Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 14 December 1891 — Page 4

1 IIlS:iS Tl KivKY TIMl'..' Make tho u:o»t of it. There aro a* least a hmulreil ways of auiling to llie pleasures a a ii a is your ftifts take ui. enduring shape, so that in tho season." still to eome the season that is tmst may lie remembered. For the holiday tlavs we have a speeial holiday display. The time it takes you to look at it. eveu though bo turkey tune, will be anything1 but tunc lost. Yon eertamly ought to see •it. You can bo sure of nothing this world if you arc not sure of lindiiip ivhat will take your fiinc'v. A line of stlyer tniyat a great bargain. We are sell:rig the diamonds because we haye the prices below all competition.

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-207 East Main Street

A Dove of a Hat

Can be obtained at

WILSON'S,

Mrs. M. W.

.South Washington street, At the Lowest Price in the Latest fjtyk-F. No lady can alTord to lose the .opportunity of visiting Mrs. Wilson's place if only to see the unsurpassed line of Millinery and Novelties there displayed. Ali are welcome and satisfaction crnarantecd.

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You Can Hank on Oar Shoos.' That Is just the kind of a s-hoc we sell— .vou can bank on it every tunii. When there is a run on a bank, it is because there is something the mutter with its credit: there is a run on this shoe because there i.s nothing the mutter with credit, for it happens to Ik: the most credituble kind of a shoe. Vou can buv no other kind of a shoe that bejrins lo match it tor. the. money and tho wear and tear it will stand xvonld surprise a champion six day walker. We call it the Calf shoe and we ask i'i.DO Tor it. That is a figure the most close fisted buyer that ever lived would call low.

T. S. KELLY.

124 East Main Street

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ANXOUNCKMKXT

Where you can set

1'resli Oyster,

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The People's Grocery.

And Provision Store,

Crackers,••

Cranberries, Celery Jersey Sweer Potatoes

J'iukli-n. Kiilinsr unci Cuoliimr Apple*. Nuw .... sorjfliuin Mollis,!*, uu.l nil klnrls of Fumy iiiul HtupWt (iruwjrii'j,-

R. E. ATKINSON,

East College Street.

"W"ginteci cZJ/Asf unl Viclnitu tf' ititw that we. tiff vrt purf'l Ut ib all kittle of hr'Mx-AUihtiui. H'orl (tmintuttcd.

Mrs. Rusk and Miss Johnson.

SO) West I'lkeStruct.

DAILY JOURNAL

MONDAY, DEC. 14, 1891.

CHIPS.

_Tlu» chicken show is in progress at K. of l\ armory. —Attend the mect'nj of the Kepubl can club this evening. —One sullen, silent drnnk was pinched by the Mayor this morning. •The funeral of Hugene lvostanzer this afternoon was largely attended. —There was one addition to tiw membershipof the Baptist church yesterday.

Fifteen persons united with the Center church yesterday morning. Natural gas will be burning in Crawfordsville before next Sunday. —The Indiana teachers' association will convene in Indianapolis -0, 30 and 31. —Over thirty coops of chickens have arrived by express to-day for the chicken show. 1). C. Hunter ant. wife leave tonight for a three months' visit in North Carolina. —Clrckens are arriving by the score to-day for the chicken show at lv. of P. nrmorv this week. —.Seats for Charles Gardner are selling rapidly and a g. od audience is already guaranteed. —-A company is being organized at

Waynetown to bore for gas. Eighty shares of $25 each will bo subscribed. --The county commissioners fined .lohn M. Schultz a peck of apples this morning for appearing before them with his hat on. —A turkey escaped from a coo]) at the Big Four depot this morning, and was shot by the express driver in order to beep it from escaping. —New depots are being erected by the Monon at Bloouiiugton and Mitch ell.'nnd a new depot will be built in this city next year. Remember this. tf-There were thirty-six teachers at tended the joint institute of Franklin

Madison and Sugar Creek Saturday, l.r. Owsley treated the crowd to dinner —Tho county commissioners visited the poor farm this afternoon to look in to the management of Matt Goben and whether he should be re-elected or not. —Mrs. .Tames Somerville. of Lafayette, and daughter, Mrs. E. M. Lacken, of Chicago, who have been the guests of P. C. Somerville, returned to Lafayette -day. —To-morrow the case of Jake Freed against Messrs. Busenbark and War britton, of New Market, for malicious prosecution, comes up in the circuit mrt to-morrow. —At its meeting hut Saturday afte noon six little girls were made members of the Juvenile Temple. Arrangements were completed for the Christmas enter tainment next Saturday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. A Christmas box will the leading feature. Everybody come. Free admission. —The dance of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Skaggs Saturday night urcved to lie a most select and elegant affair. A few of the guests got on tho outside of tco much champagne, however, and they becoming hilarious along about Sunday morning the police appeared and escorted the ladies home. If the town owned a patrol wagon it would have been

"|iiickly filled.

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A Wolf Chase.

A wolf chase—won't it bo new and novel in Hoosierdom—but there is going to be one in Fountain county, on Christmas day. It is not generally known, but there is a large wolf running wild in the south part of the county. It confines itself to the ten.lory between •Tames Snyder's and James Boden's, and is usually seen along the branch. Tuesday James Snyder, jr., saw the animal and got ijuito cioso to it, but had no gun to try his markinansliip. It is now proposed to have a grand chase Christmas day and capture the wolf, wliiel if held, will be attended by a large crowd, and be a novelty to this county

\'ci dfrslniry .\f.irx.

Fancy Florida oranges, for 5 cents, 8 for 10 cents or 13 cents a dozen at Joe Taylor's.

Chtrniio Dully Marl.ctH.

Private telegrams to G. W. L. Brown, 107J north Washington street, from C. S. Lee:

May wheat,opened 08, closed, 98. May corn, opened 13\, closed, Ki. May oats, opened closed W. Mav pork, opened SI 1:35, closed, 811.32.1.

Jan. pork, opened S10:!)() closed SI 0.85. llecipts—Wheat, 200 cars corn, 380: oats, 220 hogs, !0,000.

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local applications, as they cannot reach tho diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional rcme dies. Deafness is caused by an ini'amed condition of the mucous lining of tho Eustachian Tube. When this tnlx gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely cloned, Deafness is tho result, aud unless the inllammation can be taken out and this tubo restored to its normal condition, hearing will lie destroyed forever nino cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the inucons surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh)' that we cannot cure by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars freo.

F. J. CHENEY CO., Toleuo. Sold by druggist, 75 cents.

OFFICERS ELECTED.

The Montgomery Oouuty Agricultural Association Elects Officers and Transacts Business.

Tho new board of directors of the Montgomery County Agricultural Association met this morning in tho small court room and proceeded at once to the election of otlicers for the ensuing year. Several of the contests were quite exiting and the results wero as follows:

M. B. AVaugh, President. J. L. Davis and J. N. Davidson, Viceresidents.

W. W. Morgan, Secretary. John S. Brown, Treasurer. J. J. Tnsley, Genersl Superintendent.. D. II. Martin, Chief Marshall. J. S. Brown, Isaac Davis and Asher Wert, Fair Ground Committee.

It was resolved to hold meetings on tho first Saturday of each month. Tho Secretary's salary was fixed at S-50 and that of the Treasurer at S150. A committee was appointed to confer with tho committee of teachers in regard to children's day at the next fair, which will be held the second week in September.

Ate Him Like Hot Wiennie. Robert Ayers is Crawfordsville's professor of hot wiennorwurst, and at night is a familiar figure as he trudges up and down the streets with his white apron and sausage outfit. Nobody ever thought that Robert was particularly chivalrous, but he is nevertheless. He rooms over Poole's grocery where two or three ladies room likewise. Just what the ladies ever did to have rude men to come poking around their door at night we are unable to say, but for all that men to eome and have the gall to ask admittance, too. Sometimes they aro refused as was the case last night. Their visitors insisted on coming in anyhow, but RoIert Ayers hearing the noise, armed himself with a hot wiennerwurst and charged to the rescue. He was not in it, for the rude tnen visitors beat him almost to a jolly aud left him half dead.

Robert would like to have them arrested but unfortunately doesn't know their names. He is resting easily now, as the grateful ladies have bandaged up his cracked head in vinegar and brown paper.

The Trustee Meeting.

To-morrow the trustees of Wabash coliege will hold their semi-annual meeting in this city. The business of the meeting will, iirall probability, be tiansacted by to-fliorrow night. The business to come before tho meeting is important, including the questions of new president, coeducation and a successor to Prof. Norris. It is hardly probable that any of these questions will be definitely aud flnaily settled but it is pretty certain that a policy will be mapped out which will be closely .adhered to in the meeting next June. All in all, to-mor-row's meeting will bo one of the most important in the history of the college.

The Poultry Show.

The K. of 1'. armory-presents a lively uppearat.co. Ducks, geese and chickens by tho hundred are quacking, squawking and crowing while the management of tho greatest poultry exhibit ever seen, in Ciawfordsviile is hustling about endeavoring to find room for the numerous entries. There are many beautiful birds on exhibition and no one should miss the opjwrtunity to visit them, at this their annual fancy dress ball. This evening the show will be formally opened and an admittance of only ten •ents charged at the door.

Ko Hunting Allowed.

The farmers can now take down thoir signs which prohibit hunting and pack them up until next fall. The law posts all land against quail and squirrel hunting after to-morrow and it will go hard with tho man who wilfully violates it. The grand jury did great work last year in this line and will endeavor to sustain its well earned reputation thus.

Officers Elected.

Ashler Lodge F. and A. M., at Wingate, on Friday night elected officers for the ensuing year as follows: .T. H. Stafford, W. M. B. F. Clough, S. W. C. L. Dazy, J. W. N. Suitor, Treac. Robt. Cord, Sec. Thomas Doran, S. D. J. Shobe, J. D. The installation meeting will occur in January.

OOLLEGENOTES."

College closes Friday for the holidays. All tlie fraternities will uso natural gas.

Yount is the latest initiate of Alpha Theta 1'hi. Doc Rose will spend the holidays in Crawfordsville.

Most of tho sludontB favor co-educa-tion and wait with bated breath tho action of tho trustees. l'rof. Kingory and wifo and Keen, Johns, and l'rof. Thomas united with Contor church yesterday morning.

—^Con Cunningham's for winter linderwear. All sizes kept in stock.

Used

In

PERSONALS.

OWES

—Skating at tho rink to-night. —Mrs. S. L. Hartmnn iB very low. —Jere West was in Darlington today. —Dumont Kennedy is in Danville,Ills, to-day. —W. T. Wasson has returned from El wood. —Ben Crano went to Lebanon this morning. —John Macy went morning. —W. H. Edwards went to Muncie last night.

to Frankfort this

—Rev. G. W. Switzer was in, Lafayetto to-day. —Dr. Brown, of Alamo, was in the city to-day. —R. S. Thomson left this morning for Auburn. —J. H. Watson is in Indianapolis this afternoon. —Charles M. Crawford went to Chicago this afternoon. —Henry Glonn united with tho Methodist church yesterday. —Rev. T. J. N. Simmons went to Chicago this afternoon. —Joseph Grubb was up from Terre Huute to spend Sunday. —Will Townsley spent the day in the classic precincts of Garfield. —Fleming T. Lnse returned to-day from a visit at Cherry Grove. —Dave Shular and family, of Frankfort, 8pent Sunday in the city. —Ike Sollar arrived in the city from tho wilds of Oklahoma Saturday. —Mrs. Ira McConnell and Miss Maggie Morgan have been visiting at Mun cie. —B. F. Snyder is no longer presiding elder of tho creamery's buttermilk wagon. —Dr. H. W. Taylor, of 'Anderson, was in tho city over Sunday visiting his brother. —Mrs. A. G. Yount, of Battle Ground, is the guest of her mother, Mrs. Sallie

Ramsoy. —Walter H. Evans and wife returned to their home in Indianapolis this morning. —A. E. Ruffner, printer for tho Santa Fe route at Chicago, spent Sunday with hi6 family.

Miss Mary Thompson is expected home from Chicago the last of the week to spend the holidays. —Chas. A. Taylor, of New Richmond, was in the city to-day on his way to Ladoga to see his sick mother. —Mrs. E. P, Thomson and children camo up from New Albany to-day and are guests of friends in this city. —G«o. F. Hughes, J. F. Remley, Will Humphrey, Sam Thomas and Mrs. Mary Wilhito went to Indianapolis this morn ing. —Mrs. Lulu Carney and Isaac Henry who have been the guests of their brother, Jos. Henry, have returned to

Pleasant Hill. --Rev. Charles Hutchinson, D. D., of New Albany, is in tho city to attend the meeting of the trustees of Wabash Col lege to-morrow. —Mrs. Wallace Smith, of Chicago is at J. N. McConnell's. Mrs. Emma Loyd, of Cincinnati, is unable to come on account of being sick. —Mrs. Ulrich and Mrs. Pflummer,''of Indianapolis Mrs. Wahler and Mrs. Zimmerman, of Terre Haute, attended the funeral of Eugene Kostanzer to-day. —Mrs. Tom Waller, of Terre Haute Mrs. Emma Craig, of Chicago Fred Kostanzer, of White Water, .Wis. Nat Stader and wife, of Columbus Mrs. Lizzie Rising, of Lafayette, and Leonard Miller, of Columbus, were among those from out of the city who attended the funeral of Eugene Kostanzor this afternoon.

—There will be three-mile race at tho skating rink this week. The first mile will be run on Wednesday evening, the second on Thursday evening and tho third on Saturday evening. The person winning the two best in three will be given a purse of 85.

Epworth League Social.

There will be an Epworth League social this evening at seven o'clock at the home of Rev. G. W. Switzer. Mr, McNutt will sing a solo, Miss Ashley render a piano solo and Master Willid Evans, Master Bryon Montgomery and Mioses Ella Brewer and Nellie Switzer will have recitations. No admission. All nre oordially Fnvited to attend.

ANew Superintendent.

Walter S. Horner, of Topeka, Kanaas, succeeds Fred Slleetz as superintendent of tho Crawfordsville Water and Light Company. Mr. Horner is now here and in charge. Mr. Sheetz is to be transferred to another field, but will remain here awhile until Mr. Horner becomes familiar with the working of the plant.

Removal.

The Misses Spruhan have removed their dress making establishment to the fourth house south of Center church where they will he pleased to see all their old patrons and many new ones.

Powder

Millions of HomrS-^io Years the Standard.

Ladies Long Plash Cloaks Below all Competitors.

We have reduced the price of every garment in our store. Great bargains in

CLOAKS

AND

Don't

SHAWLS.

TRADE PALACE.

SEERING&S0N

PZiXTSS 8TRBBT DEPOT.

Grocery and Lunch Stand

—Have rocclved a— Large anil Selected —Stock of—

FINE CANDIES.

They cordially invite an inspection of this stock by all those who desire candies for the holidays or for parties.

W E A S O E

Frosli Oysters, Crackers, Celery, Cranberries, and A Full Line of Groceries.

OUR LUNCH COUNTER

Is open Day and Night and is kept fully supplied with the best eatables.

It brought forth the greatest crowd, the quickest buying crowd, the best pleased crowd of gift-buyers that our handkerchief experience has ever known. Handkerchiefs at lc, 2c, 3c, 4c, 6c, 10c, 15c and 25c, up to 85 each.

Linens, Etc.

Linens always make nice presents. Nice Table Linen and Napkins to match makes a nice present. See our Linen 'Towels at 5c, 10c, 15c, 25c and up. Full size Bed Spreads, worth $1.50, in this sale only 99c.

Dress Goods.

A nice Dress Pattern is the most desirable Christmas present you can make. Give us a call and we will help you make a selection (rom 81.00 pattern suit to $20.00. We have made a great mark down sale in this department.

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Of All Kinds.

We put on sale a large line of Smyrna Rugs cheaper than ever known beiore Also, a line ol Marsales Quilts at generally reduced prices. 100

OUR STOCK OF

Fancy Goods,

-OF ALL-

Kidns and Qualities

Are new, better and at popular prices, We are in the business to sell goods and will make special prices.

TRADE PALACE.

TRADE? PALACES

HOLIDAY GIFTS. Correct Holiday Goods! Buy Early,

Buy ol us if yon wish the Best values for the Least Money, pointment attending the Holiday rush. Come, Hegianing to-morrow, Presents ever shown. Our stock is complete in every detail.

Holiday Handkerchief Sale,

DRESS GOODS

"What Queer Opinions"

Some People have of Public at Large.

-AND-

Trimmings to

Aren't their oxuressions amuseingf One firm says: "We sell at prices that beats all competitors." Another one says: "We haven't time to cut prices."' (It takes lots of time you know Another says: "We don't offer you 'A BAIT' on one article, to catch you on another

They talk like the people of Crawfordsville wero mokeys. As tkmgb they were not capable of judging for themselves. WHAT I HAVE TO SAY IS THIS)

LOOK AROUND, see tho quality of goods others offer you, got THE1K prices. "THEN" come and see tho stock offer you ami get .1/1' prices. A Comparison will convince you that I sell you better goods (for the prices asked) than any house in the city. "I don't soli CHEAP GOODS but GOOD GOODS at a cheap price. They that don't look around will not get their money's worth.

South Side Court House, Crawfordsville, Ind.

Suitable for X-mas presents. $5.00 each.

Pocket

Presents.

ait till the last minute before making your selections, for it is then generally a case of Hohson's choice. The advantage of early selections can not be overestimated.

LOUIS BISCH0F,

12V and. 12© East Main St.

You are invited to call and examine the largest stock of

Fine Books, Teachers and Family Bibles,

Pictures, Easels, Plush Goods

nson

All the Latest Novelties. No Trouble to Show Go3dr.

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Muteli,

G-reat

Reduction in SILK of all kinds. Colored Satins for

All Fancy Work.

AT 23 Cents.

Our stock is Complete.

TRADE PALACE,

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Buy Now!

Avoid the prusli, jam and (lissato secure the most desirable

Fans, Far.s, Fans.

Prices from 2.r)C

Books and Chatelaino B»gs for X-mas

Fixrs.

Nothing more useful nnd appropriate for

present. Wo have them. A nice muff from Site i"

each. Call and see them.

Housekeeping Goods.

Yard wide, striped Curtain Scrim, l*r yard Nottingham Lace Curtains from 75c up to S pair. All Chenille Portiere, fringed top end bottom, .o..w a pair, worth 810.00. Makes a fine Christina present.

OloELkis 3c Js oXets. We have made a great mark down Sale in Department and we will save from to vl cloak you will buy of us this week.

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Albums,