Plymouth Tribune, Volume 5, Number 38, Plymouth, Marshall County, 28 June 1906 — Page 4

Zbc TObune. Only KpubLoan Newspaper in the County. HENDRICKS & COMPANY

OFFICE Bissell Building, corner Laporte and Center Streets. Entered at the Postotnce at Fly mouth, Indiana as second-class matter. Plymouth, Ind., June 28, 1906. Election Commissioner. County Chairman Hendricks has named Dr. F. M. Burket as Republican election commissioner for the election to be held November 6, 190G. While the election commissioners are not usually appointed and commissioned until about October 1, it is the duty of the county clerk to appoint the person recommended by the county chairman of the Democratic and Republican committees. The county clerk is a member and is the chairman of the board of election commissioners. One Democrat and one Republican are chosen to assist him. The affairs of the parties in this county are such that it will prob ably bo necessary for election commissioners to thoroughly fa miliarize themselves with the law and as the Republicans will have but one member of the board County Chairman Hendricks de cided to name Dr. Burket now in order to give him ample time to familiarize himself with the du ties that will be incumbent upon him. wt m . lhe election commissioners like the county chairman, get no pay for their services, but it is of the utmost importance that good men be chosen for this po sition. We have no doubt that the Democrat the county clerk names for this position will be a good man and the printing and distribution of the ballots and other nvork devolving uoon the com missioners will be done honestly and correctly. Dr. Burket is an old soldier: his first vote was cast for Republican candidates and he has voted that way eveV sine;," but socially and in business hi: knows no party. He is popular in all parties. Philadelphia justice .worked swiftly and to good purpose in the case of Kean the kidnaper. Within twentv-four hours after his arrest, when he was found in possession of the stolen child sentence was pronounced on him and he was on his way to prison Twenty years of hard labor a solitary confinement is the penal ty of his crime, an dit is none too severe. JH J9 JJ Cut loose now and build the canal," says President Roosevelt, and the American people will echo the advice far .and wide. That gigantic engineering problem has been the dream of nations for centuries and now the time has arrived for the beginning of the end to appear. It has required more congressional dillydally, in adition to the expenditure of untold wealth, to bring the matter to a conclusion than any other mechanical project the world has ever experienced. The final completion of the Panama cnal will stand as a great monument to American skill and Yankee genius. J3 J JH President Roosevelt's latest order for an octopus hunt by the department of justice is not confined to the Standard oil company. Attorney General Moody is instructed also, to go after the railroads and wherever he can obtain proof of the railroads granting rebates to the Standard oil or to any other concern, he avü! bring suit. .Some time ago the rertpd tn srniif for evidence alnnfl these lines. Not only will prosecutions be made under the Elkins act, which would merely assess a fine on the offenders, but also j under the anti-conspiracy statutes, which carry a jail sentence . An effort is under awy to pre; vent the hanging of Mrs. Agnet? Myers, who is under sentence -of death in Missouri. No effort is proposed to save Frank Hottman her companion in the crime, and as it was plainly shown in the trial that she was the instigator of the murder, and aided in perpetrating it, and that the man was really her tool, it is evident that the movement in her behaif is based on sickly sentiment and not on motives of justice. The murder was a particularly brutal one, the woman's husband being the victim, and there were no extenuating circumstances. If the man in the case js hanged the woman should meet the same fate. Jt J Dr. Lyman Abott says Socialism will come, but that the proper name for it will be fraternalism. "The age that is approaching," he says, "will be that in which desire to serve his fellowmen will actuate every one, when a corr.mon respect for every other man's rights will exist, when the Protestant will respect the creed of the Catholic, the Catholic the faith of the Protestant, the Jew the faith of the Gentile and the . Gentile that of the Jew." This is a Socialism that every man can accept. When it comes the Cottle dtiion it will create will be the long promised millennium and it

must be said that this happy per-jh

iod does not yet come within the range of vision of the average man.

WORK OF CONGRESS.

Some Good Laws Passed and Im portant Work Done. 9 Important measures extending ederal regulation and control lave been enacted at the first ses sion of the fifty-ninth congress, now rapidly drawing to a close. The railroad rate and the meat nspection bills will soon become aws and before adjournment of congress, both nouses iwll nave )iire food bills, which though dis similar in terms are both based on the same principle of federal control. It is tue present inten tion to trv and adjust these diferenc.es before adjournment. There has been no marked di vision on party lines in effecting he above results, the differences eing only as to ways and means rather than as to policy. Besides branching off into this lew field of legislative endeavor he present session pf congress us madet itself important in other ways, it nas added one and perhaps two new states to the mion and by so doing has dispos--d or iour territories, ureat re sults to the people are expected rom the removal of the tax on lenatured alcohol, and if predicions are fulfilled, heat light and xnver are to be supplied by alco;ol, made from the corn fields f the country, from sugar beets nd sugar cane,' from fruits and ther vegetation. By a deft turn f legislative points of view the iiestions which have perplexed 'ongress for some time regardng the Panama canal have been .cttled. The president may dig l lock canal as as fast as he leases. A joint resolution was greed to requiring canal supplies o be made of American manufacture. Congress has not dealt with tin foreign situation to any extent. n act making a much-needed reTganization of the consular and he . legislation affecting our colmial possessions was meagre and mimportant although tariff rcision for the Philippines received the attention and approval of he house and an act was passed evising the tariff collected by the Philippine government. A coinge act for the islands also was massed. Before discussing the number )f acts passed it is interesting to note that with all the strenuous wcrtions of an appropriations committee in the house with a new chairman Representative Tanwey it has been impossible "o hold appropriations down to mich less than $900,000,000 al though "econoqiy" was the watchword from the start. A requirement on the executive departments intended to bring the matter of appropriations directly, into the hands of congres s that contained in the legislat ive "appropriation act which makes it necessary for each de part to submit all its estimates for apropriation in the book of estimates sent to congress at the beginning of each session. Still another matter .of economy is the taking away from the fovcrnment clerk the right to secure a transfer to another department at a higher salary until he has served three years in the position he wishes to abandon. A strict accounting is hereaftei to be received, from all United States court clerks. A revelation that one such clerk had received emoluments amounting to $33(5 in one day brought about this pro vision. Although there has been in effort to prevent the enlarge ment of what is known as the per mancnt annual appropriations, this character of expense has in creased during the session to the extent of nearly $5,000,000, mak ing a total permanent annual apjpropriation Jof more then $140,President Well Pleased President Roosevelt has a right to feel "de-lighted" these pleas ant June days. With the rate bill passed, with the pure food bill virtually a law,-with meat inspec ticn a certainty and with the can ;d question settled, he can afford tp draw a long breath and give Iiis attention to other things. The rate bill is'.not in all respects as he would have it, and the pure food bill does not go as far as he would wish in some respects, probably, but each measure goes a long way toward achieving the desired result; and, being a sen sible man, he knows it is wise to accept the attainable cheerfully and trust to the better enlight enment of future Congresses to complete the needed reform. A Poor Man's Fortune. Daniel Lamont was a poo man when he entered President Cleveland's service as private secretary in 1884. When he died a few months ago he left an estate which has just been valued by appraisers at $5,G00,000. Doubt less he gained his fortune legitimately, or, perhaps, it would be ?etter to say legally; but it is cer tain he did not earn it by manual labor, by manufacturing or by the practice of his original pro fession of journalism. Modern money making has its mysteries. A Democratic Opinion. The action of the Democratic district committee in deferring the holding of the congressional convention until August 30 is worthy of the highest commendation. It is harmony with common sense and political wisdom. By that time the political situa tion will be much clearer than it now. and the convention will therefore be in a position to act deliberately and advisedly. South Bend Times.

A RICH MURDERER.

Crime in High Circles Seems Constantly Increasing. Harry Thaw, member of the Pittsburg family of millionaires and husband oj Evelyn Nesbit, the actress, shot and almost instantly killed Stanford White, an eminent architect of the firm of McKim, Mead & White, during the performance of the musical extravaganza, "Mamzelle. Champagne," on the roof of Madison Square Garden in New York on Monday night. Mr. White died before an ambulance could be called, and Thaw was arrested immediately after the shooting. The Madison Square Roof Garden, which had been closed for several years, was crowded with a fashionable audience. While Harry Short, who fills the principal comedy role in the piece was singing a comic song and the garden was echoing with the laughter snd applause of the audience a series of shots startled those' fn therear of the auditorium, and a rrfan in evening dress was seen to .fall across a table at which he wa sitting with a party of friends. V. . ' The man who had fired the shots fled, pistol in hand, ran toward the nearest exit, where he was seized and disarmed by po lice. Instantly the great audience was thrown into a panic and a wild stampede took place, dur ing which chairs and.5 tables were overturnsd and men .'and women fought with desperation to escape from the roof. The man who was shot was quickly identified, as Mr. White, nit his assailant was not positively known to be Thaw until after lie had been taken to the stationlouse. Persons, in front of the auditorium where the shooting took place say they saw a man fitting with a fashionably dress ed woman in the rear suddenly walk toward a table in front. The first intimation of trouble air.e, when, walking in front of his seated victim, the man exlaimed: "You've deserved this. You've ruined my home," and lrawing an automatic pistol fired hree shots. The first two took effect, but as the third was discharged the pis ol was Struck up by a fireman on lutv in the theater and the bullet went skyward. The woman who was sitting vith Mr. White sprang to her feet and rushed up to his assail int. who was struggling with the lreman, threw her arms about his neck exclaiming: "I'll stand by you." x The assailant was taken to the West Thirtieth street police sta Hon, where he described himself is a student of No. 180 Lafayette -lnce, Washington, D. C, but the oolire On searching him found -rds and "letters addressed to rIarrv Thaw of Pittsburg and latr his identity was fully estab lished: Sensational Charges Made. Late Saturday iternoon Danel M. Bechtel as receive of the lefunct American Mutual Life rnsurance company of Elkhart, lied an action against the officers of the corporation. William M. Barney, Samuel Stewart and R. C. Barney, in which sensational charges are made. , The receiver's suit ; also asks judgment for 150,000 against the defendants for money alleged to have been diverted. The circuit court judge immediately issued in order restraining each of the hree defendants, disposing of or in any way divesting themselves of the ownership of their respective equities in any property or it her holdings. The receiver alleges that the lefendants as officers and directors of the company conspired for the purpose of defrauding numerous creditors of and claimants against ths American Mutual and that in the pursuance of those conspiracies directed to be diverted from the treasury of the company the large sum of $SO,000. That amount was loaned" to the Esborn e-Col well company of Vew York, a corporation organized under the laws of South Dakota: The three officers of the American Mutual are accused of accepting securities that they knew, to be inadequate and of questionable value, and that at the tim- the loan was made the defendants knew that the firm was uncollectablc. Death of Mrs. Charte Zumbaugh Mrs. Charles Zumbaugh died .t her home five miles southwest ,)f Plymouth at 5 o'tlock Monlay. evening. The deceased had been a sufferer for the past several years, and her death was not i surprise. She was born in Summt county; Ohio, in 1819, being ".7 years old at the time of her leath. She leaves a husband and five -hildren, three sons, Hiram, of Chicago, Loran, of Washington täte, and Graver, of Mishawaka md two daughters, Mrs. John Profitt, of South Bend, and Miss Rose Zumbaugh, who is at home. She is the only sister of Mrs. Adim Holem of this city. Jacob Kreighbaum, who resides west of this' city, and George Kreighbaum of South Bend are her brothers. Besides these she leaves a host of friends to mourn her death. The funeral was held Wednesday forenoon at 10 o'clock at the Trinity church. WANTED Modern 9 room house. Leave word at this office. tf

MARRIED.

Whitmore Eckman. At 8 o'clock Wednesday evenng at the residence of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph ickman, 2514 South Michigan street, in the presence of about 40 relatives, Miss Etta Eckman vAis united in marriage with Mr. Chas. Herbert Whitmore. Rev. C. Claud Travis, pastor of Grace Methodist Episcopal church, off iciating. The guests from away were Mr. md Mrs. C. R. Leonard, Frank Leonard, Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Southworth, Frank Southworth, Miss Mamie Southworth, Plymouth, Ind; Mr. and Mrs. George Young, Miss Grace Young, Spokane, Wash., Mrs. Lyde Van Buskfrk, Master Louis Van Buskirk, Bay City, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Whitmore will ie at home after July 10, at 1422, Michigan Avenue. South Bend Times. North Hume. At the residence of Dr. Hume jn South Michigan street wereunited in marriage Tuesday, June i, l'JOO, at three o'clock p. m. iarl M. North and Marguerite Elizabeth Hume. lhcse two ,oung people are among the best novvn to residents of Plymouth. The groom is the son of Mr. und Mrs. A. C. North. He has .ived almost his entire life in this ;ity, having completed the course jf study in the Plymouth High ichool and graduated with first lonors in 1SUG. He taught school n .Marshall county, in Columbia City, Indiana, graduated from abash college m 1901, and from McCörmick Theological Seminary in May of the present year. The bride is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. A. C. Hume. She likewise graduated from our high school in 1899. Later she taucht n the schools of New Baltimore, Jhio ; Syracuse, Ind., and attend ed college four years in Oberlin college. The marriage ceremony was erformed in the sitting room of .he residence of the bride's par-,-nts. The room was decorated vith festoons of cut-leaved birch aVes. At three o'clock the two oting people entered the room .vhile the selection "O Promise Me" was being played by Mrs. ngie Cook and "Misses Fay and ansy Hess. Standing in 'the astern end of the room, before a ack-ground of leaves and flowers md ferns, the Presbyterian mari?e ceremony was pronounced iy Rev. J. H. Mac Lane of Chicago, a seminary friend of the groom. The young people, left on the ix o'clock Pennsylvania train for Kllendale, North Dakota where Mr. North will be pastor f the Presbyterian church. ! Certainly the best wishes of all Plymouth people will fallow them. The guests froirf Out of town were i Mrs. Oliver Chase, Miss ClifTe Xash, Mr. and Mrs. James O. Parks, Rev. J. H. 'Mac Lane, Mrs. Frank Glcistine, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gleistine, Mr. and Mrs. George Mann, of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Boyd. Mrs. W. B. Outcalt of Salt Lake City; Mr. md Mrs. A. N. Hume and son of Urbana. Illinois: Mr. and Mrs. Brown Bvers and family of Gar--ett. Ind.', Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Calwell. Miss Elva Miles of Syra cuse, Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Nicoles. Mr. and Mrs. Will Tank of Walkerton: Dr. and Mrs. L. Tohnson, Miss Louie Borton. Mr. Wm. Erwin, Lewis Erwin, Jr. of Bourbon, Ind., Miss Maybelle eelye. Kansas City, Mo., Miss Hinstine Mac Lennan, Toulon Til., Mr. Miller Nichols and Miss Fern Nichols of Omaha, Nebras ka, Madge Taylor of Canton, O.. fay Nash. Limaville, O., Miss Bertha Sloan and niece Mary Elizabeth Sloan, Osborne, O.. Miss Minnie Snell, Argos, Ind. Na Booze for Veterans. When the sundry civil bill con sideration had reached , the can teen question in the senate Nel son moved to strike out the pro viso prohibiting canteens at the soldiers' homes. He said that most of the inmates are old men of fixed habits and many of them addicted more or less to drink; that the men would seek the vil est slums if they could not get liquor within the home precincts, with results far more disastrous He read several statements, one from Archbishop Ireland, testify ing to the improved condition tin der the regulated sale of beer and wine at the homes. On motion of Senator Hale the motion was laid on the table, and a cast iron anti canteen clause went into the bill: " Living Ex-Governors. Ohio has three living ex-governors. They are Joseph B. Foraker, now a United States senator; James E. Campbell and Myron T. Hcrrick. Four have died during the past five or six years: Wm. McKinley, Chas. Foster, Asa S. Bushnell and George K. Nash. All of Indiana's ex-governors arc dead but one, Winfield T. Durbin. f .j i.i i ii u U II SCOTTS EKUßJON rat hump back ttraichL ntä.r M uui ;8 a short h long, but it feeds soft bore and heal diseased bone and Is imo. the few genuine means of recovery in rickets and bone consumption. Send for free umpl. SCOTT BOWNK, Chemists, -r iearl Mreet, New York. 50c. od iiKM; all druggist.

p

in

Is It Your Own Hair?

Do you pin your hat to your own hair? Can't do it? Haven't enough hair? It must be. you do not know Aycr's Hair Vigor ! Here's an introduction! May the acquaintance result fa a heavy growth of rich, thick.ßlossy hair! And we know you'll never be gray. I MnV that Arer'i FUlf Vltfor 1 tlie mntt troiirterfiil lilrfrower tht wm ever maile. I have it f.r wime ttru and I i nn truthfull that I Hfi nrtv i.led wttli it. I 1 i rlrfnllr ! mn1 It n i uplendHl iirepration." Minn V. liltocK. Wyli j.da b- .T. C. A vr Oo , Lowall, Kuia. SARSAPAE1LLA. PILLS. CHERRY PECTORAL ijers GUARANTEED GALL CURE. Ever have some one hit you on a boil? That gives you an idea bow a saddle or collar feels to a horse that has galls. Apply our Guaranteed Gall Cure and let the horse rest a few days and you can cure any case of galls; Of course it lakes some little time to effect a permanent cure, 1 ut you can work the animal after the first few days. Guaranteed Gall Cure is göod for scratches, cuts and optn sores of any kind. If it fails your money back. Price 25 cents. The Peoples' DriiQ Store. Chat. Reynolds, Prop. PLYMOUTH The Pure Food Bill. Raymond Patterson telegraph ing from Washington to the Tri bune, says that in attempting to pass the pure food bill Congress has proceeded along the now fa miliar ' constitutional grant of power to 'regulate interstate and foreign commerce. There is ab solutely nothing to compel a manufacturer of any article of food or drink, whatever it be, to idmit a.. government inspector to his factory. Neither is it within the power of the Federal Govern ment to punish him for adulter ing the things he sells, for deceiving the public by fradulent labels, or for the more petty swindling involved in the giving of short weight. All these things of neces sity must be , regulated by local laws and local authorities. It is only when a manufacturer or dealer seeks to send an article from one State into another that he comes under the jurisdiction ot the national government. Congress has the power to regu late only interstate commerce. It can absolutely forbid the trans portation from one State into another of any article at any time. In this way tht pure food bill, which has been before Congress for years and years, aims to regulate the manufacture of products of food and drink and medicine by prohibiting their use in interstate commerce unless they are 'lonestly made, properly labeled and of full weight. ' If every State had a satisfactory and uniform pure food law, and if the local- authorities in every county and city would interpret the law in the same way vid execute it honestly, there ould be no necessity whatsoever for a national pure food law. The bill now under considera'ion in the House, if enacted into aw, will not interfere in the slightest particular with the statutes of any State except so far as those statutes interfere, with interstate commerce. The right of supervision and of original inspection over the products of any factory, distillery or chemical house is reserved to the State. It may have inspection or not, as it sees fit. Consequently, in the absence of proper laws or honest officials, or a healthy public sentiment, it will still be possible" for a manufacturer in the city of Chicago, for :nstance, to poison his home consumers. But he will not be allowed to send his poisonous articles to Milwaukee to kill oft: persons there. If he does, he will be punished by United States law, provided this bill ever gets on the statute books, which is quite another question. Due to President Roosevelt. About every really- meritorious measure put through either house of the present congress is due to lie persistent and untiring efforts of President Roosevelt. Absolutely nothing coming within that category emanated originally from the legislative department of the government. In every instance the president had to take the initiative. And that was not sufficient. He had to push matters along, else nothing worth having would have been achieved. Fxjuth Bend Times. Convention Postponed. The Democratic Congressional Committee met in Plymouth, Friday, June 22, and postponed their congressional convention from July 12, to August 30. It was the opinion of leading Democrats that a better campaign could be made in two months than in four months. If you have not already done so subscribe for the TRIBUNE for a friend during the campaign.

Strike While tne iron is Hot Buy goods while you can ob

tain them at less than it cost to make them. For the past week we have had our store packed to its utmost capacity with eager buyers and they have purchased thousands of dollars worth of his high-class merchandise at less than actual cost of manufac ture and as the cheaper goods were first to go, we have again USED THE KNIFE and again cut the price on some of the stock that had already been cut on, far below cost which makes them as low as 17Ctc. on the Dollar Never before in America's his tory was there such an enormous number of bargains offered under one roof. Our stock which last Wednesday filled our building to overflowing has been reduced to such an extent that we are able to bring our entire stock of TIN, GLASS & CHINA WARE, from the basement upon the main floor which will be sold at almost any price. Our stock although smaller is still complete in every depart ment and all must be sold. Dry Goods, Carpets, Curtains, Lino leums also Ladies and Misses Ready-to-wear garments such as Skirts, Suits, Coats, Jackets, Cravenettes, Capes, Shawls and Mackintoshes, are all included in this legitimate going out of business sale at prices that were never heard of before in Indiana. If you have notdjoujrht. come. buy now; if you have bought, come, buy again, for the crowds become greater as the bargains become better known and Ply mouth s greatest of all sales con tinues with unabated success. Sale now in full blast. Below we quote a few of the many bar gains we offer and there are thousands of others we cannot mention here: LADIES' AND MISSES ' COATS, SUITS, SKIRTS. Ladies' Tailor-made Suits of t finest colored Cheviots, -actually . worth $18, sale price $3.C3 Ladies' High Grade , Suits, by the finest builders, effectively trimmed, newest designs and latest patterns, all sizes worth $22.50, at. .$3X5 Misses' High Grade Walking Skirts latest spring cloths ' and styles, all shades, all lengths, $2.93, 3.98, 4.98 1 $1X3 Positively worth from $5 to $10 and remember, 1000 other garments that we cannot mention here that will be sold at less than wholesale cost. Ladies and Misses' Heavy:. Winter Box Coats, worth $12, will go at $1.C3 Ladies' and Misses Tourist j Coats, extra long, very 1 1 swager anu up-to-aate, was $15 and $7.50, now $7.48 and .. ...$3.C3 Ladies' and Misses' Rain- ' Proof Coats, sell everywhere for $10, now go for.$l.C3 Ladies' Plush Capes, finest quality, sold for $12.00 sale price .' .$2.33 Ladies' Long English Walking Coats.very latest styles ! and newest shades and patterns $1G.50 quality,' sale price $6.98; $12.50 quality , sale price at 4X3 Ladies' and Misses' Warranted Rain Proof Cravenettes v that sold from $G to $18, ' sale price $2.98, $4.18, $6.98 $7.87 and .p.C3 DRESS GOODS, SILKS; 75c Waisting Silks .C. ...20c 75c Foulard Dress Silks 39c 75c Egyptian Dress Silks.... 44c 75c Short End Satins .37c $1.00 Taffeta, 36 in. wide 74c VELVETS. R00 Silk Velvets, 18 in. wide 29c 75c Fancy Waist silk Velvet.. 39c WOOLENS. 75c. Sicilian 54 in. wide, all shades ..49c 75c Silk spot Eolienne ......49c 75c Colored Serges and . , - Henriettas 48c 35c Dress Goods ..18c 36 in. half Wool Dress Goods 11c NOTIONS. , Pins, per paper ...,1c Thread, per spool ... 2c Dressing Combs '..'..4c Embroideries 3c 4-Ply Linen Collars .....4q Laces, 3 in. wide! .......... .3c Handkerchiefs, Ladies ... ....lc Silk and Satin Ribbons .lc 5c Skirt Binding., per yd 2c 50c Dress Trimming, per yd. . 9c 10c and 15c Ribbons ........3c 21 in. Suit Cases $3.00 ....$1.69 26 in. Suit Cases $3.25 $1.75 28 in. Suit Cases $3.50. . , . . .$1.98 $1.50 Telescope .79c $1.50 Hand Bag 79c Kloopfop'o Now York Storo, Plymouth, Ind. New Steamer Welcomed. Several thousand people witnessed the arrival at Michigan City Friday of the new passenger steamer, Theodore Roosevelt, which left the yards of the Toledo Shipbuilding Company Wednesday morning. The boat was built to run between Michigan City and Chicago. She can carry 3,000 passengers and her crew numbers ' 69 men. The steamer cost $300,000 and her speed is twenty-five miles an hour.

1 IT'S SHEER

i!) i'i Q ? Q Q Q ff iii e i!) Q ü üi Ö x k If The Price

Stvcn styles nobby fins vcrsteds120 suits m all some of the finest fabrics thit eyer lift Enrr.d's shores. They ere mostly grays the shade that has the ßo this season. Amcnrjthtm we hive also placed some fire blocks and blue serges. We show thtm ia Single end Double Created Styles end et the gtr.rrel price of

$lO.OO

They ought to I00V good to ycu." Thtce mils ere well worth from $12.50 to $13.00. They ere ell h-ncJ-made, broad, concave shoulders made graceful!) full hair cloth front with big lapels end full ivlz cr center vents Coats cut abcut 31 inches in length. It's Really a $15 Suit ; - with a $10 Price. Vc ere maKlng Great Special Sale ca Haa's end Boys' Fins Dress Shoes ia Patents, Gun Ttetal end Velours In ell tha latest ttyles Oxfords cr.d Full Top Shoes. Come In end let us show you "Thit's tha Or.!y Vcy.M

JLaimer r;9 : r.v VC'CGGGGGGGO: - NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT No, 12477. : State of - Indiana, Marshall County, ss: In the Marshall Circuit Court, September term, 190G. Philip Hursh vs Ney Mikels et al complaint to quiet title. The plaintiff in the above entitled cause, by E: C. Martindale, his attorney, has filed in my office his complaint against the defendants ; and, it appearing by the affidavit of a competent person that the defendants Ney Mikels, Drayton V.B.Skinner and Amy G.Sklnner are non-residents of the State of Indiana: . They are therefore heretjy notified of the firing a'nd pendency of said complaint against them, and unless they apear and answer thereto on or before the calling of said cause on Monday the 17th day of September, 1006, being the first judicial day of the September term of said Court, to be begun and held at the Court House in Plymouth, Marshall County, Indiana, on the 3rd Monday of September, A. D. 100G, said complaint and the matters and things therein alleged will be heard and determined in their absence.

Witness, the Clerk and seal oflM.of the southwest i of section

said Court, at Plv (seal) mouth, Indiana, this 25th day of June, 190G. John R. Jones, . Clerk Marshall Circuit Court. E. C. Martindale, Plaintiff's Atty. Petition of Bankrupt for his Discharge. In the matter of Marvin J. Ranck, Bankrupt. No. 2148 in Bankrupt. District of Indiana, ss: On this 20th day of June, A. D. 1906 on reading the petition of the bankrupt for his discharge. It is ordered by the Court, That a hearing be had upon the same on the 20th day of July A. D. 190G, before said Courts at Indianapolis, in said District, at nine o'clock in the forenoon, and that notice thereof be published twice n the Plymouth Tribune a newspaper printed in said district, ind that all known creditors and other persons in "interest may appear at the said time and place and show cause, if any they have, why the prayer of the said petitioner should not be granted. And it is further ordered by the Court, that the Clerk shall send by mail to "all known creditors copies of said petition and this order addressed to them at their places of residence as stated. Witness, the Honorable Alben B. Anderson, Judge of said Court, and the seal (seal) thereof at Indianapolis, in said District, on the 20th day of June A. D. 1906. Noble C. Butler, v2 Clerk. Easily Won. Plymouth won an easy game from Kokomo Sunday by a score of 1G to 3. The home boys would have shut out the visiting team had it not been for a few errors. Kokomo has a salaried team and this was the first game they have lost out of fourteen games played. Plymouth has a fast team and the management should get some games with teams that would make it interesting for the fans. Notice. Having a contract for 800 tons of brake shoes, which require scrap iron in large quantities, we are in a position to purchase all the cast iron scraps in this county at $10.00 a ton, cash on delivery, at our temporary plant. Monarch Iron Works. Give the Tribune , a trial.

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is Q (,) Q Q n 'j Q (.. n V) V) c (J (.) o. (') o (.) o n t'j C) x" ( r l . - u Don u re t The Good CIctfics Store "of courc u , v) D2GGGO: - DiCCOCuö: c. NOTICE OF DITCH SALE. State of Indiana, Kosciusko County, ss. . In Circuit Court No. 9G19. Notice is hereby iriven that on Saturday, August 4, 1906, at cne o'clock p. m. and from day to day until sold, at the office of the Drai iage Commissioner of Kosciusko County, Indiana, in the court house at Warsaw, Indiana, I will receive sealed bids for the construction of what is known as the Eli J. Miller Ditch, No. SG49, located in Elkhart and Kosciusko Counties, Indiana, and described as follows: Ms in Ditch commences 380 feet north and 20 feet west of the Southeast corner of the southwest l4 'of section 34, township 35 north, range 4 east, running thence in a 'general southerly course to where it ends 8o3 feet south and 527 feet west from the southeast corner of the northwest of the northwest of section 3, township 34 north, range 4 east, being 7000 feet of open ditch. Also Arm 1 of said ditch commencing 30 rods north of the southwest corner of the southeast H, township 35 , north, rantre 4 east, running thence in a southeasterly course to4 where it enters he main ditch at station 3 plus 0 and ends being 500 feet 12 inch tile, 930 feet 1G inch tile. Also Arm No. 2, of said ditch ommenttng 50 rods north and 20 ods east of the southwest corner f th southeast x of the southvest l of section 34, township 55 north, range 4 east, running thencV in a southeasterly course to where it enters Arm No. 1, at station 5 and ends, being 440 feet of 14 inch tile. Said ditch and arms, have been divided into stations of 100 feet each, and specifications can be seen at the ofiice f said drainage rAmmicctAfiAr lilt liiooiwilvl Any person to whom a contract is let will be required to give a 'ond with K wo approved free hold sureties for the performance of said work and that he or they will oay all damages occasioned by the nonfulfillment of said contract. The right to reject any and all ids is reserved by the commisiohers in charge of sai,d work. .Samuel C. Funk, Construction Commissioner. NO CURE, IIO PAY. 'ovr The People's Drrj Ctcrj Zill Hyomei, the Guxntted Cure fcr Cctzrrh. The "People's Drug Store has an nusal offer to make to our readers. ne that will be of the greatest value o many. For some years The People's Drug tore has been watchnig the results rom the use Of Hjomei, a treatment fcr Catarrh that cures by Sreathing medicated air. absolutely .vithout any stomach dosing. Th esults have been so univ'"siU7 successful that they, feel justified in mikng a public offer to treat the' worst ase of catarrh in Plymouth with the mderstanding that if Hyomei does 10t cure, the treatment will cost absolutely nothing. People who have spent larje suns with catarrh specialists, deriving but little benefit, or the many who have swallowed stomach remedies in the vain hope of curing catarrh, have expehcnceU almost immediate relief fror.i the use of Hyomei, while the continued treatment for a short time, has resulted in a complete and lasting cure. The regular Hyomei outfit costs only one dollar, and consists of a neat pocket inhaler that can be carried in the purse or vest-pocket, a medicine dropper, and a bottle of Hyomei. If this is not enough for a cure, extra bottles of Hymei can be obtained- for 50 cents. The People's Drug Store guarantee a cure, if Hyomei is uaed in accordance with directions, or they will refund the money.