Weekly Republican, Volume 57, Number 32, Plymouth, Marshall County, 10 August 1911 — Page 7
WRITES OF THE ADVANTAGES OF NORTHWEST
HARRY FULLER NOW IN OREGON THINKS THAT IS THE BEST PLACE' IN THIS COUNTRY. INTERESTED IN FRUIT Prices of Land Are High, Yet One May Clear Big Money Prom Frnits and . Vegetables. The following letter, written from Sheridan, Ore?cn ,by Harry Fuller will be interesting to many. He says: Enclosed find money order for $1.50 for which please send me your weekly paper. I want to keep track of what is jroin on in Plymouth and vicinity and know that I can get all the news in the Republican. Since leaving Plymouth about June 1st I have been in many towns and cities in Washington and Oregon and in the way of an investment I think the orchard proposition is about the best. , They say that Oregon app'es command the highest prices in the world 's markets and are acknowledged the leadinsr apple of the earth, and in fact all fruit here, does well. In last week's Sheridan Sun there is an article on the price of land in the Williamette Valley. Some people say it is awfully ldrh yet one ma n clears $700 from a single acre of strawberries in one season. Another Polk county man holds the record of havimr marketed $1300 worth of cherries from seven-eighths of an acre clearing an. even $1000 on the crop. So we must judsre the price of land by what one can get ou of it. While in Salem. I met an old gentleman whö told me that he had been in every state west of the Mississippi and he didn't know of any place where one can get so many good things to eat and get them so easily as in the Willamette Valley. He has been here more than fifty-five year "We have been watchins: the weather Teports and while it is hot here at times we always have a n'ee breeze in the afternoon and the nights are quite cool. They sav it rains a jrreat deal here in winte but we get vlery little vsnow. It doesn't rain any more her than in many eastern states but the rainy season is confined to about five months instead of raininz some in eaeh month. Yet vegetation does not suffer for moisture because the soil seems to retain it. There are many bungalows in th:s countrv and you people know T r.m much interested in those neat little buiMinzs. "With best wishes, I am. Your friend. ILirry K. Fuller. VALPO STUDENTS AT CULVER. Nearly 2000 Young People From the University Spend Enjoyable Day at Lake llaxinkuckee. ' Y This morning a large excursion train from Valparaiso passed thru the city on' the way to Culver. It consisted of -eleven well-filled coaehe and a - baggage car. Banners and pennats on .the sides of the car3 represented ,the various departments of the 'V arsity, such as Educational, Classical, Scientific, Engineers, etc. Over 1500 tickets at $1 each had been sold last night, and in all nearly 2000 students took part. They tok the school band of 58 pieces ji'.rig with them to make the time even more lively. The excursion left Valparaiso at 730 a. ra and reached'Plymouth a little after 9; remaining here long enough to switch over on to the Vandalia. road and moe on their way again. They will return some time this evening. Quite a number of well known Plymouth boys and girls were on board, among them being George Jordan Loehrah Wise. Georsre Firestone, Miss Mercy Jones and many others. N ; HAIR BALSAM CImbm end beutifiet Xh halt. pnmo: luxuriant growth. Herer Fail to Bstre Uny Hair to if YouthfBl Color. Quit scalp di & h' tiu..uj.
RESTAURANT CHANGES HANDS.
The Well-Known Riverside Lunch Room Sold to Boyes and Kleckner Many Improvements Being Made. Messrs. Boyce and Kleckner took possession of their new lunch room last evening. Friday afternoon a deal was made by which the Riverside restaurant, formerly owned by Holland and Stockman was sold to Harry Boyce and Ralph Kleckner. This restaurant, when properly managed, is one of the best paying in the city, and we feel sure that the two young men now in charge of it will give the public not only the best to eat, but also the best of service. They are making a number of im. provements about the place and say they will have everything first class. ' An ordinary case of diarrhoea can. as a rule, be cured by a single dose of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. This remedy has no superior for bowel complaints. For sale by All Dealers. WILL MOVE TO OMAHA. Senator Grube Leaves for That City Sunday and Family Will Follow in About a Year. Senator Harry E. Grübe announced to friends today that he was going to leave tomorrow for Omaha, Neb., and that he expected to make that his home after about a year.' His family will not follow at once, and perhaps not until the fall of next vear. Senator Grube will maintain his residence here until his successor elected to the statt, senate, sc that if tanything comes up which makes his action as senator necessary he will not be disqualified to act. Mr. Grube has a ,fine position as one of the buyers for the PaxtonGallagher Company of Omaha. They are one of the bijrsrest hardware houses in the West. He has been at work for them the past several weeks ind has ,been n Cincinnati, Terre Haute and other places. He spent' most of the day bidding his friends sroodbye. More people, men and women, are suffering from kidney and bladder' trouble than ever before, and each vear more of them turn for quick relief and permanent benefit to Foley's Kidney Remedy, which has nroven itself to be one of the most effective remedies for kidny and Mdder ailments that medical science as devised. For sale by All Drug gists. WIRES TO GO UNDERGROUND Indianapolis Makes Clear Area of Mile Square in City. Indianapolis, Aug. 7. The board of public works has sent notices to all public service corporations that poles in the mile square mu.st be down and the wires placed underground by Sept. 1. This applies to all poles and wires, except the trolley wires and poles of the Indianapolis Traction and Terminal company. This company, however, will be required to move all of Its high voltage feed wires in the mile square and place them underground. Delivery Drivers Strike. Wabash, Ind., Aflg. 7. Every driver employed by the Wabash Delivery company, which has charge of practi rally the entire distribution of goods from the city't retail section, went on strike, and as a result shoppers are carrying their purchases home.. The drivers walked out when the manager severed his connection with the com pany. Auto Injures Five Young Men. Mount Vernon, Ind., Aug. 7. Five young men were seriously Injured, Carl Dexheimer, mechanician, perhaps fatally, when an automobile running at high speed flopped over on North Locust street in this city. The boys lost control of the machine. Man Squeezed Oetween Freight Cars. Roachdale, Ind. Aug. 7. While working as a section man on the Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton railway here, Henry Meyers, oldest son of Tori Meyers, was caught betwee" the bumpers of two freight cars, receiving Injuries from -.which he died. .. Petition for Local Option Election. Indianapolis, Aug. 7. A petition for I i local option election In Wayne township, outside of Indianapolis, to determine whether the sale of intoxicating liquor as a beverage shall be prohibited la that locality has been filed. Trevino Is Willing, Too. ' Monterey. Mex., Aug. 7. General Geronlmo Trevino, former commander of this military zone. Is willing to run for president He is in the hands of his friends. Gates Family Is Hopeful. . Paris, Aug. -7. Charles G. Gates re ported that his father, John V. Gates, had spent a very good day and the family are much more hopeful.
BURNS HOTEL SATURDAY MORNING BLAZE AT LAKE TOWN DOES DAMAGE TO AMOUNT OF $5,000 ON ASSEMBLY GROUNDS ,No Hydrants and No Hcse to Reach Building, So Nothing Could Be Done to Save It Saturday morning ; t about eight o'clock the. Ralston. Hotel at Culver was burned to the ground and a nearby cottage was also nearly destroyed. The hoelstood near the lake en the old assembly grounds. It was a two storv frame structure valued at several thousand dollars. The loss was largely covered by the $3,000 insurance on the. building and eontents. Some of the furniture and fixtures were saved, but the greater part of the contents went up in smoke. A Mrs. Hummphrey was the owner of the building. It is not definitely known as to just how the fire started. The whote roof of the place was on fire before noticed. Indications point out that the fire started invthe front part of the structure. The fire company did not reach the scene until some time after the building was ablaze and then nothing could be done to save either hotel or contents as there were no hydrants nearby nor sufficient hose to do any good. A cottage situated next to the hostelry was also badly damaged but fortunately that was saved. A number of people were staying at the hotel at the time but tthey quickly found other places. KING GEORGE'S SONS Ex-Queen Alexandra to Care for Them While Parents Are Away. ! 'A V, REJEGTEDJOVER KILLS Triple Tragedy Is Enacted in Olivia. Minnesota. Spurned Suitor . Enters House , in Night, Shoots Father, Daughter and Himself. Olivia, Minn., : Aug. 7. William Wolff, his daughter Cora, and Edward Corey were shot and Instantly killed at the Wolff home here. Edward Corey did the shooting. .He was a' rejected suitor' of Us v Wolff. , Corey called at the .Wolff home, but was told .by the girl' father to leave the house and not .return. Early in the morning he entered ' the Wolff home while the family ; were asleep arid went to ' the' v girl's room. ' Her streams aroused' her father, who was shot dead as he crossed the threshold of Cora's room, Mrs. WolT fled to Sheriff Vick's home, two blocks ' distant. Sheriff Vick, accompanied by' Marshal Sherln, hastened to the house and attempted o euter the bedroom where Corey was. They were .warned away by Corey, who threatened to shoot. Immediately two shots were heard and when tbe officers forced in the door they iound three dead bodies. Beth the WolJT and Corey families are numbered among the oldest resi dents of Olivia. Havana Editors, Fight Duel. Havana, Aug. 7. Seaor Espinosa, assistant ' editor of El Dia, fought a duel with Francisco Rojo, editor of El Chotet.- The weapons used were 'pis tol?, and Senor Rojo recelted a bullet that passed through his neck. Whether the wound will prove fatal has not
ID
COM SYSTEM AT FAIR
NO TICKETS WILL BE SOLD AT INDIANA EXPOSITION. Visitors Will Provide Themselves With Coins to Open Turnstiles at the Gates. The coin system of paying admissions to the Indiana State Fair is to be tried for the first time the week of Sept. 4. It is to be tried to the end of making It more convenient for visitors to get within the gates and avoid the usual crowds which flock about the ticket windows. It is thought that every person in Indiana knows that the admission fee for an adult to the Fair is fifty cents, and for a boy or girl under twelve years the price is 25 cents. Heretofore it has been the practice for the street cars to unload thousands of people at the Fair gates, followed by a rush for the ticket windows. It is now the purpose of the fair management to do away with this inconvenience to visitors by asking each person , to provide . himself with the exact change. A man or woman is aaked to leave, home for the Fair with a' fifty cent piece to pay the gate admission, but instead of buying a ticket at the Fair, the visitor will proceed from the street car to the gate and deposit the coin in the turnstile. These mechanical devices will register, or count, coins as readily as they will receive and count tickets, and the visitor will avoid the rush for tickets. i All of the admission gates around the Fair grounds are provided with turnstiles and the coin system will be tried at all of them. The coin sys tem will be followed at the race track grandstand. Where a visitor arrives at the galea without the exact change, money changers will be on duty to supply them. The coin system will be so generally followed by visitors that the selling of tickets will be entirely done away with, not only for the convenience of visitors, but It will do away with the counting of tickets, which requires all the time of a cler ical force while the Fair is in progress. FIGHTING GARDEN PESTS ENTOMOLOGIST WILL EXPLAIN HOW AT STATE FAIR. Extensive Exhibit, Use of Sprays, Big Show of Fruit and Grapes Among the Features. The town and country gardener who would successfully fight insect pests and diseases which, if unhindered, make such havoc to trees, vines and bushes; should by all means see the exhibit and demonstrations that State Etoraologist B. W. Douglass will make at the Indiana State Fair the week of Sept. 4. Those who saw his educa tlonal work In Horticultural hall at the Fair last year turned the informatioD to profitable ends, but at the coming Fair this exhibit will be on still more extensive scale. Both displays and demonstrations will cover every phase of Insect and disease fighting with which the grower has to contend. The exhibit will be made up of specimens from the various State experiment orchards and will show trees . and bushes which have been attacked both by , pests and diseases. Fruit from trees that were and were,tiot sprayed, and the superiority of the sprayed fruit, will be exhibited, 'and what sprays to use, how to make them, and how to use them, will be included in the demonstrations. Specimen trees from the nurseries and how the grower should prune and plant them will be shown. Specimens of plant and insect diseases, photographs and charts on a variety of garden and orchard subjects will give the grower a comprehensive idea of what must be done if the gardener would be successful. The etomologist's exhibit will also show a cage of flying bees and hives of the working insects, and the information that will be available will go far to 'solving the difficulties which confront the bee keeper. This display will occupy the center of Horticultural hall, and around it in rich array will be long tables laden with the very best apples, peaches, grapes and other fruits from the orchards of Indiana's most experienced growers. With Mr. Douglass at the Fair will be a number of experts ready to answer all questions, and this fea ture will have immeasurable educational value to all Interested in fruit and garden subjects. Another Contest For the Boys. The judging contest for boys at the State Fair last year was so successful, both in number of contestants and in the educational values they obtained, that a similar contest will be held at the coming Fair. It ; will be again tinder the direction of Purdue University, with Prof. O. I. Christie In charge. It will be open to any boy In , Indiana, f röm 16. to 19 years' bid. who has , not regularly Attended an agricultural college and ;ho has not won a prize in previous judging contests at the Fair. Tie boys will judge horses, ; cttle, sheep, swine, corn and wheat' that Is on' exhibition, and four scholarships in the Purdue School of Agriculture will be awarded. Boys who enter the contest must send their names to Charles Downing, aecretary of the Fair, Indianapolis, before August 19. r Seamed to Oire Hid a Hew Stomach "I suffered intensely after eat:ng and no medicine or treatment I tried semed to do any Rood," writes H. M. J x Omrfpeiersj rxiiior 01 iue emu, Late View, Ohio. "The first few dose of Chamberlain's Stomach and Livf r Tablets gave me surprising relief and the second bottle seemed to giveme a new stomach and perfect? ly good health ' For sale by All Dealers. . ; ,
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