Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 11 May 1894 — Page 3
Forward March!
Not the Coxey Army,
but the citizens of Craw-
fordsville and Montgom
ery county to the -M- "-"V -V VV/Vv
Great Remodeling Sale.
We lead the charge on
profits and have completely
put to flight all past efforts
when it comes to offering to
the public a choice line ot Mer
chandise at astonishing
Low Prices.
Don't let the opportunity
escape you, but come and see
us, buy from our cost mark
and save
30 per cent in Cash
Store Open Evenings Until 8.
Lee S.Warner,
The One-Price
Clothier, Tailor, Hatter and
Furnisher.
Eph Joel's Old Stand.
WELL ARE WE IN IT? I Should Say So.
We Have the Only Perfect Line of
Baby Cabs
In the city. Nothing buttl.e Hey•wood make and all patterns liave a Lock Brake. Come and see them •and you will be sure to buy.
Zack. Mahorney &Son.
Chester J. Britton, M.D.C.
Veterinary Surgeon
AND DENTIST.
Graduate of the Chicago Veterinary College. All diseases of domestic ani mals treated.
Office over Moffett & Morgan's drug store. 23K east Main street. Infirmary at G. F. McDonald's livery stable, 22a east Market street.
R. E. Atkinson,
—THE POPULAR
South EndGrocer
Customers always treated fairly, No stale goods at high prices. Corner Water and College Sts
Shorthand Bookkeeping
Write to the! ,|i^ Ck Scholarships Sin °.rd I I I and Farmers' vlllo
Bunlneaa I I spoolal courss V.?
0
I
'u'' partlcu- lug. AddresR are of Uio 1\ O. Box 291 CrawfordBVllle. lad.,
wm
Purely
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THE DAILY JOURNAL
ESTAIIUSHEU IN 1887.
FRIDAY, MAY 11. 1894.
GENERAL GOSSIP.
Conc-i-riih Kverytliins aiul Kverybtxly uml in, Therefore, of Inierettl to All of lis.
—Honey's Iceland Cigar. —Frank Davis is in New Boss. —Col. J. C. Wingate is in the city. —Don't substitute for Devil on Corns. —.John Hooe was in Vcedersburg today. -C. \Y'. lUirton has returned to Chicago. •/. —\Y.-'A: -'Slutz,":«t Frankfort, is in the city. -A. C. .leuiiison was in Indianapolis to-day.
-Miss Kate Fullenwider is visiting in Waynetowu. -Dr. T. F. Leech went to Lafayette this afternoon. —John L. (ioben bis returned from Northern Indiana. -Mr. Wood, of Woleott, is the guest of John L. (Ioben. —Dr. II. E. Greene went to Lafayette this afternoon. -Mrs. Belle Gregory and daughters are down from Chicago. -Col. Anderson, late of the Junction House, is in the city. -A1 Rumble and wife rejoice over the advent of a daughter. —Mrs. Jos. Milligan has returned from a visit in Brown's Valley. -The Commissioners settled with the gravel road contractors to-day. -The First church social last evening was a decided success and was well ittended. -Frankfort News: Rev. M. W. llarlcins and son returned from Crawfordsville, yesterday. —Miss Anna Willson will spend the summer at a summer classical school at Martha's Vineyard. —"The King of Kings," produced sixty pictures from the old masters. At M. E. church to-night. Admission I") cents, children 10 cents. —Elijah Clore had $400 insurance on his barn and contents which were recently burned. This will pay only about one-third of the actual loss. -"The King of Kings'' will be an education in art, The stereoptican views are the finest in use in the lee ture field. To-night at M. 12. church. —J. A. Gilbert will formally open his music store in the Y. M. C. A. building next Thursday with a musical programme in the afternoon and evening. —You can see samples of Tim .Jouit NAI."Art Gems" at the olliee. Seeing is wanting and wanting in connection with 15 cents and three coupons is having them. —Dr. LA. Detehon and wife expect to make their headquarters here for several months, although much of the time will be passed in visiting Ken tueky and other points. —James Hunter, of Ripley townshiphad his collar bone broken this morn ing by falling from his wagon near
Yount's woolen mills. The wound was remedied by Dr. Ensminger. —The following persons have gone to Anderson to attend the banquet given by Major Doxey to the Loyal Legion: Capt. J. B. Pence and wife Henry Campbell, MissKatherine Campbell, Miss Martha Thomas, Col. I. C. Elston, Gen. Lew Wallace and T. II. li McCain.
150 leghorn hats at 33 cents each for Saturday only at Levinson's.
The
Used a
Millions
fcgruble, plenant and agreeable to take, accept* able to the stomach, safe and effective for old and young. Acts quickly and gently on the stomach, kid* neys, liver and bowels. Cures Dyspepsia, Constipation, sick or nervous Headaches, by removing bile and cleansing th« system. Dispels Colds and Fevers. Purifies the blood. The best Family Medicine. Price 50c. Sold by druggists. Take no substitutes.
LAXATIVE
THE PRUNE LAXATIVE CO., LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FOB BALE BY OOTTON fc KITE
'.Brother* Byrne.
^'liese ever popular and well-known pantomimists will appear in their comedy success, "Eight Hells," at Music Hall May 15. In presenting "Eight 1 tells" to our theater patrons this season, the Brothers Byrne have expended over 815,000 in new scenery, mechanical tricks and elegant paper. They intend giving one of the best and most complete pantomimic comedies on the stage. The reputation they have gained for themselves has been done through hard and faithful work and for this reason have been able to keep the confidence of the people. "Eight Bells will be a startling revelation in stage-craft. Mr. John F. Byrne has invented a number of new and surprising tricks, which mystify the audience. The scenery is surprisingly beautiful. The last act lias been rewritten. making it complete in plot and detail. The supporting company 11 superior one.
DEMOCRATIC OPPOSITION TO BROOKSHIRE IN MONTGOMERY COUNTY.—It All Comes From Drove.of Long-Eared Stump Suckers Outside the Pleasant Pasture-
Indtiina at the Fair.
The final report of B. F. Havens, Indiana World's Fair executive commissioner, has been issued.- It shows that the total cost of the Indiana Building to the tax-payers was 857,162.00, the contributions making the total value §(57,308.50. The amount expended by the board of managers was 8122,241.03, the per diem of the managers being S5.430.03. The balance in the hands of the treasuter is S4,7SS.S0. The public schools of the State contributed S5,781.SIS. The total number of awards to Indiana exhibitors was 278. These were distributed to nearly every department of the Fair. About 152,000 people from this Slate attended the Fair who registered at the Indiana Building. Mr. Havens estimates the total number from Indiana at 300,000.
The Colored Lecturer.
Hon. James Williams, a well known colored attorney of Indianapolis, gave ascholarly and interesting lecture at the A. M. E. church on the subject, "The Negro's Incentive to Progress." Among other things he referred to the Normal and Industrial Institute at Tuslceegee, Alabama, which is probably doing more practical work in elevating the negro than any other agency extant, the church missions not excepted. The Silver Leaf Quartette discoursed sweet music and brief remarks were made by Lemuel Gibson and Robert Burton. There was a good sized audience present.
For CommlBHioncr.
Some of the friends ol Hannibal Trout have announced that his name will be before the Republican convention on the 2d day of June as a candidate for Commissioner for the Eastern District. Mr. Trout is well known to the people of the county, and they know that lie would make an ideal Commissioner. He is popular among men of all parties and should the convention in its wisdom see proper to name him as the candidate he would make a strong and winning race.
.) one* and Browne.
Ab Jones this morning took Master Tommy Brown, the insurrectionist of the Orphans' Home, to the reform school at Plainfield where it is hoped the dogs will not get him. Tommy would certainly have become their meat if he had remained here in the Iloosier Athens and his departure is greatly felt at the home. Happily the feeling is one of relief.
Old Papers.
This is house cleaning time and every house cleaner needs old papers. We have bushels of them and sell tliein dirt cheap. The papers we sell are all clean and in good condition.
Awarded Highest Honors World's Fair
D-PRIC
Powder
only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder.—No Ammonia No Alum.
)f
Hornet—40 Years
the StaacUiC
HARRY TAMMANY IN LUCK.
He if in a Tarty that IUcovers a l.ong Lout Golil Mine In Utah,
The following from the Salt Lake City Tribune will be of interest to the many friends of Harry Tammany, late of this city.
Ever since the Gentile invasion of Utah, stories have been whispered about, one to another, that in these lofty mountains, which add so much to the beauty of Utah's scenery, in early days there had been made rich mining discoveries by men more foolhardy than their fellows. It has also been darkly hinted that the same men were forced to abandon their work, of which all traces were carefully concealed.
Such a story is current around the settlement of Lelii. It is stated by an old lady, now in her sixties, that about
1
forty years ago, when Johnson's army passed through here, two men, deserters from the ranks, went into the mountains where they began mining. The old lady says she distinctly remembers the men, for tnoy often came to her father's place, who kept a small grocery store, for supplies. To all appearances they were exceedingly lucky for tliey now and then displayed bags filled with gold dust, and showed many rich specimens of gold-bearing quartz, The news of their discovery was soon noised about, inflating the imaginations of the quiet plodding settlers I with dreams of sudden wealth. But alas for them their castles in the air soon came tumbling about their ears, for the news also reached the ears of
Brigham Young. The bishop of the settlement was giveu orders that the work must be stopped. The mine was
accordingly blown up, whether or not with its unlucky owners inside no one knows. Any way, they were never heard of afterward.
Their story had been almost forgotten until just recently, when Messrs. Harry It. Tammany, W. D. Blosser, George Clausseriues and H. B. Westover, who have a man prospecting in that region known as Beef Gulch, brought it forcibly to their minds again. The man in their employ finding good indications of gold in the vicinity ran across a tunnel about 150 feet length, showing every sign of having been blown up. Whether this is the mine owned forty years ago by the unluck prospectors or not the gentlemen are not yet prepared to state, but they, have nevertheless struck bonanza, having had assays running all the way from 83.50 to 810.50 in gold with scarcely no developing at all.
A New Counterfeit.
The secret service of the treasury is informed of the existence of a new and dangerous counterfeit of the 82 treasury note. It is of series of 1891, check letter "B," J. Fount Tilman, registerer, D. N. Morgan, treasurer, with MePherson's portrait on the ncte. The note is a trifie smaller than the genuine and is printed on soft flimsy paper. The numbering is .poor, being almost brown or chocolate instead of carminc. The seal is about one-sixteenth of an inch smaller than the genuine and is a dull dark, faded red instead of bright pink as in the genuine. In the McPherson portrait, the collar in the counterfeit shows all around in front. In the genuine the beard extends below the collar, partially hiding the small words "Two," which appear in two places.
The Oulatenon Club.
The Ouiatenon Club will be held at Judge Harney's room this evening at 7:30 o'clock. The paper which was to have been read by Prof. J. H. Osborn will be omitted on account of recent serious afflictions in Prof. Osborne's family. The current topic will be presented and discussed by Prof. Alexander Smith. A full attendance is desired as some important matters will be presented for the consideration and action of the Club.
Pleatmnt Ilop.
The dance given in the P. O. S. of A hall last night tinder the auspices of the All High orchestra was a decidedly successful and pleasant affair. About twenty-five couples were present and enjoyed the popular amusement until quite a late hour. Other entertain ments of a similar character will likely follow.
Death of Mrs. Mary Kngmlngcr. Mrs. Mary Ensminger died last night at her home 011 east Main street of cancer. The funeral occurred thi afternoon at 4 o'clock conducted by Revs. Howe and Tucker. The deceased had been a terrible sufferer for many years and death came to her as a relief
Ik
it is style, excellence, beauty and fine work in millinery you are looking for you find it at Levinson's
A Dairyman's Opinion.
There is nothing I have ever used for muscular rheumatism that gives me as much relief as Chamberlain's Pain Balm does. I have been using it for about two years—four bottles in alias occasion required, and always keej a bottle of it in my home. I believe I know a good thing when I get hold of it, and Pain Balm is the best liniment I have ever met with. W. B. Denny dairyman, New Lexington, Ohio. 50 cent bottles for sale by Nye & Hooe 111 Washington street, opposite court house,
4(l-inch black silk-finished Henrietta, worth 75c, for this sale, 49c. Large stock of 30-incli novelties, worth up to 50c, all go at 20c and 25c.
A Big Cut in Silks.
Elegant figured China Silk, worth 50c, for 20c. SI.00 cloth, used largely for capes, out it goes for (!5c. We have a large line of Braids and jets for dress trimmings.
nillinery Department.
We can safely say that this department lias the most complete stock in the city, and as our prices are moderate and work first-class, we advise you to come and take a look, as we know we can please you, both in style and purse. 1C0 pieces light shirting calico at 2% cents per yard, worth 5 cents.
Lace Curtains.
We are the people that can sell you lace curtains cheaper than any other house can or will sell them. Lace curtains, WA yards long, 00 inches wide, for 31.25 per pair, worth 82.50. Curtain poles and fixtures free with every pair of curtains.
OPPOSITE COURT HOUSE.
1.A1IOUA.
Ladoga business men want gas piped lis year. John Stanley, of Raccoon, was in town Saturday.
Lebanon band furnished music for the horse show. Robert Ash by most completed
new elevator is al-
Candidates for office were out iu full force Saturday. John Zimmerman has moved his family to Ladoga.
Jessie Fall, of Raccoon, is visiting Sant Epperson's. The new town officials were sworn in Tuesday evening.
Many of the Monon officials have been here this week. Miss Lulu Jenkins leaves to-day for an extended trip in Ohio.
A traveling musician was the attraction on the street Thursday. J. E. Likiday's handsome new residence lias been commenced.
Ten men are at work erecting a new depot on the Momon at this place. The horse show Saturday was a success although it rained until noon.
A party of young people attended church at Crawfordsville Tuesday night.
The Brooksliire block will be ready for occupancy about the middle of next week.
The High School alumni will give their annual banquet about the middle of June.
Miss Yearger, of Putnam county, was the guest of Mrs. Steve Smith the past week.
Miss Lou Cox left for her home in Russellville Saturday after attending school here all winter.
Mrs. Rachel Funk returned home. Wednesday after a week's visit with relatives in Crawfordsville.
AN immense new stock of hats bought at a great sacrifice, to be closed out at less than wholesale prices, at Levinson's.
A Pointer for Travelers.
While Mr. T.J. Ricliey, of Altona, Mo., was traveling in Kansas lie was taken violently ill with cholera morbus. lie called at a drug store to get some medicine and the druggist recommended Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhcea Remedy so highly lie concluded to try it. The result was immediate relief, and a few doses cured him completely. It is made for bowel complaint and nothing else. It never fails. For sale by Nye it Booe, 111 Washington street, opposite court house.
Kellef in Six Mourn.
Distressing Kidney and Bladder diseases relieved In six hours uy the "Now Great South Amcrluau Kidney Cure." This new remedy Is a great surprise on account of its exceeding promptness In relieving onin in the bladder, kidneys, back and every part of the urinary pdssages In malo or fomale. It relieves retention of water aDd pain in passing It almost immediately. If you want quick relief and cure tills Is your remedy. Sold by cotton & Kile and Moffett Morgan.
Notice to the Consumers of the Crawfordsville Water and Ltghi Co. We desire to notify customers who are dissatisfied with their present annual flat rates that we will furnish tliem water by meter measurement upon the following basis.
If the consumer will set at his expense a meter to be approved by the Manager of this Company, we will rebate his charge 15 per cent of the regular meter rate if his bills are paid at the office of this Company previous to the 15tli of the month for the previous month's consumption of water and will adjust unpaid disputed charges for water comsumed during the interim from the first of April to the setting of meter upon a basis of the consumption by metier measurement. To obtain the rebate above offered meter bills must be paid at the office of the Company previous to the 15tli of the month for the previous month's consumption.
In addition to the above the Company will agree to purchase the meter from the consumer at a price not to exceed that at which a similar meter can be purchased from the dealer. Payments therefor to be made in monthly installments equal to 25 per cent, of balance of the consumer's meter bill for the month after deducting 15 per cent. Information in regard toaeters can be obtained from the manager of the company on application.
Respectfully,
The Crawfordsville Water & Light Co.
A GRAND SPECIAL SALE
HERE
IT
CHEAPEST, for it saves TIME, LABOR AND CLOTHES.
I Made only by
GOES.
Our beautiful stock to be demolished by cutting down prices. We have never yet had to to take a back seat with low prices, nor do we ever expect to. The purchasing power of one, dollar to-day will be found by every customer who buys at this sale to be three times greater than it was one .year ago.
Dress Goods. Table Linens.
Don't stand back and wait. Come in with your nerve and your pocket book, for now is the time to buy bargains. We are going to slaughter everything, so don't fail to come and bring your friends too.
When I Was a GaL,
Will all be reduced for this sale 17%c for good Turkey red 35c for 50c quality all Linen crash only 4c per yard. -j Best apron ginghams made, only 5e per yard. 20c and 25c satines only 10c per yard.
Children's W06I dresses worth up to 83.50, go at this sale for 81.50.
Miscellaneous.
Lonsdale Cambric 9c. per yd. 7c. unbleached muslin 4Jij'c 7)^c. bleached muslin, 4%c.
Men's socks. 5c, worth 10c ladies' fast black hose, 5c. Men's working shirts, 19c 50 ladies' wrappers at 05c each.
Pins lc per paper Warner's Caroline corsets, 00c. Dress stays, good quality, 5c a set genuine Castile soap, 3 for 5c.
Special sale on ribbons dress Ginghams onlv 5c per yard. Outing flannels only 4%c white goods, laces, eliallies and all wash goods reduced.
Ladies' summer vests only 4c, worth 10c. Spring capes and jackets at about one half price. Indigo blue, red, black, white and grev, all best calicos go at 4%c.
See our 0c umbrellas they arc the 81.00 kind. Boys' Windsor ties only 4c. Elegant percale shirt waists '01 ladies, only 390* worth 00c.
Straw mattings at 12^c per yard, worth 20c. The best carpet warp ever brought to this citv at 15c for white and 17c for colored.
butlandsakes.itaintrachoreda!lnow since !hem
got to making^
I Sakt^
I SOAR
It sarfinlyisthebest thing For HOUSEKEEPERS that ever was invented.
B£"S isthe
Is pnre and unadulterated, while for rapid cleansing power
The American
EAST flAIN STREET.
washday was always
a
AIway.« ahead of all competitors in the race
for patronage in the Clothing business. All
others are distanced, but the reason is easily ex
plained by "The Judge*." They are sadly
HANDICAPPEDEEEEE
Because The American manufactures
all their own goods which enables us to
sell them at prices so far below all
others that they are
perfect dread I
FAIRBANK
tolKs
OUTCLASSED.
Every article in our great double room is of
this season's production. No relegated back
numbers that would be dear "at cost," but every
article is bright, new and stylish. If you get
your clothes made to order look at our line of
woolens. Full dress suits for sale or hire.
THE AMERICAN
Wholesale and Retail Clothiers, Tailors, Ilatters and Furnishers. Corner of Main and Oreeu Streets. N. B. .las. Howard and Will Murphy are with The American.
ILr I
ft has no equaL
N. K. FAIRBANK & CO., Chicago. I
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