Plymouth Tribune, Volume 5, Number 43, Plymouth, Marshall County, 2 August 1906 — Page 5

GRANITE WARE. - The old fashion kind. The best yet A complete new stock at bottom prices. Call a 1 see at V - f Bucirs Gash Hardware

LOCAL NEWS . . Albert Wright and family have moved from Etna Green to Denver, Ind. Mrs. George Xraige is reported street. The immense shipments of wheat and hogs this week have caused a decline in prices. Attend the auction sale of vehicles and i implements at Hess, Grube & Harley's Saturday. Mrs. Mary Morrison left .for Denver, Colorado, Tuesday morning for a visit Qf a month. 1 . , Miss Mariha McFadden is taking a course of instruction' in the South Bend; commercial school. Mrs. F. P. McFadden has ( gone to Ashland, Ohio, for a visit of. a month in that city and vicinity. ' Mrs. John Burns cf Lafayette, is visiting her mother, Mrs. Reuben Sisk and other relatives in this city. Mrs. Peter Casmier .visited over Sunday and a few days this week with Mrs. James Kleckner in this city. Miss Susie Hillsmaa went to Columbia City Monday evening for .a visit of a week at the home of her brother. The auxiliary of the Eastern ' trr will have a business meeting at tr.e chapter rooms at 2:30 tomorrow atternoon. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Fishburneihave returned to Mishawaka after a. visit of several davs with relatives at - Donaldson. : : , A famine due to the failure anfl destruction of crops in several provinces of Russia adds to the horrors of general strikes. State central committees of both parties in several states seem to be doing more to help the opposing parties than their own. i Mrs. C M. Swisher and Mrs. Mc Murray of Medaryville, have returned home after visiting and transacting business in this city. Miss Ethel Lackey of .Minnesota, has gone to Rochester- to fisit alter a visit of two weeks in Plymouth, at the home of Royal Lackey. FOR SALE My residence- corner Garro and Center streets. Time given if desired. Also household goods, tu friaug w3 Mrs. J. U. Wil'-unison. The hrst dollar. Mr. Sage made when a boy he saved. Compound the Sage rate of interest on mat dollar for eighty years and see how easy it is to get rich. Read Ed Gam's affidavit" in this paper. He and Goodrich ais afraid of the good people of Marshall couney. The bolters have no use for honesty in politics. Miss Emma Koontz is away on a two-weeks vacatoin. She will visit Fort Wayne and Cleveland but expects to spend most of her .vacation at Toledo, Ohio. Miss Kate O'Brien arrived" from Iowa at noon Tuesday to help care for her grandmother, Mrs. Ed O'Brien, who is seriously ill at .her home on South' street A Philadelphia court has decided that a love letter can not be probated as a will. It is clear that in such productions the soitnd and disposing mind is entirely absent. Senator Parks and wife, Mrs. Dr. Loring and her brother, Mr. Frank Wilson of North Dakota, and Miss Lucretia Loring went to- Winona Tuesday to spend a day and heaV the Thomas orchestra which .will be there for ten day?. Miss Ruth Hostetter, -who has been visiting at L. J. Carton's on William street, two weeks, returned to her home at Millersburg, Elkhart county, Tuesday, accompanied by De Vere Wise, who will visit at Millersburg a few days. Work on the foundation rof the riew foundry at the west end f Laporte street is progressing rapidly and the foundation will prolbly be completed this week. The first lady visitors were Mesdarnes Salesbury, Stiger, Crawford and Luella J luff. The world is full of want, but of actual starvation there is little; Wwit and need are by no means synonymous."v3c is a nice question whether tfK?are not more people who have "more than is really good for them than people who have? not enough. f ' Wilbur Glenn .Voliva was. indorsed for the position off general overseer of the Christian Catholic Church t Zion City Sunday; night by a vote that was almost unanimous. Judge Landi- of the federal court .will ai once be notified of the wishes of the former followers of Dowie, and it is thought that he will appoint Voliva general oy'erseer without de-

D. A. Bradley of Culver, is visiting his daughter, Mrs. Al Porter in this city. Mrs. Ernest Castleman and her two little sons are visiting at Atwood this week. Miss Edna Crum has returned to South Bend, after a visit with friends in this city. i. Seneca Primley is here from Eauclaire, Mich., visiting nis son and other relatives. Auction sale of wagons, buggies and implements at Hess, Grube and Harley's Saturday. Mrs. A.: Becker and daughter will leave for Philadelphia, August 9," for an extended visitMrs. J. S. Crowder and children arrived this noort . from a three week's visit at Waveland, Ind. Misses Grace and- Lillie Elmers

of Chicago, are visiting Miss Theresa Hendricks in this city.Mrs. A. H. 'Massena has returned to Warsaw after a visit of a few days with the family of her son in Plymouth. In Pulaski count where Brother-in-law Riddick lives, they seem to have doubts about his being a Republican. ' , Mrs. Charles Parsons of Bourbon, stopped in Plymouth Wednesday cn her way to St. Joseph, Mich., to visit relatives. Mrs. Rebecca Chaney will leave for , F.stavan, Canada, in about ten days to visit her son, Frank Chaney and family. The ice cream social given by the Royal Neighbors was well attended and all present spent a very enjoyable evening. A large number of people from out of town are here to attend the Cleveland Sheppard wedding. Their name will be given later. . Mrs. Agnes Crowder of Richmond, Va., arrived Tuesday evening for a visit with her sons, J. S. and W, R. Crowder in this city. ' The 'postoffice at Greenfield, Ohio,! was robbed Monday night of $4,000 in stamps and $1,500 in cash. The safe, was blown to pieces. Mrs. Ed. O'Brien, who has been a resident of Plymouth fifty years, is lying at the point of death at her home on West South street. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel A. Frevert of Nappanee, are visiting for a few days at the home of Mrs. Frevert's father, F. M. Welsh of this city. There will be only one Republican ticket, in Iowa and Cummins will be at the head of it. The state committee yielded after a fight of two days. The rain last Thursday and Saturday gave the corn, pickles, potatoes, and tomato"? a big boost and almost made a new crop of blackberries and huckleberries. John Astley, the well known tinner, who has been enjoying a vacation of ten days in this city and county, returned to his work at Elkhart Wednesday. The Iowa bosses in the Republican state committee were compelled to back dowTi and allow the renomination of Governor Cummins, and only one Republican ticket. i - The old choir which sang at the M. E. church thirty-five years ago of which Emanuel Price was choirister, will furnish the music next Sunday at the old people's service. Commencing today very male em: ploye in the South Omaha packing houses will wear white duck suits, fresh' each morning, and 3,000 dresses have been provided for the worna. Mrs. Jadob Hoham went to Argos Wednesday to visit relatives and to bid farewell to her brother, William Thompson and family, who are returning to their home at Springfield, Ohio. Mesdarnes Houghton, Brewer and Baxter of this city and Mrs. Dr. Vaughn of Hammond, who came here to attend the Baxter golden wedding, visited at Bourbon Wednesday. Jesse Miller of North township, has 100 acres of good wheat, 90 acres of corn and 30 acres of oats. There is not much danger that the family of the old Republican musician will starve this year. ' There are a great many evidences in every state that the people do not propose to submit quietly to the absolute dictation of political bosses. The result of the Iowa convention is a reminder of this. Mrs. Elmer Werntz went to South Bend Wednesday to attend the funeral of James Meek, a former resident of Plymouth, who died of consumption at South Bend, Sunday evening, aged 22 years. With President Roosevelt pitching hay, Vice President Fairbanks drinking buttermilk and Speaker Cannon attending a thrashing, it is up to Secretary Taft to do something in the rural line or declare himself out of the 1903 handicap.

Hess, Grube & Harley will con

duct a large public sale of imple ments and vehicles Saturday. There "will be a meeting of the Base Ball association this evening at 8 o'clock at Harry Unger's office. All persons interested are requested to be present. Next Tuesday and Wednesday the Ottoes of Logansport play the Plymouth ball team in this city. The Logansport team is one of the best in the state and two great games are expected. The new feed barn on the old mill site east of Hess, Grube, & Harley's hardware store, is now open for business. There is a waiting room for ladies and another for men. The ladies have a place to rest before and after doing their shopping. A tent has been erected just west of the Tribune office and John W. Clarke of Michigantown, will commence a series of old fashioned gospel meetings Thursday evening to teach people the way to heaven. Admission free and everybody invited. The Rochester Presbyt'erian church has been without a pastor since Rev. George A. Hill resigned and went ot Alma, Mich., last May. Last Sunday the church extended a call to Rev. Arthur M. Smith of De catur, and it is believed he will accept. T. F. Chapman who was seriously burned by an explosion of powder while firing a cannon on the Fourth, is slowly recovering though is still confined to his home owing to the injury of his eyes from which he suffers considerable pain. Argos Reflector. . . Plymouth won easily overthe Logansport team at ihe-lai? grounds Tuesday. The-score was 13 to 3 in favor of Plymouth. The majority of the Plymouth team were Plymouth boys, which proves that home talent is often better than that which is imported. Mrs. John Ashley and her two children and her mother, Mrs. Stuck, passed through Plymouth Friday on their . way to Grovertown to attend the funeral of little Vadas Ashley who died at South Bend Wednesday evening and was taken to Grovertown for burial. News comes from Laporte that Simon Wile, well known in Plymouth is in a critical condition. Mr. Wile is one of the old-time Democratic leaders of Laporte county, and one of the few survivors of the old guard. He is suffering with a complication of diseases. If Goodrich and Garn have as much sense as Iowa Republicans, they will recognize Hendrickj as chairman and restore Republican harmony in Marshall county. It certainly looks bad to see such men become bolters' every time things do not exactly suit them. The Argos Reflector says Jim Gregory, an all-around bad man of the Bearss neighborhood in Fulton county licked his mother and sisters Friday and chased them with a revolver, firing a number of shots at them because they disagreed with him on some trivial matter. During a storm at South Bend, Mrs. W. M. DeLyton, was struck by an electric bolt, which burned her clothing and blistered her back, but beyond a few bruises caused by a fall she was not materially, injured. Her companion, Mrs. Grace Powell, was rendered unconscious by the shock. James Wilson of near Maxinkuc-1 kee, received a broken leg and some internal injuries in the runaway Sun day ne?r the lake. Mr. Wilson jump ed from his wagon when the team started to run and the bone of his right leg was- found protuding through the flesh. Thursday was the seventieth anniversary of Thomas M. Berlin of Rutland and an enjoyable birthday surprise was arranged by his children and there was a happy family reunion. Mr. Berlin is one of the pioneers of Marshall county and has resided "near Rutland for fifty years. Prof. Zueblin, of Chicago University, who was reporte'd as favoring probationary marriage, denies the charge with some degree of feeling He asserts, however, that he does believe that engagements publicly announced and ot not less than six months' duration, enabling the partics to become better acquainted with each other, would promote happier marriages and result in fewer divorces. A horse being driven by Mrs. J. F. Summers, was hit by lightning and instantly killed in Whitley county on Saturday. The animal's head and shoulders were badly mutilated. The stroke cut a large hole in the head, tore out the teeth and . then cut its way through the horse's shoulder laying open the flesh, which burned and crisped until the flash ended by running down the horse's leg and into the ground. Pickpockets are thought to be operating in Warsaw and Winona Lake and within the past week half a dozen ladies have missed their watches and have failed to locate any ot them after diligent search and advertising When the first few were lost it was thought that they had merely been mislaid and would be found, but as none of tac watches have been located and the losses are becoming more frequent it is felt certain that pickpockets are operating. The editor who can please every one is not suited for this earth, but is entitled to wings. Human nature is so constituted that some of our readers would like to have us feed them on scandal some would like to have us tell the unvarnished truth about them, while others would kill us if we did. It is a comforting thought to the editor to know that the Lord did not please every one while on earth. We labor hard to entertain and please our subscribers but that we should occasionally fail is to be expected, but you will always find us willing to be forgiven. Exchange. . ' ;

Miss Bessie Humphrey is spending

a" few days at Peru. Mrs. Fannie Ruth of Chicago, is visiting in this city. Commissioners meet in regular session next Monday. The weather bureau promises rain tonight or tomorrow. Fred Bonham has gone to Winona for a visit of a few daysPearl Zeiders is visiting friends at Bourbon j until Saturday. Mrs. L. L- Shafer is. visiting relatives and friends at Argos. Miss . Gertrude Soice returned Tuesday evening from Buffalo, N. Y. Frank B. Carey is doing Sunday school work in Dekalb county this week. FOR RENT Flat in Hoham block over barber shop. Enquire of S. N. Stevens. Miss Osie Goddard of Chicago, visted her aunt, Mrs. Gilbert, and her cousin, Mrs. Harry M. Bennett, in this city Saturday and Sunday and went from here to Argos to visit her father. The Columbia, the iOO-foot airship which comes to Winona Lake on August G to spend the week, is regarded as 'the most successful monster of itsi kind that has ever been made since, menjbegan to think of the problem of aerial navigation. Mrs. J. P. Carroll and children have returned to their home at Indianapolis, after a visit of three weeks here with her brothers, Oliver and Milton Soice, her sisters, Mrs. Harry Buck, and Mrs. Hogarth, her sister at Elkhart and other relatives and friends in this vicinity. A dispatch from Winamac says: Jacob Sturdevant, of Porter county, who was arrested two months ago for robbing the Denham postoffice of $800, confessed that Dr. Charles Downing and Edward Conaway, of North Judson, assisted him in the robbery. Both men were arrested last ' Friday by a deputy United States marshal and taken to .Indian apolis. Brooke "Bowers and John Kinney on rural route 1 had letters' adver tised last week and Larkin L. Ev ans on route 7 has a letter advertised this week. Such errors occur so often at the Plymouth postoffice that we never call attention to them un less requested to do so. During the past four years more than fifty letters for people known to almost everybody in Plymouth have been advertised. The San Jose scale has invaded Elkhart county, and farmers and fruit growers are subjecting their fruit trees to close daily inspection, under the direction of H. H. Swain, of near South Bend, assistant state entomologist and also president of the Indiana Horticultural society. Fruit trees owned by Harry Sand ers that were affected, were burned, and other trees are being sprayed with an emulsion cf whale oil, soap kerosene. r Two of Russell Sage's nephews, one in Indaina, the other in Troy, N. Y., express themselves as satisfied with the bequests made to them. Both are poor men and $25,000 is to them a fortune.;,,' The relatives who are talking of contesting the will will do so on the ground that he was not mentally competent to dispose of his estate. If he had left each of them a million they would testify unani mously and enthusiastically to his sanity. Farmers in the north part of La porte and Porter counties have been greatly discouraged lately because of an insufficiency of rain says he Michigan City Dispatch. Late crops arc perishing, from drought. Corn and potatoes are drying up, especial ly on the higher grounds, and the soil is like ashes. Unless, a. heavy rain comes soon the-e will not be a half crop, and' rain at this time would save some of the corn and potatoes. An old soldier's reply to one of the bolters was as follows: We opposed secession and fought to preserve the union from 1861. to 1865. We were for the preservation of the union then and we are for the preservation of the Republican party now. The bolters from the . Republican party make exactly the same plea now that the seceders did in 1861. We want no compromise but we want submission to the regular organization just as we did 45 years ago." Prison Farm Success. An adjunct to the State Prison that is a source of considerable profit is the prison farm. It contains 101 acres of rich, black soil, as level as a floor. The entire farm is under a high state of cultivation. A few acres is planted in corn, and the remainder in peas, lettuce, raddishes, onions, beets, tomatoes, parsnips, potatoes cabbage and turnips. Of all these, with the exception of parsnips, potatoes, tomatoes and cabbage, not yet in season, there is plenty for the prisoners' dining room. The prison does , not have to buy any of these products except potatoes, which are used in great quantities, and thus the cost of living is reduced at the prison, while the convicts have a variety of food that they otherwise would not receive. Their health is greatly improved in consequence. During the busy season fifteen "trusties" are employed on the farm, under the direction of a practical farriguard. Rape Case Dismissed. The case of the State of Indiana versus Clarence Wilson, charged with rape by Miss Pearl York,, ha been dismissed by Prosecuting Attorney Hess, who decided that there was not sufficient evidence to convict Wilson. Marriage Licenses. . Peter Balmert sr and Anna Mutti, Clement Neidig and Jennie Gaskill, Franklin L. Sheppard and Victoria C. Cleveland. '

THREE BILLION BUSHELS.

Estimate of Corn Crop for This ... Year. New York, July 31. Wall street was aroused today by a prosperity bulletin issued and posted by the Henry Clews banking house. It ap propriately follows Uncle Joe Can non's recent remark that. "This coun try is a hell of a success." It reads a follows: "Corn crop this year, 2,700,000,000 bushels. "Wheat crop, 722,000,000 bushels. "Cotton crop, ll,000,Q0p bales. The United States Steel corpora tion's profit for the last quarter was $40,000,000., "A man died a few days ago in Illinois who weighed 4C0 pounds and was 73 inches around the Waist. This should not be surprising, because he was born in the corn belt country. "A negro woman in Texas recently gave birth to six babes. 1 "What a country. What a people How to Be Well. ' If all the instructions of all the heatlh experts or specialists could be followed by any one person no1 time or energy would be left to that per son for any other pursuit... Naturally, then, a selection must be made by one who desires to experiment ..id believes that the various plans for improving the physical condition have merit. , f. The, j trouble is to choose. There are the apostles of deep breathing. If their assurances are to be accepted, a persistent and systematic course of this form of breathingwill fill the experimenter so full of oxygen and ozone . that he will soon reach such a state of buoyancy as to be able 'to keep his feet on the ground with difficulty. Or he may take more active measures and adopt some fcrra , of exercise golf,' pedestrianism, canoeing or such other variety of athletics as may appeal to him. Advocates of each of these will tell him that perfect health lies' that way and that doctors may be dismissed by one who has an athletic fad. ' There, too, is "Fletcherism," thor ough mastication of food another process whose promoters aver will cure human flesh of all the ills to which it is heir. Industrious and suf ficient chewing will, it is declared, not only produce perfect health, but will so lessen the quantity of food necessary to satisfy hunger that it wiil prove a vast economy to individual and Nation. In fact, the figures showing the saving that jnay be achieved in this way are so impress ive as to incite the reader to immedi ate and prolonged mastication of the nearest food at hand. Then there is the opportunity of securing perfect and abounding health without any bodily exertion whatever. Why exert ourselves, especially in hot weather, when, if we only think so, absolutely nothing is the matter with us nd we are in fine mettle mentally, "spiritually and physically? What could be more delightful if only the seeker after, personl peace and comfort could find simple faith in strange doctrines his to command. One thing is sure. If truth is in all the modern doctrines of health and' well being, then the doom of "the medical profession is sealed. Doctors who use anything so crude and material as drugs will soon be put out of business. And yet, strange to say, medical schools are increasing in size and number. It is all very puzzling. Indianapolis Star. Fears for His Life in Russia. M Alladin, leader of the "Group of Toil" n the dismised Russian parliament; M. RoditchefF, leader of die constitutional democrats, and M. M. Ostrogorsky, Vasileff and Professor Kovalevs'.y, who came from St. Petersburg to London to attend the Interparliamentary Union, departed Tuesday. With the exception of M. Alladin they will proceed direct to St. Petersburg. Mr. Alladin said: "I am not going to St. Petersburg, because if I did my life would be in extreme danger. While parliament was sitting I was comparatively safe, as deputies could not be arrested. Now that it is dissolved I must take every precaution. There are forty-five death sentences hanging over my head, and the government would dearly love to get hold of me. "I am going to Finland, where the authorities will not be likely to .arrest me. If they did the Finnish people would fight for me and (touching his revolver), I should fight, too. I always carry firearms, and I shall not be taken if I can help it." M. Alladin said he knew that special detectives had followed the members' of the Russian parliament to London. Woman Storms Saloon. St. Joseph, Mich., has a Carrie Nation. I Angered beyond control when she saw her brother, George Force, drink in a saloon, Gertrude Marshall (picked the misiles within reach and! hurled them at the big mirrors and pyramids of glasses in the place. ; ' . 4 When Leopold Hassle, one ot the proprietors, who was behind the bar at the time, tried to interfere, the woman held him at bay and , then grabbed her brother by the coat collar and vehemently scolding marched him out of the place and to their home. .' The violent action of Mrs Marshall .caused a sensation in the city. Getting Sensible. In. no uncertain terms do ministers of Warsaw and men and twomen generally condemn tjie growing tendency toward making ' nearly;' every wedding that takes place in .the city the basis of hoodlumism 'that is simply the indication of lack jfcf good horse-sense cn the part of. tfe people who engineer the-hazing

Should .Favor No; Side.

David M. Parry, former president of the National Association of Man ufacturers, is not disposed to take President Gompers seriously when he advises laboring men to organize themselves into a political body and vote only for men pledged to the in tercst of labor. He says that Gomp ers has been made ridiculous by some of his former edicts, and he will be made more ridiculous by this. "The only pledge that organized labor should exact from a candidate for office is one to the effect that all classes should be treated alike, the capitalist and the laborer," Mr. Par ry said. "Neither should be favored at the expense of the other, nor be neglected for the benefit of the oth er. Organized labor should receive no more. "The minute a candidate pledges himself ot give special favors to the capitalist or to labor organization, then class legislatoin steps in, and the fight degenerates into one for advantages rather than one for jus tice. But I have no idea that President Gompers can force any candi date to declare for his ideas any more than for mine, and the candidate should declare' for neither. Gomp ers has said that organized labor has no affiliations with the Socialist par ty, but I notice the labor papers are taking issue with him. This brings out the inference that an alliance, if one should come, would be with the Socialists, despite Gompers' state ment to the contrary. That would be the natural union. To Mold Houses. Whole houses molded in a single casting out of solid concrete, which will provide' cosy homes for workingmen at' a cost of from $500 to $G00 much less than the average mechanic pays, todayis the- goal which Thomas A. Edison is striving to Yeach. He is confident of success. Combined with economy of construction and maintenance, the in ventor aims to embody architectural beauty and practical indestructibility. Mr!. Edison intends to make his first practical experiments next year in his new village in Warren county, N. J. One of the big Edison indus trial establishments is situated there, and he' purposes to erect the homes by the new process for the families of. the hundreds of employes of the plant. If he succeeds in demonstrating the practicability of the scheme, he will introduce it generally. Increase in Gold Supply. "This is actually what has happen ed in recent years with regard to the available supply of gold. Few people realize the enormous increase in gold production of late. In , the last fifteen years it has increased 300 per cent. This naturally has had a tremendous effect on the value of money, and has materially cheapened it. The average annual production of gold, for the world from 1800 to '1850 was only $10,000,000; from 1850 to 1800 it was $12t000,000. From that period the yield of gold increased by leaps and bounds. The average for each year from 1890 to 1900 was $210,000,000. From 1900 to 1905 it was $320,000,000. Last ,year the total reached the phenominal figure of $379,000,000, and reports for this year estimate that the production will be $400,000,000. Miles Predicts War. Gen. Nelson A. Miles, former commander-in-chief of the United States army, says that the opening of the canal will in his opinion, be a step toward a war in the future. "If war does come," he said, "it will be a struggle for supremacy be tween the United States and the powers of the world." Gen. Miles admitted that the struggle he foresees will not come for some time. But it is certain sooner or later as the clash of commerce becomes keener. In such a war the United State? would have to struggle single-handed against the world. An increased army and ravy would not avail much, he says. South American trade is the bone over which the powers will contend and the canal's opening will torce us into the arena. To Probe All Companies. Attorney General Miller said Monday that immediately after the conclusion of the present examination of the State Life Insurance company bj' Auditor of State Bigler and his assistants the state will begin an investigation that will include all the life insurance companies of Indiana. There is rio uneasiness among the state officials as to the solvency of the large Indiana com panies, but there is a desire for a complete examination of their se curities and methods of doing business. The attorney general said that the outgrowth of the investigation will probably be the introduction of some bills at the next legislature for new insurance laws that will compel the companies to confine themselves to a strictly legitimate line. Poison in Pipe Stem. A peculiar cause of death was re ported to the state board of health F riday in the filing of the death certi cate of Henry B. Smith. He was cl eaning a pipe with a pin and pricked the thumb of his left hand, barely breaking the skin. The pin point as covered with nicotine, some of hich was left in the almost imper ceptible wound. Blood poisoning developed within a few hours, and Smith died two days laten- at a hospital at Indianapolis. Hearst to Run Independent. William R. Hearst will be a candi date for Governor of New York as an Independent. This announce ment was made definitely following developments in the Democratic state committee indicating the defeat of the publisher for control of that body.

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JUST WHAT WE ANTICIPATED Our (firand Harvest Sale ! Has proven a Boon to the Public A rush and a clamor was the way the public sought cur Wonderful Bargains. We still have a Big Lot of SPRING and SUMF.IER SUITS to dispose of and will add many NEW FALL STYLES ( now coming in), and to this end have decided to continue our GRAND HARVEST SALE Up to August 15tH, when samt will positively be closed. We want to caution all in need of Clothing for self and family, that this is the BARGAIN CIIANCE, and we want all to participate in this GREAT GltOTHUlG flllD SJ10E FEAST.

I THE CHANCE I OF A LIFETIME I TO BUY J I Suits, Shoes, : NATS i FURNISHING GOODS X atsuchlow Pricca t J un FOR. LOGA

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Only a few days left for our friends and the public in general to buy goods from us at prices never again to be duplicated in Plymouth. Every; article still remaining in our large store room for sale, which means at less than manufacturers' cost.

We have on hand

of 6c Lawns; price, 3 l-2c, per yd. Very best Calico, 4 l-2c. 10c Linen Toweling at 7c, and so on. Not enough space here to enumerate all, therefore, look us over aud save money.

Will Put on S2le. Saturday. Ausust th, A NEW LINE OF FUSS that came to us before "vre could countermand the order. These Furs must all be sold at once. Wo expect to lose money on this lot, but they must go at some price. Now, if you expect to buy a Fur for next winter, buy now and get it for halt the price you will pay in November.

We certainly close up shop for good August 31st. Your time to ,buy from us and buy cheap is therefore limited. Come soon and often and .if you know yourself indebted to us, settle before August 15, 1900, as books will be turned over to a collector after that time.

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PLYMOUTH, INDIANA.

A Sensible Plan. David M. Parry of Indianapolis, formerly president of the National Association of Manufacturers, whose speeches on the labor question have been widely quoted, expresses the opinion in an interview given to the Indianapolis Mar that the tariff should be removed, from politics and that its revison should be, intrusted to a commission of business men. His plan of treating the tariff will be found of special interest at this time when the subject of tariff revision is of large and growing importance. Mr. Parry said: "1 believe in a tariff law providing maximum and minimum schedules of duties and giving the president the power to conclude reciprocity arrangements within the limits of these schedules. I also believe that the tariff should be taken as much as possible out of politics and a tariff commission created of experts who can give their individual time to the investigation of 'each protected industry in order to ascertain the least amount of protection each industry really requires, the recommendations of the commission to be followed by the executive n securing trade concessions from other countries. Tribune $1.10 per year.

SUGGE

Many people ask tho question, "How can you sell high grade goods so cheap?" There is a cause for everything. We will tell you why we sell so cheap. Wo run our owr. store no rents smallest possible expenses and only ask a living profit on goods bought hero. Try us. There is only one way come and see that we do exactly as vre advertise.

The Good Glottes Store o - "Of course.' MSI? a large assortment f n. y. si J NO CURE, NO PAY. How The People's Drug Store Sell Hyomei, the Guaranteed Cure for Catarrh. The People's Drug Store has an unusal offer to make to our readers, one that will be of the greatest value to many. For some years The People's Drug Store has been watchnig the results from the use of Hyomei, a treatwent, for Catarrh that cures by hreathing medicated air, absolutely without any stomach dosing. The results have been so uniremlly ruccessful that they feel justified in making a public offer to treat th worst case of catarrh in Plymouth with the understanding that if Hyomei does not cure, the treatment will cost absolutely nothing. Teople who have spent large sumi with catarrh specialists, deriving but little benefit, or the many who have swallowed stomach remedies in the vain hope of curing catarrh, have experienced almost immediate relief from the use of Hyomei, while the continued treatment for a short time, has resulted in a complete tnd lasting cure. The regular Hyomei outfit costs onlv one dollar. anH rnnUt 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 czn tj obtained for 50 cents. The People's Drug Store umr.tc2 a cure, if Hyomei is used in accordance with directions, or they vr.ll refund the money.

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