W. R. R., or address II. J. RHEIN, General Passenger Agent, Indianapolis, Ind. fENTENNIAT vJOPERA HOUSBJJ ONE NIGHT DNLY. Thursday, August 17. ROWLAND & CLIFFORD Present The Emphatic Succes?, DORA THORNE. 0 amatlzatization of BERTHA M. Clay's '- Famous Novel. The Sweetest Story Ever Told. Wholesome, Cleaa, Refreshing. AN EXCELLFNT PRODUCTION Prices 50c, 35c and 35c. At Studies' Drug Store. - RAILWAY TIME TABLE PENNSYLVANIA LINES. EAST No. G Daily 3.00 am Nn r.fi Dailv Sunrlav. lv 5.50 am No. 30 Daily except Sunday 9.45 am No. 16 Daily 10.13 am No. 22 Daily, no coaches ..1.20 pm No. 8 Daily 5.55 pm No. 2 Daily(ex fare train) 7.40 pm No. 38 Daily ex Sunday ..8.23 pm No. 24 Daily 9.45 pm WEST No. 15 Daily 5.30 am No. 5 Daily (ex fare train) C.19 am No. 49 Daily, leaves 5.45 am No. 37 Daily ex Sunday. .9.00 am No. 23 Daily ..! 35 pm No. 39 Daily ex Sunday ...2.02 pm No. 9 Daily ; 6.04 pm Lake Erie & Western ft. R OBTH BOUHP. No. 20 Daily e:c Sunday ..11.30 am No. 22 Daily ex Sunday ..4.45 pm No. 24 Daily cx Sunday ..11.05 pm No. 2C Special Sunday train 9.15 am SOCTB BOCKD No 21 Daliy ......5.45 am No. 23 Daily ex Sunday ..10.47 am No. 25 Daily ex Sunday ..5.15 pm No. 27 Special Sunday train 7.30 pm S CRESQTA is the leading Family Flour. Whea ytu buy Cretota you buy the best. Used the world over and pronomced THE BEST. Try t sack. If you doast fad It THE BEST yon ever used, it costs yoa asthlag FOR SALE BY L. J. Southworth, Geo. Vinall, A. C. Roberts, Hogarth & Co., Wm. Suit, Grange Dept. Stcrc NIAGARA FALLS $7.53. August 10, is the date of the annual excursion to Niagara Falls. Round trip fare will be 57.50 from Plymouth, Indiana. For particulras apply to J. E. -Haines, Ticket agent. Excursions to Colorado For Eagles Grand Aerie Auj. 11th and 12th, Via Pennsylvania line. Special low fares to Denrer, Colorado SprinRs or Pueblo. For informatkti about stop-overs, routes, etc., apply to ticket agents, Pennsylvania lines.

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