Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 6 September 1893 — Page 3

mmmaaam

CA

Big 4

Route.

Haviland China

•AT COST-

-AT—

ROSS BROS., 99-Cent Store.

CLOSING OUT SALE.

School Will Soon Begin, Mothers

You want to get your school suits ready

for the boys. We have received our com-

plete line and they are ready for your in­

spection. We are the sole agents of the

Champion, (the greatest school suits on

earth). We warrant the suits to wear

and never to rip, and you know what it

means if they rip, come back and get

your money.

LEE S.WARNER

THE ONE-PRICE

Clothier, Hatter and Furnisher.

Successor to J. A. Joel. Craw fords ville.

"A. HAND SAW IS A GOOD THING, BUT NOT TO

SHAVE WITH."

SAPOLIO

18 THE PROPER THING FOR HOUSE-CLEANING.

THE POSITIVE CURE.

T.V HMDI'HUP- BUHwrTotfc FtlMWe

Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago &St. Louis R.

Warner Sleepers 011 night trains. Beat mod ern day eoaoheaon all trains.

Connecting with solid Vestibule trains at Bloomlngton and Peoria to and from ssour river, Denver and tho Pacific coast.

At 1 ndlanapolls, Cincinnati, Springfield and Columbus to and from the Eastern and 1* board cities,

TRAINS AT OBAWFORDaVIIXH. OOIKOWHST. No. 9 mall 8:47 at in No.7 mall (d...) ...12:40 a No. 17 mall 1:30 No. 3 Express ,6 f.0p in

OOINQ BAST.

No.12 Mall (d) 2:03 am No. 2 Bxpresa 9 07 am No. 18 Mall....—.. 1:05 (J 0.8 Mall- 5:30pm

dili

MDNONROUTE

ta)iauwiut.Na»*ta«inrmiitMo»Y.ca((a

DIRECT UXVB To all points

North and South—Chicago and Louisville. Through Route to Western Points. Solid Pullman Vestibule Train Service

BETWEEN

Chicago-Louisville. Chicago-Cincinnati. Orawfordsville Time Table: SOUTH— 2:22 am 12:30 f:40 3:05

SOUTH— 1:02 a in 4:17 a 1:55 in 0:15 am

VANDALIA LINE

I I T1MB TABZiB NORTHBOUND. St. Jo© Mail '.8:10 a. m. South JUmd Express 0:10 p. in, bt. Jo© Special 2:33 p.m. laical Freight 2:33 p.m.

SOUTHBOUND.

Terre Haul© ExpressTorre Haute Mail Southern Express Ixjcal freight..

0:44 a. m. 5:20 p. in. 8:10 p.m. 2:33 p.m.

For complete time card, giving all trains and Btatlons. and for full Information as for rates, through cars, etc,, address

-^LDwHWTJ

A. C. JENNISON,

Tho Old Kellablc

PIONEER ABSTRACTER

Loan, Real Estate And Insurance Agent.

Over 121 E. Main St. Crawfordsvlllo, lnl

B.F. WOODSON

SELLS

Baggies Buckboards

Repairing a Specialty.

305 North Washington St.

A. H. HERNLEY,

Special Collector.

All kinds of notes and accounts promptly looked after. Settlements made and all business entrusted to his care promptly done. Office with J. J. Mills, 10914 S. Washington St.

T. S. PATTON,

SO4 Main St.

FIRE INSURANCE.

Represents the following Old Reliable Companies: Orient Insurance Co, of Hartford, Conn., Glens Falls Insurance

Co., of New York, Firemen's Fund Insurance Co., of California.

The Opium Habit Cured in All Its Forms.

I will treat patients on a guarantee—no cure, no pay. Call and consult me. Kid yourselves of this desperate habit. Treatment perfectly safe—no chloride of gold or Keeley Cure—any child may take the tnedlolae with safety. Same treatment will also cure the whisky or tobacco habit. CaU on me at my oflice, 224 south Washington street, Crawlordsvllle, Tnd.

J. It. DUNCAN, M.

D.

DAILY JOURNAL.

WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER C, 1893.

PKBSONS LBAV1NU THE CITY Can have The Journal sent to them for 10 cents a week, postpaid, the address being chanced as often as desired.

Important to Advertisers

Copy for changes in advertisements must be in the office by ten o'clock. Heading notioes will be received up to two o'olook.

THK DAILY JOURNAL

IS

FROM HERE AND THESE.

—0. L. Host has returned from Columbus. —John Griffin and wife are home from Chioago. —Mrs. B. Wurzel, of Joplin, Mo., is in the city. —W. T. Whittington went to Rockville to-day. —Will Maxedon is home from a six weeks' visit in Faoli. —Misses Nettie and May Neilest are visiting in Indianapolis. —A. H. Thomson and Miss Emma are visiting the World's Fair. —About half of Waynetown is here to day to interview the grand jury. —Bert Webster is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Webster. —One drunk was financially electrocuted in the Mayor's court this morning. —Mrs. A. E. Yount,of Battle Ground, is the guest of her mother, Mrs. Ssllie Ramsey. —Mrs. Doubleday, of Columbus,Kas., who has been the guest of J. J. Insley, left to-day for Indianapolis. —Claude Travis has given ap his po sition at the Y. M. C. A, and Walter Curlis is in charge of affairs. —Henry Burns will not return to Chicago but will go to Texas and open up an iron foundry for himself. —Miss Ada Deletion will leave in a few days for Toronto, Canada, where she will spend three months with S. G. Detckon and wife. —S. M. Grimes, junior member of the firm of Henkle & Grimes, met with a very painful accident this afternoon. He was cutting paper on the large paper cutter when the lever broke and he fell, striking his head on the sharp corner of a box. The wound is a very painful one.—Brazil Times. —llev. Otis A. Smith, formerly of this city, but now pastor of a Presby terian church in Evansville, is at present traveling abroad. Last week he wrote to friends from Paris, France, and intends visiting many other points of interest in the old world before returning returning to the United States.—Frankfort News.

New Suits filed.

Hurley & Clodfelter, attorneys for the Sentinel Printing Company, of Indianapolis, have entered suit against J«re M. Keeney on a promisory note for 8111 with interest at 8 per cent, since April and attorney fees. The complaint states that the defendant refuses to liquidate.

Isaac Davis has brough suit against the Big Four railroad for $75 damages and cost. He claims that tne road's engines set fire to one of his hay fields and burned six acres of timothy.

The Grand Jury in Session. The grand jury is in session, beginning this morning, and a large number of witnesses were put through to-day. It is expected that an unusually large number of indictments will be returned. B. F. Walkup and Matthias A. Liter are the only members of the regular panel serving. The substitutes are G. W. Corn, S. K. Fisher, Wm. VanarBdall and Perrv Martin.

We print sale bills on short notice. THE JOURNAL Co., PRINTERS

Your Painte'r

has often wasted time and material in trying to obtain a shade of color, and has even resorted to the use of ready mixed paints, the ingredients of which he knew nothing, because of the difficulty in making a shade of color with white lead. This waste can be avoided by the use of National Lead Company's

Pure White Lead Tinting Colors

These tints area combination cf perfectly pure colors, put up in small cans, and prepared so that one pound will tint 25 pounds of Strictly Pure White Lead to the shade shown on the can. By this means you will have the best paint in the world, because made of the best materials—

Strictly Pure White Lead

and pure colors. Insist on having one of tne brands of white lead that are standard, manufactured by the Old Dutch" process, and knows tc be strictly pure: "Armstrong & McKelvy" "Beymer-Bauman" "Eckstein" "Fahnestock" "Anchor" "Kentucky" "Morley" "Southern" "Shipman" "Red Seal" "Collier" "Davis-Chambers"

These brands of Strictly Pure White Lead and National Lead Co.'8 Pure White Lead Tinting Colors are for sale by the most reliable dealers in paints everywhere.

If you are going to paint, it will pay you to uend to us for a book containing informs* tion that may save you many a dollar it will only cost you a postal card.

NATIONAL LEAD CO.,

1 Broadway, New York,

Cincinnati Branch, Cincinnati* Ohio*

HORA MAflOSEY.

A Orawfordsville Girl Fatally Injured in Cincinnati. On Sundaj at Cincinnati a motor oar became unmanageable aud ran over a mile finally crashing against a telephone pole. Several persons were killed or fatally injured, among the latter being Miss Nora Mahoney, of this city. The girl is a sister of John Mahoney, who resides near the Monoo station. She was formerly in Biechol's store but for three years phst has resided in Cincinnati. She

waB

for sale fcy

Pontious & Looey and J. T. Lay mon.

well known here. She

was a pleasant girl and was well liked by all. The family received word last uight"that she could not possibly recover, her skull being terribly (raotured.

Miss Mahoney is in the city hospital with no chance for reoovery. The Commercial Gazette thus graphically describes the terrible accident:

A oar beoame unmanageable at McGregor avenue, and after a wild flight of over a mile jumped the track at Broadway, orashed into a telephone pole and one passenger was killed, three fatally injured, and twenty-six others more or less seriously hurt.

Three minutes of mortal terror, whirling along through clouds of dust, in a runaway oar at a speed that, at the finish is described as close to one hundred miles an hopr, is an experience that will never be effaoed from the memory of those who passed through its horrors and will live to tell the tale.

For more than a mile the runaway oar, itself weighing several tons, with its load of precious freight shot with velocity seldom attained in the most exditious railway traveling, and the wonder of all was that it kept the rails as long aa it did. Down the steep grades the terrible specter shot past wide eyed and open mouthed pedestrians,and along the level grades it coasted, and then, a quar ter of a mile from the finish, took the plunge that could end only in death and destruction.

It Btruck the sharp curves in the road with jolts that huddled the passengers together in heaps, and even despite the efforts of the cool headed crew, who tried to throw it from the rails, it held to tbem with a pertinacity that Burely was predetermined by fate.

On, on it went for about a mile, when a Bteep declivity was reached, and the plunge down this meant death. Down it went striking a huge spar and carry ing it till the car struck the supporting pillar of the doorway of a brick house on the oorner, and, although this pillar was of stone, twenty by twenty inches in thickness, it was torn from its place and shivered to pieces.

But the occupants of the car, they who took that terrible ride, of them? Twenty were borne away to the hospitals in the swift and ever ready patrol wagons, and one poor thing, a little girl with a pretty face and long, dark hair, now matted with blood, was lifted ten derly to the stretchers and carried to the morgue. She was dead when taken from the wreck, and for several hours was unidentified. Of the others, several are so badly hurt that they cannot recover, while others, although they may regain health and strength, will carry the marks of their injuries to their dying day.

No Controversy,

lo the Journal.

Your nonce Monday of remarks made by me in the pulpit on Sabbath gives a different impression from what I intended. I announced that at some coming Sabbath I would preach to my congregation upon the action of our General Assembly and give my reasons for up holding what they had done. That 1 had not preached on the subject immediately after my retuurn—for fear it would look too much like answering other sermons and entering into controversy—which I wished to avoid. That also as we had had amongst our worshippers for the last six weeks a large number from other congregations, and as they oame to hear the gospel and not discussion of doctrines which probably some of them did not view in the same light, I had out of respect to our guests abstained from preaching such. Your reporter seems have understood that I was referring to our sister Presbyterian uhurch altogether, which was not the case, as doctrinally they are probably more apt to agree with anything I say in this line than the members of other churches, many of whom worshipped with us. Now as all churches have their own services and I will not in a way be forcing my opinions upon guests I will tell toy congregation why I think Presbyterians should endorse the action of the General Assembly. I will not "roast Dr. Briggs" or anyone else. Dr, Briggs is a Christian, a man whose scholarship I admire, and yet I do not think he should be a professor in a

Presbyterian seminary. When in a few weeks I preach on this subject I cordially invite along with anv others who may desire to hear me, the reporters of THE JOURNAL and respectfully invite them, if they report me at all, to report me correctly. R. S. INOLIS. 1st PKES. CHURCH.

The Police.

"I see the Council roasted the police," remarked Sheriff Davis this morning "well, if they kept jail for awhile they might think the police were doing something. Two or three of the force I think are rattling good officers whose places conld not be filled. The fact of the matter is we expect too much of them."

Love's Lament.

In the enchanted valleys of cashmere and sharon countless millions of the rarest and most beautiful of earth's fair flowers are born to blush unseen and waste their perfume on the desert air. So in the gardens of the human heart the lilies of love and violets of tender thought too often blossom without our giving them expression. In the poor human heart there is a sad and pitiful waste of love.

Gentle reader, it's been just about that way with our esteemed fellow oitizen, Ben Zachary. Ben's heart is fall of love and noble sentiment. His soul swells like old ocean's tide with pure and holy love for Ida Alioe, his fair wife. A sweeter creature ne'er drew breath than Ida Alice. Still, Bomehow, Ben has restrained the expression of his boundless, infinite and granite-strong love in a manner almost spartan. He hasn't wished to appear too affectionate so he has assumed a cold and haughty de meanor wholly at variance with his lamb like character. This demeanor has led Ida Alice to enter suit for divorce. "The loving word unspoken is a sin," says John Boyle O'lleilly. If, however, Ida Alioe had merely to bank on a lack of outburst in Ben's great love she might get left at the trial. That sort of sin doesn't go for much before the court. Ida Alice has other sins to speak of. Ben refrained from loving words but not from abusive profanity. He refrained from lingering kisses of youth and love but not from good hard blows with his fist. Its pretty rough when such

things

come out on a nice young chap like Ben Zachary but we reckon he will have to stand it.

Weather Crop Report,

The drouth continued over the greater portion of the State and sufficient show ere to do good fell only over very few fields in the southern portion. The av erage temperature was below the normal with cool nights and not very warm days. Uninterrupted sunshine prevailed every day. Corn is turning yellow and the ears on late planted fields are still soft and undeveloped, and even should good rains come soon they would not improve the corn much in moBt localities. Vegetation looks dusty and withered and the leaves on tho trees are browning and falling. Water is getting more scarce every day, and farmers commenced to feed their stock, as the pas tures are ruined. Light frosts occurred in some few localities on Wednesday morning, doing no injury.

Make Your Entries Early.

Secretary Morgan advises all of our home people who expect to enter arti cles at the fair to make their entries this week as early as possible and avoid the disagreeable but inevitable rush of the last day or two. He is receiving entries at tho rate of about three hundred a day whioh is greatly in excess of previous years and means that this is to be the greatest of all fairs without doubt.

An Elegant Herd.

Secretary Morgan, of the fair associa tion is in receipt of a letter from J. H. Miller, the famous breeder of polled Durham cattle. Mr. Miller captured the World's Fair prizes and his herd is now in Chicago. He states that he will bring it to Orawfordsville and exhibit here during our fair.

I TiGEll VALLEY. Bert Remlcy is hauling gravel. H. Morris is still on the Air Line R. R. John Perry is building some new fence. School begins the third week in Septcm ber.

Abe Wilson was in Orawfordsville Satur day. Miss Clyda Peterson Sundayed at John Finch's.

Harry Morris will sow 100 acres of wheat this tail. Homer Chambers will work for his nap this winter.

C. Yeagley will work at Hazelrig Station next summer. We wonder what has-become ot the Chapel scribe!

Andy Fearless is buying cottle for his father-in-law. Tom Lookeridge attended the Frankfort fair lust week.

Hannibal Finch will sow sixty acres of wheat this fall. Hen Hinkle has joined the base ball nine in Boone county.

There is talk of having anew gravel road through the Valley. Hard times potatoes SI .35 per bushel and clover seed at $4.20.

Orawfordsville fair next week. Every body should attend. Charley Pew and Emot Henderson went to Illinois last week.

Tho Valley is still having trouble with tramps and thieves. Otis Robbins is hauling logs to build an ice house this summer.

Eph Snarlcy and wife have returned home from the Shades. Hill Morris and O. Armstrong were in New Ross Sunday evening.

Tho party at Hen McDonald's Saturday evening was well attended. H. Finch and Charles Poguc left for In dianapolis Tuesday morning.

Democratic times was the cause of last week's items not coming out. Corn will make an average of twenty five bushels per acre this year. .lake Johnson would like to know who got into his water melon patch.

Everybody that could raise eighty conts this week went to the encampment. Mrs. Lyda Caster and Miss Lou Tremble started to tho World's Fair Monday.

Harvey Morris sold a pen of corn to the Clahan Bros, this weeh at 40c per bushel, The Llnnsburg scribe was not around

colors just received.

Wc Must Have More Room

—FOR THE LARGE STOCK OF—

Fall and Winter Goods

We are now receiving, and in order to have same we have made'

Johnny Mish, of Mace, is quite ill at this writing. S. S. Vanscoyocwas in very much trouble Sunday night.

Fred Evans, of Iowa, visited his Uncle Robert Sunday. Arthur Caldwell was turned off tho railroad Wodnesda.y.

Miss Mary Rutan is working for James Mclntire this week. Morris Lauthers threshed four bushels of seed off of six acres.

Bert Ncwkirit's girl returned home Sunday for a few weeks. G. S. Vansco.yoc has quit the store and will now go to school.

Misses Pearl and Ola Wright visited Wm. Pock's Tuesday. Win. Peck's horse will go at tho Orawfordsville fair Friday.

Frank Wren and family, of Whitesvillc, visited Ed McCarty Sunday. James Summers, our leading horseman, visited Hank Ncwkirk Snnday.

Andrew Chambers visited Jarob Wingert. Sunday and reports a grand time. Whaler Linn, who was married a few days ago, has gone to the World's Fair.

Henj. Ha'l is inventing a Hying niachiuc and will call it the Lollis flying machine. Guy Evans and Albert Linn made f'i.50 by trading horses with some traders last Saturday.,

Cbas. Lauthers is sowing wheat on Edward McUarty's place and will move in with him in the spring.

Sam Coulter sold his sheep last year for $5 and complained about it. This year he sold them for ?3.50 and said nothing.

James Coulter, our Democratic postmaster, says wheat will soon be worth $1 per bushel and sheep are booming.

Samuol Connor, living ono milo feast of Mace, cut his clover and raked it and expected about eight bushels of seed but when threshed it only made one half bushel.

D-PRICE'S

Powder:

The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder.—No Ammonia No Alum.

Used 1 Millions *f Homes—40 Years the StandMd

big reductions through our entire stock. We are showing the

new things in Cloaks. Big line of Felt and Silk Sailors in all

ABE LEVINSON.

Another Rocker Like Above, only smaller, for $2.90.

Bed Room Suits for $15.00 and $18.50, just the thing for 1 ooms to rent. Do not fail to see them. Resp. Yours,

Zack Mahorney& Sons.

buying Democratic chickens that weigh 1K pounds shis week on account of the encampment at Indianapolis.

Lon Jackson sowed twenty-five acres of wheat last week in three days. Who enn beat that with one horse aud a line hoed drill. He challenges any ono to beat him.

Wheat sowing is at hand and there will be at the outside not less than M0 acres sowed in our ring this fall. Tho man who wants to thresh it should be on the lookout.

A. J. Abott has employed C. Hugelheim and C. C. McClure to work for him this winter. One to do the wood work and the other the iron work to complete the improvement on the old fashioned Moline cultivator.

STIIISGTO IfJV.

Corn good. School begins the ISth of September. Sam Linn Sundayed at Cbas. Cram's. Mort Acers visited Linnsburg Sunday. Walter Hunt was on our streets Sunday. Charley Munich sold his hay for $11 per ton.

Thomas Whorley says ho always quits at noon. What has become of the Greenwood scribe

The Fast Mail scribe was on our streets Sunday. Eston Hostetter was inviting for a party Sunday.

Bargains

-This Week.

A Large Arm Rocker

Cane Seat, for—

$1.75

A Large Rocker,

Like tho cut, forr

$3.45

Upholstered in Silk Tapestry,

Spring Seal., Solid Oak Quar­

tered, Sawed and PoliBhed.

Doney's Leland.

Cigar

Will Give

You Your

Money's Worth

Every Time.

PHENYjMjAFFEIN!

If you ever have Headache or Neuralgia, take Plieuyo-Cafl'cin Pills.

They are effectual In relievlng_PaInI and In curing lleadache or Neuralgia. They are not a cathartic, and contain nothing that stuplflcs. They tone up the nerves, and tend to prcvont returns of lleadache and Neuralgia. Tliey are guaranteed to do all that is clalmcd for lliem.

TESTIMONIAL.

I havo never seen anything act so promptly as rhcnyo-Callein 111 sick and nervous Headache. Many cases have been cured, and not any failures reported. H. L. i'arrer, Belle Voir, N. C.

For years I have been a terrlblo sufferer from headache some six months ago, my physician prescribed Phenyo-Caffeln, and since then, by ihelr use, I have not had a sovero headache, being able to 8top tbem completely In their lnclplency. J. •. Stannard, Concord, N. 11.

You hit the nail on (he head when you put Phenyo-Caffeln on the market They are the bust thing out for headache. E. P. Jones,M. D.,

Orleans, Mass.

One year ago I was ono of the greatest sufferers from sick and nervous headache that I ever knew. I no more have trouble with sick headache, and seldom have even a slight headacho. 1 attribute the great change to your Phenyo-Caf. fein, a remedy I could not do without If it cost a box. I have tried a dozen or more medicines [warranted to cure] without their even helping me. I can not praise your valuable preparation enough. Frank H. Schmltt,Seymour,lud

For sale by your druggist.

METROPOLITAN

Cor. Michigan Ave. and Monroe St. CHICAGO. THOROUGH INSTRUCTION. CHEAP BOARDiNO.

!XLt.b:,dtagO.M.rOWEBS,Prln.

ASX ros

Fred Boudinard's Bread.

And you will get tbe Best,

Rye Bread a Specialty.

Bakery, Corner of Main and

Walnut Sts.