Weekly Republican, Volume 57, Number 26, Plymouth, Marshall County, 29 June 1911 — Page 7

PLYMOUTH

STAL SAVINGS

PO

Hitchcock New Named Places

Aggregate Balance $500---Deposits

in Multiples of $1 Postmaster General Hitchcock Wednesday named Plymouth, Ind., among the new places to receive a postal savings bank. The official information has not as yet been received at the post office but all probability today's mails will bring it. As has been provided, sums of $1 or more will be accepted from depositors, and these sums will be deposited in the local banks, where the money is to remain unless withdrawn by the President in case of war of other exigency. In case of this withdrawal the funds are to be invested in government securities, but with the provision that such securities shall not draw less than 2 1-4 per cent interest. The control of the funds is vested in a board of trustees composed of the postmaster-general, the secretary of the treasury and the attorney general. The aggregate balance allowed to any depositor is $500 and no person will be permitted to deposite more than $100 in any one month. The government will pay 2 per cent interest and must exact not less than 2 1-4 per cent from the banks, the extra 1-4 per cent being required for the payment of expenses and losses. The postal savings depository will be kept open for the transaction of business every day, Sundays and legal holidays excepted during the usual post office business hours. Accounts may be opened by any person of the age of 10 years or over and by married women in their own names and free from any control or interference by their husbands. No persons will be permitted to have more than one account. All deposits must be in multiples of $1 but in order that smaller amounts may be accumulated for deposit, savings cards will be issued and 10c postal savings stamps sold. When these cards on attached stamps show an investment of $1 or multiple thereof, they will be received as deposits. The original depositor may secure his money upon demand. It is not intended to furnish banking facilities through the postal savings depositories, but only to furnish absolute safety coupled with wiesprcad opportunity to save. Saved His Wifo's JAU. "My Wife would have 1een in her grave todsy" writes O. H. .Brown of Muscadine Ala. "if it had not' been for Dr. King's New Discovery. She was down in her bed, not able to get np without help. She had a severe bronchial trouble and a .dreadful cough. I got her a bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery, and she soon began to mend, and was well in a short time." Infallible for coughs and colds, its the most reliable remedy on earth for desperate lung trouble, hemorrhages, lagrippe, asthma, hay fever, croup and whooping cough. 50c, $1.00r; Trial hottle free. Guaranteed by Fred Wenzler. BIG FIRE AT TEEGARDEN. Earn on Isaac Miller Farm Burned to Ground and Stock Perishes In Flames. June 23 Teegarden as the scene of great excitement to-day between 11 and 12 o'clock when the barn on the Isaac Miller farm, now occupied by Truman Lcmert caught fire and burned to the ground. Mrs. Lemert was away from home at the time of the catastrophe picking cherries. It is supposed that the fire -was started by the children ho were left alone. Two horses two calves, and two colts, beside a new rubber tired buggy which had never been nsed and a separator belonging to Kemu3 Shroeder ere burned with the barn. The separator was new last year, -in $700. but fortunately was nearly cohered by insurance. Just what the loss amounts to is not as yet definitely known. . ( Tt!i v::i lr.;ereUU:ier. flotber Grai Powder for CoUdren relieve

TO

HAVE

BANK

This City' Among tO KeCeiVe JOenellt FOR BETTER BUILDINGS. South .Bend Architectural Club In vites Plymouth to Visit its First Exhibit. The South Bend Architectural Club I cordially invites the citizens of Plyinuuiu io iew us iirst exiuuiu ixiere are over twe hundred oils, water, co 1ink and neucil renderincrs on exhibi tion. Of these all but thirteen iliiisträte the work of Indiana architects-. Some of the j erspectives have been rendered bv man of national rcputation. Tiffany, J'itzpatrio'c. Gregg

Howe, Hawley and Jenkins are repre-jwith

I cATif a1 Viir rn ö mnra imnnrf inf rfln- I I . I derings. There is also an exhibition of materials some of which have ne er been seen before in South Pend. Tho exbihlt. is loafed in the dnnblJ store room in theh Main street annex of theh Oliver Hotel, and is open every day this week from 10 in the rnbrnmg till lu at night The moming hours, on account of the coolness, are Desi ior viewing n. It is free to the public! C. Efs. CHOOSE PLYMOUTH. District Convention At Mishawakai Ends Officers Elected Kline Chosen Secretary. The delegates returning from the Mishawaka convention' are very enthusiastic over the fact that rivmonin win nave lie next . convention in iuu. Mr. Ralph Kline of our city was Jr. feupt., iviiss w mitred weld, South "Rtnd: AHssionnrv Sunt... Miss I r?ou,c Ke pK tt,,i, ti. TV i 3 s I ha I lief nnt n rmtscaA rr fnn I J - v counties anu meir ouicers are; , jj it cc I Plymouth. c-x t i. u. r- . -n.v--. I ftiisbawaka. . , , 1 Elkhart Mr, Geo. Kowe, Elk hart. Kosciusko Mrs. Ray Lloyd as Pres. with Miss Frances Reed as Sec, Warsaw. The delegates will no doutt give inspiring reports from their trip. Notice To Hen-Resident 8tate of Indiana, Marshall County, ss: In the Marshall Circuit Court, September Term, 1911. Milton E. Soice vs. Amos K. Hanifin and Grace Hanifin. Complaint to Foreclose Mechanics Lien. The plaintiff in the abova entitled cause, by J. A. 'Molter his attorney, has filed in my office a complaint against the defendants; and, it appearing by the affidavit of a competent person that the defendants; Amos K. Hanifin and Grace Hanifin are non-iesidents of the State of Indiana; they are therefore hereby 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 Monday the 18th day of Sept., 11)11 being the 1st judicial day of the September term of said Court, to be begun and held at the Court House in Plymouth, Marshall County, Indiana, on the 3rd Monday of September, A. D 1911, gaid complaint and the) matters and .thßj-s thsrein alleged will bs heard an3 determined in their absence. . ' Witness,' tha Clerk', and seal of eaid Court, at Plymouth, Indiana, this 7thday of Jane, 1911.

County Correspondence

HIBBARD. The farmers are hustling their corn alonsr. Daddy Swairgood is on list at present. the sick Cherry canning is the order of the day with the housewives. A number of our citizens took ii the sights' of Chicago last Sunday. Mrs. S. E. "Wise and daughter Lola spent last Sunday at Gras? cr cek. Wise took dinner with the Alberts last Sunday. David Sweet and Will Richhart are working with the bridge gang near Br'stol in EMchart county Dr. Loring of Plymouth passed through our town last Sunday from making a professional call cast of this place ywe understand TWIN LAKES. Elmer Lawrence of South Bend spent Sunday at home. Mrs. Meed Dorightis Ilo spent -Monday in Plymouth. Miss Cleta Cummins of Plymouth spent bunday with her mother. Florence Grossman of South Bend spent Sunday with her parents. Henry Nier of South Bend was the guest of James Dotz Sunday. j w. v;1, qa ti.a -ktvh attemleJ the BaU ame ia p, th Fern sPitl(7 Plynsouth was the -uest of Nellie Dotz a, couple of days ras wfek Mr. and Mrs. Flovd Holm of South Bend spent a part of last week here relatives. 11 iff A i il I PA. fPl- 1 wit en ii i .iiiursf'ay for Li jronier Inn. to spend a few 4 A party of 5 men from Muscle T ho are touring the lakes are stop in a few days a Datz's. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Piper entertained tvo automobile loads from Monterey and Winamac. Sundav Mr. and Mrs. Frank Borkett of Ft. Wayne returned to their home Friday after spending a few days with their parents Mr. and Mrs. Henry Glass. WEST UNION. Mr. Wolf lost a valuable horse last week. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schoner were Plymouth callers Sunday. Mr. Anderson of Chicago visited over Sunday with his family. anl rs- c filler of near Lapaz were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Albert rerguson bunday. Mr. an rrs t. Miller and rbndrön r r,1flctc nf "r- 1 Mrs. Fred Dills Sunday. last Fridav sitin? their son. T'.i dav .as srent :n rxn Mrs- Catherine Foreman of th 111 J IS e wees wun it. : JJ- 1T . i . -.1 r 1: - :.:.. Wiho uiiu xiicuua in tun I mi it a i- . . ine laaies oi ine i'resoytenan church will hold an atternoon social Fridav at the home of Mrs. D. L. Dickinson . lrs ü Ttiomas returned from Warsaw last week vber sbe was taiieu -v ine slCKness & oeatn oi her brother,' J . Hand Mr. and Mrs. Beagles of Tyncr, Mr. and .Mrs. Levi Hill and Mr. and Mrs.. Wolf were guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. Ruff Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Simon York, Mr. and Mrs. Hecliart of Plvmonth Una Mr. a-id Mrs. Huffman and children oi Tyner, Claud Long and Floyd Bottorff were thegnestsof D. Thomas Sunday . PLEASANT VIEW Young Peoples endeavor at Salem Sunday evening. , Tom. Murphy, Wife and 5 year old son Pat, were Sunday callers on Joe Atha. Wm. Hoopengardener of near Ft. Wayne has moved his family to their new home near Starke county Mrs. Andie Glass came home from Chicago Sunday where she went through an operation Gild is some what improved. Mrs.x Fred Joseph' and daughter Lucretio were callers on Mr.' and Sunday and took in the sisht at the Sunday took in the sights at the White City and enjoyed a very nlAJisant Aavl ' - j - A junk buyer tried to help himself to a pair of Paul Snyder's hoots one day 1 last week but as his wife was watching and decided they-could he used a while longer requested he should bring them back he threw them over the fence. has bten making her home in Ft. Wayne with a brother. She is home now, making all arrangements. Both are populivr young people of Ft. Wayne ard will make their home at that place where Mr. Brunick is

GREEN TOWNSHIP i

Clinton Jones and wife were nests oi nis orother, Jordan and family Sunday. Jaci Howell of .Ohio came Satur day evening for a visit with his brother, G. A. Howell and family. Chas. Hutchinson and daughter, Mrs. Ed Tebodo of Three Oaks, Mich., visited here the first of the week. ' Marion Jones of Minneapolis was called here to the bedside of his mother, who passed away Sunday evening. , Mrs. Geo. Sponsellor and daugh ter, Helen Virginia of Plvmontli visited her 'parents, J. B. Marshman and family here ast week. P. 0. Jones an dwife of "Pivmouth, Daniel Jones and daughter of Talma and Miss Myrtle Lambert ot Rochester were - those to at tend the fur . jf Mrs. Jordan Jones here Tuesday. To Cook hy Electricity Mrs. Frank Vangilder has bought an electric, cook stove and intend? hereafter to "take it cool" wh le other housewives are sweltering in over their ranges in mid summer It !s the same make stove adopted bv the government for its battleships, for Uncle Sam runs nearly all his battleship operations hy electrticity, growing his own currents by plants on ship hoard nearly as large as our whole Plymouth outfit. The stove boiviht by Mrs. Yancilder has three burners, and an oven with a top broiler. The oven is heat ed by currents both above and below the oven and so is assured of an even temperature Tnere are six different heats to this tove and it can be mqdo hot or äs merelv warm as de sired. One ad van aire wh:ch the new stove has over older makes is that one can see the wires glow when thev are hot and consequently is in less danger of forgetting to turn off the fire when through and so wasting tricity. Anv Jcind of croking utensils can be used with this stove; , Electricity is surelv the top notch fuel a there are no ashes, no smoke, no heat scattered in the room and no tank to keep full. It comes as near being the honsekeepers ideal as can possibly be imagined. Lightning Kills Few. In 1906 lightning tilled only 169 people in this whole country. One's chances of death by lightning are less than two in a million. The chance of death from liver, kidney or stomach trouble is vastly greater but not if Electric Bitters -be n.ed, as Robert Madsen, of West Burlington,' la., proved. Four doctors gave him up after eight months of suffering from virulent liver trouble and yellow jaundice. He was then completely cured by Electric Bitters. They're the best stomach," liver, nerve and kiftney remedy and blood purifier on earth. Only 50c at Fred Wenzler 's. FIND BODY IN CISTERN Neighbors of Peter Larsen Make Grewsome Discovery. Nurse from Chicago Who Recently Married Fowler (Ind.) Farmer Under Surveillance. Fowler. Ind., June 24.---Peter Larsen, a retired farmer, sixty-three years old, was found dead in a cistern at his home here. His head was cut as if by an ax, and officers say there are indications of a homicide. His wife and he had quarreled during the night, it is said. At 6 o'clock in the morning she went to the home of a neighbor and reported her husband had gone away from the house after brutally beating her. The neighbors investigated and found a large pool of blood in the barn and the body floating in the cistern. Larsen had been married twice, his second wife coming from Chicago as a nurse. They had been married but two months. Mrs. Larsen is under surveillance, but has not been arrested. Georgia's Prize Baby. Mount Airy, Ga.; June 26. In James Adolph Cody, two years and three months old, Mount Airy hoists the big gest baby In the world. Jaines Adolph now weighs 122 pouncs and is growing every day. 'Galesburg Woman D;es of Pellagra. Galesburg, 111., Jure 26. Mrs. John Loftman of this city is dead from pel larra. Has New Nephew. A card ,was received here this morning announcing the birth on June 22nd. of a six-pound son to Mr. and Mrs. I. D. Tinkham of .Grand Rapids, Mich. Mr. Tinkham is a nephew of Mrs. D. C. Cole and is well known hre, he having visited Plymouth on several occasions. ' . Hov's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by HalFs Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O. TTe. the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE,

Eft! FEAST OF PRESIDENT TAFT TO HAVE WARM INDIANA RECEPTION AT INDIANAPOLIS ON JULY 4. BANQUET S5 PER Visit of Great Man to This State Is One of Most Noted Political Moves of Many Months. Indianapolis June 22 One of the surest indications of the popularity of President Taft is found in Indiana n the remarkable 'interest shown by Republicans of the state in the reception to the President July 3 and 4, when he will visit Marion and In dianapolis. Overshadowing pageants, celebrations and other events incident to the President's stay in the state, is the fact that in a political sense his coming will be weighted with importance and full of meaning to Republicans. President Taff is to be crceted heartily as an executive and a states man who has been tried by manv tests, and who has made rood on all counts in a measure never beforeknown in a single administration. This is the feelinjr that pervades the Republcan ranks of Indana, and this is the feelin? that inspires the prep aration for the Taft reception. Mr. Taft is to voice as, the national lead er of the Republican party, the policies and principles of the party, and in his Indiana speeches to Republicans it is expected that he will laydown the fundamental principles for the campaign of 1912. So it is that the Taft visit to Indiana is oloked on as the most notable poltical move in recent months on either side of the public issues. The sreetins of Taft and the trend of his speeches, will be taken by wise men to indicate sometincr as to the next poltiical battle in Indiana and the nation. It is held by many that as Indiana leans so the ntaion will end. This theorv adds still further o the susrerestion that the Taft meeting will be imporant from a pol tical standpoint. The demand for seats at the Re publican banquet in this city the nirht of July 4, indicates that Indiana Republicans are not only alive o the opportunity presented to show proper hrspitalitv to a distinjuished imest but that they are eaqrer to hecome units and workers in the vig orous campaisTi that lies ahead. Charles S. Norton who has in hand he issuing of the tickets for the ban quet to be ?iven in President Taft 's honor reports that calls and inquiries are cominst fnom s direcifons fcmd that his mail is flooded with demands for reservation for the feast. The banquet is to be $5 a plate and is to be in all ways worthy of the cruest. of the hosts and of the significant occasion. Mr. Norton has an office at the Marion club and there he is earin? for the application for banguet ickets. President Taft is to be guest of Charles W. Fairbanks former vice president, while in Indianapolis. The Republican workers will have two opportunities to see and greet their pa'rty chieftain. One will be at the Marion club recntion .just before roAn.'.Tnlv 4 and th other w!ll be at te b.monet bonrd that nicrht, at the Claypool 'hotel. The jMarion meeting ;lso will be utilized bv manv Republicans to pay their respects to Big Bill Tafl:. ' A Peek Into His Pocket. would show the box of Bucklen's Arnica Salve that E. S. toper,1 carpenter, of Marilla, N. T. always carries.' i I have never had a cut wonnd, bruise, or sore it would not soon heal," he writes. Greatest neater oi Burns, wua, owwua, cuau hands and lips, fever-sores, tlaneruptions. eczema, corns and piles 25c. at Fred Wenzler's. Engagement 'Announced. The . enjrsurement of Mr. Albert Brnick to Miss Fay Atha is announced. The wedding will take nkce July 3. Mr. Brnick is the son of .tfr. and Mrs. John Bruick of Ft. Wayne. Miss Atha is a daughter of Mr. - Joe Atha of this place but Ladles Caa Wear Shecs one lize smaller by using Allen's Foot-Ease, the arteeptic powder for swollen, tender, aching eet. It wate walking: a deUsbt. relieves corns

HONOR

PUMP, GRIND, SAW

$65 Fora Perkins Engine This engine is high grade in every respect and will do the work of other engines costing twice the price. We fully warrant it. We can also furnish: a full line of

Fittings, Pipe, Pumps, Hose, Tanks, Feed Grinders Woad Saws, Corn Shellers, M;at Choppers, Cream Separator Attachments, Etc, Etc Call on ASTLEY CD$ HOHAM, Agants for Plymouth PERKINS WIND MILL AND ENGINE CO MISHWAH, INDIANA

1 Another

The accumulation of personal resources is the argument most frequently advanced for saving. Systematic eavingfdevelopes character, the greatest of resources and the cornerstone of credit. Character and credit are as essentinal as cash, when the rainy day comes. A savings account for YOU, at this bank, right now for building character, credit and cash recources.

TBE MARSHALL COUNTY TRUST

Ar

Fraits and Vegetables

We have everything in the line of fresh Fruits from a Strawberry to a Pineapple, and in -Vegetables from a Radish to aj Cabbage. Complete line of Canned Goods such as Peas, Beans, Corn, Tomatoes, Pears, JPeach es, Etc, Etc. Come and try'our goods, WOODBURY'S GROCERY Oscar P. Woodbury Successor, to Geo. VInall.

MACHINERY

On account of the consolidation of the Tribune and Chronicle printing plants I have the following machinery and materials for sale: l'Potter 2-revolution cylinder press, four roller, table distributing, air Eprings all in good condition and can be seen running. 8x12 Schneidewind & Lee Gordon jobber in good condition. Can be seen running. 1 7-column Dexper newspaper Folder, needs some repairs, but can be put in good shape and make a fine machine at a small price. Boston'staple binder, nearly new. l r Proof press, cases, racks, mailing type, ten point body type, and other materials. " 1 If you are interested in any of this, write me lor prices, or better still, come and see it. It will bear inspection.' . S. . BOYS, Plymouth, Indiana.

Cr 3C

MONEY TO LOAN ON HOUSEHOLD GOODS, LIVE STOCK, ETC SECURITY LOAN CO. ROOM 1, PACKARD BLDG. With W. H. ROBERTS AGENCY, Plymouth, Indiana . , Ant in Office Saturday From 11 A M. to 5 P. M.

HOME OFFICE: 12 I. O. O. F. T

' ; C. n. L50MHRD. '

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y'OV J View - point S SAVINGS CO.' Plymouth, Ind FOR SALE. BLIL SOUTH BEND, INDIANA . . . . ka '-0

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