Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 12 May 1893 — Page 3

May Festival

—AT—

M. E. CHURCH.

May 12—

Organ Recital.

Walter Howe Jones.

Admiaaion to Organ Recital SBc.

More About Clothing.

If Growing Sales oonnt for anything. If Complete Stocks, Exolusive Styles and Absolute Low Prices Lave any weight, then this store leads the

Clothing, /futs and Furnishings Trade oj Central Indiana.

The most natural thing in the world is for a merchant to think his own stock is the best and to say so. One of the easiest things is to exaggerate quantities, qualities and values. We offer proof that this Olothing business is the Largest in Orawfordsville, that olothing Styles here are more exclusive than elsewhere, that the range of prices are more reasonable for line mm'e goods.

It is utterly impossible in the limits of newspaper advertising to properly introduce our $10, $12 and $15 suits. It surprises most people that tailor-made and readymade go hand-in-hand. As a matter of fact we are getting the trade of those who formerly went to the custom tailor. Suppose you could get for $5 a pair of trousers actually worth $8—what then Our salespeople are ready. Any style hat you want—silk, Derby or felt— same quality and for $3 as the fashionable hatter asks $5 for. The difference is worth considering.

We are the acknowledged authority for the best new things in Hate and Furnishings.

LEES. WARNER,

—THE ONLY—

One Price Clothier.

Successor to Joly Joel.

A. C. JENNISON,

The Old Reliable

PIONEER ABSTRACTER Loan, Real Estate And Insurance Agent. Oror

121 E. Main St. Crawfordsvillo, Ind

Big 4

At

Cleveland, Cin cinnati, Chicago &St. Louis R.R

Route.

Winer Sleepers on night train*. Best mod tolld*Ve«tlbule t»ln. Bloomlngton and Peoria to and from aeour •tyAf Denver ind tho Ftolflo ooMti ...

Indianapolis,

board cities. TRAINS AT OBAWPORMTMA OOIMIWMI.

and •e*

Clnolnnati. Sprlnfffleld

Columbus to

and

from the Baatern

and

No. Small vS:52!5S No. 7 mall (d...i No. 17 mall 1.J0 No. 3 Bxpren ~6.48p 001110 BAST. No.12 Hall (d) VT.nnJS No. 2 Bxpreaa 52? No. 18 Mall liljj P? No.8 MalL....!.... 5:18 pro

^Ppuisvrut.lltw*i»tiiri CHIMSO kllSr

DxmBOT un To all points

North and South—Chicago and I^ouisrlUe Through Route to Western Points. SolidlPullmah Vestibule Train Service

BETWEEN

Chicago-Louisville. Chicago-Cincinnati. Orawfordsville Time-Table: BOOTH— 1:02 am 1:35 pm

•ORTH— 3:16 am 1:24 pm

Wall: Paper: Cleaned.

M. H. CHAMPION

M. H. Champion will clean your wall paper with a compound that removes dirt as if by magic. Saves tho expense of ropaporing. Leave orders with Nye & Beoo.

DAILY JOURNAL.

FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1898.

SMARTS UltG.

Farmers are busy planting corn. Three vacant houses in the burg. The new ohuich is progressing nicely. Gleaning house is the order of the day.

No new cases of mumps or whooping cough. Galloway Brothers commenced work on the church Thursday.

Mies Lottie Downs is taking music lessons from Mrs. Lide Fletcher. Tne sewing circle will meet at Miss Pet Posey's next Wednesday evening.

Rev. Jackman preaohed to quite a large congregation Wednesday night. Mrs. Edna White, of Orawfordsville, visited her mother Mrs. Green, Wednesday.

Miss Bertha Mitchel, .of Orawfordsville, is visiting her sister Mre. Allie Doyl.

Messrs. Ben Shelton and Sherman Moore passed through our midst with their beBt girls, Sunday.

Mr. Ed. and Miss Oarrie Stark, of Orawfordsville, attended church here Wednesday night.

The sisters of the church will give a basket and ice cream supper next Saturday night, May 20th, for the benefit of the church. All are invited.

NEW ROSS.

Bram Mount, of Darlington, was here Sunday. Nathan Thompson was in Lebanon Monday.

Mrs. Burrows spent Wednesday in Jamestown. Nathan Graybill, of Max, drove a firm over Sunday.

O. E. Kelley and wife spent Sunday in Jamestown. Wm. Brown and family,oC Thorntown, were here Sunday.

Mrs. R. F. King is visiting her parents in Haughville. Rev. Higgins officiated at the Christian church Snnday.

Mrs. E. M. Graves and Mate Bonney are visiting at Zionsville. R. 0. Walkup and wife, of Orawfordsville, spent Sunday here.

Gilbert Gray lost a valuable mare Thursday from pulmonary trouble. Ziglar, the pacing horse of W. II. Gott, took fright at a bear and tore a cart to pieces.

The' drill is rapidly moving downward. A small flow of oil was struck at 180 feet and shale at 200.

Two of the star actors of the Chesterfield Comedy Co. engaged in a club battle in the woods east of here.

Mrs. J. W. Shepard and Mies Daisy Hurt while out riding Wednesday evening were precipitated down a high bluff. The buggy was badly demolished but no one was hurt.

MACEDONIA.

E. E. Vanscoyoc is in Chicago. Hannibal Finch is roofing J. R. Linn's barn.

Clarence B^rry spent Suuiluy at J. R. Linn,s. IJnole Billy Calrer haF very severe attack of asthma.

Electricity Hrij s'" was ooen on our streets last week. J. M. Galloway will leiivo for Nebraska in the near future.

Wilmer Harris spent Saturday night and Sunday at home. Ed. McCarty has bought the electric light plant at Advance.

Sherman Vanscoyoc was the guest of Teddy Linn last Sunday. John M. Yount, of Enstis, Fla., is visiting at Jasper Faust's.

Rev'. Wainscott preached to a large audience last Sunday night. Usual Linn and Ezeba Armstrong ore attending meeting nt Ladoga.

Usual Linn says he is not building an air ship. It's a five-wheel cart. Now! What's the matter with our concert company Does anybody know Con any one tell

Sam Galey killed a snake h»t week that measured nine feet. Sam

Bays

it

wasn't a good day for snakes either. Mike Hunt had quite a disastrous runaway last Sunday night. Nobody hurt, but Mike was frightened out of a year's growth.

Clifton Linn of Davidson & Son the phenomenal young trotter John M. He will be sent "to the Bowman kite track and trained for the June races.

Misses Nina Ohodwick, Blanche Peterson, Lory Faust, Jennie Linn", and Messrs. Olahan, Linn, Evans and Harrie were the guests of Lida Galey lost Sunday.

"Dear Sister, "They charge you with being restless, irritable, excitable, and exacting. "They don't know the horror that oppresses you.

Every hour pains run rampant through your body. You suffer secretly as long as you can, then go all to pieces and 'don't care' what happens. "The iron grip of female disease is upon you.

Dear sister, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has cured tnousands like you.

It has cured me, and I want to tell everybody. It kills the pain. No more backache, no more bearingdown,' no more restless days and sleepless nights. Oh! what a blessing! take it and be well! it's a sin to hesitate."— Mrs. P. A. Quiett, North Hamlin, N. J.

All druggUts tell it. Address in confidence* Lydia B.

Pinkhaw Med.

Co.,

Lynn,

Mass.

Lydia E. Pinkham's Liver PU2st 25 cents.

FE0M HERE AND THERE.

—Col. I. O. Elston is in Indianapolis. —W. A. Coleman went to Rooohdale to-day. —Mrs. Dove McBroom is visiting in Hillsboro. —Ed. McCallough is visiting in Greencastle. —Hon. John L. Wilson left for Chicago this afternoon. —Rev. T. J. N. Simmons and wife are visiting in Chicago. ,*, —Mrs. Sallie Ramsey returned from Battle Ground to-day. —Mies Belle Allen will entertain her lady friends to-morrow afternoon. —Walter Howe Jones will give an organ recital at the M. E. church this evening. —Mrs. Carter, nee Mattie Hostetter, will arrive to-night from Denver, Col., on a visit. —The May Festival will be concluded this evening with an organ recital by Walter Howe Jones. —The botany class of St. Charles Academy spent the afternoon of yesterday in the woods botanizing. -Mrs. Fannie D. Gardner, the famous lady undertaker of Vincennes, will attend the convention here next week. -Capt. W. P. Herron has $5,000 worth or stock in the Capital National Bank which failed at Indianapolis yesterday. —Captain W. P. Herron owned 20 shares in the Capital National bank which failed yesterday. The bank will pay out. —Koch Robb has resigned his position in the Treasury department at Washington, whether by request or not the dispatches do not say. —Arch Stubbins and family have returned to Indianapolis. Mr. Stubbins will open a Eupropean hotel on the old site of the surgical institute. -The ball game between Wabash and DePauw will be called to-morrow afternoon at the college campus at 3 o'clock. A large crowd is expected up from Greencastle and a big time generally is anticipated, providing, of course, that the weather is propitions. —D. Lothrop Company announce as nearly ready: ltav. J. F. Cowan's "Endeavor Doin's Down to the Corners," a inuint, keen, graphic description of the Christian Endeavor work accomplished in a country village. It is told in the droll Yankee vernacular with all those odd phrases and bits of humor peculiar to the Yankee tongue, and it shows the real scope of this grand work as no statistics could.

COLLEGE NOTES,

Downey is in Indianapolis. Hanover is scheduled to play at Polytechnic to-morrow.

Rose

No entries for field day will be received after to-morrow evening. The Washburn Symphony club went to Danville, 111., to-day, where it will give a concert this evening.

Judge Baldwin has been called away to Indianapolis and will not be able to lecture at the College Chapel to-night.

The tennis tournament has been postponed till to-morrow morning, as the grounds are too wet to play on this afternoon.

Manager Kerr has arranged a game of foot ball with the University of Illinois to be played at Champaign September 30.

Should the weather be propitious to morrow the boll grounds will be crowded, as a large delegation is coming up from DePauw.

The tennis tournamenl will occur on the campus to-morrow morning at nine o'clock. There will be at least twentyfive contestants.

DePauw and Hanover played ball at Greencastle yesterday, the score being 20 to 1 in favor of DePauw at the end of five innings, Hanover giving up the ghost, making 14 errors and having 12 passed balls counted on them.

Kerr, manager of the foot ball eleven for next year, has the names of about 40 men who will strive for places on the 'leven next year. Some practice will be done this term and Prof. Horton will endeavor to get all the fellows back at least two weeks before college openB, for preliminary practice. A game has been arranged to be played with the University of Ills., at Champaign, on the 30th of Sept.

Motioe.

Fifty-cent balbriggau underwear only 25 cents all day Saturday at 211 east Main street.

CHICAGO CLOTHING STORE,

GBAND bjall at P.O.S.A. hall May 15. Good music, everyone invited. 5-12 15 Old .Newspapers

Are very handy about house cleaning time. You can get a big pile of them at THE JOURNAL office for five cents.

EYE, ear and throat diseases only, Dr, Greene, Joel Block. Fitting of glasses a specialty.

Catarrh tn New England. Ely's Cream Balm gives satisfaction to everyone using it for catarrhal troubles.— G. K. Mellor, Druggist, Worcester, Mass.

I believe Ely's Cream Balm is the best article for catarrh ever offered tho public. —Bush & Co., Druggists, Worcoster, Mass.

An article of real merit.—C. P. Alden, Druggist, Spriugflelo, Mass. Those who use it speak highly of it.— Geo. A. Hill, Druggist, Springfi»ld, Mass.

Cream Balm has given satisfactory results.—W. P. Draper, Druggist, Springfield, Mass.

SILAS WRAT will furnish you with a fine crayon portrait 14x17 inches, handsomely framed, for $4.50, delivered. All work made by the most skilled artists

1'

^•-1

$

and the finest quality guaranteed. Address 1102 E. Main St., Orawfordsville. diw-tf.

A STREET OAR FBQQHI8E.

Cincinnati Parties Who Desire to Put in an Electrio Railway Plant Here. The city council is in receipt of an electric street car franchise from a Cincinnati syndicate which desires to put a plant in Orawfordsville. The syndicate is represented by a Orawfordsville gentleman but the coancil refuse to disclose his name. The franchise is a very acceptable one and Mr. Smith states that in some reepects it is superior to that framed by the council and now awaiting acceptance. The Cincinnati people put up a $25,000 bond, agree to the forfeiture clause, promise to keep the streets in good repair about their traoks and in short to meet all reasonable obligations. The matter will come before the oouncil at its next meeting Monday evening.

The Wail Is Hade.

A special from Lafayette says: "There will be indignation among the taxpayers of Tippeoanoe county when they learn that Judge Harney, of Montgomery county, has allowed Anderson, of Orawfordsville, and Haywood, of Tippeoanoe, $2,000 more for services in the Fred Pettit wife-poisoning case. This fact was not known until to-day, when the order was presented directing the au ditor of Tippecanoe to draw his warrant in favor of Montgomery county for $2,000. Anderson and Haywood were prosecutors, and this allowance is Bup posed to be for briefing the case. Auditor Byera will most likely be mandated before he will draw the warrant, unless the commissioners instruct him to do so. Last December the commissioners paid the attorneys for the defense $5,000 for their services in full.

The Defense Backs Down.

The trial of William Mackessy, the third of the LaFayette riot cases, was called yesterday and one hundred venire men were summoned for the jury. When oourt adjourned lost night the bailiff hod called the forty-ninth name and twelve were temporarily in the box. Mackessv is one of the two men who came on the stage and assaulted Rudolph, Mackessy carrying a short club. Last night oral testimony wns to have been taken to support impended, witnesses for Murphy's new trial plep, but when the defense called two or three important witnesses and found they worr not present for examination, they withdrew the objection heretofore made to the filing of certain affidavits by the State, which said affidavits pointedly controdiot the affidavits made against the juror.

Attention Company I.

Company I will be inspected by the Major commanding the 2d Inf. I. L. on Wednesday evening, May 24th, at o'clock. Every member of the company, or every man having a uniform belonging to it, is hereby ordered to keep this date in mind and to be present at this inspection. Orders from headquarters are to the effect that no excuse will be accepted from any member who is absent from this inspection. Preparation will have to be made at once, and in view of this fact, there will be three company drills held next week, Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings at 7:30 o'clock. Attendance at these drills and at inspection is imperative. By order of

Captain GEO. W. LAMB, Commanding Officer.

Quite a Kunaway.

Yesterday afternoon JameB Gerard, of Wingate, suffered in a bad runaway at Lee's tile factory. His team took fright and ran off. The wagon struck a post and Gerard was thrown out and to quite a distance striking on his head It is feared that he suffered spinal injuries.

WALNUT CHAPEL.

Everone is plowing for corn. No corn has been planted in this community.

W. K. Harris is the owner of a fine Redwood colt. H. C. Linn purchased a fine horse Monday morning.

Bill Vansooyoc has commenced work for Sam Hipes again. Hannibal Finch spent Sunday with friends in this community.

Rev. Wainscott preached to an atten tive audience Snnday night. Dr. J. W. Northcutt is turning the soil for M. Vanscoyoc this week.

Harry Freeman and Albert Linn, of Mace, started west Sunday night. Harry Everson, of Ladoga, was seen rolling his buggy Sunday evening.

J. B. Linn and family, of Mace, took dinner with T. A. Davidson, Sunday. M. T. Peterson, the Linnsburg huckster, is seen in our midst every Friday.

The carpenter work of the new M. E. church, at Maoe, is getting along nicely. Anyone wanting bottled pop call on S. G. Vansoyoc, the Linnsburg merchant.

H. O. Finch, of Tiger Valley, put a new steel roof on J. R. Linn's barn last week. a

Tobe Harris, the Ladoga Race horse trainer, spent Sunday with folks at home.

HAUNTED STATUES.

Ancient Egyptians Tlrllevod That ImagM Were Animated by Spirit*. When Darius I., according to Herodotus, wished to erect his statue near that, cf Kameses XI. ^Sesostris), the priests objected on the ground that Sesostris was'a greater conqueror than he. The statue in question was one of several erected before the templo of Ptah at Memphis, on tho borders of the sacred lake, where is now the village of Bedreshein. After Memphis became Christian the renown of its monuments died away, and when it perished tho stones were removed to serve in building Cairo. One colossus remained to our day, it having been preserved under the sand, and on being unearthed by Caviglia at the beginning' of the century was found to represent Sesostris in his youth.

This colossus has been visited by most tourists in Egypt, says the London Globe. It lay on the sands near the plain of Bedreshein, in a hollow or ditch, and was covered with water during the inundation. Tho remains of the temple might be traced along the lake, which is still represented by a depression in the ffround covered with wheat fields. Of late years Gen. Stephenson and Maj. Bagnold, R. E., have excluded the waters from the colossus, raised it on timber supports above the ground and surrounded it by a brick wall. On payment of two piasters, however, it can be seen by the curious.

M. Maspero, tho great Egyptologist, relates in a French contemporary that the Arabs had formerly a great awe of this, which they called Abou'l Hoi, the "father of fright," as they do

1

the sphinx.

The ancient Egyptians, he assures us, believed that statues, divine or human, were animated by a spirit or "double" detached from the soul of the person they represented. This double ate, drank, and spoke or delivered oracles. In later times tho double was credited with playing evil tricks on those who approached the statue, and even with killing them. His power could be destroyed by breaking the statue, or at least the features hence it is that so many statues of the Pharoahs have been mutilated by the Arabs.

The spirit of Kameses II. was supposed to haunt the palms at night, and M. Maspero relates that every time he passed by in the evening toward dusk the driver of his ass would mutter his prayers and hurry on his beast. One evening M. Maspero asked htm if he was afraid of some "afaito" and the driver begged him not to speak of such things or some harm would befall hiin. Presently M. Maspero was thrown from the ass in the middle of the wood and the incident was regarded by the driver as a punishment for his not speaking respectfully of tho spirit in the statue. Egypt is full of such superstitions, dating from the far past.

WHY JENNY LINO RETIRED.

An Intimate Friend of tho Singer Given tho True Keason. One matter which must be of interest to every lover of dramatic art, and which has been an enigma' to many people, is now for the first time dealt with by one with authority to discuss the question, says a writer in the Century. Why did Jenny Lind quit tho stage at the moment of her greatest glory, and many years before her unrivaled powers had begun to suffer any decay? Some have perhaps reluctantly accepted the widely-prevalent idea that she had come to regard the dramatic profession as an unholy thing1 which no pure-souled woman could remain in without contamination. Happily this notion can be entertained no longer. Her intimate friend, Froken von Stcdingk, with reference to it says: "Many suppose this resolution to be the result of pietism. Jenny Lind is as God-fear-ing as she is pure, but had pietism been tho causo, she would not herself have gone to the play, which she declared she liked to do, to see others act." The fact is that to appreciate her motive for leaving the stage is to understand the whole character of the woman. Her distaste for it seems to have begun with her first great European success and steadily grew as her fame spread. In 1840 she had lived for ten years a life of incessant hard work on the stage yet in the following year she wrote from Paris: "Life on the stage has in it something so fascinating that I think, having once tasted it, one can never feel truly happy away from it." But in 1S45, just after her transcendent success in Berlin, the idea of leaving the stage had not merely occurred to her mind, but had already becomc a fixed determination. Among the dominant notes of her character were love oi homo and craving for domestic peace. This craving was to a great extent satisfied while she remained In Stockholm, and especially during the time she lived with tho Lindblad family. But when her destiny drew her in relentless triumph to Berlin,Vieuna, Copenhagen,

London, her domestic instincts wero wrenched and tortured, and she found no compensation in all the glitter of her success. "I am convinced," said Herr Brockhaus, in April, 1840, "that she would gladly exchange all her triumphs for simple homely happiness." That was the secret of the wholo matter: And so she formed the resolution 1 quit the stage forever, a resolution in which she never wavered from 1845, when it first took definite shape, till she carried it out in London in the summer of 1840.

Natural HUtory an a Tranquillizer. "A patient of Sir William Gull told mo," says a writer in Temple Bar, "that his physician had recommended him to t"ikc up natural history as a tranquillizing study. Tho question arises, are he men who pursue these studies tnore free from strife, jealousies and all uncharitableness, than those wh« are struggling for supremacy in art and literature? Judging from the naturalists I have known, I am inclined to think that, as a rule, they are more tranquilminded. Kingsley felt the truth of this when he said: 'Ere I grow too old, I trust to be able to throw away all pursuits save natural history, and die with my mind full of God's facts, instead of men's lies

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Old

SAM C. SCOTT is with us.

It May Make You Our Customer.

It will if you want to save money on your purchases of Dry Goods JVoiiotis, Cloaks, Millinery, Etc. If you have not given u« a trial, do so at the earliest opporlunity.

It is money in your pocket.

You want to see our Lace Ourtains at 75 cents per pair. They are the 11.50 kind, It will pay you to see our stock of Spring Jackets and Capes before vou buy. We have a now stock.

We give you better value in Hosiery and Underwear than can be obtained elsewhere. Wo havo some big bargains in Table Linens.

Beautiful stock of Silk Waists just received. Wo are showing the new things in Dress Goods.

*SUCHR

Furniture, Stoves,

In Calicos and muslins we always quote the Lowest Price.

Beautiful stoik of Silk Umbrellas and Parasols.

But there is one thing you must surely not fail to see, nod that is our Millinery Department. We have the most exquisite Hats to be found, and with our excellent trimmer we can show you sotne things not to be lound elsewhere, and best of all is our strict regard for Popular Prices tor Millinery Goods. V: Respectfully,

Is going Higher every day We will sell at

Picture Mouldings in endless variety, at all prices at

Tine Fair,

South Washington Street.

POSITIVE

Mcmui.MCNS,,

nson,

Prices This Week.

Do not fail to try ont gallon of our 30-Cent

Syrup, We have this same Syrup in

2-Gallori Buckets for 75 Cents.

Barnhill.Hornaday&Pickett.

Queensware, Grates,

Mantels and Furnaces.

Cast Your Eye on This!

Fringe Shades Under Shades

40 Cents. 25

Tl

cMlIliLKNS, l\/| N S I

105 South Washington Street.

NEW GROCERY STORE,

Goods New and Strictly First-class. Call and see us. A. ]. McMULLEN & SON.

A Good Second-hand Safety Bicycle

FOR SALE CHEAP, AT

Ross Bros., 99-Cent Store.

SATARtt