Plymouth Tribune, Volume 10, Number 3, Plymouth, Marshall County, 20 October 1910 — Page 4

Ebe tribune Only Republican Newspaper in th County. HENDRICKS & COMPANY TELEPHONE No. 27.

OFFICE-Centennial Opera House Block, 107 West La Porte Street. Entered t the Postoffice at Plymouth Indiana tfs ccond-clas matter. Plymouth, Indiana, Oct. 20, 1910. FORTUNATE IN HIS ENEMIES EX-PRESIDENT HAS BEEN MADE TARGET OF ALL KINDS OF ABUSES. Has Been Theodore Roosevelt Attacks Have Turned Out to be Veritable Boomerangs. There is one characteristic dominant in the American people that is truly admirable. This is the demand for fair play and contempt for habitual falsifiers. A stunning rebuke to this class of prevaricators and assassins of character is administered by Virginia' accoranlished ioumalist, Alfred B. Williams, in an editorial published in the Roanoke Times of Sept 29, wherein that forceful writer expresses hiraselves thus: The Colonel's Foes. Colonel Roosevelt doubtless is an irritating man to those who Jislike him. For one thins he has the annoying habit of winning always. This naturally is exasperating to his ene mies. Therefore they make themseleves extremely valuable to the colonel because in their rage they forget to have any sense. They sputter and pour out floods of incoherent and contradictory abuse. A few years ago they said he was insane and quoted medieal opinion that he would be in an asylum within two years. Then they said he was drunk all the time. Thev accused him of cowardice at San Juan hill, although he was near enough to the trenches to shoot with a revolver a Spanish soldier running out of them. They said he was an assassin because he shot the Spaniard. They said he couldn't ride a horse or hit anything with a gun. When he went to Afria and shot lions and rhinoceroses they said he was wantonly butchering innocent, tame animals. 'When the New York statee commtitee defeated him for temporary chairman of the state convention the incident was heralded gleefully as iRoosevelt's Waterloo" and ' Stinging Defeat for Koosevelt", as if nineteen men in a committee room could destroy anybody. Within the last three days we have seen about ' 4 Roosevelt Riding to a Fall." On the eve of the convention the New York World sprang a story of a niysterions claim of $100,000 from the Pennsylvania railroad and $40000 from the Pullman company against Roosevelt for special trains and transjortation while he was president. We always have been skeptical about anvthing The World prints. It has the longes record of forgeries and libels in the Lnited States and never gives the slightest attention to the trifling details of truth. It is the same newspaper that printed the stvy that Mr. Taft 's brother and others had conspired to swindle the government in the Panama canal and afterward dodged trial on technicalities and defended its right to circulate libel and slander as part of the sacred liberty of the press. This Pennsivania story impressed us as a peculiarly awkward yarn. .We could not understand why the road had not sued for the money if it is due.Col. Roosevelt doubtless is good for the amount and he has been private citizen a yeai and a half. Then counting a special train at $250 a day and a Pullman at $100 a day would make 400 days o! travel and hardly thought the colonel had d,one so much. The explanation forthcoming from some of the colonel's newspaper friends is that in his first term he followed the custom of presidents nnd traveled dead head, iust as Grant Hayes, Harrison and McKinley had done. It was the rule , travel the president complimentary, just as senators and governors and members of the house and state legislatures were traveled, Mr. Cleveland was the first president who broke the precedent. He always paid his fare and if he had a special train or car gave a check for the full amount at usual rates before the end of his journey was reached. Col. Roosevelt in his second term, when the movement against accepting favors from transporation companies, became general, had a bill introduced in the congressappropriating $25,000 a year for traveling expenses of the president, and it was passed. The colonel's enemies should restrain themselves Undoubtedly a good deal is to be said against him and he, is not a man to follow blindfold or without wary scrutiny of the way he is going and where it lads, But his owner never will be erstrained or his use of it directed wisely by mere fish-wife abuse and attacks which mean nothing but desperate, blind, impotent and disordered hate. Falls 50 feet.; Looks at Watch. After failing fifty feet from a root and landing on his back on a pile of cement tile, Cecil Jack foreman of a roofiing gang on the Superior court il. Tnd.. went UUIIUIII 4i"Vr.L, J back to work yesterday morning:, ap parentlv uninjured. Jack's first act - m p irno 4 rmll lf Ilia TTSltell fO SCÖ It M I J pUlt fUl A..-? ' - - ht, hid broken the ervstfll He then started for the ladder to ascend.

COFFEE RAISE

ADDS 10

1

LIIJG COST GREAT INCREASE OF $1.50 PER SACK GOES INTO EFFECT TODAY EFFECTS ALL BRANDS Cheaper Grades of Bulk Coffee Have Been Raising Steadily for Past Two Weeks. Another contributing factor to the high cost of living is the recent ad vance in the price of colTee, an im portant article, the advance in the last six months varving from two to six cents in the wholesale tradtand necessarily affecting the retail trade. K. Ij. jenwick, traveling repre sentative of the W. F. McLaughlin Co., of Chicago, was in Plymouth Saturday, and told a Tribune report. er of the advance which went into effect last Saturday. "All of the coffee undergoes an advance of from one half, to one and a half cents per pound wholesale, by the new scale which goes into effect today", said the coffee man. Some of the cheaper brands suffer an advance of $1 :.")() per ba, while the average advance of bulk coffee is so cents per hundred. This advance effective today, is not the only increase, as the price of colTee has been steadily advancing for the. past two weeks, the cause of the advance is the fact that the Brazilian government, where almost all of the coffee of the world is raised, in order to advance the price of coffee, borrowed seventy nve million dollars, irom American I capitalists, bought up the coffee output, and are holding it while the price of coffee advances. This was done, becauee of overproduction, the vaule of coffee was becoming reduced to almost nothing, for the planters and raisers. As an example ol the rapid increase in price of coffee, Mr. Fenwick said that coffee which he sold eighteen months ago for 9 cents per pound, must now be sold for 17 and one-fourth. All grades of coffee have advanced three' cents per pound in the last two weeks, said a grocer of Plymouth The advance in local stores depended on the supply on hand. If an additional stock cost us more and necessarily raised our price. One grocer who sold coffee for fifteen cents a month ago, now sells the same brand ,at twenty cents, owing to the wholesale price which is reported to be gradually advancing- each day. Another grocer reported having raised the price three cents on the fifteen cent coffee in two weeks on his choicest brand. Still another has advanced two cents on 10, 18. 20 and 22 cent grades. T'.ie higher grades 30 to 40 centj coitees nave remained to tue same the wholesale price not raising on that brand and thus allowing it to j be sold at the same price. The change in the prices on this commodity began about six weeks ago and the effect on local merchants depended on the amount of stock held in the warehouses ot the vari ous wholesalers. The advance in price by the importers is said to be the cause of the new increases. THE LUMBER COMBINE Government Agents Seeking Basis For Suit Against Weyerhaeuser and Hines People. The next prosecution to be under taken by the Taft administration un der the Sherman law may be directed at the so-called lumber trust. Attor ney General Wickersham, it became known Tuesday, is studying the reports now being made to him by in vestigators of the lumber trade. The attorney general is trying to discover whether the operations of the lumber magnates like the Weyerhaeusers and Edward Hines, of Chi cago, are in violation of the antt i rust act. Several months ago Mr. ickersharn sent investigators into the field to conduct an inquiry inde pendent of the comprehensive exam ination of the lumber trade Mmn; made by Commissioner of Corpora tions Herbert Knox Smith. The report of the latter is to be issued within a few weeks. The reports from the department of justice investigators have been coming in for the last fortnight. It is said that they show the existence of a number of lumber combinations in restraint of trade, but that these are confined within the boundaries of a single state. So long as the combi nation does not operate in interstate commerce it is up to the state and not the federal government to deal with its acts. The investigators have reported on conditions discovered in Chicago, Kansas City, Minneapolis, St. Paul, and St. Louis. Kadi of these cities, it is understood, has been fount! to be the headquarters of lumber combines of various kinds. Prices are controlled in territory contiguous to these cities. MARRIAGE LICENSES. Jesse A. Hitter 20 to Edna Cripe 19. Both of Tippecanoe. I). Samuel M. Stoneburner 23 Mable Dills 20. Polk township. Edward Woodward Culver 21, to Blanche Burns Burr Oak ID. William Discall Portland, Ind., 22 to Fay Layman Argos 10.

HAS TALK FOR MOTHERS

STATE HEALTH BOARD WOULD FOLLOW EACH BIRTH RETURN WITH LETTER. Dr J N Hurty Prepares a Letter That Emphasizes Statements Being Made in Warsaw Lying in the drawer of a desk in the ollice of Dr. J. N. Hurty, secre tary of the state board of health, is a copy ot a general letter auuresseu to the mothers of Indiana. The mothers have not received these letters and probably will not receive them, for the general assembly held down the state board's appropriation so that there is no money for expenses of mailing. The letter was prepared several months ago by the secretary in the "hope that by some manipula tion money could be obtained to cov er such cost. The purpose of the let ter is to instruct mothers of the state in the prevention of diseases among babies during the years preceding school age. This letter emphasizes the statements that are being made by Dr. King and John Owens, who 1. lTAnl4l, w!-" uu now coniuivi mi; iiruiui htcr in Warsaw. "Twenty-five per cent of the chil dren born in Indiana die before they are five years old," said Dr. ITnrty, "It is appalling; when one thinks of the effect on the race. The dea'ths too, are due chiefly to the fact that many, many mothers do not know how to prevent the diseases which take off babies. When the chil grows sick a physician is summoned Nothing will be left undone to save it and sometimes it is saved. Wha ought to be done is to prevent the conditions which cause the disease and that is what we wish to aceom plish by the letter, "Few mothers know about the proper ventilation ot sleping rooms for children, about how certain foods ought to be prepared, about the best metlio.ls of dressing and the like They can not be expected to know all these things as the skilled sani tarian or nurse knows them, because they haven't had the opportunity to learn. As a result, many children irrow up amid grave sanitary dan gers merely because thev hav strong constitutions and are able to lefeat the attacks made on them. Hut because three children survive we ought not condone the loss of the fourth and make no effort to save it. "The state board employs skilled physicians, chemists and sanitarians witn the people's money, snd the i lot hers of the state have a riirht to oemand mat iney receive ine results of the study we have made concern ing the care of children. The children, too, have a just right to demand that their mothers be instructed in the best methods of protecting them airainst disease in the weakest parts of their lives It is our plan to publish a circu lar letter setting out numerous recommendations prepared by the board touching the care of children. A copy of this should be sent to every mother whose name is return ed here in the monthly reports of births. The loard believes that hun dreds of children under the age of five years could be saved annually if these circulars could be placed in the hands of the mothers of the state at the proper time. A thou sand dollars would pay the expenses of the proposed plan of disease pre vention for a long time. LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL FORMS ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION IN PREPARATION FOR NEXT SPRING. Base Ball Team Will Not Begin Active Work Until Last Semester of Present School Year. The Athletic Association of the Plymouth High School, was reor ganized at a meeting of the male members, held in the school building Monday evening. The association elected the following officers for the ensuing year: President Conroy Eley. Vice-Pres. Ua'ph Powell Secretary Prof. II. E. Schell Treasurer Carl Leipert. The meeting decided that no games of base ball would be played during the fall, but every effort will be made for developing a winning team for the spring season. A step in athletics showing marked progressiveness, was laKen ai me meetim Mondav evening. It was . 1 1 A Ä 1 voted to secure sufficient athletic par . t aphcualia so that every boy in the high school may take part in athletic whether he has any expectation o making nnv team, or not. In this manner athletics, which have been hithertofore beneficial only to those who did not need it so much, wil be participated in,' by every boy in the high school. Marry in Old Age. Though each is 77 years old, Geo W. Shafer of Mount Vernon am Mrs. Sarah Milliken of Newcastle ,1 Tuesdav at the home of tle bride's daughter, Mrs. Wil Rider near Newcastle.

PREPARE FOR ATHLETICS NEXT YEAR

CITO

AI

IS SOLD 10 U.E. ( FIFTY-THREE ACRES OF PLY MOUTH PROPERTY BRING $4610 OR $610 OVER APPRAISMENT. Two Bidders Seek Possession of Land City. Retailed Four Acres for Cemetery Addition The city farm was sold to excouncilman Harrv E. Buck at the special council last evening, upon his bid of $4610.00 for the 53.(5 acres. Christian Fisher was the other bid der for the property his offer being $4500. The appraisement of the I . I property was $4000 and the selling price brings a premium of $010 over appraisement. Of the fifty-three acres sold twelve lie under water, and constitute what is known as Mushshaw lake. The other fortv-one are as fertile land, as can be found in Marshall county. The council originally purchased the farm of the late Oliver Hair, for the sum of $5700, after condemna tion proceedings were brough, in or der to annex the land for an addi tion to Oak Hill cemetery. The council used but four acres for ceme-1 tery addition, but purchased the entire farm,, in order to make a material saving, as it. was estimated that the four acres alone would have been appraised at $500 per acre. To show the nhenominal increase in value of farm lands in this vicinity it is stated that the farm was pur chased by 0. P. Pair for $4200, sold to the city for $5700, and now, two years later, brings at the rate of $0000. The citv cemetery now com prises eighteen acres. Banks and Crops. There are 1,703 savings banks in the United States. There are 0,473497 depositors. The total amount of money to their credit is .t.VJiB,.U4,214, or an average of $420.45 perl lepositor. That would be nearly $42 or every man, woman and child in he 'United States. A Mightly array of figures a sum of money so great, a number of de positors so large that it palls into nsignifuance the fabled wealth of he romancers of old. Yet thev are pioted here simply to call attention o the mightier wealth that has been produced in this country, this year, upon the farms. For, if ail of these savings bank lepositors were to withdraw their dejMsits and take them to the farms, hey could not produce one-half of hat produce that has been raised this good year 1010. They could buy the com alone, and have a little pocket change left. They could not buy the corn crop and then pay for the eggs with which to make corn bread. And com is not a universal crop in the I nited States, there being larire areas upon which no corn whatever is raised These jnore than nine million sav ings bank depositors have for years many of them at least made sacrifices to hoard up their savings. This money unquestionably represents sac rifices somewhere along the line. Millions and millions of dollars of it have been accumulating for five, ten and fifteen years. It represents toil of course, workimr. long wearv months. Yet all of it combined re presents" less than one-half the

wealth produced in a single year up- extension department of Purdue Union the farms of this country. versitv. Since its establishment, it

All of which goes to show that the farms of this country, and the farm ers, have never been appreciated at their full value. As soon as a visitor from a foreign country lands in the United States he is whisked about the big cities in an automobile and shown the skyscrapers as an eri dence of the greatness of this conn try. He sees New York and Chica go and marvels at our greatness He visits the captiol at Wasbir ;ton and stands in awe in contemplation of its beauties and magnitude an marvels that a people so new could have accomplished so much. But no body thinks to take such visitor to the country, to look over oiu farms and to get acquainted wi'!i our farmers, in order that he may come to a better understanding of the Tcsources of this country and of the mn who have made America jiossi Me. Roosevelt's Parting Word. As a parting word to the people of Indiana Col. Theodore Roosevelt, just before taking his departure for the East, made the following statement: "My trip through Indiana ot course was graitfyiiig. In some respects unprecedented. The gatherings of my felolw citizens at certain places were so great as almost to be unprecedented. I have not the slightest doubt, from my experience of today, that by a very large majority Indiana will elect a Legislature that will return Senator Beverblge to ths Senate, where he has fought t?o hard for the welfare of the people and for righteousness in public life and in the affairs of the nation. "And I trust that the citizens of Indiana will support Senator Beveridge and those who are associated with him in this really great fight for those things for which the nation stands. He has been tried as with fire and has proved the right kind of a man. That kind of a man the country needs, one who can not be bought or frightened or influenced in any way to swerve a hair's breadth from what is rHit."

NEED OF NEW

ROAD SYSTEM OLD PLAN OF YEARLY GRAD ING PROVES TO BE WOEFULLY DEFICIENT. By Little Activity Rural Lanes May Be Kept Well the Year Round Indiana farmers are involved in a well directed campaign for the bet terment of country roads. In many sections of the state roads are being graded, drains established, perpetual mud-holes wiped out and with the advent of the rigorous weather of winter the lanes will be in a much improved condition over former years. The subject of maintenance t il -1 -1- A il n oi eann roans appeals 10 me iarmer because a well kept road leading to his farm enhances the value of his land and also lowers the average year's work of the farmer as well as his horses. Any one who has given the subject even the most cursory examina "on win reauuy agree that the sys . 'it 11 . . . iem of repairing earth roads once a yeai is woefully deficient. The sys tem of maintenance is at the bottom of most of road trouble and it is use less to expect better roads as long as it remains in vogue. With the present system, roads deteriorate to uch as extent that all the available road funds are required to put the roau oacK into as good condition as it was when last repaired. In this Til 1 . wny roads remain at a standstill and no true progress results. In order to make good the greater part of the year a system of continu ous maintenance must be adorned. Many have argued that every farmer should keep in repair a certain de Unite piece of road near his farm, but this system, although often pro ductive of a great deal of good, has never been entirely successful. The trouble is that the farmer has too much important private business to attend fo and can not always give the road his attention when the con dition of the road requires it. Then, too, this systeju is against the ten deney of the times,: which is for division of labor and intense speci alization. The present day farmer is a speci alist m the true sense of the word. lie no longer concerns himself about the making of his Shoes, clothing. tools or other equipment: he no longer worries about the. bringing of his mail, and the time is coming when he should no longer bother about the direct maintenance of his roads. .The fanners mail is brought to his door and he takes it as a matter of fact, stopping to consider the sys tem which brings it there only when the mail for some reason or other fails to appear. Likewise the ideal system of road maintenance is one by which the roads are kept in repair as automatically but as surely as the de'iverv of the rural mail. PURDUE TO TEST SEED FREE. State Experiment Station Offers Services to Marshall County Farmers. After being closed from July to September, when practically no sam ples are as a rule sent in for insjK'ction and analysis the seed test ing labratory of Purdue Experiment Station lias ben reopened and is iow ready to receive and analyze for Indiana farmers samples of small seeds savs Director Arthur Goss. The labratory was established il February, 1910, by the seed labra tory of the bureau of plant industry, U. S. Department of agriculture in co-operation with the agricultural iias examined and reported upon 803 samples. These reports give to the senders an accurate estimate of the kinds of weed seed impurities present and the number of seeds of each kind present ev pound of seed, of the quality sent, adulterations presen; and amount of each, amount of inert matter present, weed seeds scattered on each square rod of land when seed of a given quality is used, also the percent of seed of the kind sent Jhat will germinate. All these things the farmer should know about the seed before he makes his selection of seed to go on the ground. Many a farmer is a heavy loser because he puts in his seed with out knowing these things, thereby befouling his farm with weeds and getting a poor stand by reason of the low vitality of the seed. The careful examination of seed before buying and sowing is now recognized to be indispensable in successful crop production. A farmer or seed dealer may do this for himself or he may take advantage of the free sl Purdue Exypcrimcnt station. Expert and accurate work can be depended upon. The labratory is in a position this season to make reports promptly. Germination tests, it may be stated, take from six days for clover and alfalfa to thirty days for bluegrass. A purity test can be made in a few hours. Farmers and dealers are urged to take advantage of this opportunity of getting alvice ami assistance in selecting high grade seed. Of clover or alfalfa seed, send two or three ounces taken from different parts of sacks or bins where possible; of grass seed, one to one and a half ounces' will suffice. Address Agricultural Extension Department, Purdue Experiment Station, LaFayelte, Indiana. Need Not Wrap Bread. The state board of health rescinded an order requiring bakers to wrap all bread delivered to retailers. The master bakers of the state fought this order and forced the board to back up.

n

DAY

Starts Thursday, 06t. continues until the End

RTHlb is a great

large, and the prices are more than

9x12 Keystone Granite, Art Square..... 9x12 Extra Super Wool Rug 9x12 Cashmere Rug....;.... 6x9 Nappa&an Seamless Tapestry worth

76x9 83xl06 " 9x12 Manor 9x12 Napperhan

9x12 Body Brussels, excellent value..

9x12 Smith Saxony, worth $22 60 9x12 Smith Axminister, worth $25.00 Il3xl2 Seamless Velvet, worth $35.00 12xl36 Smith Axminister, worth $35.00

12x15

Thursday, Friday, Saiufday October, 20, 21. 22.

48x72 in. Blankets, White, Gray and Tan, 45 c. , Limit 5 to a Person THE RAILROAD HAS A PRIVATE LINE PENNSYLVANIA PLACES OFFICES IN CLOSE TOUCH WITH EACH OTHER. Plymouth Railroad Men Can Now Talk to Any point Between Chicago and Pittsburg. The Pennsylvania Kailroad .company has installed a private telephone system that extends from Pittsburg to Chicago and connects with all the company's offices along the line. Connections with the Plymouth ticket ollites have been made. The telephone' system bad been installed not for the dispatching of trains, but to place the many oflices of the company in closer touch with the general offices in other matters of business. With the new system it will be possible-for local railroad officials tc confer with the higher officials with mure satisfaction than by telegraph. Pv means of the private wire, the service is much more efficient than over public wires and it is possible to make a call to Pittsburg, several hundred miles away, reaching the party within two or three minutes time. It is the opinion of railroad men that the telephone will some time in the future supplant the telegraph system, but at any rate, the new service lias proven very useful to thf company and will remain a permanent factor in railroading, Missionary Meeting. The largest convention in the history of the northwestern branch of the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society Of the M. K. church opened at Lafayette Wednesday with an attendance of 1000 delegates; representing Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Michigan. The report of the treasurer showed that in the last year the recwipt of the organization J''6 and the disbursements $181,190.04.

A GREAT

RUGS

departmetit the assortment is extremely

I it f $37.50

GIAL DAY

Best Grade. CALICO 10 yards for 45 cts. Limited BEE FIND SIBLEY'S ANTITHESIS. Congressional Candidate Spent Less Than pne Cent Securing Nomination. Wilkerbarre, Pa., Oct. 13. Joseph Sibley's antithesis was unearthed here today when Frank C. Mosier, Keystone candidate for representative to the Pennsylvania legislature from the Sixth Lucerne district fixed the expense account of his nomination. "Less thanone cent" is the significant way lie puts his record. Mosier is a prominent member of the bar and is reputed to be worth several hundred thousand dollars. Abe Martin Says: Th' feller that takes a basket along never finds any mushyrooms. Now that pumkinser ripe an' turnips erH at ther best th' millionaire hain't got not hin' on th' country editoi when it comes t' extraction th fullest enjoyment out'o' life. Notice to Non-Resident. No. i:nos. State of Indiana, Marshall Co., ss: In the Marshall Circuit Court, September term, 1010. Cora Croy vs William Croy Complaint for Divorce. The plaintiff-in the above entitled cause, by II. A. Logan her attorney, has tiled in my office a complaint against the defendant and, it appearing by the affidavit of a competent person that the defendant William Croyas a non-resident of the State of Indiana; he is therefore hereby notified of the filing and pendency of said complaint against him, and unless he appear and answer thereto on or before the calling of said cause on Tuesday the 20th day of December 1010, being the 20th judicial day of the November term of said Court, to be begun and held at the Court House in Plymouth, Marshall County, Indiana on the 4th Monday of November, A. 1)., 1010, said complaint and the matters and

20tn and ol OßtoDer usual. . r .... .$ HAS . 6.95 8.95 $10.... 7.95 II .... 13.50 15.... 18. 8.95 10.95 . 11.85 . 14.85 .18.95 . 18.95 . 20.95 . 28.85 29.85 32.05 Apron Ginghams, 8 cent quality CENTS 10 Yards to a Person HIVE things therein .alleged will be hoard ami determined in his absence. Witness, the Clerk and seal of said Court, at Plymouth, Indiana, this 17, day of October, 1910. J. C. Whitesell Clerk Marshall Circuit Court. ' II. A. b)gan Plaintiff's Attorney. Notice to Non-Resident. No. 13170. State of Indiana Marshall Co., fs: In the Marshall Circuit Court, September term, 1010. Lottie Voreis vs. I la t tie Oglesbee et al Complaint Quiet Title. The plaintiff in the above entitled cause, by E; C. Martindale her attorney, has filed in my ffice a complaint against the defendants; and, it appearing by the affidavit of a competent person that the defendants; Harriett Ogleslee, Anna Z. Houghton, James K. Houghton, Mary Ann Oil more, James W. Oilmore, the unknown heirs, legatees, devisees, executors and adminstrators ofMarv Ann Cilmore, deceased. The unknown heirs, legatees, devisee executors and administrators of James W. Oilmore, deceased Myers, wife of John I). Myers, the unknown heir, legatees, devisees ot Myers, w.fe of John D. Myers, now deceased are non-residents of the, State of Indiana; they are therefore bereby notified of the filing and pendency of said complaint against them, and unless they appear and answer thereto on or before the calling of said cause on Tuesday the 20th day of December 1910, beinjr t be 20th judical day of t ho November term of said Court, to-be begun and held at the Court House in Plymouth, Marshall County, Indiana, on the 4th Monday of November, A. I)., 3910, said complaint and the matters and things therein alleged will be heard and determined in their absence. Witness, the Clerk and seal of said Court, at Plymouth, Inidana, this 17th day of October, 1010. J. C. Whitesell Clerk Marshall Circuit Court. Vj. C. Martindale Plaintiff's Attorney. .