Plymouth Tribune, Volume 6, Number 32, Plymouth, Marshall County, 16 May 1907 — Page 5
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CALL DEFOE i LOCAL NEWS AAA A A A A AAAAAAAAAAAAAA V WTf rF Vrr W W w W Frank Gam and Amos Friend. öf Burr Oak were on our streets Thursday. Miss Laura Feller went to South Bend Thursday to begin her duties as governess. Mrs. Claude Garrison went to Twin Lakes Thursday to spend the week with her parents. Mrs. J. A. Holland went to Harris Thursday to stay with her son, Austin on the farm a few days. Mr. and Mrs. John Wright and children went to Knox Thursday to visit friends for a few days. Miss Lucetta Spear of Frankfortj transferred here today on her vay home from school at Valparaiso. Miss- A.ina Baxter of Lapaz. and her little brother went tc- Mentone Thursday for a visit with their grandmother. . Mrs. Hiram French of Argos, returned to her home Thursday af.cr a few days' visit with her niece, .Mrs. Marshall. Mrs. ErJtna Sharpe returned to her home in Chicago Thursday after a visit in this city, Culver and Argos. Mrs. R. A. Randall was called to Ann Arbor, Mich., Thursday morning by telegram,- announcing the serious illness of her mother. It so turns out that ther .have ' a Justice Young at Warsaw and that he like our Justice Young is kept in practice by illegal fishermen. What are the fish there for anyway if not to be caught? John Hutchinson an old citizen of Walnut township, and a soldier of the rebellion died at this home two miles north of Argos, May 8. He hai lived at the foot of the Allen, hill for many. years and, was a gofjd;citi-; zen. " . Harold North gave us the-news that he found some mushrooms in the alley near their house, none of which had ben frostbitten and we have 1 een wondering if Harold didn't burn a brushpile near by, in the night, to temper the winds a little. . Miss Lois Thompson had the good fortune to secure a high grade teachers' license from the state, and. also to be retained at Mishawaka as teacher another year. Verily all the honors are not being won by Plymouth's young men, arc they? William Davis returned to the Hahnemann hospital in Chicago Thursday, for some after treatment of hisf eye which he hat! treated in that hospital recently for . cataract. He is able to see much better than for years and he hopes to completely recover the sight. Mr. H. P. Latta and wife were in the city Thursday to visit the parents of the latter, Dr. and Mrs. Martin. They were called from their home in Mobile, Alabama, to Goshenj by the death of Mr. Latta's brother and stopped for. i brief stay on the way home. Mrs. Solomon Stockman and sister, Mrs. Beck of Bourbon, and a nephew Mr. C. C. Watson, returned Thmsday from Mishawaka, where thej hal vis ited the family of T. C. Jackman Mr. Watson was called here from Barron, Wisconsin, - by the death of his grandfather, C. C. Wat son. And now on the heels of the desire of some doctor to chloroform men at the age of sixty, comes another advising chloroforming consumptives Why not advocate like treatment for all cranks, as soon as they show the symptoms of the disease, by advocating the taking of the life of their fellow men. Mrs. Sadie Kane of Elkhart, returned to her home Thursday morning after a week's stay with her sister, Mrs. Philips. Mrs. Kane was not in the best of health and the long vigil of watchfulness and the death of Mr. Philips following, so completely unnerved her that she thought best to return home even before the funeral. Talmage said, the newspaper is the great educator of the nineteenth century. There is no force compared with it. It is book, pulpit, forum all in one. And there is not an interest religious, literary, commercial, scientific, agricultural, or mechanical that is not within its grasp. All our churches, and schools and colleges, and asylums, and art galleries feel the quaking of the printing press. , Pitiable indeed is the individual whose envy makes him miserable whenever he sees' that some one engaged in the sane line of business that he follows get along fairly -well. Such envious creatures can't get it through their pinheads that this world wasn't made for them exclusively and that the almighty cot'ld never have deemed it wise to .secure them a monopoly of any particular line of business. South Bend Times.
FUME'S 1 . .. .. .. q
IT IS ÄLL GOtlE x Henry Jarrell came down Saturday from Tyner, to get a good start for South Bend. Harry Hoharn, rural carrier on route one, is confined to Iiis home withr malarial fever. Miss Jeannie Oglesbee went to Chicago Friday -evening for a visit with friends over, Sunday. , ; Walter and Marvin Freed went to South Bend Saturday noon to visit friends and on business.. Miss Anna Hendricks has returned to Logansport Friday' evening after a. two weeks visit .in. this city.' 1 . Mrs. .George' W. Shrider went to Chicago "'to spend the day with her daughter Mrs. Walter Stevens. . . 't ' jpi: Mrs. F. Miclke and daughter went to Chicago Saturday to spend a few days with friends and relatives. . Stephen Coleman and wife returned to Burr Oak Saturdaj; after visiting their son, Rev. J. J. Coleman. .William Nutt of Tippecanoe, was in town Tuesday. Mr. Nutt was looking at some Jand near Donaldson. Mrs. Ed Reese came dow from Fort 'Wayne to spend Sunday with her parents, on South Michigan street Mrs. A. Barber of Bourbon township, went to South Bend Saturday, to visit over Sunday with her daugh ter. ' Earl Wiltfong came down from Bourbon Saturday morning to go with ' the young folks to the track meet at South Bend. Ordie Stephenson came down from South Bend Saturday. He is much improved in health but is not yet fully up to his old standard. Jesse Allman writes his folks from Park Falls, Wis., wher he is in business for himself, that he is well and doing well, and at that time they had eight inches of snow. Mr. J. Freshour of Rutland, staid over night witl his daugnter, Mrs. Charles Zmnbäügh and ' left "Saturday for VanWert, OhiO, for a visit with relatives and old friends.' Mrs. May of West Plymouth and her sister, Miss Ethel Richwine of Peru, went to Twin Lakes Saturday to view the beauties of the lakes and angle, for the finny tribe. Louis Allman who recently moved from this city to Indianapolis, left this week for a six weeks trip through the west, in the interest of the Kahn tailoring company; establishing agencies. John Markley of Plymouth and Miss Mary Rupel were married Wednesday May 8, at the home of the bride's parents Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Rupel, residing south of townNorth Liberty News. The women of the Chicago suburb Of Oak Park, have instituted a new fad, or rather agitated the old one of i talking contest, and after exhausting the resources of their own sex, have challenged the men to combat. Earl McLaughlin, who represented Plymouth in the oratorical, contest at ßouth Bend,- was seriously handicapped by having been sick with the grip for several days, ..winding up with loss of half a nigh,ts' sleep from tooth ache Friday, night. .;.,. . , ....... Mrs. Elia- Dickson came down from Tyner ;Saturday!Jwhere she vis ited her brother, John Aker, and went to Argos for-Scnday with her-daugh ter, . Mrs. Sylvester Bryan. She will return next week as housekeeper for George Engle on Pearl street. Alfred Grater, who is employed in Peru, passed through the city Friday witl an automobile party, enroiite to Chicago on a business and pleasure trip They stopped for supper with his mother, Mrs. Jacob Haag and then went to Laporte for the nightl 1 Mrs. Samuel Osborn came up to Plymouth Saturday morning to at tend the funeral of Mrs.' Teter Richard, with whom she attended school at Old! Pizgah in their girlhood days, and in which neighborhood they afterward lived a's" neighbors," for forty years. . . . Mrs. Steere a niece of Mr. Samuel Osborne of Culver, is home for a visit with her people and came to Ply mouth Saturday. She and Mr. Steere are dwarfs and have traveled exten sive'ly for pleasure and profit for years, they having been married 27 years ago. Che stork brought joy to the Span ish people May 10 by delivering to the. king and queen a son and heir, to be known as Prince of Asturias. Big guns boomed a salute telling the castilians the child is of male sex. He will be the tenth ruler from the house of .Bourbon. i ' Ohio Republicans held a council at ALron in the interest of "harmony,' br.r, the reporter failed to state wheth er , the participants had their razors with them or not, though up to date nothing has been done to change the situation. We are pleased to see them advocating harmony, for if there is anything that makes political machin ery run smooth, and in which we par ticularly delight, harmony is its name
Mrs. Anna Truitt, who had been visiting her sister, returned to South
Bend. John R. Jones went to Aigos Wednesday to attend the funeral of Aaron McCroskey. W. E. Gray, of West township, re turned from a visit of a week at his I old. hörne in South Bend. Mrs. Emma Shafer and daughter, Dollie, who werei visiting here, re turned to Argos, their home. Mrs. G. S. Cleveland, who sustained a severe fall at her home, is slowly recovering, though not able at pres ent to be out of bed. Snow fell Wednesday throughout the state of Nebraska. There was a fall of three inches in Missouri and two inches in Kansas. Mrs. A. L. Gray, of South Bend, who is visiting her daughter, Mrs Porter, went to Argos Wednesday to see her father, G. W. Duddleson. Complaint is made of the "fowl" odors of a chicken yard on West Garro street, and claim is made that it needs looking after by the board of health. If Metsker's consent was obtained to repeal the "graft" resolution why did not Councilman Ness voe for its repeal? Like the mayor he wanted to be. consistent, eh? Mrs. J. A. Carlisle, daughter of the late Mrs. Ungcr, returned Wednes day to her home in Crowley, La., She came here five weeks ago upon the death of her mother. C, A. Reeve, Harry Humrichouscr and J. T. Brosnahan, the latter of Pierceton, went to Indianapolis Wednesday to ittend a state meeting of Independent telephone men. A number of girls gave a farewell party Tuesday , evening in honor of Miss May Allen, of Danville, 111., who is htre on a visit to her mother. Miss Allen will return home Friday. A report just filed in probate at rittsburg shows that there is still some $439,000 coming to Harry Thifw from; his father's estate a good deal more than there will be if he should get dut of jail. Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Donohue, the latter formerly Mrs. Anna Brakel, will remove here from Chicago Thursday and will take up their res idence in Mrs. Donohue's home, on Madison street. Guy E. Lowry and other remon strants have filed an appeal from the board of county commissioners on the application of Lawrence O. Kamp and John J. Sipe on application for liquor licenses. Lon Pelton has moved from the Brakel property, on Madison street, which will be occupied by his daughter Anna. He will move into the Long property on Third street, that he lias purchased. Dn and Mrs. C. O. Wiltfong, of Chesterton, arrived hce Wednesday for. a' visit with the doctor's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Wiltfong. Mrs. Wiltfong -, was formerly, well known ere 'as Grace Axe. The common council had to get Metsker's: permission before they could appeal his "graft" resolution. We ' cannot . understand how the state's attorney was able to take an appeal in the Metsker "graft" case without the little man's consent. Jiut two veniremen have been re tained in the box in the HaywoodMoyer case in Idaho and they are yet liable ' to challenge. This case bids fair to drag out to equal length with the O'Shea and like case in Chicago and the entire country is watching for the outcome. The South is again storm swept, another one having done enormous damage to a wide strip of country. across the states of Louisiana and Mississippi, blowing down houses and factories and at . Heidelburg, Miss., the home of Seth Deaz, was struck by lightning and Deaz was killed. - Cfaude Garrison, who since his school closed, has been selling crock ery on the road for the Robert Johns Wholesale company, came home Fri day from a trip through central Indiana arid will leave Monday for a three week's trip through Southern Michigan.! ' He likes the road and thinks he can 'mäke it pay better than teaching. . About one-third' of the lots in the Cenjral , Addition were sold by Denison!& Son before this paper went to press. They expect to have them all gone by Monday night. It will be advisable for those wanting lots to go out: Sunday and pick out n lot, take off the card and present to Denisort & Son at Seybold's Real Estate office Monday or 'Monday night before 0:30 p.m. The trial of the John Hilt Lake Ice company's case against the Lake Erie ancT Western Railway company was begun Tuesday in the federal court at Indianapolis. The Laporte ice company is suing for $11,000 for the destruction in July, 1903, of its ice houses at Fish Trap lake. It is claimed that sparks from an engine on the Lake Erie railroad set fire to the building. Solomon Stockman and Justin Myers. 'on North Center street and John G. " Leonard on Sophia street are pa r.ting their houses. There is noth ing that attracts to a town and gives it a name for thrift more than nicely painted homes and well kept lawns, not to mention the tasting good to the buildings themselves, and Plymouth with all this and her avenues cf shade trees is not excelled for beauty by any city in northern Indiana. The "Cleveland Boomers" is the title by which a special train of Cleve land, Ohio, men are known that are making a tour of Indiana cities to boom the Ohio city on the lake. The party was at Logansport Tuesday, at Peru Wednesday and came here over the L. E. & W, late Wednesday after noon. The train was run on the south siding track, the party remain ing in them over night. .There are said to be 100 in the party. . Aunt Priscilla Thompson is sick at her home.
Mr. and Mrs. George Joyce return
ed Thursday to their home in La porte county after a Visit with friends and relatives east of the city. Mrs. Joyce, is a daughter of Levi Cramer. The trustees of the several town ships at their meeting re-appointed the present incumbent, J. F. Langenbaugti, truant officer. We can see no reason to complain at this since Ir. Langenbaugh has given prime satisfaction in the past. He is master of German as well as of the English language, is an old teacher and more than all is crowned with a well bal ancedi head. While the trustees might have done worse, we., don't know where they could have done' better. Brother Bean of the Goshen Dem ocrat puts in his entire editorial strength May 6 in complaining of Republican editorial meetings' failure to pass .. resolutions complimentary to Gov. Hanly, and of the extravagance of the last state legislature also the last Congress voting $25,000 to Presi dent ' Roosevelt for traveling ex penses. You should cheer up broth er and not grow pessimistic over lit tie things; there may come a time if you live. long enough when things will go your way and then you won't have anything to take back. The bickerings of .the politicians at this time, relative to the special fit ness of the, favorite sons of the sever al states, for the presidency; each con tending their man is more nearly per fection than all others until somebody shows his total unfitness, when an other is brought forth and so on, puts one in mind of the story of Er nest pnd the great stone face. Many who have come to honor and fame, and others to great riches or states manship are brought betöre him whom they must follow for comparison, but' up to date none has been found who bears his likeness. Metsker never did have any use for the community only to the extent he could use it for selfish interests. He had nothing here until he broke into the legislature after which he blossomed out full fledged, with money enough to pay an excessive price for The i Democrat, thereby acquiring a means by which he could fleece the unsuspecting public right, and keep it up. He didn't care for the excessive price: put on the paper be bought; he got his money easy and its use in this ivay would furnish him a means to an end and the public has payed dearly for all he has given them. The last grand jury returned indict ments against Editors Metsker and Boys', of the Plymouth Democrat and Chronicle, for overcharging the coun ty for legal advertising. Tuesday, Judge Bernetha quashed the indictments, holding, as quoted by the In dependent, that the charge does not constitute a public offense, and the statute cannot fix the price any indi vidual may charge for his commod ities or services. This is certainly a revolutionary decision, but the courts are. rendering so many funny deci-j sionsl these days that one can only wonder what will happen next. Bre men '.Enquirer. ' Common Sense Spreading. One of the most gratifying evi dences of the development of cpmmon sense in Indiana is the growth of the sentiment for the practical protection of fish. The latest county organization for the enforcement of the fish and game laws is at Crawfordsville, where seventy-two prominent citizens have banded together to put a stop to the seining, spearing and dynamiting that have almost depop ulated Montgomery county streams. Kosciusko county, which took this course some months ago, reports that there is already a marked improve ment in. its lakes and streams that promises a return to their old-time excellence. At the same time comes a, report from Richmond of investigation by the Fish Commission of charges that the Richmond Artificial Gas Company is again turning refuse oil Into the Whrtevvater and killing fish by thousands. If guilty ,the company should be punished to the full extent of the law.: In all probability what is called "refuse oil" is something that would make .valuable by-products if the company management knew. how to utilize it. But whether it is or not, they; know the wrong they are doing for they have been complained of before and have promised to discontinue the nuisance, Ir is folly to make sewers of the natural streams, and folly that must result in injury to health generally. It i? folly to allow the destruction of acqoatic. life by dynamiting and seining. It is folly to permit the reckless and useless prevention of a large food supply that nature would provide if mere opportunity' were given. It is folly to drive away numbers of pleasureseekers who are drawn .by the beauty and convenience of Indiana's lakes and streams when they can get fair' fishing, It is folly for masses of citizens to submit to deprival of an innocent and enjoyable pastim because some people insist on violating the laws. It is folly for any one who believes in law enforcement to treat lightly the persisted- violation of any law. Star.' 0 To Aid Your Memory. Next spring you will want to know what kind of weather we had in April of this year, and if you will paste this up 'somewhere you will know April was a very cold bleak month. It snowed 14 days at some time during the: day. There was frost every night but four. On two occasions, it froze tothe thickness of one inch. Not twenty per cent of the people had their oats planted. On the 30th, but very little garden was made, and one third of the gardens not plowed. Oat that was sown in March, in many instances had to be sown ove.. On the last . night of the month the iron pumps were frozen, and water froze a quarter of an inch in thickness, and you might add that there was a heavy fall of snow on May 4.
GRAND ARMY ENCAMPMENT.
28th Annual Meeting Department of Indiana G. A. at Ft. Wayne. Plymouth and Marshall county will be well represented in the state encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic, which holds its 28th annual encampment at Fort Wayne next week. Miles H. Tibbetts post will go as a body and Capt. Thomas, of the I. N. G., has replied to an in vitation, saying that Company I wiU be present. The Plymouth band will accompany the soldiers. George Bowell, commander of the G. A. R., expects that more than fifty will go. Major A. H. Kuhlman ,of Auburn, has been designated by Adjutant General Perry, of Indianapolis, to command the National Guards battalion that will march on May 23. He will lead the national guard past the reviewing stand and on the line of march. The troops will wear their blue uniforms instead of the latter day khaki. It is expected that fully a dozen companies of the Indiana nitional guards will participate. Sev eral have shown a desire to attend but the long distance prevents. Col. Genimer, private secretary to Governor Hanly, writes that it is the governor's intention to attend the en campment providing he is well enough by that time. When the G. A. R. encampment opens May 22, 23, 24, the visitors will find Ft. Wayne thoroughly prepared to entertain them. Hundreds of quarters have been secured from the people, who will open their homes to the veterans and other visitors. The decorations will be the most elaborate in the city's history, ard the decorators have already put up the colors on many buildings. There will be ,two grand arches, one in front of headquarters in East Berry street, and the other in Calhoun street at Wayne. Each will b a' glittering mass of 400 electric lights at night. The reviewing itand will be south of the city hall, in Barr street, and the parade will be in five divisions. The line of march will not exceed wenty squares. A .very unusual feature of the en campment will be the joint reception by the officers of the Woman's Relief Corps and the Ladies of the G. A. R. For the first time in many years their1 differences will be forgotten, and they will act harmoniously. Judge B. W. Skelton, secretary of the en tertainment committee, urged the women to forget the past and dwell together in unity with such success that both Mrs. Eliza E. Browning, of Attica, president of the ladies of the ,G. A. R., and Mrs Alice E. Waugli, of Tipton, president of the Woman's Relief Corps, have consented. Their joint reception to their own members and the public will be held I in the rotunda of the milliondollar courthouse on Wednesday night, encampment tweek. The souvenir badge is of bronze metal, the bar being-fashioned- in the G. Ar R. design 'with silk ribbons, in tri-color, holding the medallion of General Lawton. The obverse of the medallion bears the words: "Twentyeighth Annual Encampment, Depart ment of Indiana, G. A. R. Fort Wayne, May 22, 23 and 24, 1907." It was ;designed by Secretary Skelton. General Lawton began his military career in Allen county. , Pennsy Plants Many Trees. Inj undertaking the most extensive private , torest planting on record, the Pennsylvania railroad has just begun setting out some 550,000 trees. The purpose is to provide economically in future years for the company's need for ties. Work on a targe basis is progres sing' this week at .Mount Union, Pa., where about 225,000 trees are to be planted. At Altoona, Pa., 250,000 or more red oak trees are to be set our this spring. At Hollidaysburg, a"forest nursery" is being created, about 135 pounds of seed being planted this year, in nursery beds for use next yean When this spring's p.änting is com pleted, the company will have about l,00(j acres under cultivation. Some 2,250,000 trees will have been set out, in addition to the seed planted. The planting is done with great attention to scientific detail, under the .'direct supervision, of the company's recently appointed forester, E. A. Sterling, formerly of the United States bureau of forestry. I Fruit's Not Damaged. The latest reports from the fruit growing regions show that while the northern states will be late in putting m their crops on the market, they have escaped with lighter loss due to cold than the southwest section of the country. Advices from the various states were as follows: Michigan Fruits and vegetables one month behind normal condition. Growers look for average-yield. Indiana Fruit, grain, and vegetables in good shape. Crop will be four weeks late. Kansas Fruit crop killed by cold. Tender garden plants destroyed, but growers have replanted. Missouri Practi:allv entire fruit crop destroyed by cold. Oklahoma and Indian TerritoryTree fruit crop will be almost noth ing. Bush fruits, grapes, and straw berries suffered serious injury. Indiana Methodists Will Go to Winona. Sines the Methodists have decid ed not to rebuild at Acton park and since Island Park assembly, thei summer retreat at Rome City, will not be in operation this summer, th indications are that the Methodist of Indiana will hereafter make theii summer headquarters at Winona lake The Rev. Frank Snyder, for years at tle head of the Island Park assein bly, has joined the Winona assem bly forces and is endeavoring to in duce the old Island Park followinj to go to Winona lake during the com ing season.
UTAH IS A TRAITOR STATE.
W. C. T. U. Speaker So Terms It in Bitter Arraignment of Polygamy. Utah was characterized äs a traitor state and a number of personal exper iences were related depicting the per secutions of womanhood and the practice of polygamy in its boundar ies during the opening programme of the Cook county W. C. T. U. spring institute at the First Methodist Church, Clark and Washington Streets Friday afternoon. There were also a number of addresses made and much discussion indulged in concerning the subject of temperance instruction in the public schools and the total abolition of liquor traffic from the country. Utah and polygamy were brought before the meeting first by Mrs. A. C. O'Neal, who read a synopsis of the speech of Senator Julius C. Burrows for the unseating of Senator Reed Smoot of Utah. She told at some length of the treachery-of the mormon priesthood and leaders that brought defiance and contempt for the United States government into the attitude of Utah citizens after their enfranchisement. She described the "secret endowment house" of Salt Lake City wherein promiscuous marriages are performed and kept from the record books, so that men are enabled there to marry as often and as many spouses as they choose. Following the reading Mrs. C. A. Walker contributed an address on her recent travels and impressions in Utah. . In the speeches that followed the sentiment was forcefully expressed that temperance is the paramount issue before the public now and that the time is- soon to come when sa loons and distilleries will be shorn of their license and legality. At night a literary and musical program was rendered.' Judge Samuel Artman, who recent ly became noted for his ;decision against the licensing of saloons', spoke before the meeting also. Young Heroine Fire Victim. Search of the ruins of the Univer sity Building at Kansas City recently burned revealed that Miss Aurora Wittebort also lost her life Thurs day in the fire in which Professor George DeMare was killed. All the other missing persons have been ac counted for and of the injured it is believed none will die. Miss Wittebort, who was 25 'years old, was a pianist of much talent, who lad recently returned from Germany, where she had studied for two years. It is believed she perished in het room on the fifth floor, and that her body was carried down with the de bris to the basement. Miss Wittebort was the hero of a train incident in Indiana when she was a girl, twelve years ago, and for her bravery, which resulted1 in saving a fast passenger train which bore a number of French' and "Belgian officialsj en route to Chicago; she was decorated by the French government. A small bridge on a division of the Pennsylvania Railroad near Hartford City Ind., where Miss Wittebort then lived with her family, caught fire. The "Cannonball" passenger train, westbound, was due to arrive within a short time and Miss Wittebort, the first to see the danger, ran to the top of a steep grade east of the bridge and awaited the arrival of the flyer. She succeeded in flagging the train with her red skirt and enabled, the engineer to bring it safely to a stand still within a few yards of the bridge. The incident was brought to the at tention of the French government, which, later, decorated Miss Wittebort, while the passengers raised a fund that was used in giving her a musical education abroad. Quips on Pride. As thou desirest the love of God and man, beware of pride. It is a tumor in the mind,' that breaks and ruins all thine actions; a worin in thy treasury, that eats and ruins thine estate. It loves no man, and is be loved of none, it disparages another's virtues by detraction and thine own by vainglory. ' It is the friend of the flatterer, the mother of envy, the nurse of fury, the sin of devils, the ddvil of mankind. It hates superiors, scorns inferiors, and owns no equal. In short, til thou hate it, God hates thee-. Bolingbroke Let me give you th history of pride irt three small chapter The be ginning of pride was in heaven. The continuance of pride is on earth. The end of pride is in hell. Thi3 history shows how unprofitable it is. R. Newton. Pride costs more than ' hunger, thirst and cold Thomas Jefferson. , Logs and! Bolts Wanted. Highest cash prices paid for Logs and Bolts. Plymouth Novelty Mfg. Co.,' Plymouth, Ind., Home Phone 12S mayl6w4 ADVERTISED LETTERS. GENTLEMEN. , Geo. E. Hart E A Graham William H Croy William L Wallace William Hasseuis S. B. Burch , LADIES. Miss May M. Allen a r f n rrnt will be charred for md yeiiisinfr. In calling for these letters pleate . .... ".A-riA " , J. A. Yockey. I. M. Prymouth Markets. Butter ..' ..'...' ---IS Eggs --14 Hens 10 Spring chickens 10 Ducks x..9 Roosters 5 to 7 Turkeys ......8 to 10 Potatoes ....30 to 33 Wheat S3 Date .40 Rye 62 Corn 49 Dover seed 750
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stomach disorders Its con- Tt
tmuedAise means injury to health.
r Following the advice
5v.icnr.i5t5, .cngiana ana
passed laws prohibiting its use in bread making.
American housewives
should protect their households against Alum's wrongs
- Powder. qPure Grape Cream Tartar Powder is to be for the asking Buy by name Embalmer Finds Life. While an undertaker was preparing to embalm her, Mrs. John Bogan,, wife of a gate tender employed by the Lackawana railroad, at Syracuse. N. ,Y. was discovered to be alive Tuesday afternoon. Bogan was notified while at work that his wife had died. The informa tion was carried by" a boarder at the Bogan residence and almost frantic, Bogan returned home. His wife lay motionless on the bed and he supposed her dead. He immediately sent for an under taker and made preparations for the funeral. Half an hour later the dead wagon drew up at the door. One of the undertaker's assastants went into the death room and began to unpack his ins-truments. He carefully ob served the neck of the woman and noticed a pulsation. He rushed from the room and summoned the other assistant. The woman whom they thought dead was breathing. Stimulants were administered and a physician sent for. Mrs. Bogan soon became conscious, and she was gazing about in wonder at the strangers when her husband entered. He fainted at the sight. 6 i t 3 i t c i t i t 3 J ? 6 3 i ? t 3 C t Lest
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15 DAYS MORE Of Our GREAT MAY SALE j Prices on everything CUT TO THE QUICK f
: To reduce our immense stock of Spring and Summer Suits for Men Boys and Children
DOWN MUST GO THE PRICE. We have?
purchased too many and the unseasonable weather HAS BEEN against us. AW our Men's and Young Men's Suits $7.50 n e values at J3.lü All our Men's and Young Aen's Suits $10.00 py ß and $11.00 values at i)l.DJ All our Men's and Youn Men's Suits ;n $15.00 Oll C1C5 hand-tailored at... All our Men's and Young Aen's finest $18.00 ?C AQ and $20.00 hand-tailored Suits at. $13.10 In our Shoe Department all our $3.00 "World rn A O Over" Dress Shoes at )d!.LJü 100 pairs Men's medium Dress Shoes ct ......01.30 300 pairs Men's guaranteed first class work shoes at.. 01.69 mr Itsup to you to save a few dollars by taking advantage of this GREATEST SPRING SALE ever attempted in Plymouth. You know the reputation of our store So yHEN WE SAY there is a big reduction in prices, you can depend on it. Your money's worth oryour money back
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Alum
in food causes permanent p of medical ( r ranee nave of had ' Attempt to Parole Bill Green. A petition is again being circulated at Logansport for the parole of "Bill' Green serving a life sentence at Michigan City for the murder of Enos Brumbaugh, at Young America, in 1S81, and T. E. Brumbaugh, a brother of the victim, has consented not to interfere with the proposed release. Green escaped to Texas. Soon after Amer Green, a brother murdered Luella Mabbitt, and he also made his escape to Texas, where he joined his brother. "Buck" Stanley, temperance evangelist, then deputy sheriff of Cass county, traced both men to Texas and arrested them. ' Arrival of Stork. Telegram received Wednesday by W. '.H. Conger: "A daughter arrived at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Wilcox, Ravenwood, at 10:20 Tuesday evening. Motaer and child doing well." For Sale. Household Goods, Carpets, etc., also one Knitting Machine. Apply to Mrs. J. B. Williamson. Center street. d2wl M I
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The Good Clothes Store, "Of Ccrse." , "The Store that always nafces c-d."
