Plymouth Tribune, Volume 6, Number 6, Plymouth, Marshall County, 15 November 1906 — Page 4
Only Republican It'cspapcr' in the Count. HENDRICKS & COMPANY
OFFICE Bisse 11 Building, corner Laporte
and Center btreets.
Entered at the Postofiice at Fly mouth, In
diana as second-class matter.
Plymouth, Ind., November 15, 1906, ...
Among the men elected or defeated for congress at the recent election,
none had a more stinging rebuke ad
ministered to him because of his of
fensive personality, than -was tfiven
Abraham Lincoln Brick. J J Ji
Brick thought he had his machine
in such fine working order that he
cculd manage it on Tammany lines, and even go further than Murphy
and Croker ever tried to go. The ma
chine is smashed, its owner disfigure and knocked entirely out. JI JI JI
Kosciusko Republicans got the impression that a ring r.ot entirely hon
est, was running things in that coun ty and they elected the whole Demo cratic ticket except the member o
the legislature. Men who suppose
Republicans cannot reform their own
party find themselves badly mistaken in Indiana. -.-'. Ji Ji J
Kosciusko county gave the Republican state ticket a majority of CO! and ' gave Shively 81 majority over Brick for congress. Kosciusko county Republicans speak in no uncertain tones, and if thousands of Republicans in the .district, had. noj felt that a. vote for Brick was a vote to sustain Roosevelt, the congressman would .have been snowed under by a majority of at least 10,000. As it is he was elected bythe votes of Democrats.. At least 400 Democrats in the district voted for Brick because they wanted to sustain Roosevelt. Ji J Jt "Official Vote of Indiana. The Democrats and Republicans of Indiana cast a total of 537,829 votes in the recent election, the democrats 263,602, and the Republicans -Ü4.227. The Republican plurality on secretary of state, head of the ticket, was 30,82 compared with 25,913 in 1000, 3-,2G4 in 1902 and 84,364 on the state ticket in 1904. The Republican plurality for president in 1904 was 93,944. Every county except Laporte has sent in the official returns on the last election. With the exception of the Tenth district, therefore, the figures ar" 'complete on the vote for Congressmen. Leaving out the Tenth district, Ov-
erstreets plurality was the highest of
any of the Congressmen, 4,786. Adair, the Democratic candidate in the Eighth had the second highest plurality, 4,244. One of the surprises of the officii! figures comes with the showing that Cox's plurality in the Third district was only 455, instead oi about 3,000 as reported at first, Kostet: carried the First by 1,319, Chanev . the Second by 410. Dixon the Fourth
by 1,868, olliHday the Fifth by 953, Watson the Sixth by 1,506, Charles
Landis the Ninth by 2,232, Rauch the
Eleventh by 3,155, Gilhams the
Twelfth by 350 and Brick the Thir
teenth by 207.
Democrats elect four congressmen;
Cox in the Third district, Dixon in
the Fourth, Adair in the Eighth and Rauch in the Eleventh. The eighth
and -eleventh were two of the trongest Republican districts in the state
The smallest plurality was that of
Congressman Brick.
FORTY-NINE KILLED. To Cleanse the Senate.
It is signi.icant that the election re
's. & O. Wreck in Porter Countv. turns show a determination on the
Fire Add3 to Horror. part of voters to rid the United
States Senate of corporation influence
Forty-nine-lives were sacrificed and " was not possiDie to accompin a
moro than-forty persons were injur- great ueai at one election, uiu sonic
ed. manv of them seriously, in a important steps were taken, joiin i
head-on collision between a nassen- Dryden, president of a life insurance
r .ni.f a freight train on the Balti- company, is in danger of defeat for
more and Ohio Railroad near Wood- re-election as Senator from New Jer
i.;iiA Tnr! fnrtv-r.Vht mllp from sey. He finds himself facing a deter-
i r -
Chicago, at 3 o'clock Monday morn- mined opposition with a meager mains. All but two of those killed were jority of seven in the joint session. .,
cremated in the fire which followed 1'ennsylvania was carried Dy tne out the wreck and which destroyed the Republican machine, but the organpassenger train. The only way of izat5on is pledged to carry out pracestimating the number of the dead is tically every reform the fusion moveby subtracting from the total num- rnent advocates, and Senator Penrose ber known to be on the train the says the pledge will be kept, number of those who were injured or It will have to be kept or the peoescaped wholly. P!e of the State 'jn rise UP. and The exact responsibiity for the smite the machine in two years. The horror has not been fixed, but it was g'eat lesson of the election is that
either to the neglect or misun- " voters of this country have
' Dramatic Side of Hinshaw Case. Dramatic features to the arrest oi Hinshaw 'are piled up in the "follow--ing: The fact that George Freeman, one of-the most prominent Republicans in Wabash county, kept the matter still until after the election was not without its interests, nor its effect, when it is realized that his plurality -was only a tew more than 100. The farewell that Hinshaw gave his mother, after he had been apprehended out in the corn field at his mother's home "Oh, I am just go ing to Winchester for a little while." he said to her through the window. She was bedridden at the time. And then, after persuading the officers that they not not handcuff him, he took the reins and drove his own horse into Winchester. He was accompanied by Deputy Sheriff Martin of Wabash county. The direct interest of two promi-
Mnf c thw to the neurlect or misun-1 "c olcls Vl -uuimjr u-vc v
der standin tr of signals and a thor-'ast caught the spirit of mdepe.i-1 nent state officials does not detract
ouch investigation is promised by the dence. 'They have discovered thai ?rom the interest. Union B. Hunt,
Officials of the road. l,?ey a!X supreme anu can command
Twelve hours after the accident the parties.
' ; They Voted for Roosevelt.
The defeat of Congressman James W. .Wadsworth, of New York, has its
significance. To the national view Mr,
Wadsworth is the man who opposed
President Roosevelt on the meat in
spectfon bill and dared to criticise
his' 'methods of enforcing legislation
Other things may have contributed to Mr W.adsworth's defeat, but it will
undoubtedly be generally looked upon
as- due to his having opposed the President. This, as a distinguished rriernber of the administration once
remarked of another matter, is
rriore important . political fact than whether that on which the belief is
based is fact or not fact. Mr. Wadswqrth has been elected to Congress
ten times, he served in the war with the South, he is a rich gentleman
farmer in the beautiful Geneseo coun
try, and personally he is a clean-cut. likable man. He is also the father
of ; young J. VV. Wadsworth, Jr ,
whose selection and good perfor
mance as Speaker of the New York Assembly must have added to the prestfge of the family nam These things make the defeat of ;lv: elder
Wadsworth more surprising. It wi! serve as a warning to other Congress
men, who might be tempted to cros swords with President Rooseve!t, and strengthen the President's power over Conerress. As a matter of fact.
President Roosevelt will probably re gret Mr. Wadworth's misfortune.
Apple Crop in Figure.
The apple crop in the United
States has been estimated at JG.1-0,-000 barrels. This is 12,625,000 barrels
more than in 1905. The estimated
crop in New York state is 4.900.000 barrels, or larger by 1,000,000 barrels than , the production in any other ate. The estimated New York crop
equals the crops in .Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky and
Tennessee combined, and if equally distributed among the people of the
state would give half a barrel to each
man, woman and child.
Fred Landis Lost Every County.
;In the crashing- defeat of Congress
man Fred Landis for re-election, ev
ery' county in the district " gave his
opponent, George Rauch, a plurality
as follows: Blackford, 336; Cass, 75j Grnt, i3$l; Huntington, 720; Miami. 522$; Wabash, 110. In VVabash county
thef Republican county ticket, excepi
surveyor, 'pulled through by the nar
rov'est margin ever . given. Wabash
usuilfy gives from 1,600. to 1,800 RpubJican plurality. .
injured and survivors, numbering 120 persons, were brought to Chicago and " taken to Mercy hospital, while
the ashes and fragments of charred
bone which represented all that re
mained of the dead men, women and
children were interred in the ceme
tery at Chesterton, not far from the
scene of the horror.
All the victims were immigrants
rom Poland, Russia, Bulgaria, Ser-
. r
via, Austria ana omer european
countries, and anything like a com
plete list of the dead probably will
never be known. The wreck was fol
lowed by agonizing scenes in which the shrieks of those doomed to death
by fire mingled with the groans and
cries of the injured and the frantic
lut futile efforts of the living to res-
ere the imprisoned ones.
When the injured and survivors
were brought to Chicago scenes al
most as heartrending were enacted
at the Grand Central station, where hundreds of the friends and relative?
of passengers on the ill-fated train
wept and struggled with the police in their efforts to learn the fate of
those " for whom in many instance?
they had been waiting since early
morning.
-M- M
the immigrant tram, wnicn was
! The Warning Heard. Indications are not wanting that
the enormous vote cast for William
R. Hearst has not failed to be ob
served by the representatives of the policies against which it was a protest. Had Hearst himself lived a life
consistent with his profession; had
his personal character been pure and
upright; had his business transactions been open and square; in short, had he been free from the suspicion of hypocrisy and disreputable methods,
the movement which he led would have proved irresistible. "No matter what his motives may have been, the
impulse which moved his followers
was a revolt against predatory wealth
It was a demonstration against the
disobedience of law anl disregard
of morality" which has characterized
the men and corporations that in the recent past have "hasted to be rich"
without reference to the means em
'loyed. South Bend Times.
Sherrick to Go Free. A special from Indianapolis says
"That David E. Sherrick, ex-auditor
of state, who is now serving an in
determinate term in the Indiana
.i. . i .? -f ii
running as tne sccona section oi innPrison North at Michigan City for regular express from New York to I . ;j11(.t ,n fflr. h.
Chicago, carried ib7 passengers, an back ;n Indianaoolis. either a free
bound tor Chicago or points in the an nr t h(. vnitA , nw rr;,i
Northwest. The east-bound freight th prediction freely made, based on
train witn wnicn it couiaea naa uem tlie actJon of the suorcme court of
ordered on a siding at liaDcocK, ind. I h- ctat
i
to aiiow tne passenger tram to pa,s The fumor is that Sherrick will be When the first section or regular ex returned to Indianapolis within 60 press had passed, the freight crew days That he will ncvcr be tricd
v.. ...v.. ....JU..wv..ov-..vJ...ts I ac-ain is coniidentiv Denevert. l ne
a second section was following, o
through failure of the first section to
sienal that it was be'ng followed.
pulled out on the main track started eat.
supreme court may reverse the lowc
court on any one of a half dozer
points, but the belief is that the reversal will be based on the action of
the trial judge in refusing a new trial
The passenger train was running aftcr one juror had bccn firmly ac
forty miles an hour and the frcigh
twenty when they crashed together
on a curve near Woodvillle. The en
gineers and firemen jumped whe
they saw the collision was inevitable
but one of the firemen ws so badl
injured that he died a few hours later
The passenger coaches, filled vitli
sleeping immigrants and the one ex
cused of having expressed an opin
ion, although he declared under oath
that he had not. This is' the main point on which the defense carried
the case to the supreme court."
Death of Jacob Hoham. Jacob Hoham, one of the old citi
press car on the train were thrown I zens of thia .city, well known
into a tangled mass together with hroughout the county, died suddenly
two of the cars from the freight train I at his home Monday evening. He
and in an instant flames burst forth I seemed in his usual health and was in several places. J sitting by the stoye when he suddenly
Many of the injured succeeded in I fell over against it, burning his face
extricating themselves from the land died instantly.
wreck and others were rescued I His wife was at Culver and his son
through the heroic efforts of fellow finding that he was dead ran across
cassengers who had escaped unihjur I to his sister, Mrs. Wiggins, and the
ed, but many others were imprison
ed in the mass or so badly injured
that they could not save themselves, and their appeals for help filled th-.-
night for endless minutes before the
ever-increasing volume of flame overwhelmer them.
But for thefire the loss of life
neighbors were soon in, but nothing
could be done. His wife returned
from Culver a half hour after his
death.
Mr. Hoham had suffered from heart
trouble for two or three years but
had not been seriously ill at any time
He was 63 years old and was a neph
1
would not have been one-third I ew of the late John Hoham and Mrs
what it was, but the flames spread I M. Klinghammer.
with such velocity that the rescuers
were driven back and forced to aban
don thtir efforts. The thunderous roar of the collision was heard for
miles, and when, a few minutes later.
the sky reflected the glare of the conflagration, farmers and villagers hurried to the scene and lent their aid
to the injured.
Near by towns were notified and physicians responded as rapidly as
circumstances would permit. It was 5
o'clock in the morning before Super
intendent F. C. Batchelder learned
of the wreck, and he at once order
ed wrecking trains started from
South Chicago, with instructions to
pick up all available physicians en
route. At 6:30 o'clock Mr. Batchel
der-boarded a special relief train of
five coaches, supplied with cots
blankets and medical supplies. He
was accompanied by Drs. E. Nelson
A. W. McLaughlin, S. D. McLean
and David S. Woodbury. The ear
lier train carried Drs. E. J. Hughes
and J. G. Davis of Chicago, and en-
route picked up Dr. M. S. de Naut at
Walkerton ,and C .C. Robinson at Indiana Harbor.
Th ese, with doctors from Laporte,
Valparaiso, and Indianapolis, attend
ed the injured, who were made as comfortable as possible in the relief train, the most seriously injured were
quartered in the Pullman car Eyria,
the interior of which soon presented
the appearance of a hospital.
chairman of the railroad commission,
; Hinshaw's brother-in-law; he mar
ried Hinshaw's sister. Ever since the
rigmal incarceration of Hinshaw, he
has worked persistently for his re-
ease- or parole. Through his efforts,
largely, Governor Durbin agreed to
sign the parole one conditioned on
the nleasure of the eovernof at all
times.
And Will Freeman, brother of
George Freeman,' whose wife is in
volved is the secretary of the state board of forestry.
And there is a Durbin end of . in
terest. It was Durbin's act, of course, that set Hinshaw free. And the irony
of circumstances is shown when it is
known that the Freemans, Will and
George, were two of the strongest supporters that Durbin had in hi
gubernatorial fight. Indirectly, then, his act. went straight to the homrof his srongest supporters and com
pletely ruined that home. It is said that Durbin is almost prostrated over the matter.
A Doctors
M
di
cine
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is not a simple cough syrup. It is a strong, medicine, a doctor's medicine. It cures hard cases,
U severe and desperate cases,
chronic cases of asthma, pleurisy, bronchitis, consumption.Ask your doctor about this. 1 have DMd a jrreat deal of Ayer Cherry Pectoral for coughs ami hard cold on the chest. It has always done me jrreat Rood. It Is certainly a most wonderful cough rnedlclne." Michaex J. Fitzgerald. Medford. Ü.J.
rTTcadJ b j J.OTA Vit A.lo man llyeri taiismMeaag
Am Co.. XiOweU. Jtaaa.
manafactorere of
SAKSAPABLUL
O ruin Y1008,
You will hasten recovery by tak
ing one of Ayer's Pills at bedtime.
Magnanimous. In taking back his wife after A
that has passed between them.
George Freeman has risen to a height
of magnanimity that would have been
beyond the capacity of most men,
however dearly they might love their wives, however solicitous they might
be for the future of their children, however amenable they might be to ihr. entreaties of relatives and friends.
Warriors at a Banquet. Archbis'hop Ireland delivered a severe rebuke to the preachers of Utopias in response to the toast "Our Country" at the annual banquet of the Society of the Army of the Tennessee. Gen. Greenville M. Dodge, wlio had just been re-elected president' of the society,1 'presided, and Archbishop Ireland was the principal speaker of the evening of the grUz'ed warriors present The venerable r relate asked: "Comrades, did not America deserve well the sacrifice yon made for her? Is not .America
as, she is and as she will be the plen
teous reward of these sacrifices?". !The speaker extolled the material greatness of the country, and noted in this connection a feeling of social unrestfulness calling for new methods in the distribution of wealth and the enjoyment it procures, and issued a j caution against the 'danger of un tried remedies, saying: "The very recognition of manhood in every man makes the multitudes the rulers, and
at times the multitudes bend too
readily to momentary excitement The wild anarchist, the would-be as jissin, are the public enemies of society, whom to tolerate is to toler
ate open sedition. An enemy, too, of
public order is the workman who, re fusing his own labor, deters by vio
lence a brother workman from the 'if - offering of hi.t labor, as is even in a
greater degree the strong and the
Sins of Mrs. Freeman's kind arj
the ones which humanity finds it powerful who override the law of the
Marriage Licenses. Arthur C. Rhodes and Retna Tucker, Fred M. Lemler and Mary Eliza
beth Helsel, Earl R Romney and Alice Ferguson,' H .H. Bowan and
Cora A. Knapp, Rena Mestach and Efhel Coil, Clinton Keyser and Jane
Kimble, Frederick Espick and Clara
Coyle.
Card of Thanks. ttr .
vve nereoy extend our sincere
thanks to the many friends who kindly assisted in the sad death and burial of our son and brother.
Mrs. and Mrs. A. M. Fuller,
Harry Fuller, , Lottie Fuller,
Every
Two Minutes
Physicians tell us that all the blood in a healthy human body passes through . the heart once in every two minutes. If this action becomes irregular the whole body suffers. Poor heslih . follows poor blood ; Scott's , Emulsion makes the blood pure. One reason why SCOTT'S EMULSION is such a great aid is because it passes so quickly, into the blood. It is partly digested before it enters the stomach; a double advantage in this. Less work ' for the stomach ; quicker and more direct benefits. To get the greatest amount; of rood with tht least possible effort is the desire of everyone in poor health. Scott's Emulsion does just that. A change for the better takes place even before you expect it
We will tend jroo a ample free. Be tu re that thU picture in the form of a label it on the wrap-' per of every bottle at ' Emulsion you buy, Scott & 7ownb Cherhiiti !. 409 Pearl St., !. Y. 50 centi tod Ji. 0O All dragfUu
hdest to forgive, notwithstanding the adjuration by one of old: "Whoso is without sin among you, let him cast the first stone." Women of up-; right life especialy find it hard to condone violations of. the seventh commandment in members of their own sex, notwithstanding the fact that in most cases, as in this one, the man is the greatest sinner. To err is human, to forgive divine." and in this act of forgetfulness and
restoration Mr. Freeman has gone far ' s- , , . . r . -A
10 atone ior mucn mat was unioriun ate in his previous action in this distressing affair. One can only hopr that the forgiven wife has learned her lesson and will redeem her good name by' exemplary conduct from now on in the sacred ' relations 'of mother and wife. Indianapolis Star. Proposes Concrete CanaL A plan for a concrete maritime highway across the Isthmus of Pana ma, to be used as a substitute for the ditch as at present projected, has been submitted to President Roosevelt by Col. Alexander Hogeland, known throughout the United States as "the father of the curfew." The plan, which has been the subject of correspondence between President Roosevelt and the engineering department and Cob Hogeland, (ls now in the hands of the Canal Commission. It contemplates the build ing of a concrete highway with, tht bottom thirty feet above sea level and which will resemble a viaduct' in
passing over the low portions of the isthums. The advantages claimed for it axe that it will allow the rivers to be passed under it, thereby obviating the dangers resulting from freshets; doing away with the necessity Tor impounding a vast quantity of water from the Chagres and other rivers in the artificial lake by the Gatum dam and finally avoiding the necessity for an immense annual expense for dredg ig and keeping the canal canal, especialy where it passes through the artificial lake. Col. Hogelad secured patents covering the principles of the project some years ago.
Corn Show at Purdue. The second annual corn show will be held by the Indiana Corn Growers' Association, January 14-19, 1907, in connection with the corn school at Purdue University. This show be ing held in connection with the corn school, is of great educational value. At no place in the state will there be brought together more representative samples of corn than at Purdue. The state will be divided into five sections, as was done last year Premiums will be offered for ne different classes of corn in each section In this way every farmer in the state has a fair chance -competition being limited to exhibitors from his section. Exhibitors from the north, central and southern parts of the state will come into competition only in the Sweepstake classes. '
land in carrying out the schemes of
their ambition. ' '
"Private property, the right of
every man to own, and dispose of thr fruits of brain and of hand, must b;
regarded as sacred and Inviolable. It is the corner stone of the social
structure. Destroy it, weaken it, you
establish barbarism. Nor is private
ownership to be merely for the ind:
vidual himself; it is for those who are parts of himself, his children and
those whom by his own free will he chooses 1 to' make beneficiaries of the
rewards of his labor of mind or of
limb. That in the holding of private
prope; y there, be inequality is a fact
that is .inevitable. Men are not and
never will be equal. Proposed Uto
pias, which ignore the nature of men
and the vital conditions of human so
r.ety, are an insult no less than an
injury to the individual whom hey
fain wvuld beguile by their will-of-the wisp glamor and deception. The grav
est responsibility lies on all just at
this time to move slowly, to think-
wisely, to avoid all perils or leaps
into the dark. "A chief panecea before us is com
mon ownership through city, state or nation of the c'rief agencies of. pro
ductivity and of the transportation o the results of this productivity. Le
all be on their guard." Common own
ership in one direction leads readily
to common ownership in another
mO, Wise Judge." ;
In one thing the Cuban courts have
given this .country a pointer. Th
Cuban Central railway,.? in order to
build up a certain sugar interest
made a contract to carry its product at an extremely low rate for twenty
years. Another shipper learning o
this contract brought suit for the same rates. The court holds that
the presumption is that the railroad
can certainly afford to carry at the-
lower rate or it would not. have so
contracted; therefore it decrees tha
all shippers are entitled to the same
rate during the existence of the con
tract. Surely a Daniel came to judg
ment in that Cuban court. It would
be a very simple way to abolish re
bates arid special terms if the inter
state commerce commission shoul.
act on a similar principle in fixin
rates in this country. South Dend
Times.
TAKE IT IN TIME.
Just as Scores of Plymouth People
nave. '
A Departing Stab. The man who invented the barbed wire fence died in Illinois the other day. it is said he amassed a" fortune of over a rnillion dollars as the result of royalties on his' infernal implement of destruction and lived to be over P0 years old. It would be interesting to have statistics of the amount of $tock killed or injured by his invention, also the list of torn clothes, Oaths, and loss of temper caused by the device, which once so popular, is now passing. We don't think there will be any mourners, either for the inventor or his fence. American Farmer. s
Waiting doesn't pay. If yoir neglect the aching back,
Urinary troubles, diabetes, surely
follow. , Doan's Kidnev Pills relieve back ache, Cure every kidney ill. Plymouth citizens endorse them.
Edward Gibson, of Michigan s't.
Plymouth, Ind., savs: "For severa
years a weakness of the kidneys and kidney pains and. backaches have seriously annoyed me. At the period
when the pain was at its height.
was hard for" me to stoop, 'bend or
lift and when 1 caught cold it settle
in my kidneys. There had been more br less doctoring to cure this trouble but nothing I used got at the cause f the disease until I took Doan's
Kidney Pills, which I procured at the
Oak - Pharmacy. A short treatmen
of this remedy has relieved me, stop ped my many aches,' pains and dis orders - and' I' find that- my genera
health, is much better than befor,e us
jng Doans, Kidney Pills.; .There, is
nothing too good for me to ay o the remedy. a m m m
vox sale Dy all dealers. '" Price 50
cents. , Foster-Milburn . Co., Buffalo
New York, sole agents for the, Unit ed States.
' Remember the name Doan's and
take no other;
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OTOJtT&fjf the-jnly A bs t met Roök lu CI ÖW GISH J AOSlwel of Ule v all
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we naye ca sale J 200. Men's,- cays' 2nd Children's latest
Ira F. Friend and wife to David A
Aiey. lot 6 Burr Oak; $500.
Charles A Lemert and wife to
Robert Clark .45 of an acre in sec
2 tp 33 r 1; $40.
.Mary A. Kramer und hus to Daniel
W Ritter, lot in Tippecanoe;" $225.
Henry Zechiel and wife to Austeni
C Stahl, lot 35 Zechiel's add Culver;
$155.
Edwin R Monroe and wife to Mary
J Beagles, part of lot 1 block 8 Ty-
ner, $30.
Robert Johnson by gdn, gdn d to
Louis N Schafer, und hf of lot 3 in
sec 24 tp 32 r 2 except 2 acres; $1005.
William Spencer by gdn gdn d to
L,ouis -N Schafer, und 2-15 of lot 3 in sec 24 tp 32 r 2 except 2 acres;
$444.
Corbin Spencer et al to Louis N
Schafer, und 11-30 of 51 3G-100 acres in lot 3 in sec 24 tp 32 r 2; $1221..
Joseph A Harris and wife to Fank
Montgomery, n hf of sw q also w
hf of nw q of se q also sc q of nw q also 1 acre in sw cor of s hf of ne q all in sec 3 tp 32 r 1; $2315.
.Alfred Nufer and wife to Frede-ick
Schlosser, lot 11 Nufer's add Bre
men; $250.
Samuel Fryar and wife ot Amanda
M Kitch, lot Bremen; $075.
Aurelius Joyce and wife to Davi 1
T Warnacut, lot In wood; $90.
Eldora B Barr et al to Ric'.iard
Daklen e tal lot 4 and 5 Rochester
Club Grounds, Maxinkuckee Lake:
$900. -
Levi Artz and wife to John H
Pfender and wife, lots in Van Pelt's
add to Plymouth; $275.
Heirs t)f Sarah A 1-nbley deceased
to Lewis Bose, lot 16 Rhodes. add Argos; $000. -
Elmer O. Wkkizer et al to The
Wickizer McClure Co., lot Argos;
$265.
. Thomas Ei Johnson et al to Delilah E. Fish, lot 44 Rhodes add Argos;
$500.
Elijah L. Sewell and wife to Charles A Patterson and wife, n hf of e q also part of s hf of se'q of sec tp 32 r 2; $5000. Henry A Born and wife to John D Gordon and wife tract in sec 20 M R L; $1230. William McCormack and wife to Christian H. Cless', lot in Tippecanoe; $5. Sarah C. Jamison to Jacob Heistand. e hf of nw q of se q also sw q of se q of sec 19 tp 35 r 2; $4000. Nathan Thompson to Roy E: Wickizer, e hf of ne q of sec 14 tp 32 r l; $3075.
Sanford A Joyce and wife to Vander S. Rice, und hf of und 1-10 of tract in ne q of sec 17. tp 33 r 3; $50.25 Edith Dunfee and, hus to Jacob Klingerraan. und hf of north 12 acres
in w hf of se q of sec, 15 tp 34 r 1; $250.
Emma Shaffer to Henry A. Born,
lot in Argos; $900. Charles M. Walker and wife to State Exchange Bank Argos, north S5.C3 acres of w hf of nw q of sec 30 tp 32 r 4; $2275. John D. Johnson and wife to Calvin M Lötz, lots 1, 2, 3 and 4 Johnson's add Teegardenj' $200. Sherman EUis and wife to William H Laudeman and wife, west 91 acres of se q sec 72 tp 33 r 2; $3000. Catharine Smith and hus to Senica Primley, part of out lot 13 Ewing's add Plymouth; $400. Magdalena Ulrich and hus to Nancy J. Young, lot 21 Wheeler's add Plymouth; $950.. Jacob Swihart to Ober R. Berk eyr pile, w hf of ne q of sec J tp 32 r 3; $450. : James.- A Klingerman o Sarah A. Grube, lot 2 Works sub div to Plymouth; $S00. . Erastus Wood and wife to George W Spitler parrt of out lot 1 Lowry's add .Argos; $1700. ' . ' , Solomon Stockman and wife to Wiliam H Seymour, w hf of nw q of nw q of sec 33 tp 34 r 3; $1000. Edward R. Shoemaker and wife to Ellis F. Rockhill, 1 1-2 a in,w hf of sw q of sec 19 tp 33 r 4; $1250.
z style Overcoat, arid are; niaVl SPECIAL, LOWEST Kf 0 VM f
prices on the same for 1 5 Days DON'r CE ' MISLED, tat come to LALERfS, the HOr.IE 0E THE OVERCOATS SUITS
r.
Brlnd us tti6 prices trom
anpliere lor comparison and wc will sliow iioii a positive savlno or trom 25 to 33 percent under anu oi ttiera In anu article In our store. Special sales ttiröuaüout our entire 2-Floor Store that will , Interest all In need ot Clothing. Boots, Shoes, Furnish ng Goods. Come to our store Let usshowuou that Lauers are In a position to save you. money on anything from head to loot.. This is a moneyl saving proposition to you.
: 1? i Wfct fit 1 I ii m f - :; . 0
we Mean Business
The Good Clothes Stcre. nc ri M
THE STORE THAT ALWAYS AVAKES GOOD.
I I I 1 I I I I I t I I a, U
IP 1? 6 fi U X K
A LIST OF THE ALLOWANCES made by the Honorable. Harry Bernetha, Judge of the Marshall Circuit Court, at the regular September Term 190G, thereof:
v
McFarlin W, O, petit Ames Guy, " Myeis Jonn " Anderson John,1 " I?isher Christian, " Engel John. "
Goodwill Wm G, Davenport, Sam'l Freese Elias S, Botset John H, Downing John, Baxter Geo W, Myers John A, Young Elmer Zumbaugh Chas, Listenfeld John, Horner Harrison, Williams Je-sse, Bonham Homer, Gibson, John H, Orr Sherman, Stull Wm B, linger Sylvester
Morlock Daniel Hawk' Edward,... :." Richards Jacob, " Stuck James M, ' Stephenson Alnzo, ' Heim Pctr, Beldon Samuel, " Couts Daniel,' . " Hamlet Vm F, " May Levi, " Bodey Arley " McGriff David, Picked Jonathan, " Moslamler, Chas, Kanarr Chas C, ' Thompson Wm D, " Mosher James L, " Berlin Wm L, Myers Jacob E,'" ' Triplet Frank D, lliggens Edward, " Williams W S, " Ruffing Frank, Shaw Stephen A, Lawrence Chas, Lidecker Varntne, Savage Daniel, Bennett Jesse H, " Boggs Frank P, " Stahl Charles H, " Jordan John, Logan Marshall, " Shanes John, " Burkholder John, Hutchings Geo, " Ladd Basil, Welborn Wm H, " Kline George Umbausrh E Frank, " Rust, chas q, Lawrence John V, " See Jesse L, Evans Larkin L, Shirk Henry Y, " Beltz Geo W, "
jury
n n I f n i t ,
.. r
; t .
30.G0 18.G0 14.7U 21.00 10.10 19.40 18.80 18.S0 18.5 18.8U 19.00 2.00 2.00 0.00 4.00 4.00 "4.0o 4.00 4.0:) 4.00 4.00 23.4 L 23.3U 22.00 23.10 22.50 22.i(i 22.3 20.40 18.00 18.4 2.00 3.30 2..b 2.80 2.00 2.63 2.10 3.10 4.40 3.0c 2.90 2.10 3.00 5.00 3.20 4 30 4.7i! 3.41 4.00 4.S0 5.10 4.50 4.60 5.40 5.00 4.8f. 4. GO - 4.70 5.1 f. 3.30 4.10 5. 0 4 30 4. SO 5.20
Lockwood Seym'r, Thompson -Clark Gam John F, Winenger Henry, Slayter Clarence, Martin Jacob Knoblock Harmon, Gottschalk John, Heinke Ihilip, Coar Gilbert, Place Huron A, Mielke Franz, Kelver Louis, Machel Daniel, Schilling Albert Hoover John, Yark Simon, Ii rum bau gh J W, Harbaugh Wm, Adams A E, Thompson John Sester Peter, Silvius John. Lambert Orian, Zumbaugh Chas, Bollman L J, Force Chas,
G rover, J. B, Bates Frank L, Bogcrs Charles.
Wilson Jonathan, Young- Newton, :Stockman Solm'n, Protsman Geo W, Smith David C.
Swinehart O K, reporter 145.00 Wise Adam E, pauper atty.. .2000
Ive, Nathan, court b'ltt cs tnj
9.00 13.05 4.55
grand jury. .
biff
5.40 4.30. 5.20 4.10 4.10 5.20 .1 in
4.80 5.O0 5.70 5.40 2.30 2.30 2.3! 230 2.50 2.G0 2.40 2.50 2.41 2 40 2.30 2.20 2 30 2.10 3.00 s.rto 2.70 7.20 6.80 7.10 ,7.20 GXti 6.10 0.00
jury m, lodg jury meals. .
Plvmnuth Tel Es. phone..
Logan Är' Thomas, jury meals. Carder Edward, . Hill & Son, " M . Albert Otto. . " w --a .-.Ii n 99
Haag I'nnip, Lamson Frank. Bowell Tohn B.
Wi-st Pnbl Co. law books
Metsker C W, bar dockets.... North Achilles, probn officer.. Steiner Monroe, shff p d.... Steiner Monroe, riding biff.... Tones, John R, clerk p d Kruyer Peter J. far commr.. Snnthworth n C. iurv commr
f Given under my hand and
the seal of the Board oi Commissioners this 12th day of November. T.itn. H. L. SINGREY, Auditor.
4.53 4.55 37.00 4.55 C2 00 43 00 9 83.00 75.0! 79.G0 3.00 3.0
(seal)
10,000 Hunter After Deer. The opening of the deer season u Michigan finds nearly 10,000 hunters in the woods of the northern peninsula. Of this number it is safe to say that scarcely 1,000 of these will get a deer, although they are said to be numerous. That section is experiencing a genHrtVe 'winter blizzard. There is a foot of show on the ground.
OVERCOAT -VALUE
that arc unsurpassed. You have the certainty that whatever you buy here is of the very best of its Kind in the market, Vc have no old garments everything is new the latest styles, the newest fabrics, and there's a saving to you of from $2.00 to $5,00 on every garment you purchase here. We quote a few of the many special items: . All $15 OvercoaUfor for $12.45 All $10 Overcoab for $7.85 AH $12 Overcoats for $9.45 All $8 Overcoats for $5.90 Men' and Young Men's Suits at the prices vve are quoting here will surely interest every intending purchaser. ! Men' and Youruj Men's fine Suits $10.00 value special at.-l 3.45 Men's and Young Men's fine Suits $12.00 value special at...-.., -C9.C3 Men's and Young Men's fine Suits $15.00 value special at -.$12.05 SHOES. ! Two special values that you cannoUfford to pass: ( i : Men's "Monarch" Shoes $2.50 value for -j. $1X5 Men's "lone" Dress Shoes Extra Special this week for . --- C2.15 HATS. We offer one of our special styles, "The Barling" Hat, a fine black stiff hat. OQ tC Regular $3.00 value; for.,.-.-T---T;;-..-----.-----J-.--r----
