Plymouth Tribune, Volume 5, Number 1, Plymouth, Marshall County, 12 October 1905 — Page 7

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Royal Baking Powder is indispensable to finest cookery and to the comfort and convenience of modern housekeeping. Royal Baking Powder makes hot breads, cakes and pastry wholesome. Perfectly leavens without fermentation. Qualities that are peculiar to it alone.

ROYAL BAKING POWDER Entered at the Postoffice at Plymouth, Indiana as second-class matter, j Plymouth, Ind., October 12, 1905. ! 55 LUVML lL-YY.3 i &9 5 13 i Miss Ethel Haines is visiting! at South Bend. Mrs. Dr. Preston and Mr?. G. W. Shrider went to Chicago Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Holem went to Hamlet Thursday for a visit of a few days. Mrs. O. M. Berkey has returned from a visit of a week at South Bend. Mrs. L. M. Shakes and children are visiting her brother at Hibbard. Mrs. James Putman has returned from a visit of ten days in Berrien county, Mich. Mrs. Henry Leiter of Bourbon, changed cars here on her way to Peru to visit her sister, Mrs. Jennie Newman who is seriously ill. Rev. C. A. Spitler is at Waterloo looking up the work which has been assigned to him by the U. B. conference for the ensuing year. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Rhoades went to South Bend Friday to attend the 90th birthday anniversary of Mrs. Sarah Watkins, the mother of Mrs. Rhoades. Mrs. Griffith of South Bend, has returned to her home after a visit of several days with her brother, John Haines south east of Plymouth. The baby boy of Mr. and Mrs. James O. Parks born Friday morning at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. North, the parents of Mrs. Parks, died at 10 o'clock. Thomas Leak, of Lake Odessa Mich., attended the reunion of Company D, 3d Reg. and visited cormades and friends in this county a few days. J. M. Lowry of Walnut, who underwent a surgical operation at the Epworth hospital, South Bend, a few weeks ago, is now able to get out and shake hands with old friends. Broken in mind by grief over his son's disgrace, Allen Obenchain, father of Cass county's defaulting treasurer, has been sent to Longciiffe asylum. He is 84 vears old. Miss Edith Stout of Dayton, Ohio, who has been very sick at the home of the Misses Carrie and Laura Reeves, returned to her home Thursday, prepara tory to a trip to southern Texas, in quest of renewed health. Ohio will be almost overrun with Hoosiers during the next three weeks. Four hundred native born "Buckeyes" hied themselves to Ohio from St. Joseph Marshall and Kosciusko counties on the excursion last Tuesday night. Conrad Bricker, of Fort Wayne, visited his old army comrade, Joseph Davis in this city this week. Both these old men served their country in the 5th Indiana battery and both are retired railroad men. Mr. Bricker was an engineer on the Pennsylvania for thirty years. Chas. Vink, who possesses a fine herd of Red Polled cattle, weighed his herd bull, Senator, this week and the scales registered him 1860 pounds. Hoosier Boy a yearling, weighed 1085 and a male calf five and a half months old, weighed 560. Bourbon News-Mirror. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rearick, of Muskingum county, Ohio, have been visiting a few days at the home of Christian Fisher in tills city and will visit relatives in Jasper county and at Hobart before returning home. It is their first visit here and they are much pleased with Plymouth and surrounding country. Mr. Rearrick may sell his farm in Ohio rr. rrchase a farm here.

CO.. NEW YORK.

Mrs. Charles P. Drumond of South Bend, is visiting in Plymouth. Miss Myra Vangundy is visiting relatives and friends at Tippecanoe. Mrs. Emma YanGilder and Mrs. Louisa Gotschaal are visiting at Mishawaka. Frank Cullison has moved into the Geiselman house corner of Michigan and Louisa streets. J. V. VanGilder and wife are visiting at YVooster, Ohio, where they resided over thirty years ago. Mrs. Charles Cooper of Bourbon, has returned home after a visit near Tyner at the home of her father, Samuel Tea. Mrs. William Kellar has returned to her home at Ora, after a visit in this citv.with Mrs. S. C. Hull. Ford Reynolds has returned to Chicago to complete his studies in the Northwestern Dental school. James J. Babcock, treasurer of Kosciusko county, Warsaw, Ind. changed cars here on his way to South Bend. What shall be said of a city administration that will sit calmlv bv and see vice flourish for two vears. Clyde, the four-months-old baby of Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Butcher jr., residing on West Jefferson street, died Tuesday and was buried in Oak Hill Thursday. The price of wheat, corn and oats seems to be slowly advancing. Europeans are buying large quantities of wheat and the export trade in oats is enormous. The Walkerton flouring mill, which has been idle for some time will be overhauled and put in running order by C. W. Jewett, a Michigan man who recently purchased it. Mrs. J. C. Woodrow has returned to her home at Kansas City after a visit of several weeks with her sister, Mrs. Cocper in Plymouth, her brother John Blain and other relatives and friends in Plymouth. Wednesday was school children's day at the Bremen fair and there was a very large attendance. All the schools of German township closed Tuesday for the remainder of the week. German township people are always loyal to Bremen and all its interests. I. A. South of Culver, stopped nere on nis wav nomc irom a hunting trip in what used to be the Kankakee marshes, but which like the marshes adjacent to Plymouth, have mostly been chang ed into productive farms. Over at Fort Wayne it has be come custom for candidates for office to say what they have to say through the columns of the newspapers. Some aspirants are content with a single 'column, while others occupy an entire page, artistically and attractive ly displayed. Rev. J. A. Groves, who has been preaching in Pennsylvania, was assigned to Lafayette, Ind., by teh late U. B. church confer ence. '"Jim" as we used to call him, has the reputation of a big preacher and he stopped in Mar shall county to visit old friends on his way to Lafayette. Metsker says Mayor Logan's splendid administration will be the Democratic platform for the election of city officers. But Metsker may crawfish when the fights are turned on just as he did when he seemed to think that Dave Sherrick was almost saint. At the city election November 7, all city officers and five councilman for the city will be chosen for a term of four years commencing Jan. 1, 1906. This will be the most important election ever held in Plymouth and :here should be a full attendance at the meetinT for organization at Kuhn's 4:all Friday evening.

The Gigantic success of our great $40,000.00 Upheaval sale has impressed the entire city and country as never before that Allman's "Busy Big Store" is the popular trading center. Friday and Saturday and during the remainder of the great sale, these wonderful bargains will be given out and greater crowds than ever will reap the benefit during this spirited sale of the most reliable Clothes, Shoes and Dry Goods. This mighty sale lasts until SATURDAY, October 21st. The crowds are growing bigger each day. Thousands of satisfied customers have visited this great mart and have been benefited thereby. DON'T DELAY! Be sure to be one of the t

next thousand. y That Are A 14 comccHT IW IT its noes or Kjj?Dcra r

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during this sale. Many new prizes given free each day. Every number sure to get a prize if brought before the last day. Car fare free with all purchases for cash of $8.00 or over. A beautiful Medallion free to all buyers purchasing $5.00 worth or more in our Great Economy Basement. Remember The Great Sale Lasts Until

It is announced that the Sunday excursion to Culver will continue through October. Plymouth can have a Carnegie library for the asking. Don't you think its about time to ask? Mrs. E. L. Gillam has return ed to her home at Portland, Ind., after a visit of several days with Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Shafer in this city. Judge Joseph F. Dally, a former judge of the Indiana 'supreme court died suddenly of apoplexy at his home at Bluffton, Monday. Mrs. L. A. Kloepfer has gone to Leavenworth, Kansas, to visit her son Carl and family. Carl is the teacher of German in the Leavenworht schools. Joseph Coar of Bourbon township, visited in Plymouth Tuesday. Mr. Coar was a teran of the civil war and one of Marshall county's best citizens. Mrs. Herman Bradtmiller and Miss Anna Souder, of Ft. Wayne who had been visiting a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Charles VanGilder, returned to their home Monday evening.

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BARGAINS

Making This Store the Talk of the Town

10 yards best Calico on earth for. .33c 2 spools best silk or best cotton Thread 5c Men's Shirts for dress wear worth up to $1.23, at. 39c Boys' 50c dress Shirts at 18c Special value in blue, blacl: or brown Brilliantine at 33c Special value in new, wide, changeable Silks at 77c 250 Shoes for Ladies or Gents at. $1.87 Ladies' $2.50 warm-lined or dress Shoes at $1.39 Best 25c Rubber Collars at 2 for. .25c $22.50 high class "Kuppenheimer" Suits for Men $18.00 The best and prettiest fitting suits in town. Try 'em on.

BRING IN

Saturday October

Bourbon is always lucky. The rain came just in time to settle the dust for the fair. William Frost of Bourbon, came up Saturday evening for a visit of a few days with his daughter, Mrs. John Huffer and family on the How farm west of town. William Holland, the well known nurseryman was in poor health several weeks during the later part of the summer, but he is now well again and made a business trip to South Bend Tuesday.. Attorney F. ,E. Lambert, the referee in bankruptcy, is a candidate for the republican nomination for mayor at South Bend. Mr. Lambert would make an ideal mayor for our thriving sister city. The Supreme Court of Germany has recently decided that lawyers are liable in damages to their clients for evil results consequent upon misleading advice. The German court evidently proceeds upon the theory that a lawyer cucht to know law.

WON

$12.50 Suits or Overcoats for Men at $7.95 100 Ladies' new all wool Skirts, worth up to $5.00, from $1.95 to $2.95 100 have already been sold. Best 25c Ingrain Carpet in the city 19c All T5c Shirt Waists at 48c Ladies' and Children's newest Furs from 59c up 10c quality Bleached Muslin 7c Wide silk Ribbon from 2c to 7c Extra quality toilet Soap, per cake lc Best Hooks and Efes at per paper lc 50 dozen school Kerchiefs at, each lc Extra quality fleece lined Calico Wrappers at 82c Men's or Boys' work Sox or black Sox 3c

YOUR NUMBERS

Christian Jacoby, sr. this week left a natural curiosity at Tanner's drug store. It is a kitten with two perfect bodies back of the front legs, but only one head and two front legs. It was dead when found. The type for the Culver Vidette, will be set this year on the Tribune Mergenthaler., f This, will greatly improve the appearance of this publication which is the official organ of the Culver Military Academy. It is reported that some of the Democratic bosses as well as most of the rank and file are opposed .to the renomination c Lacher for councilman, and they are trying to persuade him to go to Panama and work on the canal. Eighty-six indictments have been returned against Newton C. Dougherty, Peoria banker and former school superintendent, and the inquiry goes on. Erwin J. Schnebly, recently a clerk in Dougherty's bank, tells a start ling story, of crooked work in acconnection counts.4' ' with the school

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$12000.00 worth of the most reliable Clothing and Overcoats for Men, Boys and Children that is being rapidly sold from 25 to 33 1-3 per cent of the original prices. The prices will surprise you. Every piece of goods we sell is warranted to give perfect satisfaction. When we say we will we will. Money cheerfully refunded. 3 tables of new, reliable low-priced Remnants, the like of which you have never before seen. 2000 yards 7c Evansville L L Unbleached Muslin at, per yd 4j4c $1.00 mercerized Underskirts at... 69c 10c value in Shirting at l2z Children's 15c School Stockings 8c Big Bargains in Men's Underwear 19c Big Bargains in Ladies' fleece lined Underwear at 19c Ladies fine black Hose 7c 50c Umbrellas at 28c

21st

Big Salaries Bring Ruin. Although numerous expose ures have been made in connection with the insurance companies which has been exploited in the newspapers and produced widespread surprise and indignation, it will have to be admitted, when the smoke and dust of battle have drifted by, that only one absolutely disgraceful and indefensible crime has been committed. That is the distribution of the money of the policy-holders ! among the officers and their famJ ilies ostensibly in the form of salaries, but really without any adequate consideration, if any consideration at all. Probably every policy-holder in the world understands that insurance companies are able to pay their losses only by trading with their premiums. It is universally understood that if they did not invest their aggregate receipts in some renumerative way their policies would be worthless.This being admitted, the connection of the companies with bond-purchasing syndicates is

U4 1 ra rast of cjnema V9 J just as legitimate as any other investment, and if it has not always been done honestly it is not to be condemned wholesale, as if it were one gigantic fraud. There may have been much' dishonesty in the way these things were done, but they were not wrong on the face of them, and that is what can not be said of the salaries which the officers of the companies paid themselves and their families and dependents. Some of these salaries, ranging from $10,000 to $150,0OO, were, paid for doing nothing and came under the head of largess and not one of them was earned. That salaries of $100,000 and over are paid in this country is to be taken as a proof not that some men are of such transcendent talents that they are wortW that much but simply that the country is drunk with prosperity. Rockefeller says' he would willingly pay any man a salary, of $1,000,000 who would relieve him of his cares and labors, but in the nature of the case that can not be done.

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