Plymouth Tribune, Volume 9, Number 35, Plymouth, Marshall County, 2 June 1910 — Page 4

Xbc tribune. Only Republican Newspaper in tba County. HENDRICKS & COMPANY rVSLXSSSBS.

TELEPHONE No. 27. OFFICE Centennial Opera House Block, 10T West IPorte Street. Entered at the Postoffice at Plymouth, Indiana as second-class matter. Plymouth Indiana, June 2, 1910. Call for Republican County Convention. The Republicans of Marshall county are hereby called to meet in delegate convention in the city of Plymouth at two o'clock p. m. on SATURDAY, JUNE 11, 1910, for the purpose of nominating candidates for the following county offices: State Representative, County Commissioners for the Second and Third dists. Clerk, Auditor, Treasurer, Sheriff, Sur veyor, Assessor, Coroner and County Councilmen, and to transact such other business as the convention may deem wise or necessary. Delegates and alternate delegates to this convention will be chosen on Saturday, June 4, 1910, at the following times and places : Union In Culver at two o'clock p. .m. West At West schoolhouse at ten o'clock a. m. Polk At Tyner at two oclock p. m. Xortli At Lapaz at two oclock p. m. German At Bremen at two o'clock p. m. Bourbon At Bourbon in town hall at two o'clock p. m. Tippecanoe At Tippecanoe at two o'clock p. m. Walnut At Arjos in town hall at two o'clock p. in. Green At Kiigdom schoolhouse at 'two o'clock p. m. Center At Burkett's Hall at 2 o'clock p. m. The apportionment of delegates and alternate delegates ehall be one t'o every five votes cast for James E. -Watson for Governor in 1908. The townships will be enthled to the following number of delegates and alternates: Township Vote Del-egades Union 311 62 West 150 30 Polk 253 50 North 173 34 German 334 G6 Bourbon 351 70 Tippeoanoe 187 37 Walnut 329 C5 Green 127 25 Center 69C 139 Total delegate vote 578 Necessary to a choice 290 All Republicans of the county are earnestly urged to attend the meetings for the election of these delegates and assist in choosing the best possible nie for our candidates at the. county convention. S. C. Loring, Chairman S. E. Boys, Secretary. Political Announcements Representative The undersigned desires to an noomce his name as a candidate for Representative, subject to the decision of the Republican con vention to be held Saturday, June 11, 1910. E. M. .Wright. Auditor The undersigned wishes to an nounce as a candidate for county auditor subject to the decision of the Republican county con vention June 11, 1910. F. E. Garn Chürles H. Powell o Polk tp. will be a candidate for the office of county auditor, subject to th'e decisions of the repvbh can convention to be held in Ply mouth Saturday June 11, 1910. For County Clerk Wm. G Hendricks will be a candidate for county clerk subject to the decision of the Republican county convention Saturday June 11, 1910. Treasurer I will be a candidate for the office of County Treasurer before the Republican county convention to be held in Plymouth, Saturday June 11, 1910. W. F. Schilt. Commissioner The undersigned desires to an rrounce his name as a candidate for county; commissioner from the Second ' district subject to the decision on tmc Kepu'Diican county convention to be held on Saturday June 11, 1910. 19w4t Geo. H. Hatfield Sheriff. James M. Ramstead of North Township will be a candidate for sheriff, subject to the decision of the Republrcan Convention June 11, 1910. The undersigned wishes to announce his name as a candi date for sheriff, subject to the decision of the Republican con vention, June 11, 1910. Herschel P. Berlin North Township Surveyor. The undersigned desires to an nounce his name as a candidate for counfty surveyor, subject to the decision of the Republican convention to be heM Saturday, June 11, 1910. Milton F. Beck

NATION LOOKING

TO INDIANA BEVERIDGE'S FIGHT WILL BE DESPERATE BATTLE IN STATE. Kansas Editor Says Opponents of Senator Will Make Every Effort to Defeat Washington, May 27. Wm. A Hen White, the distinguished Kansas author, editor and publicist and close friend of Theodore Roosevelt, says that the issue as to whether the United States shall be governed for the benefit of the special intersts or for the whole people is about to be put to the test in Indiana. 'Mr. White is one of the most vigorous champions of progressive governiment in the country and he would regard the defeat of Senator Beveridge as a national calamity. He believes the contest in Indiana, itukred in all its bearings, is the mast important in its bearings on the future of nroirressive nolicies of all the political battles to be waged this year. The progressive movement. Mr 4 White said is not confined to the United States, but is in progress all over the world ; that as people become informed they are demanding more and more iustice from the men that rule over them. Knows Beveridge's Record. Si)eakinir of the ficht Senator 4 Beveridge has waged in the face of tremendous obstacles and of what his re-election means to the common", ordinary citizen Mr. lute said todav : "The atmosphere of Washing ton is so different from the at mosphere of the country at' large th.iit the people do not realize the forces that are arraved and the tremendous pressure that is brought to bear on men in conpress to induce them to vote for the special interests, rather than for the public interests. The man who stands irp for public interests as against private aggression in Washington is a marked man. Through enor mous can'naign contributions ,reat corporate interests have capmred the party organizations and smothered the party conscience, and those organizations have their home and their greatest power in Washington. Read Men from Party. "Here they can bring pressure that is unimagined bv the av erage citizen at home. This pressure is social and political. I hey ostracize the indqenuent con gressman or senator and they read him out of the party. "It will be a trrcat test of selfgovernment in America this year when the people at home are brought face to face with the proposvtfon of standing by the men, who stood by them, and the greatest test of honest govern ment in America will be in inui ana for if there is one man in the United States whom the powers that prey through public plunder desire to annihilate politically that man is Senator lieveridge. "He has withstood every kind of temptation that ever has been offered to men to induce him to betrav his people. Every insid ions art oi inc politician, u c u-nancic-r and the social artificer lias been tried upon Beveridge and he has stood like a rock." "The fact that Beveridge has stood unafraid and unshaken has meant most to the insurgents in both houses. Naturally the interests that he has rebuffed and has helped to keep within decent bounds are alter hrm. Will Resort to Trickery. "They will use money in Indiana. They will use political trickery in Indiana. Inev wil ii.se everv scheme and dodcre that the -wily politician knows in the high degree of that craft. "The people of Indiana have to vote through a legislatures in order to return Senator lieveridtre. ?o it mav 1c expected that every Republican, who is a candidate for the legislature wil be assailed, not because he is for Beveridge not at all. The candidates will be attacked on personal grounds; local issues will be manufactured, stones wii le soread. everv inducement wil be held out for the average voter to vote for the democratic legis lative candidates. "In county conventions where this dialohcal influence can con trol, county offices will be swap ped in order to get week legis lative nominations. Plan to Trade Voters. "Wherever the interests -an do -So, in any local community, where they can control, where they can buy or trade for the oartv machinery, they will put up men they think can be defeat ed and then go to the polls am trv to trade these men out of their birth-right. Although Mr. .White Is one oi the most gifted writers in Amer ica he is not a speech-maker.' I h-e. were, it would afford him keen delight to go into Indiana and make 'speeches in behalf of Senator Bevridire and in support of the cause of the people which he believes has so much at stake in the Indiana campaign. Ninety-One jYears Old Friday. Mrs. Julia iWard Howe; author of the "Battle Hymn of the Re public and one of the most not ed women of America was 91 years old Friday.

BUILD OLD PEOLE'S HOME

Mrs. Trainer of South Bend Pre pares to Carry Out Provisions of Mother's Will. Mrs. Mabel C. Trainer, who ate Saturday afternoon was given a verdict in the Good will contest whereby she is to come into possession of $300,000 left ler by her mother, 'Mrs. Minerva Good has already started prepar ations to build an old people s home on a 03 acre farm north west of South Bend, thus carry ing out the terms of the will preMlnis ttt( "the .'attachment, (aif a codicil which disinherited Mrs. Trainor and gave each of three sisters .$10,000. By the terms of the original will a society must be formed and an additional $?5,000 subscribed for the home within two years of the .$;3.000 will be turned over to the Children's Aid societv for use in maintaining the orphans' home at Mishawaka. The supervisions will be enforc ed bv Mrs. Trainor. GAS A THING OF THE PAST Natural -Product at Fairmount, Once Greatest Field Has . Completely Petered Out. A Fairmount news item says: That natural gas is a thing of the past in this part of the old gas belt is shown by the moving of the machinery from what is known as the west pumping sta tion to the waste pile at Greentown. This is the second of the three stations that were owned and operated by the Indiana Na tural Gas and Oil company in the vicinity of Fairmount to go out of business. ' "About fifteen years ago the company put in three pumping j-tationy, each having from tight to twelve compressors of five hundred horse-jower and which required from four to thirtv-six boilers to furnish the necessary s'team to run the compressors. The gas was pumped from here to Chicago day and night. The wells at one time showed the greatest volume of any field in the world. Fairmount was the home of "Jumbo" the strongest pressure well that was ever drill ed in the gas belt. Reaching out from the pumping stations was a net work of piie lines. Two main lines, one fourteen and the other twelve inches, carried the gas to Chicago. "During the last five vears the company burned coal under the pumping station lxuers, thereby saving all the gas possible for the Chicago consumers. The stations were costly affairs and each covered about three acres." HOME FOR GIRLS. Inspector of Board of State Char ities Visits Salvation Army Institution. The emergency home for girls conducted at South Bend, Ind., by the Salvation army, is doing a good work along rescue lines, according to 'Miss Ethel Clark, inspector of the board of state charities, who recently completed her inspection. The home is designated in army circles as the maternity Jhospital a ltd placing agency of the Salvation army. "Miss Clark was well pleased with the institution," said Capt. Arthur Meaker of the Salvation aTmy. "She was also surprised to learn that few people know what is being done by the Salvationists. Many people have a vague idea aflxmit it, and assume it to be all right because influential people indorse the work and contribute to its support. If they were called upon to tell the difference between the Salvation army and other kindred charitable organizations, churches or philanthropic societies in South Bend, they could not. "The difference is that while other societies or charity workers take care of cases that are brought to their notice in an excellent way, the Salvation army workers look for trouble. Their regulations call for three hours' visiting every day. In this way they seek to save that which is lost and overlooked. South Bend has over fifty questionable resorts. The lasses of the army work among the women and girls frequenting these places, to plead with them to forsake their sinful ways. If they find girls under legal age in these resorts they take them out as guests of mercy, if they come willingly and with the co-operation of the juvenile court if they do not. The women work among women." FINE AND IMPRISONMENT Elkhart "Blind Tigers" Plead Guilty and Get Heavy Sentence. Through agreement with the prosecution and the Klkhart Law and Order League the men arrested at Klkhart for keeping alleged "blind tigers" Charles Medley, Charles Schmidt, Im Tracey, Arthur Chapman and George AVidrcws, came into court Thursday 'morning and pleaded guilty to' the charge. Judge Van Fleet fined each man $100, ordered all "wet" goods taken in the raids destroyed and gave each one a suspended sentence of six months in jail. He warned them that on the slightest pretext of law infringement he would have them arrested and compel them to serve their sentence.

BUTTER TRUST FIGHTS MEAT

ELGIN BROKERS BOOST PRICES AND CONSUMERS PAY BILLS. Natural Laws Defied and Changed to Help Great Combinations. The price of the better grades of butter have advanced this week. There has been no drought or epidemic among cattic. The farmer is now in the midst of the grass season when feeding is cheap and abundant. Milk and butter should also he cheap and abundant, and if there were no interference with the law of supply and demand the price of butter would be oin down instead of going up. But there is no .great mvstery about the situation. Mr. ' I;. L. McAdam, a Chicago butter broker, in a burst of indiscretion lets the cat out of the bag. Says Mr. McAdams in an, interview in a Chicago paper: "i'c have enough power and a sufficient number of votes on the Elgin Butter Board to shove the price of butter to 10 cents a pound before the last day of June, and if this does not force packers to break the contracts, they have on hand we will boost the price to 50 cents within the next five weeks. So it is quite clear why butter is advancing in price !'i defiance of natura', law. The Elgin Butter Board and the Chicago packers are in a figl't over the control of ti-e butter market, and in the meantime the consumer may get what satisfaction he can out of the situation and if he doesn't like it he can go to Old Xick. The packers were formerly wont to buy tl-cir sjpring supplies of butter from the Elgin brokers. This year the packers decided to save a half-cent a jxnmd commission and went out into the open market and bought their own butter. This made the Elgin brokers angry, for they -see in the action of the packers an entering wedge which might mean the annihilation of the Butter Trust. "We'll run the Butter Trust and you run the Meat Trust" is virtually the message sent by the butter brokers to the packers, with the threat that if the packers can't see it in that way, the price of butter will he run up to 50 cents a poiriTd and the . - packers will be made to sweat in making future purchases. But of course no one thinks of the consumer, who isn't interested in the least as to the merits of the controversy between the butter men and the packers. He can sweat "to a frazle" as far as the butter men care. The Elgin Butt-r Board, an institution with ramifications all over the nation, is an obstrusive but exceedingly powerful asso ciation of 'gentlmen who meet every week dav mornin.tr in a dingy, -smoky and cigar-strewn room in the commission house district of Chicago. There is a little room off the big room. A committee adjourns each morning and evening to the small room. Then after ten or fifteen minutes of patriotic communion, the committee emerges and a benevolent old gentleman with white whiskers softly marks up the butter prices for the day. The prices are swiftly suit to all parts of the country by telegraph and dealers everywhere arc guided thereby. It's all settled. The committee has issued its fiat and there is nothing more to be said. It is very pleasant to be on the inside of the butter board transections. Suppose several of No. 4." 1 it nit i-?.iii!iamc genuemen composing the board should need a lit tle Oberammergua spending money. 1 hey simply buy- up and hultl a few thousand pounds of butter, tlierdliv cansm n scarcity. They then mark up the price and unload. Can you blame the butter brokers for getting alarmed when the packers show a desire to go into business for themselves? Rcallv it isn't nice for one trust to invade the preservcw of another. Lord Rothschild said the secret of speculation was "to buy at the bottom and sell at the top." It isn't speculation with the butter brokers it's a cinch. Voted Early and Often. Terre Haute has got excited lyecause the census indicates that she has but -UJ.ooO inhabitants. So ,a mass meeting has j been called, to provide for Miimlcmcntingthc government countings Xo suggestion is made of any reasons why the census enumerators 'who, presumably, arc Terre Hau'te citizens and who, moreover are paid by the nameshould have deliberately minified the population, lint Terre Haute W'dch had :u;.:7;$ in l!)oo. thought she had doubled hCr imputation, because, according to election returns, her vote had doubled. Perhaps some of the -nine-mon'th voters have been utilized for repeating purposes South Rend Times. The Children Can't Vote. State Superintendent Aley and other school men who expect to be elected to office this vcar would not urge schd for" the vacation period if the children could vote.

OWE THING WE

YOUR MIND; THIS STORE IS PRE-EMEtJTLY A PLAGE FOR HIGH QUALITY IM CLOTHES. & & ft -ft ft $ "ft M ,

s Copyrinlit 1909 Tbe Home of Kuppenhdmet Chicago

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Let us shod you in a pair of Nobby Oxfords-Wc have every style toe and every color of leather Shoe Department Always.

Bear in "The Store That Always Makes FURNISHED BV Uwners ol the only Abstract Book in j the county. Abstract of title to &U J Cisi.ua in .uiiiu tuunij compiled promptly and accurately. J Harry C. Uerirm?. w i IMward K. Urauni Part of sv ir also part of sc (jr '7, 1, Wer t township .$10.00. State Exchange Hank of Anro.s w d to First National Hank, Arrr, () Mil J"-'' i V'.' 'V.'. Robert K. Stout and wife v 1 to Henry Haag nw qr of sv qr except r. r. sec' ir M R L Lentcr tp $-000.0 Mnlinda Harison wd to Jefferson Florian and wife west hf ( f sc qr., of sw qr also part of .;, :;if l, west tp. .$1200.00. Edward E. Urattni v d to John Ciultay Part of sw qr also part of sc. qr '7, M), 1, West tp., $2100.00. Aaron Eowrv and wife wd to Henry T. Long I)ts fl and (;." Walnut $'.,00.00. Almira I .urns and husband, v d to Schuyler C. Schillling Lot in liurr Oak $7.").00. Heirs of .Win. F. Iiates deceased w d to Frank iates sw qr. of nw qr l:, 33, 3, Bourbon tp., $:.' ,oooo. Henry Haag w d to Erwin Reisch and wife, Lot 3 Elliot Place Plymouth $."")00. aniel W. Miller and wife w d t.: Thomas Thompson East hf of Lot P.lock 1 Tyner $1. Thomas Thompson and wife v d to Henrv L. Jarrell East hf, of Lk rtj p.iock 4" Tyner $000.00. Henry L. Jarrcll and wife w d to Thompson Part of Lot 3 and part of Lot 'I "Block S Tyner .$;oo.oo. James Schultlicsis et al w d t.i Mary Schulthesis Part of se qr Section 1 M. R.L. Center tp $1.00 Thomas F Chancy ami wife w d to Wm. I). Reiter and wife Lot 24 Brownlces continued addition to Plymouth i:0.00. Levi Puteii)augh and wife w d to Herbert Puterbaugh and wife south half of east half o se qr, also west of west iif of se qr. al west hf of se qr 9, 33 3, Walnut tp f. 4 00.00. Bryan on Personal Liberty. Speaking in Chicago, before the Catholic Abstinence Union, W. J. Bryan outlined Iiis position on the temperance question. In answer to the opponents of local option, he attempted a definition of personal liberty. Personally favoring total abstinence, as ?4 public yolicy he declared himself in favor of such restriction of the use of liquor, as may be necessary for the protection of society. On this question he believes that every political unit has the righ!t to act, save as restrained by a larger unit, which lias, the right to control the smaller in this issue because the caloon is a nuisance, a menace, and a demoralizing influence. Mr Brvan favors federal action recognizing the right of the "sitatc to control shipments of liquor inmieVliately upon their entrance to the state. He declared that thei interstate commerce clause of the Constitution had been used to nullify state laws on the liquor question. Marriage License. Kniest K. Thomas 2fi, Ply. mouth and Blanche M. Tracy 20 plvmonth. Harry C. Thayer 1!), Des Moines, la., and Ida K. Thomas 1!) Culver to Frances M. Mow, Plymouth, n. John D. Clark Medaryville 41 to Rosa Clark Walkerton 35.

Lauer

WANT TO EMPHASIZE 111 OUR ADVERTISING. fltlD IN

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Abstract of Official Vote Democratic Primaries, Marshall County.

Rep. A. E. Wise J. AY. Edison; Ed. S. Kitch Clerk Otto H. Weber George McCoy Auditor Treas. V. A. Lidecker Cm. A. 'Maxey Byron Carpenter Sheriff J. W. Falconbury Coroner f. II. Kizer. .'. j. X. Wolfe Surveyor v . R. Schoonover. O. W. Smith Y. T. Leonard Xathan Lee Geo. Morlock Assessor Com. 2nd Dis. James Sevcrns Com. 3rd Dis.. C. E. Rom ig UNGER IS PLYMOUTH MAN RENOMINATED PROS. BY JOINT CONVENTION HELD WEDNESDAY. Judicial Convention of Forty-first District Held at Democratic Headquarters in Armory Wednesday. Harry L. linger was renominated candidate for Prosecuting Attorney of the Forty-first judicial district, composed of Marshall and Fulton counties, by the joint Democratic convention held at the Democratic headquarters in itfoe Armory, in this city Wednesday afternoon Unger was the unanimous choice there toeing no other candidate. An address was made) by Vie State Senator Harry E. Grube, after which the convention adjourned. GEN. M'GINNIS STRICKEN. Unusual Exertion Proves Too Much for Prominent Veteran at Terre Haute. Terre Haute. Ind.. Mav 27: (Special) General George F. McGinnis of Indianapolis, . 81 years old, a veteran of the Mexican and Civil wars and one of the best known .G. A. R. men in the state, dropped from exliaustion in the street Thursday. lie was at once taken to the Filbeck hotel, wliere his condition was pronounced serious by Dr. S. I. Brown of Knox, department medical director, who ordered him taken to the Union hospital at once. Late reports say that' he is resting easy and is. now probably out of danger. Mark Swoverland Still Lives. Mark Swoverland of Bourbon township, who has been critically ill for two weeks, seems tobe holding out against odds and hopes of recovery arc entertained notwithstanding' the fact that specialists thought he had bnghts disease, an abscess of the liver and tuberculosis of the bone.

NOMINEE

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SUSTS Our Incomparable line of Kuppenheimer and Kirschbaum hand tailored SuitsSuits of guaranteed pure wool materials, right in style and first-class in every detail. All the newest shades, all the finest Blue Serges practically anything you may want in fancies or plain. Glad to show 'em to you. Great Showing of Shirts, Underwear, Hosiery, Neckwear and everything to help. the appearance of the men folks.

CKothes 3

May 28th, 1910 C o" 3 3 O 5 3 n 3

1K40; 21 51 180! 58 18G 36 54 3 88 23 18 51 41 34 7 3 1M414 38 G4 233 96 203 44 52 47320 13 21 24 24 130 16 17 106 16!) 301 44 201) 77 78 3 39 84 179 24 54 146 57 81 17 28 82 310 18 16 77 42 124 19 30 45 45 32 21 80 57 1121 4 3 121 454 12 51 150 44 89 40 56 136 396 39 64 232 94 185 31 47 G4190 12 27 126 41 113 21 27 94278 29 41 106 61 96 19 32 108223 301 49 136 65 104 16 50 552C3 12 19 91 35 109 21 7 321168 11 18 63 43 96 17 11 122315 32 47 161 53 102 21 47 46231 25 12 174 76U41 26 28 109233 16 58 53 27l 53 11 28

, . . , HOLIDAY LIATf BE ON SUNDAY G. A. R. MAY TAKE UP PLAN TO HAVE MEMORIAL DAY HEREAFTER ON SUNDAY. Old Soldiers Do Not Like Idea of Having Decoration Day Made Time for Amusements. It is probable that the G. A. R. will be asked to consider in the annual encampment to be held in Terre Haute next week, a proposal to do away with Memorial Day and to substitute for it a Memorial Sunklay, preferable the last Sunday in .May, when the memorial services now conducted on Memorial Day will he bad. The question of doing away with the day a-si it is now provided has been under consideratronj'for some time by G. A. R. leaders but 1tfas never come before the encampment in a formal way for consideration. The members of the two. local posts, who attend the annual encampment will have an opportunity to vote on the proposition. The cause of the dissatisfaction among the veterans is the custom among a large per cent of the people of making the day an occasion for personal pleasures entirely apart 'from the original purpose of the day. The preparations in Indianapolis , for auitomcibile races and airship exhibitions on Mav .'30 has served to crystalize. the sentiment among the ileaders of the Indian apolis posts, who are leading the movement to do away with May .'50 as Memorial Dav. Colon el John R. Fesler, assistant adiutant general of the! state organization favors the substitution of the last Sunday in -Mav as. Memorial Day. "If there is any day in- th'e year, which ought to be held Sacred, it is Memorial Day, and I can see no reason why the sacredness of the day cannot be combined wilth the sacrcdness of the Sabbath. The veterans declare that they are in no sense "kill-joys" and do not wish to interfere with the pleasures of the people, but they object to promoters of amusements talking alrvantage oi the fact t'hat the state gives the people a lioliday in memory of the soldiers, to swell their gate receipts. Memorial Day b made a legal 'holiday in Indiana by an act of the general assembly.

can find; we invite compari-

that's our claim to your Look What's Here in - Popular Prices Prevail In'our ' Tie too OF COURSE J75 ft 3 3 -i o tu -5 N 7T 'jj TT O 1 3 o 3 22 58 78 8 71 50 1361 387 1582 737 I 60j 1I 15 34 9 79106 4 38 54 23 51 50 66 39 29 994 785 929 537 1244 to 48 9 28 20 56 8 64 7 43 13 78 79 53 84 90 40 4 q7 4 28 18 32 24 1! 18 110 1519 20 i li-t 962 952 782 549 6 9 14 8 43 34 74 16 13 107 16 14 46! 208 53 7 72 44 .12 18 13 581 t2 65J 31 1 30 51 92 1125 20J 51 1 3 12 28 925 111 759 STEAM HEATING AND VENTILATING plant: Sealed proposals will be deceived by the Board of Education of the city of Plymouth, Ind., until 1:30 p. m. June 13th, 1910 at the office of the Superintendent in the Washington School Building and for the erection and completion of a heating ami ventilating plant, including new boiler house and reconstruction Work, rfinlshing yooms; etc., in the Washington School Building at Plymouth, Ind., in accordance with the plans and specifications for the same; prepared by Lewis and Kitchen, Engineers. Each proposal must be accompanied by a certified check payable to Oliver G. Soice, Treasurer of the Board of Education of Plymouth Ind., for 5 percent of the amount cf the bid. v Each bid must be complete for the entire work and no proposal for the part of the work will be considered. Plans and specifications may be obtained by depositing cash or a certified check for .$10.00 with the becretary of the poard. a. m. Cleveland to insure their safe return. v The deposit will be returned when the plans and specifications! are returned. The right is reserved to reject any or all bids. A. M. Cleveland, Sec. Board of Education. d2twlt Plymouth, Ind. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE. In tbe matter of tbe estate of James Whitty, deceased. In the Marshall Circuit Court, September Term, 1010. Notice yis hereby given Jhat the undersigned as Administrator with will annexed of tbe estate of James WMutty, deceased, has presented and filed his final account and vouchers jn4 final settlement: of said estate and that the same will conne up ; for .'thelexämmamESnd äctibr o jid Oircmt Court ion the 19th day of September, 1910, at which time all persons interested in said estate are required to appear ,i dm fourt ana sjioav cause if any there be, why said account and vouchers should not be ap proved. And the heirs of said estate, and all others interested therein, are also hereby required at the time and place aforesaid, to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of said estate. Done May 31, 1910. Charles .Whittey Witness, the 'Clerk and Seal (seal) of said Marshall Circuit Court, at Plymouth, Indiana, this 31st day of May 1910. J. C. Whitesell. Clerk

toms

Chas Kellison, Atty. ,