Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 18 September 1894 — Page 4

Cash is King.

And it is the only way I buy my stock, and when I get an opportunity to buy goods at a great sacrifice, my customers get the benefit of same. You will al­

ways

get more for a dollar

the year round at my store than any other place in the city. Call and see bargains

m-

5eth Thomas Clocks

And Novelties in Jewelry.

207 East Main Street.

Dr. H. E. Greene,

Practice Limited to Diseases of tho

Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat.

Office Hours— Joel Ktoclr. 0 to 1" a. Crawfordsville. 2 to 4 p. m. Indiana.

Bring

Your Feet

To My Store and Have them Shod.

J. S. Kelly.

124 E. Main St.

"The Great Steinway."

Here, as everj'where. is recognized, as the

World's Best Piano

And it was awarded the red at our fair as it always is at every fair. Also got First oil Display. Not so bad.

The "Gilbert" Music House

Shorthand

vllle Business Co 11 eg or lull particuars of the

Bookkeeping

Write to the Crawfords-Free

Schol are hips and Farmers' special course In Bookkeeping Address P. O. Box 291

Crawfordsville* Ind..

MONEY TO LOAN.

Any amount in sums of Slou and over, at the lowest rate, and on easy payments.

C. W. BURTON.

Loan and Real Kstate A^ent Office 1073-6 E. Main St.

THEO. McMECHAM, DENTIST.

CHAWFOKDBVILLR, INDIANA. Tenders his service to the public. Motto good work and moderate Drlcee

Neat Business

Such as The Journal Co. Prints,

8

Is Worth twice as rrniclv as an ordinary business card. And yet we do not charge ••twice as much for it.

Try our Round Cornered Cards.

The Journal Co.

Printers.

THE DAILY JOURNAL.

ESTABUSHKK 1" 1SST.

TUESDAY, SEI'TEMKKll is. 1894.

GENERAL GOSSIP.

Concerns Everything mikI Everybody .. Anil I*, Therefore, of lutorest to All of Cs.

—Dr. Tucker is in Chicago. —0. M. Gregg went to Chicago day. —Sehultz A llulett want to buy an sO-aere farm. —Mrs. .lim Lee and baby are visiting iu Indianapolis. —M. V. Wert is attending a reunion of the Tenth regiment at Lebanon. —Xuek Mahorney and wife went to Grand Kapids. Mich., this afternoon. —Miss Yount and Miss Remley -.vent to Greeucastle this afternoon to enter school. —Mrs. H. A. Tucker is in Greencastle to place her daughter. Miss Frederieha. in college. —Miss .Susie Adams has gone to Indianapolis to enter a wholesale millinery house. —Miss Katie Stevenson has returned to Cincinnati after a visit with Mr. and George Abraham. —The business men's gymnasium class meets this evening. New members will be welcomed. —W. J. ltuskirk has resigned his position at the Monon station and will be succeeded by A1 Parrish. of Orleans.

to-

Indianapolis Jmtnuil: Mrs. Mason B. Thomas, of Crawfordsville, and Miss Keyes will come to-morrow to spend the week with Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Thompson.

Mrs. Anderson, the county president of the W. C. T. l\ desires to|meet all the ladies of the organization at Mrs. David Ilarter's residence to-mor-row afternoon at 3 o'clock. —The Seagle sale of hogs at the l!ig Four yards to-day was adjourned as prices offered were too low. They will be shipped to Lebanon. Nebraska hogs are not wanted in Montgomery county.

"For tlit? Cro»s Complainant. After dinner yesterday the Dodge divorce suit continued to absorb the attention of the court. A llock of witnesses were examined prominent among whom was Mr. Dodge himself. Mr. Dodge gave Clara a very bad name accusing her of a number of very bad things, the worst of which, perhaps, was her failure to carry out her threat of "carving out his heart." He lived in terror of his life and after eating food she prepared never felt easy until lie knew it had been safely digested. Another damaging witness against Clara was Mrs. MeGimpsey. Mrs. MoGimpsey stated that Clara allowed her child to go in a scandalously dirty condition. She pictured the cherubic urchin as going about so dirty that the dirt peeled off from its face like scales from the inside of a saw mill boiler. She had also heard Clara announce that she didn't care if the cars did run over it as it was "just like its daddy."

The court this morning announced that lie would grant the divorce and the custody of the child to Samuel and would also grant to Samuel the esteemed privilege of planking over S30U alimonv to the ex-wife of his bosom.

A Surprise Dinner.

Danville 1111.) Press: Friends and relatives of A. .1. Quick suprised him at dinner yesterday noon at his home, corner uf Lincoln and Grant streets, in commemoration of his 43d birthday anniversary. The surprise was engineered by his wife and children and was a success both in arrangement and happy result. Among the guests were a number of Mr. Quick's relatives from Crawfordsville. Ind.. whose presence in the city was unknown to him until dinner was aunouueed.

To Indianapolis.

liilly lionnell, J. .1. Jnsley, Charley Long, Miss Daisy Ellis. Mr. and Mr.-. George l-\ Hughes. Mrs. M. H. Hinford. Mrs. \V. E. Nicholson, Mrs. H. W, I a a a a to In dianapolis on the afternoon train.

WAI'.ASll COLLKOICLII K.

,Ioe Condit- is back in college. Another half back ..is.needed,, 011 the first eleven.

The watjhword of Coacher Ilenninger is ''Get low." Ferguson 'US. wears the old gold, royal purple and white of Delta Tail Delta.

Charley Little is out with the team every evening. He plays right end this year.

Cloud, Mount and McKee, of 'lit, started for Princeton Theological Iseminary to-day.

Fred Lambed'-"."!, who has been out of college for°a year, returned this morning and will graduate with '!»T.

In spite of all reports to the contrary Witherspoon bobbed up serenely on the morning train, and will return to hard study.

Prof. Tuttle will use the Seminar method in the elective class in Political Economy. It is feared however, that the class is doomed. This morning after the oprofessor luul assigned seats around the recitation table he found that the elans consisted of exactly thirteen men.

letter I.Ut. ..

Following is the list of letters remaining uncalled for in the postotliee at Crawfordsville, Ind.. for the week ending Sept. IS, lS'.i-l. Persons calling for these letters will please say advertised: 'Yi'f-. Brown John Corine Ii Caulkins A Dodds Wm Ferguson .las Glover John

Ilill Miss Kate Harrison Lizzie 1 ndi'naChemical Co Jones Margaret. Pittmari Ben Riley Klma

Sabill &. Ott. Ed. VoiiiN. ". M.

TO CHANGE THE UNIVERSITY.

AgltatUm hooking to Removal From Kloomington -The Expense.

Indianapolis Sews: A bill is contemplated for legislative action looking to the removal of the Indiana University from ltloomington to Indianapolis. Hold-over Senators will present and advance it. The agitation comes largely from sources outside of Indianapolis. though this city will be asked to pay the expense of the removal. This is estimated at S.'iUO.OOO. and is to include the price of grounds and new buildings. The argument has been made that the city ought to save its money and its credit with which to do this and ought not to increase its indebtedness for high school property. Friends of the movement say that Bloomington will be amazed if it counts upon the State University alumni in its attempt to hold the University. for it is said that the alumni are for removal on the theory that a great university, with law, medical and other departments and 110 preparatory work, can exist only at the Capital.

A New Plan For Sewer A*we*f»mentn. In view of the possibility of Crawfordsville getting 11 sewer system this year or next.everything bearing 011 the question should be of interest to our citizens, especially property holders. We publish below some new ideas on sewerage assessments from the August number of uniciiml Enjhiccriiii. which, in view of the unfair and unsatisfactory methods now prevailing for opening new streets, may be worthy of investigation. The article reads as follows:

Mr. F. Herbert Snow, city engineer of Brockton, Mass., has made a valuable contribution to the literature of improved municipal government in his report on the subject of sewer assessments. which has just been published. Mr. Snow points out the objection to the plans of assessment which are now commonly in operation, showing the inequalities or unfairness which is very likely to result from them, lie believes that under any plan land should not pay the whole cost, any more than it should bear the entire taxation for pill-poses of school or water works. He holds that the benefits of sewerage cannot be calculated in the ratio of valuation of real estate.

His consideration of the whole subject leads up to these propositions: First, a user of a st-wer receives a direct benefit second, an abutter may sell his vacant land at an increased price, and third, a farmer or other occupant of land outside the sewer district may derive advantages therefrom. To meet these betterments. the following scheme is proposed: That one-half of the total cost, including maintenance, be raised by rental assessed on the user: one-fourth by first assessment on abutting land, vacant or otherwise and the remainder, approximately one fourth, by general tax levy. The plan contemplates the issuauce of bonds to raise the amount required to pay for the construction of the sewers, and the fund for the retirement of the bonds is derived -from the rental assessments and taxes provided for ill the distribution of the burden of expense.

What tilt' W. C. T. I:. I!nf Don..-. The Woman's Christian Temperance Union held its annual election of otlicers yesterday and elected:

Mrs. Minnie McKuight—President. Mrs. II. S. Watson Vice-President. Dr. Martha Griffith— Recording See retary.

Mrs. J. S. Hutchinson—Corresponding Secretary and Treasurer. The Union is in a good condition but needs more members. During the year it has given ?(I0 and a handsome tile and oak library mantle to the Hadley school for girls. It has kept two temperence papers iu the V. M. C. A. reading room and temperance Sunday school papers in the two mission Sab bath schools of the city during the past two years. It has also paid all State and county dues and assessments, and has brought a number of lecturers to the city.

Public .-school Kindergarten. The W. C. T. U. and other ladies who assisted them took a thorough enumeration of the children of the city of kindergarten age. four to six, and found IT."). They gave the report to Prof. Wellington to present to the school board, but the board had to make the assessment to the limit allowed them to run the regularschool work so the public school kindergarten is postponed a year

The A. M, K. Conference.

The A. M. K. Conference is now 111 session at K'okomo. The parishioners of Rev. J. G. Pettiford have asked for his return to this charge and in all probability this request will be com plied with. The next annual conference will be held at Indianapolis in September, lS'J.'i.

Forecast Kiir Indiana.

For the thirty-six hours ending at p. 111., Sept. Hi. 1S1M, cooler, fair tonight. fair weather 011 Wednesday.

JOINTS AND

One of the

CARTILAGE.

Nature in the

Wonders of Human Itndy,

Why do joints work so easily and never give us any pain? In a fresh joint its appearance in life can bo readily studied. In the ball and socket joint, says the London Hospital, tho round end of the bone, as well as tho cup, are covered or lined with a smooth substance called "cartilage," or "gris tie" kept moist and smooth with synovia. Cartilage contains no nerves, and has no feeling If It had, we should have pain when we moved. Tho bones arc kept in place at tho joints by very strong bands or ligaments, In hinge joints a number of these bands an fastened above and below, but in ball and socket joints they also surround the joint, forming a cap, in which the joint moves freely. In disease this smooth cartilage gets worn away, and the ends of bone rub together like those of a skeleton the pain is great, because the bones have nerves, though the cartilage has none. A bone without cartilage is like a decayed tooth with an exposed nerve. In a healthy tooth tho nerve is well covered, aud gives no pain, and in a health}' bone the nerves nro there, but they are only felt when the cartilage is worn nivnv

STATE TELECiKAMS.

Important News from Indiana Cities and Towns.

Mm. Coleman Placed on Trial. Lebanon, Ind., Sept. IS.—Tho trial of Mrs. Cordelia Coleman, the exsociety leader of Thornton, this county, charged with arson, was called in the Boone circuit court here Monday morning and gives promise of being hotly contested and full of unusual sensa* tional disclosures. Cordelia was married to William H. Coleman in 18S0. Coleman returned from one of his periodical trips to Iowa, bringing with him Mrs. Ella Rider, the pretty 20-year-old wife of Edward Rider, lie explained her coming b.y saying she was his illegitimate daughter, whose husband was cruel. About a week after her arrival the deserted husband of Coleman's paramour came and denounced the guilty couple. Mrs. Coleman at once brought suit for divorce, which was grant-

October 20, 1S»0. Coleman was again married within a ar. Cordelia began a life of apparent seclusion. Shortly after Coloman's marriage began a series of depredations. First a barn was destroyed by fire, then his carriage was cut to pieces, his stock poisoned, and finally, about a year ago, his residenea was totally destroyed by fire. Coleman then brought a civil suit against his former wife in the Montgomery circuit court for damages and waa awarded 88,500. The grand jury then jlndicted her, and for seven months she has occupied a cheerless cell in tlio Uoone county jail.

Anderson*. Frenoli Class "Busted." Andkrson, Ind., Sept. 18. Prof. Louis Duvaal, of France, a French teacher and a master of arts, was engaged by Anderson's "Four Hundred" several weeks ago. The importation arrived Monday and wai to have organized Ills private class at night. At noon he took his stand on the public square and in a mixture of French and English delivered a red-hot anarchist speech, lfa was arrested and then addressed a large crowd of citizens from behind the bars. Monday night he was put on the hoe gang and the French class is busted" and several hundred out.

Crushed to Death.

Suluvas, Ind.. Sept. IS. As James T. Whitmier, a substantial farmer of this count}-, was attempting to separate a cow from a herd of cattle in the cattle pens at Paxton Monday the cow became infuriated and attacked Mr. Whitmier, pinning him against the fence with her horns, and before he could be rescued by the bystanders she had crushed iu his breast, killing him almost instantly. Mr. Whitmier was about 40 years of age and leaves a family.

I'niversity for the Ciipltnl.

Inuianahmus, Ind., Sept. IS. —Hold•over senators will present and advocate in the next legislature a bill providing for the removal of the state university from Bloomington to this city.

The agitation comes from sources outside of Indianapolis, though this city will be asked to pay the expense of the removal. This is estimated at SolHUKX) aud is to include the price of grounds and new buildings. l'rof. Oottsr^ialk Chom-n.

VAI.PAHAIBO, Ind, Sept. IS.—Prof. G. L. Gottschalk, president of the Chicago lyric school, has accepted a place as a member of the faculty of tho Northern Indiana norma! school in charge of the department of voice culture, to fill the vacancy caused bv the resignation of Prof. R. A. Heritage. 7

Said to Have Fled.

HAMMOND, Ind., Sept. IS. —Louis Evers. a secretary and confidential clerk cf the Tuthill Coal company of this city, and two companions. Henry York and Peter Gommola, contractors, who left here early in June on a fishing tour to Canada, have not yet returned, and their families fear they will not come back.

Banker Paris' Second Trial. Kokomo, Ind., Sept. 18.—The second trial of John W. Parle, of Indianapolis. for embezzlement in the bank failures last year will commence at Frankfort to-day on a change of yenue. At the first trial Paris was given a sixyear term and 81,000 fine, but secured a rehearing.

Resumed Operations.

Ei.WOOD, Ind., Sept. 18.—'The Xivlson & Wieskopfl bottle factory, employing 200 men, resumed operations Monday morning in all departments and will run full time._ A reduction of 13 per cent in wages was made, which the men accepted quietly.

All the Evidence In.

VI.NC.IC.NNBS, Ind., Sept. 18.—Tho evidence for the prosecution in the Willis murder case is all in and the state rested Monday. Nearly 100 witnesses testified for the state. No evidence of a sensational nature was adduced.

Women Clone a Saloon.

Couimus, Ind., Sept. 18.—Dr. Lewis Meeks. who was running a saloon at Marietta, was visited by a praying baud of women. Upon their agreement to pay the cost of the stock ho consented to close out business.

Miners Btrllce.

Ukazh.. lud., Sept. 18.—Two hundred miners employed at Caseyville mines, belonging to the Mclutosli Coal company, have mo out on a strike to force the reinstating of a check weighman, Alexander MoDonald.

Editor llolllday UccllucN.

I.ndianai'oi.is, Ind., Sept. 18.—The declination of John II. Holllday to aoccpt the nomination to the legislature offered him by the democratic county convention Saturday was received Monday.

State Fair Opens.

I Mil AN" atoms, Ind., Sept. 18.—The forty-second annual state fair opened at noon Monday. The exhibits have taxed the forty acres of ground to &1. most the limit.

St. l.miiiT KxpoHition— Sousu's (.rami tourer! llaml.

The Toledo, St. Louis & Kansas City R. I!., Clover Leaf Route, will issue low rate excursion tickets from all stations, until Oct. ISth. Call on nearest agent or address,

G. C. Jknki.VS, Gen. Pass. Agt., Toledo,

N. B.—The great St. Louis fair and famous Midway Plaisance, Oct. 1-0.

THK best bargains ever offered in printed Jap. silks at Bischof's this week. Don't fail to sec them.

WOOD FOR KINDLING.

How It Is Prepared by Steam and Machinery for Use. I'ine kindling wood comes jirincipally from the forests of Virginia. The trees, says the Scientific American, are first cut down and the trunks quartered nnd sawed into proper lengths. The wood is then carted to the coast, packed into sailing vessels and brought to this section, where it is bought up at the docks by tho dealers and manufactured into kindling wood, being first sawed into short lengths, then passed through a steam splitter which carries the pieces to an elevator, which in turn passes them along and drops them down into the delivery wagons. The pieces of timber, whieli are four feet, six inches in length, are first-sawed into eight and one-half inch lengths, the saws used for the purpose being thirty inches in diameter, one-eighth of an inch in thieluies, having fifty inch and a quarter teeth. These saws make about two thousand revolutions per minute, the attendant being able to saw up about from twelve to fifteen cords per day. The pieces as fast as they are sawed are passed to a steam splitter. They are first placed end up on a movable endless chain, which, by the aid of t-.vo hexagon wheels and a ratchet wheel which is worked by ail eccentric, causes the chain with the wood to move along under the kives, which pass down through the pieces of wood, splitting each of them into a dozen or more pieces.

The knives are four in number and bolted into the crosshead. They are twelve inches ill length, six inches in width and three-quarters of an inch in thickness. The knives pass up and down a perpendicular slide with a twelve-inch strokf-, making about eighty cuts per minute. The endless chain is twelve inches in width, and passes over a wooden bed, the top of which is covered with an iron plate which protects tho chain from the blows of tile knives when striking tho wood. At every downward stroke of the knives a moveable bearing which the knives pass through holds the' pieces of wood down firmly against the chain. With the upward stroke it releases the split wood, which Is moved forward about two inches at a stroke by tho chain, which is worked by the ratchet wheel and eccentric. The pieces of wood then drop down into an elevator at the end of the niaclilne and are carried off to the. delivery wagons by a number of buckets bolted on a twelveineli cot ton belt. These buckets uro eighteen inches apart, and mudo of wooden '..trips three inches in height and about one and one-half inches in thickness. They are held in place by being bolted to narrow iron strips on the under side of the belt. The belt is about forty-five feet in length, and travels about one thousand feet per minute. Tho splitting machine can cut about twenty cords per day. A delivery wagon holding about one cord can be filled iu ubout fifteen minutes. Tho wholesale price of Virginia pine at the dock is from seven dollars to eight dollars per cord, the manufactured kindling wood brings from eleven dollars to thirteen dollars per cord.

MADE YOUNG BY THE CIRCUS.

A Childless Plttsburglier'g Vain Quest tor an Excuse to Visit tho Rnu-dust King. It is surprising how paternal men become when a circus comes to town. They must get fatherly t. become childish. A Pittsburgh Dispatch reporter saw one man the other day who spent most of the forenoon trying to "borrow a boy to take to the circus." He confided to me that tho circus was one thing that made the blood thrill In his veins, but his dignity would not permit him to attend one without sufficient excuse. As he had no children of his own I10 was forced to hunt up somebody who would loan him a child to take to the show. He said: "But tho strangest part of it all is that I was unable to get one. Now, you would imagine that there would be plenty of children around anxious to seo a circus, and you would 1m. right but the supply did not equal the demand. Uy aotuai count I went to twelve of my friends who have growing boys and requested that I might give the little fellows some pleasure by taking them. 'Without a single exception they thanked me very much for my kindness, nnd said they were going to take them themselves. Now, I would feel foolish going to a circus without I had 11 child with 1110. Yet I do not know of anything I liko better. It brings back the old days when I was in the country, a barefooted boy following the parade, looking with wonderment at the lone elephant plodding along. Tho smell of the sawdust, the cries of the peanut and lemonade man are as pleasant to ino as tho new mown hay and singing birds. They aro the chemical.^ which

D. F. McCLURE,

—OF THE—

TRADE PALACE

Has been for the past two weeks in the New York and East ern markets buying our

Fall and Winter Stock,

The newsiest of everything the market affords. The new goods are coming in every day and have been bought on a depressed market for spot cash and our friends can depend on it the Old Trade Palace will be made headquarters this Fall for the best stock of

Dry Goods, Millinery, Cloaks, Carpets,

Etc., at lowest prices in Crawfordsville. We solicit your Fall buying, confident we can suit you best and save you money. Resp'y

McClure & Graham.

Peoples' Drug Store.

Cline's Hog Cholera Preventative

The only SURE preventative of HOG CHOLERA as hundreds will testify. Don't wait until your 110lS get it. but use it now. A stitch in time saves nine. The Genuine manufactured only by

SMITH-HYER DRUG CO.

develop the unseen image which is upon the plate of memory, and it eomes forth in all its glory. Hut I missed this all, for, thanks to the same feeling in the hearts of my father friends, all tho available 'excuses' were taken up. Go myself? What do you take mc for? Do you think 1 would allow anyone to think I would enjoy such a thing as a circus? Never."

DISCONTENTED WITH THE GODS

Hindoos Constantly Struggling Between Polytheism nnd Monotheism. The gods of India are everywhere, and yet they seem to be nowhere. Tho religion has been one long winter of discontent one prolonged struggle on the part of the people to worship manygods under many shapes, while always on the point of believing in one single divine essence as the cause and creator of all things a hand to hand fight between polytheism and monotheism, in which the priests have continually endeavored to play the part of conciliators. Vishnu and Siva are now the chief contending parties, and tho priests have tried to make them agree by adding a third supreme deity in tho shape of Brahma. Of this fact ingenious searchers after collateral evidence of Christianity have made capital, saying that Brahma, Vishnu and Siva are inseparable, and that the Hindoos aro evidently iu possession of the dogma of the trinity, says a writer 111 the Century. As a matter of fact this is pure nonsense, and contains as much truth as the parallels that have been drawn between Christ and Ruddha, Christ and Krlslima, Napoleon the Great and Apollo. Archbishop Whately, in his great squib, showed once and for all the absurdity of such demonstrations. For tho chief of Buddhist institutions was the monastery, and in no Catliolio country have tho mendicant and priestly orders ever nourished in such numbers, iu such wealth or in such power as they did In India during the eight or nine hundred years which elapsed from the rise to the extinction of Uuddhism.

The monks took the vows of poverty and mendicancy as individuals, but the order, as a body, owned vast estates, magnificent buildings and untold riches. Their error lay iu severing themselves too much from the people, in making their religion too abstract for popular comprehension, in leading lives which were too secluded to admit of any breadth of view and too well provided with good things for any groat intellectual activity. They havo loft but little behind them worthy to bo ranked as literature. In countries where people live inuch in tho open air, dress simply when they dress at all and eat what they can get, it requires little effort of imagination or skill of pen to make them seem as primitive as one pleases. As a matter of fact, where it is very easy to live, or, at least, whero little thought or labor is requisite to obtain the means of living, a nation endowed with any natural activity is very likely to devote its energies to intellectual pursuits and the result is sure to bo a state of national thought which, in despite of scanty clothing and rice for breakfast, dinner and supper, will turn out the very reverso of primitive. India is such a country, and, so far as the Aryans are concerned, always has been. What it was before tho Aryan conquest we have 110 means of knowing, but it is not at all likely that the modern religions and customs belonged to the aborigines prior to that date. It seems much more natural to suppose that the Vedic hymns and the Vedlo faith—if we may so call it—were at all times the exclusive property of the higher class of Aryans and that popular religions existed among the masses, as they do now, simultaneously with the liiglily-eivilized belief of the Vedic ltrahmaiis. Tho word bralnnana, as designating a member of tho priiSstly caste (distinguished from the brahman, the officiating priest and singer of the sacred verses), is found only in the very latest of the liymns, showing that no such distinction was necessary before the fusion of the classes which probably accompanied tho southward migration.

SKK Hischofs duck suits at §2.14 with TMque vest at 01c. this week.

For tag's see ... TUB JOUKNAL CO. Piuntkus.

122

IpOtt

N. Green St.

THE PEOPLE'S EXCHANGE.

WANTED.

ANTKI)—A girl to do general housework at :KH K. Jefferson St. IMtf

A&TED—Waitress at 209 East Pike St o-iM-tr

WANThD—Asmallirirl

$

pood for general house-

work In family. Apply at 220 Washington St. U-in-tf

WAS.TK,'?—To

exebungo 80 acres of land

^for city property.

WANTED—A

Scott & Stuuijs.

boy about 10 years old.stoudy

and Industrious, to work In cigar factory- CllKIHStil1WEITZlStt.tr. CALESMBN:—Every county. Salary or comO mission. Noexpenence. New tariff bill gives unlimited profits. Active men apply quickly stating salary and territory wanted. MANUFAOTUHBK8, Box 5308, Hoston. 'JGood

A A to #15.00 per day at home selling Lightning Plater and plating Jewelry, watches, tableware, etc. Every house has goods needing plating. No experience mo capital no talking. Some agents are making I2i» a day. Permanent position. Address H. K. Dctno & Co., Columbus, Ohio.

FOR SALE.

FOli

SALE—By tho Dovetail Co., at their factory, east College street, three new top buggies at flrst cost. R-22

IijVJK

SALE—Two choice lota in east part of the city, cheap. Inquire of John L. Shrum. 7-18-tf

FOH

SALE—A dwelling house of 8 rooms, with natural gas, water and other conveniences, on oast College street. A great bargain. fi-22 8cott & Stubiis. IP Ott SALE—A Jump seat surrey, cheap.

Call at this office. 9-is

8ALB—One large residence and one cottage. Both desirable properties In Crawfordsvlllo. Inquire at law office of J.J. Mills. 12-21tf

JLO ST.

LOS1—hall,

on the fair grounds near Baptist dinlug a silk umbrella, pearl handle, gold band. Ueturu to this olllce and receive reward. 0-27

jcpiC KENT.

JjX)R

KENT—Furnished rooms for man and wife. Housekeeping, if desired. Apply this office. 9-17 tf

IjVJK

RENT—Unfurnished parlor aud bedroom, ttrst lloor. Call at 312 south Water street 8-21-tf nOH KENT—Houses. SOOTT & STUBB8.

FOlt

RENT—A house of seven rooms, summer kltchcn, W(X)i.-house and cellar, cistern water brought into summer kitchen and flink house sltjated on corner of College and Hocutn streets everything In good repair. Jnqulteof Mr. Reuben Smith, 5(5-1 east College street. 9-14-tl

FOR

RENT—House on oast Pike street. Inquire at 007 east Main st.eet or Citizen's National Bank 4-:J0tf

FINANCIAL.

IJOANS—Money

to loan.

9-22 SCOTT & STUBIIfl.

HAVE YOU IDLE MONEY?

It can bo invested securely with good returns. RE. Buvant, Joel Block.

MONON ROUTE

I

o)Houwim.ittw*iaw»cnicMo BrxoRp

SZBBOT LIHI To all points

North and South—Chicago and Louisville. Through Route to Western Points. SOLID PULLMAN VESTIBULETKAINS

BETWEEN

Chicago-Louisville. Chicago-Cincinnati. Crawfordsville Time Table. NOHTH— SOUTH— 2:18 am 1:50 am 1:00pm 12r:pm 2:f»0 9:15 am

BIG FOUR ROUTE

Cleveland, Cincinnati,

Chicago t. Louis, R. R.

Watrnor Sleepers on night trains. Beet mod era day ooacheson all trains. Connecting with solid Vestibule trains r. Bloomington and Peoria to and from Ml ssour nvor, Denver and the Pacific ooaat.

At Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Springfield and Columhus to and from the Bastern and «"a board cities,

TRAINS AT CRA WFORDS VILLE GOING EAST, No. 2—8:14 a. m.. dally oxcept Sunday. No. 8—5:02 p. m., daily except Sunday. No. 10—1:50 a. m., dally. No. 18—1:15 p. ra., dally except Sunday,

GOING WEST,

No. 9—0:20 a. m., daily excopt Sunday No. 17—1:15 p. m„ daily except Sunday No. 7—12:45 a. in., daily. No. 3—(l:50p. m. dally, excopt Sunday.