Plymouth Tribune, Volume 6, Number 17, Plymouth, Marshall County, 31 January 1907 — Page 4
ftbe TErtbune. Only Republican Newspaper in the County. HENDRTCKS & COMPANY
BOILER EXPLODES.
On Pennsylvania's Engine at Colum
bia City.
TELEPHONE No. 27.
The boiler of the mail train, which
passes Plymouth at 1:58 p. m. explod ed near Columbia City this Wednes
dav atternoon. Ihe engine was
wrecked and one man killled. We
Entered at the Postoffice at Plymouth. In- I went to nrp? parlv ami rould not cet
j: j -i ' I " i J "
umim as secunu-ciass mauer.
OFFICE Bissell Building, corner Laporte
and center Mreets.
Plymouth, Ind., January 31, 1S07. Secretary Shaw on Commerce.
We will pretty soon be compelled
to develop international merchants:
particulars.
One Hundred Years.
Hon. Addison C. Harris, one of the
most conservative speakers of the
state, stated in his address tn the Pur-
England, Uermany and France are due corn school that the population
great manutacturing countries,, and nf th irn:tfA Sfats aftr nn hlin
. l i . . i i , r . r I , .- 'i
iney nuni me worm ior marweis ror drt( years if the-present increase
per cent of their products and continues', "will be 300,000,000 people.
they go with their own ships. There is no reason whv. the oresent
. , . .
In the last century there were generation should worry, but the fig
great conflicts for territory. The cen- ures. doubtless based on fact, are ap
tury in which you are will witness palling. Wc spend a great deal of the greatest conflicts in the world for time and thought these days in plan-
markets. God grant that they may njng for tj,e future.
be bloodless, but they will be just as
intense as any that have gone before. And just as certain as the world, we
are going to need international mer
chants. If you young men think that we have had a surplus of agricultural products all these years ami are no:
soon going to have a surplus of man
ufactured products, you are mistaken. m a
In bouth America there is a market of $600.000.000. We furnish 12
pr cent of it; I am not satisfied, I
want fifteen. The Orient imports $1,000,000,000. We furnish 10 per cent
of that. I want 11 per cent. We must
get this international trade. South
America has scarcely heard of the
Unitd States as a great commercial country. She never sees our flag.
Our ships never enter her harbors.
Wc have a few old hulks gor.ig eight
or nine knots an hour, not belonging to tis, carrying freights to this country. And they sail when fhey get
loaded.
Almost Physical Wreck.
It is said that Dan W. Krisher,
president of the failed bank of North
Manchester, has become a physical
wreck through brooding over th
troubles growing out of the collapse
of that institution. The Wabash
Plain Dealer says that he is almost
distracted and one who has not seen
him for ten years would scarcely recognize him, so great nas been the
change in his appearance, tie has
aged twenty years in the last two
tiis nerve is all gone, and among
those who know him he is an object
of pity.
AND STILL THEY COME.
9 9
111 HI IMS
FURNISHED BY GKE&&NER & COMPANY
Another Electric Line Proposes to
Pass Through . Plymouth.
By the incorporation of a new $7,-
300,000 company, the arm of the traction syndicate represented in Indiana
Owners of the only Abstract Books, in" the county. Abstract of title to all ' lands in Marshall county compiled
promptly and ccurately. .hiu.. u..u niirl
For Luna
es
Tröübl
Indianapolis to the northernmost
r C ' D.I.- A I .. . m.
' njuiiK cidi iu Rcuciw a counties or the state, the new com-
Chaney, part of out lot 67 Cabbel's pany, articles of incorporation for
add Plymouth 50. which, were filed Friday, is tailed the
Henry M Haag and wife q c d to Chicago, South Bend & Northern In-
Samuel J Haag, w 20 a of ne q sw q diana Railway Co., and will take over
sec 32 tp 35 r 1; $5. the properties of the Northern Indi-
Abraham Vangundy to Jacob Swi- ana Railway Co. and build extensions
hart, lots 19 and 22 Tippecanoe; $100. and connecting links between cities.
Wickizer Bondurant Co to Lillie The plans of the incorporators con-
L Rule, lot 10S Marquelle Place Ar- template that IndianapoliswilVhavc
gos; $75. I electric connection with .Michigan
David C Linville and wife to Cyrus Crty within one year and with Chi-
E Shafer, lots 31, 32, 33 34 34 blk 1 Cago inside of two years. .fThe towns
AF's Cherry Pectoral certainly "cures 'coughs, colds, bronchitis, consumption. And it certainly strengthens weak throats and weak lungs. There can be no mistake about this. You know it is true. And your own doctor will say so. M My little boy had a terrible congh. I tried yemhinR I could "bear of but in vain until I t. fed Ayr's Cherry Pectoral. The flrit night bM better, nd be tendilT Improyed until he wti, perfectly well." Mas. & J.
Stiilb, Alton 111. . -
)fk . ,,
Ivy
GREAT
.'di j i Ü 1
Thayer's add Lapaz; $150.
Frank E Johnson and wife to Chas E Mead, part of lot 4 Teegarden;
$500. ,
Cynthia E Pickerl to V;n E Hand and wife, lot 7 Rhodes add Argos;
$250.
James Lowry by and tax deed ...to
and cities named in the papers as in
cluded in the system are Goshen,
Elkhart, Mishawaka, South Bend. New CäriisleLapörte, Michigan City
Chesterton, Valparaiso, Crown Point. Whiting, Hammond, Lagrange, An-
golat Auburn, Ft. Wayne, Columbia
City, Huntington, Wabash, Peru,
u Mjers
by J. O. Ayer Co.. LowtU, Mm.
Atae maniuMtarere er
7 SACSAPARILLA.
PILLS. HAIS YrOOR.
Keep the bowels regular with Ayer's r "a -and thus, hasten recovery.
MAXINKUCKEE ICE CROP.
Abraham Vangundy, lot 22 Tippeca- Warsaw Albion Plymouth, Roches-
noe; $1.83. Iter, Knox, Winamac and Logansport
Martha C Reynolds to Jacob E Work will begin at once on an ex
Price, part of Bishop lot Plymouth; tension from South Bend to Michi-
$1200.
Annual Harvest Will Soon Be on in
Full Blast.
Caroline A Baker to Huldah E Jan
ke, lot 5 Plymouth Imp Co add Ply
mouth $1000. Josephine Roth and hus to Chris
Culver, Ind., Jan. 28. With a few
more davs of favorahfe weather the
gan City with material already ob- galherini of the ice crop from Lau
Maxinkuckee will . be .'o'n in earnest.
By favorable weather is meant the
continuation of freezing weather and the absence of snow' or sleet, which
makes the work more laborious ' and hazardous,' and makes the planing1 of
Opposition to Subsidies.
ine science ot subsidy Dills, is a
very simple one, but it is not preach
ed in high places. No subsidy should
be given to millionaires to encourage i : u .. - i . . :ii
uv.La:i mies ucidusc c lia c liiiiuwu- i V. 1
u U1C w " "T"" The bill says that "no experiment
upon any living creature shall be per-
MHuman Education Bill
Ex-Judge R. W. McBride of Indi
anapolis, formerly of Elkhart, has
prepared a bill establishing a system
of 'human education" in the public schools which will be introduced next
week. The bill provides that in each public school not less than one-half hour each week shall be devoted to teaching the .pupils how to show kindness to dumb animals and birds. One day in each month must be set
apart as humansty day when appro-
such lines as playthings and plenty
who Would build them if they paid 6
per cent on the investment.
To make rabbit potpie you must
first catch the rabbit and if our mil
lionaires are sharp enough to wait
until tne rabbit is caught ..ingress
emulate their sagacity. TI? Republi
can party needs to steer jt of all such steals as would be reckoned against it if Harriman Hill, Morgan
& Co. got a subsidy upon no grounds
except gall. Four millions a year will build the Chicago ship canal to the
gulf and be a better campaign docu
ment for 190S in the working man's eyes than al the subsidies dreamed of.
It is time congress stopped voting money to millionaires. The doctrine of protection as originally taught and as still demanded by the toiler was
for the purpose of making prosperity
for the poor and not for the rich. And the Republicans uTl congress don't want to forget this." Voting money
to millionaires is abusing the doc
trine.
mitted in any public school in the
state."
For Two-Cent Fare. The first state in the Union to es
tablish 2-cent fares by law was Ohio.
The second was Michigan and the next will be Indiana.
The 2-cent fare bill before the leg
islature will be. passed without oppo
sition, says the Indianapolis Star. The
railroad Caesars came, saw and did
not conquer. ' They 'have met the en
emy, -but he is not theirs. The law,
will not go into effect until sixty days after its passage; it may not even take effect until July. It may allow a differential for higher fares on
trains, but this will likely be a nom
inal fee for stated graduated distances and not a cent or fraction of a cent a mile. But it will cut faes down a
third, and the 'railrojds will "try :o
look as pleasant as fossible. .
Sandford Wreck a Puzzle.
Tcrre Haute, Ind., Jan. 29. The
Indiana railroad commission today
took its tum in the investigation of the disastrous explosion of a car of
powder at Sandford.
. Members of the train crew were ex
amined, but did not throw light on I could get the country kind.
The Independent Farmer. Comparatively speaking, what an affluent and indepedent gentleman the farmer is. The city man is the victim of the butcher, the baker and the poor gas maker. He pays for every thing he gets except air and
would be glad to pay for that if he
INOt SO
the explosion. The testimony of the I the farmer. Though his fields are
experts, notably Dr. John White of broad and his fences high and strong.
Rose Polytechnic institute, was that I he has a neighborly feeling for every-
high explosives, such . as dynamite, I one who lives within ten miles of
fulminates of others, would leave no I him. His pastures and poultry yards
trace of their presence but would supply his meat and eggs, his garden pass off in gases. Nor would it like- fills his vegetable cellar every fall ly have made an odor distinguishable and his fruithouse is stocked with by these in the wreck. Therefore, if fresh canned and cured fruits in abunevidence is to be had of any explosive dance. He works leisurely through other than the 500 kegs of gunpowder spring and early summer, rushes a
as billed by the American Powder j little during harvest and then spends
company from its factory at Concord I the winter doing chores and cutting
crossing, Mass..' it must be by dis
closures in connection with the load
ing of the car or by the Equitable
Manufacturing Company which has a
factory at East Alton, 111., for the
manufacture of 'cartridges. Fulmin
ates for caps or for the percussion of
cartridges might have been in the car.
Dr. White says fulminates are cap
able of ignition from several cause, one of which is spontaneous combus
tion.
his year's fuel.
New Theory as to Disease.
Medical men are coming round to
the view that personal history is of primary importance or, in other words, that a man's own manner of
.life, his record of health and his cir
cumstances should be much more carefully considered than the finesses
, that his ancestors have died of. Dr.
Rabaglräti, a medical examiner for in
surancc companies who is well known
in the profession ' which he adorns
and of high repute in the north of
England, has devoted much thought
to this question of heredity from a life insurance point of view.v In his opinion it is not so much disease that is transmitted from one generation to another but organization, or "humanity" as he expresses it. Any member of the human family may suffer from any disease to which humanity is subject, and when an individual so suffers it is the cause of the ailment that must be inquired into. Exposure to this or that set of conditions brings varying results. If the body is exposed to one set of conditions it wili take on gout; if to another, consumption; if to a third, cancert and so on.
Hoosier Crop of Inventors. Indiana is producing a large number of inventors. During the calendar year 1906 there were 782 patents issued to Indianians. This is one patent to every 3192 inhabitants. In Kentucky one patent was issued to every 8041 inhabitants. That Yankee ingenuity is still uppermost is shown by the fact that Connecticut leads all other states in the number of inventions, one patent being issued to every 1074 inhabitants of that state.
Is a System of Ruin. The interstate commerce commis sion Monday sent to congress a re
port of the investigations made by it
under the Tillman-Gillespie resolu tion approved March 7 last, concern
ing the relations of common carriers
by rail to the production and distribu
tion of petroleum and its products
east of the Mississippi river, and in
cidentally, the Kansas and Texas
fields.
The report points out generally the methods by which the. Standard 0i company "has built up and perpetuated its monopoly and the relations
of transportation agencies to that
monopoly." It is asserted that "the ruin of its competitors has been a
distinct part of the policy of the
Standard Oil company in the past,
systematically and persistently pursued." Considerable of the ground covered has been gone into fully in
the report on oil and its distribution,
made public by the bureau of corpor
ations.
Lays Train Wreck to Meteor.
That a meteor set off the car of
powder and caused the disaster to the Big Four passenger train at Sandford last Saturday night, is the assertion of R. E. Brown of Edgar county, Illinois. Mr. Brown, said that at the time of the explosion a large meteor passed over his place. It appeared like a great ball of fire, he said, and made a noise like a strong wind. The meteor, said Mr. Brown, was moving in the direction of Sandford, and left a trail of sparks. Almost immediately after its appearance, he said, the explosion occurred. Other people living in the vicinity stated that they saw the meteor. The crew of the freight train in which the powder car exploded testified at the coroner's inquest that they believed the explosion was caused by leaking powder being ignited by a spark from a locomotive. It was possible, they said, that dynamite had been smuggled into the car with the powder.
tained by the Northern Indiana.
The Northern Indiana Railway Co
at present operates the following
lines: Between Goshen and ' South
tian Lauppe, lot 17 Foltz add Bre- Bend and Laporte and Michigan" City
men; $1500. land local plants in Goshen, Elkhart,
IXrMKnm TT flirrn r pA.nitll'l II!. 1 -1.1 C iL T j I T it
.mau. ivnsnawaKa, oourn uemi, iporic ami th . . rhlnW :mV,rat;VP TU n,w
-1 : ot n to r 1 I i r t . .. I v
Kfe ' I icnigAii y.iy. mammrttti triirtiiirf arc now ranirllv
President Hanna, of the Chicago, approaching1 completion and- rt will
take weeks to gather in enough of the
congealed aqua to Jill them.
ine Maxinkuckee JUake ice com-
pany, wnose principal owners are
Messrs. Hollingsworth and. Reamer
of South ' Bend, and .whose houses and plant were destroyed by fire in
June,1' are rushing' the work on the six
big hoüses'to replace those destroyed The new housets are practically the same size of theold, being a simple
structure 140x240 feet and 32 feet in
side height, subdivided into six
houses. 40x140 feet in dimensions
T i r r - . U!.. . ( .1. . TL ' 1 1 I ' r
josepn it. uenneu ,a somicr orxne ine twemy-scconu annual cuuvc- Each 0frthese rooms or houses has
t r I: .'11 L 1 II m. . 1 r -f j I . .
civil war ana ior many years a prom- t.on wu. uc ncui at inc nc.urn.cu , - . . 40fl j , kj ;
.... .. . . I , . rv.i . "T . j T . i il f
inent business man ot this city, died cnurcn, at cuiver, inaiana, reo. anu theif tota, cit somewhere be
i i r w i r r . . I
twecn 20,000 and 25,000 tons
$330.
Heirs of Joseph Penrod to Elmer I Lake Shore and South Bend Railway
Seltenright, 12 acre in sw q of nw q j Co., said Saturday at Laporte that
sec 10 tp 34 r 2; $50. the sale of the Northern Indiana
Henry Miller and wife to Franklin Railway Co., properties to the Mc
M Kyser, 10 acres in nw q of nw q Gowan-Murdock interests ' would
sec 2 tp 33 r 1; $340. ihave no' effect on his road and that
Isaac Reed and wife to Marion L I his toad would not be sold to those
Brewer, part of lot 1 Williams add I interests.
Argos; $10000.
Alanon u Brewer and wile to wei-1 COUNTY SUNDAY SCHOOLS.
vin L Corey, part of lot 1 William s
add Argos; $10000. Marshall Countv Sunday School Con-
w -
Joseph H. Bennett
vention.
at his home Sunday morning, January I 9, 07.
27, aged CC years. FRIDAY FORENOON.
Deceased was born n Leesburg, 1 10:00 Opening Hour, Led by Vice
Highland county, Ohio, rew td man- President O. S. Ellis. ' hood in that county and enlisted at 10:43 Recorder's Journal. Greenfield in the 81st Ohio, serving ii;oo "Open Doors" ' ' ,1?
in defense of his country until the
close of the war. He came to Ply
mouth forty years ago and engaged in the grocery business. He soon made many friends here and was
three times elected councilman from
the first ward, being the only Repub-1 11:45 Adjournmept
(1) The Country Neighborhood,
Miss Loudell Staley
(2) Sunday School Virtues,
Mr. Walter- Hanc
In addition to 'these, S. E. Med
bourn" is completing a structure 120 xl30 feet, and 28-feet high, subdivided
into three rooms of 40x130 feet, vih a roum capacityj of about .5,310 tons each, or a total f about 10,000 v:ns.
D. G. Walters, to supply tht local
trade, puts up probably 3000 tons, and
U0
lican ever chosen in that ward except
the present incumbent. He w?s a
man of excellent judgment ana al
ways worked for what he believed to
be the city's best interests.
. He was prominent in grand army
circles, was a useful mereber of the Presbyterianchurcli, a juiet honest citizen, friend and neighbor, winning
respect wherever known.
His health had been failing for sev
eral years compelling him to retire
from active business and his death
was 'not unexpected.
He leaves a wife and four sons,
Gordon, Rollo, Ray and Clyde and
an aged aunt, Mrs. Sarah Bennett,
now in her ninetieth year, whom he
.E.
T."
G: R: Howard, for his own consump-
(3) The Teachers, Opportunity, tibrt n his ice cream factory, about
Mrs. E. WV League I ourj tons. Thus the grand total ct
if all houses are filled, will be in the
neighborhood of 40,000 tons, aside
from the hundreds and hundreds of
cars shipped direct from the ways.
A' feature in- the construction ot both new planls is the absence .f
elevator superstructures over the
tracks. The Vndalia has cut channels' under the tracks througfi'which thc.ice will be rolled in a steady
stream oi cakes until tne elevators
are reached. At the Medbourn houses tlie channel comes straight in from the lake to the elevator, while at. the Maxinkuckee Ice company's plant the
channel is located about 5Q0 feet to
the north. Here the ice is raised by
FRIDAY AFTERNOON 1:30 'Devotional, . led by Rp. S Klopfenstein 1:45 Cnvention Sermon, Rev. D Williams
2:15 Primary Program, Mrs. M. J.
Baldwin, State Superintendent.
. . r i.TM. T 1 XT . -..
Rev. E. W. Halpenny, State'Sect.
S. S. Association "
3:15 Announcement of Committees.'
Miscellaneous '
3:30 Round Table Conference, direct
ed by Rev. H'alpenny ,,K
4:15 Adjournment
FRIDAY. EVENING
and his wife have given a home for
many years, she havincr been an in- i 7:25 Offering
valid for 25 years. I work,
Funeral services were held at the 7:30 "Lesson Preparation,'
Prsbvterian church Tuesdav after-1 win
noon, conducted by Rev. Geo. A.
Prlug, assisted by other ministers of
the city.
The attendance at the funeral was large and the widow and family have
the sympathy of all in their bereave
ment.
the. endless elevator plan to a point
7:00 Song Service and Derotion, ledl about level with a car door, and car-
by Rev. W. M. Nicely r, ..; i ried nearly the entire distance .on the
for?; Sundayj. School Lame ievei to a point within about
Mrs. Bald
Opposed to Woman Suffrage.
The Tribune is in receipt of ,The
Remonstrance, the organ of the fe.
male anti-woman suffragists of Mas
sachusetts It sets forth lucidly and forcefully the objections which its publishers and patrons believe exist to the "burdening," as they term ij,
8:15 ""Investment of Influence," Rev.
Halpenny SATURDAY FORENOON
9:00 Morning Prayer, led by Rev. F.
B! Walmer
9:30 The . Township Organization
Between Conventions," Prof. F.
B. Carey.
25 feet of the houses when it is raised
to. the runways. This gives them a trackage of nearly 800 feet for car filling, and requires but little switching, as a large number of oars can be
placed in readiness to fill at once.
The outer walls of these buildings
are twelve incnes tniCK tigntiy seaieu
both inside arid out, and the space
between filled with sawdust. The
partition walls ;are 8 inches, and simi-
ey term ij, öai ukuai1' Ai' i ßK? .onsibifitieiiV i:äO;Song ami' PrayerV'Rev ency Vf'th'e iMTh'e Sun'däy1' School L
of woman with man's respon
They believe that the tendency o'rih'e a i "Th'e Suftdäclio Lesson for
assumption of political . privileges and Jc Fcb: 10v 'The,,Cair,bf Abraham
fespons.:bilities will necessarily be .to
divert the attention and energy of
woman from the home. They regard it as a step backward rather than forward in civilization. The'entratvce of
dfn.'li?,"l-9 Will tenery delegate ' "read'' Gen ll, 10A to 20; three
times?)
2:I3,"VVhat Think Ye of the Christ?"
Rev. H. B.- Hostetter, South Bend
women into so many avocations here-3:00 Primary' and Junior Conference,!
toforc occupied by men has, in the Mrs. Baldwin
opinion of these remonstrants, been j 3:30 Reports of Committees:
fraught with evil consequences. It I Nominations of Officers.
has hardened, woman and enervätedl Resolutions.
.. . . .
man.' I Auditing
-
In Europe; the female suffrage Time and Place of Net Meeting
movement is chiefly in the hands of 3:45 Thee Last Word: "How ha.'-this
Socialists, and its extension is mark- Convention Helped you?.
ed by many of the demoralizing ten-14:00 Adjournment.
dencies of that organization.
The plea for the home, for the care
of children, and the sacredness of the
marriage relation, made by these women remonstrants is sane and sen
sible.
- .. I. . TT t 1 1
10:00 "From Twelve to Sixteen, Rev larly- stutted. nay is usea dciwcch
E. W. Halpenny the layers of ce. Over. 500,000 feet
10:30 "Flans for the Junior. Mrs. of lumber is being used m tneir con-
Baldwin , I struction, most all of which is of .a
lT.OO Roll Call by Townships, and good quality, as Knot noies permit
Reports from Township Officers the. leakage oi sawdust filling; and
10:00 Adjournmdnt :t i I such lumber cannot be economically
iw j Although neither. 'he-Medbourn or ev7:Crowder . . , , . T. .
tne. AiaxinKircKec iiKc kciuiuf; plants are finished, it is the. intention of Mr. Medboprn to begin cutting as spon as a thickness of sven inches is secured. With, a good, force of cut.ters it will take 10 or 15 days to fill the houses the carpenters in the mean time finishing ;the walls'.as the houses fill, therebv saving. the' huge scaffolding which woiitcl otherWise 'lie nectsWork, on ;tHe " Maxinlcuckee Ice" company's plant has'progfess'ed to a point when it will take at least 10 days to enable) them to begin packing. Considerable ditching along the channel remains to be done, and .the boiler and engine to' be installed, as .well, as all the elevating apparatus.1) The firm is sanguine, however of having every
thing in readiness in time to get in a
From a Democratic Editor.
The Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette, the Democratic organ of Allen county says: . 4 ' , United States Senator Bailey, of Texas, attributes his political troubles to the Hearst newspapers. Senator Bailey while ostensibly representing Democratic Texas, was really representing the Standard Oil trust in the United States senate and was on the pay roll of the octopus Mr. Hearst exposed the Texas charlatan, but by the use of Standard Oil money he was returned to the senate some days ago by a single vote above the necessary majority in the legislature. All these years the Democrats of Texas have been proclaiming against trusts and monopolies and all these years Bailey was in the service of the arch enemy of competition.' But the power of Bailey is gone in spite of his election and we want to compliment Mr., Hearst and his. newspapers for the unmasking.
Fighting the Governor. .
One need not be long about the In-
umu icgiMdiu.c iu icdni wiu uicic crop This hrm his been singu
is an organized effort to defeat every larly unfortunate. in the ice business reform measure proposed and-, for h,efe; having bought the plant a year
which the people voted fit the last ag0; Owing to the open winter they
election. Ihe liquor element and the siicceedeu in fining oniy thrce houses
political bankers, are the principal about half full last winter, and then
parties in tnis combination, ana m suffering the loss of the entire plant
order to defeat high license; I public depositories and a better banking: law they are combining their 'powerful influence against every suggested preformBremen Enquirei.'! i-
Boy's Eye Knocked Out. A sad accident occurred in school district No. 3, in West township Friday afternoon, by which Eddie Thomas; aged about 15 'years, had an eye so badtly injured by being struck with a stone'thrown by another boy, that he was taken to Chicago: Saturday1 afternoort' to have the eye taken out. The injured "boy is the son of Edward Thomas," who lives near Pretty Lake. ' ' "
- - "Crackers." .'. One more week at 5c per pound. Best quality. At Jacox's Grocery, Plymouth.
by fife in June. . S. E. Medbourn,. who is now reentering the ice business after being a few years separated from it, is a pioneer in the field here. . The original houses erected by Medbotirn & Pitfman were the first along Maxinkuckee. Later on while associated with Sterling R. Holt he successfully. car. ried on the business, and owes ' his present financial position to the yield of froie'n Maxinkuckee.-" ' ' The ice harvest is of great benefit1 to the1 town and surrounding country, giving employment t during, the cutting se'ason jtoi every man and boy that'ican be 'obtained. Many farmers with .little tq do at this time of . the year,; find profitable employment .at it and the wage's are good and although the- work necessarily involves considerable exposure, seldom if ever results seriously to anyone, such is the
During the 3 last days the reductions will be greater than ever, especially so in our Clothing section. ' ' ' : ... Mens and Boys' Overcoats and Suits, Shoes, Hats, Caps, as also in our Ladies' Cloak and Suit department. The Millinery Department offers the greatest reductions of the year.
fori every spent here in the ahove lines during the last 3 days; we will give yon
$1.25 to $1.40, in merchandise.
Me
wm
ate i teyers . e
iase of iss siM sauk
(Ui M0
-in.
()
WE DO THIS TO FORCE SALES on ALL WINTER GOODS
PLYMOUTH,
u.
D
All Winier GOODS Mnstbc'Sold BEFORE Wt Bigli to Sbow SPRIKG LINE'S.
- 4 t
INDIANA
N. B. We have the only recognized Optician In Marshall county, having tha full indorsement of the Medical profession. No charge for consultation.
V
vV ) A v . V7 , X (;) A
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1 ' : watchful care and interest in all taken by those in charge. ' Ice averages In price at Culver from' $1.50 to $2.00 per tori."' Forty dollars per car is the usual rate, so figured in dollars and' cents 'the ice that is yearly cut from Maxinkuckee "brings in a very tidy sum.
300 Persons Perish. Saarbrueck, .Prussia Jan. 28. As a, result of fw'o explosions today in the Redehn coal mine at St. Johannon:Saar opposite Saarbrueck 30Ö persons are dead arfi fifty are" injured, thirty-five of whom, it is said, will "ie. Fire damp exploded 'early in the morning, killing more than 200. Rescuers immediately entered the mine and another explosion occurred, killing scores. Up to 6 o'clock this evening, seventy-seven todies, had been bronght to the surface and .fifty-six corpses wer? known to be still under gfourid; Only fifty live men "have' been brought out and of tlvese the doctors say at least thirty-five surely will die, as they 'are frig-htfiilly1'-injured through' Tiaving ben hurled agiinst the" walls of .the galleries by th force : of the explosion. j ; ' During the afternoon the efforts at rescue had to be suspended,' but bcfor :all the rescuers had reached daylight a second terjfFic detonation was heard underground. , It is estimated that the death, list from the two explosions reaches a total of 300 men.
House o Correction, Senator Goodwine has introduced two bills affecting the State institutions. One provides an appropriation of $ro,ooo to' put iu condition the Woman's 1 prison, in order to make out of a part of the prison a house of correction for women convicted of petty, crimes over the State.' Under this bill no' woman will be confined in a county jail, but will be sent (to this house of correction. The second of the bills changes the namemf the Indiana Industrial School for:Gsixls lo the Indiana Girls' School.. '.- i:!.- ii
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Mel Welch p -;" - A F Overstriet Afteiniis Haines'" - '. Milton RfadteyJ ". . ' .' -' Amos Kugel ! ' ' ' ' : 1 ' ' j LADIES.: , Mrs W H thotnas-. r-.- . ... Mrs. Sophia Elmers. k ,.j -,. Myrtle 'Smit-i j .. . r.r; A tec oi one : cent will be charged for advertising. In calling for these letters please say i"advertised."" . . ' 7 J. A. Yockey. Y. M.
MARS HIS WIFE'S BEAUTY.
Husband -Hurls Boiling Coffee in Face of Pretty ' Bride.
Elkhart, Ind.v Jan. 29. Disfigured for life, the pretty young wife of Oscar Prahl, an expert machinist, lies at the home of a friend in a serious condition as the result of his jealous attack. Seeking to make, her less attractive to others, Prahl snatched a boiling coffee pot from the stove at their home and threw the contents in her face. The' incident was the climax of a quarrel in which' he had accused her of infidelity. Her right eye was dan gerously burned and her physician fears the sight is, destroyed. The scalding Coffee' grounds stuck to her flesh and inflicted deep burns. Mrs. Prahl, who was a strikinglyhandsome woman, will go through life with ugly scars on her face! Prahl ' was arrested. His hearing has been continued until the extent of his wife's injuries is more definitely known, when the charge of assault, on which he was arrested, may be changed to that of attempted murder.'
200 ENTOMBED IN MINE.
Dust Causes Explosion in West Virginian Colliery.
Charleston, W. Va., Jan. 29. Two hundred miners were entombed by an explosion caiifced by dust in the Stewart mine near Lafayette tonight. Fifty-seven men are known to have perished and the list may go much higher. .Every effort is being made to get out the men still in the mine, but the work is greatly delayed owing largely to the fact that the shaft ;s 5CS feet deep, The mine is owned by the Stewart Colliery Company, and has been in operation for about ;hree years, lnt is not fully developed, the work if developing being done on the double entry system.
Protection of the Streams. Senator L. Ert Slack will this week introduce the bill prepared by the Siate Hoard of Health for the purpose of preventing the pollution of streams. The bill makes it unlawful for any individual, company or miinici. al corporation to turn refuse into thhe streams of the State and creates a department of sanitary. engineering in connection with the State Board of H tfth which shall nspeet-the- localities in which the factories or .municipal corporations ar situated with a view to recommending the riru;t alla,tion of filtration plants'fto be baid for, in tlje cse of cities and towns,, from inkng funds establislied'fr jh.e. purpos.e,rjThe bill gives ' thö '-juduTgs of the Circuit Courts, Pflwef tp, order Jhese. plants installed. . f - - -
Card of Thanks. To the G. A. R. and the many friends who so kindly assisted and sympathized with us during the illness, death "and funeral of our Jirsband and lather, we extend sincerest thanks. Mrs. J. 'H. Bennett and family.
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New Naturalization Law in Effecc ' ' Under the Federal naturalization statute now in effect, before final papers are issued in. any state court the United - States district attorney or his deputy-shall examine witnesses is to the history of the applicant and his fitness for citizenship. This will neesilate a; federal officer, coming from Indianapolis to this city to pass finally on cases of naturalization in this county.. The provision is r. good one and safeguards all possibility of undesirable . foreigners becoming American citizens. .
NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT. No. 12538,, State of Indiana, Marshall County, s: ' In the Marshall Circuit Court, February Term, 1907. Louis K Wolfgang . vs ' Mvrtle M. Wolfgang Complaint for Divorce. The plaintiff in the above entitled cause, by L. M. Lauer his attorney, has filed in my office His complaint against the defendant; and, it appearing by the affidavit of competent person that the defendant Myrtle M. Wolfgang is a non-resident of the State of Indiana: She is therefore hereby notified of the filing and pendencj of said complaint against her, and unless she appears and answers thereto on or before trie calling of said cause on Monday the 4th dav of March. 1907, being the 19th judlcirl day of the Februiry term of said Court, to be begun and held at the Court House in Plymouth, Marsh til County, Indiana, on the 2nd Monday of February, A. D. 1907, said complaint and the matters and thins therein alleged will be heard ari determined in her absence. Witness the Clerk and seal (seal) of said Court, at Plymouth, In., this 8th day , of January, 1S07. JOHN R. JONES, Clerk Marshall Ciicuit Court.. L, M. Lauer. Plaint UTs Atty. v;l
