Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 7 May 1892 — Page 5
0.
IE SHALL RULE THE ROOST,
Never in the history of the clothing trade has any offer like this been made. Right at the start of the season it is an ssffer that will strike consternation and terror into the camps of our competitors. But that's nothing to us. We again want to show the peop'e what great facilities and advantages we possess, as strictly cash buyers to undersell any and all competitors.
Just think, you can buy at our store for $10 a fine
All Wool Suit
Worth to any one in need in clothing •$15. Our Slo suits are far superior to others S20 and S2o suits they are as good as tailors about town will make for $35 to $40.
1 PAIR OF KIDS
-THE KIND TO-
Have on Hand.
'Largest line of kid gloves in the west. See the four-button glove of large button-something new. We have them in both, glaze and suede. A late importation of eight-button suede gloves in all the shades.
A Special Sale
•Of eight different lines of kid gloves at one dollar a pair. tention to this.
Pa ra sols.
'An indespensible adjunct to the toilette this year. We h.ave laid in a stock commensurate with that idea. We know of nothing in this way that we have omitted to provide. If you see that we have omitted something, kindley mention it.
S. AYERS & CO..
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
There Is No Reason
Why every lady of Crawfordsville and vicinity should not wear the very latest styles in millinery. Our eflicient corps of milliners can
EXECUTE ANY ORDER
In the way of appropriate trimming.
We Invent! We Originate
*7e never have need to copy.
SUIT Df TIE 10USE
-ONLY-
$15 Fifteen Dollars $15
Show us the man who will pay $25 to $40for a suit when he can get a better one at our store for
New
Sooixxg is Believing.
Come and convice yourselves that this great offer is strictly bona fide.
will show you all the
Of every make, color, shade, style and cut known to the tailors art and
guarantee to give you the best fitting clothing made in the world. Old
men, young men, and middle aged men can find in our great assortment of
goods. Just the thing they want either in light, medium and dark colors
sack, frock or cutaway, please bear in mind this sale last the season through,
but first choice is always the best. So come in as soon as possible.
•Our assortment of lovs suits from the ages of 14 to 19 years is very large. Price way down on children suits from the a°-es of 5 to IS. Never havo we shown such a variety before. Prices from $1.50 to S10. Our complete stock of spring and summer goods are all in and ready for your inspection. Respectfully
THE ONLY ONEPRICECLOTHIERAND HATTER,
J. A. JOEL.
We call special at-
30 DAYS
WIshinfT to Introduce our CRATOS PORTRAITS and at the same time extend our business and make new cnstomers.wo have decided to mako this
OITer: Send us a Cnliim't Picture, Photodraph.Tin type. Am brotjpo or naguerotype of voursoif any member of your family, living or dead and we will make you a Crayon Portrait Free of Chnrice, provided you exhibit it to your friends as a sample of our work, and use your Influence In se CurinK us future orders. Place name and addresson back of plcturo and It will be returned In perfect order. We make any change In picture you wish.not Interfering with the likeness. Refer to any bank in Chicago. AiWress nil mall to ECHPSK PORTRAIT €0., 108 and IIO East Randolph St., CHICACO.ILL. PS.-We will forfeit $100 to anyone J^"nHij^«£hoti^n^io^ec«ivin^rajroi^ictur^2EEjay££thi^jrerj^£hi^fferi^ion^^aej^^
Speclnl
We
will
Read the avertisement of William's' Brothers in another column. It is full of interest.
Ben Myers will soon begin the erection of an elegant new residence on west Pike street.
Mr6. Josoph R. Nicholls, of Indianapolis, organized a branch of the W. C. T. U. here this week.
A team hitched to Nicholson & Jackmon's delivery wagon ran away Monday morning and thoroughly demolished the vehicle. Fortunately no one was injured.
Monday Mrs. Annie Glenn received a check for $2,000, from tho Commercial Travelers' Association, the amount of in surance which har husband, Henry Glenn, carried on his life.
Tho managers of the Garland DeU hotel
say
the Shades will be open on
Sunday as usual in spite of petitions or protestations from any person or persons. To close the grounds on Sunday would prove ruinous to their business.
Daniel A. Gooden, superinteddent of the hub and spoke factory, died at his home on east Collego street Monday morning of cancer of the stomach at the age of 48 years. The remains were taken to Indianapolis Tuesday for burial.
Rev. S. W. Brown delivered his farewell sermon to a larce audience at the Christian church last Sunday night. Mr. Brown will at onco enter the Evangelistic Held, a place to which ho is peculiarly fitted. His successor here has not yet been chosen. "Nig" Seering celebrated his narrow escape from the penitentiary last Sunday morning by indulging in a lively mix with lfarry llernley. "Nig" said Harry made a slurring remark about his snow-white and stainless character which so wounded his delicate feelings that he was forced to resent tho insult. Noble boy.
The County Commissioners have left the matter of fighting the injunction which the Monon road has placed on county treasurers to prevent them from collecting tho tax assessment, into the hands of County Attorney Johnson and Treasurer Hutton. who will havo full power to proceed against the railroad company as they deem proper.
Our friends and patrons should not, forget our
Carpet and Lace Curtain DEPARTMENT,
Nowhere are goods so carefully selected or prices so suited to your needs. Out-Carpet and Lace Curtains convey to you an absolute sense of novelty, Good
Wear and Very Low Prices.
He Believed In Opening the Store Early One morning some eighteen or more years ago, when Steve Stilwell was clerking in a grocery in the stand now occupied by Martin & Craig, he opened it for business long before daylight, as was his custom, and was busy sweeping out when a tall, well-dressed stranger entered. "I would rather,"' his first words were, "pay you $3.00 per day than some of the late fellows who do not open their stores until long after daylight," His rather abrupt but somewhat complementary manner of address at once attracted Stil well's attention, and he wandered who his strange visitor was and what his business could be. After talking for a short time he further remarked, "Now with your kind permission I will show you how to arrange your canned goods so they will present a more attractive appearance" and suiting the action to the word, he after about 20 minutes work had the goods all re arranged and making them present a nicer appearance than they ever did before. Getting ready to go out of the store he remarked: "you wonder, may be, who I am. My name is R. M. Bishop, wholesale grocer, Cincinnati." R. M. Bishop was after this elected Governor of Ohio, and is yet, we believe, in tho wholesale grocery trade. He had been stopping at Gen. Carrington's in Crawfordsvillo, and being an early riser always, had thus unexpectedly appeared at this store, the proprietor of which was one of his customers.
The Monon Shops.
A number of citizens met Saturday night to devise some means for securing the location of the Monon shops here. It will require quite a bonus but the good that will result will more than repay any expense incurred in securing them. As a result of the meeting Col. John Levering, O. C. Goldsmith, James M. Reynolds. James Murdock and Adams Earl were named as a committee to devise some plan by which the necessary funds can be raised. They will begin work this morning. Being men of experience, it will not take them long to discover some method by which the bonus can be obtained.—Lafayette Journal.
This Monon shop business has become a moth-eaten chestnut. It is usually revived by some Lafayette people just after awakening from a Rip Van Winkle sleep which occurs generally when tho outlook for the city's general prosperity looks gloomy and gives them something to croak upon. We wouldn't give 75 cents for Lafayette's chances of ever securing the Monon shops.
A Small Exulosion.
The first accident from natural gas in this city is reported this week. Dr. T. J. Griffith, living on South Green street, cmplojed a new domestic Monday morning, presumably from Rockvillo. The girl was instructed in the use of the gas until tho Doctor thought she had become proficient. When the girl started to get dinner, however, she came near joining that little and select band on the other shore. She just simply opened the feed valve, after which she leisurely lighted a match and the gas did the rest. Fragments of tho stove were found all over the room while the girl is still wondering who struck her. Fortunately no one was seriously injured, but the event should serve as a warning to those who are growing careless in its use. It wont stand monkeving with.
Minnie's Lament.
Minnie E. Shatto lias filed suit for divorce from her husband, Alexander Shatto. Minnio alleges that Alex, is a worthless, trifling character, that they were married in the year of our Lord, 1880, and after a honey-moon extending over a period of two months the gallant Alex, became disgusted with the liveli hood Minnie was furnishing and under the pale beams of a July moon he decamped for other pasture, perchance to "Maggie Murphy's Home," or some other joint not immortalized in song and ''He Never Came Back Any More." and now Minnie prays the legal bands be cut asunder and her maiden name Minnie IS. Bennett be restored.
Marriage Licenses-
Luna II. Rush and Matilda .J. Williams. Eugene Osborn and Mary Winter.
1892. BEAUTIFUL SPRING SPECIALTIES. 1892.
William M. White anil Mattio Detcli-
The greatest worm destroyer on -earth is Dallam's Great German Worm Lozenger. Only cents per box. For sale by Nye A Co.
—TIIE-
Two Libel Suits.
Two libel suits were filed in the circuit court Tuesday morning by N.J. Clodfelter and W. E. Humphrey, exofficers of the Wabash ValleyJProtective Union. The plaintiffs each ask for $3,000 and the suit is brought againBt I. Manse and E. Ulrich, of Peoria, President and Secretary of the Peoria State IoBurance Company, which purchased the business of the former companyThe complaint alleges that the defendants sent out hundreds of circulars charging the plaintiffs with absconding with the funds of the Wabash Valley Pro tective Union and other wicked things Hurley & Clodfelter appeared for the plaiutills and Wright & Seller for the defendants.
School Enumeration.
The following trustees have reported their enrollment of pupils to Supt. Zuck. The comparative tiguresjof 18911are also given: 1891 Walnut 485 Wayne 345 Clark 475 Coal Creek 722 Sugar Creek 346 Ripley 562 Franklin 725 Scott 421 Waveland 326 Darlington 236 Ladoga. 393
1892 476 404 437 758 352 560 734 428 332 218 424
It was resolved that in the county contests at the fair the girls road ^original essays and tho boys deliver original orations. They will be graded on thought, expression and delivery.
Damaged the Fruit.
A special from Covington, last Tuesday morning, says: "Tho heaviest rain known in many years fell hero this af ternoon between 5 and 7 o'clock. The streets were like creeks cellars are flooded, every gutter and branch is a raging torrent, culverts and bridges are washed away. There are several washouts on the Big Four railroad between here and Veedersburg, eight miles east of this city. Some of the passengers on tho east-bound train, duo here at 7:45 p. m.. who have just arrived in the city on foot, report the train as being tied up at Troy siding by a washout. The rain was accompanied by hail, which, it is thought, has damaged the fruit."
Tbe Midland Again.
Indianapolis papers say that Harry Crawford has succeeded in negotiating a loan in the eastern market on the bonds of his present Chicago & Southeastern railroad, the old Midland, on which he will be able to complete the construc tiou of the line through to Brazil and thoroughly equip it for business. He is at this time in the city of New York ar ranging the details of the transaction. We earnestly hopo that the report will prove to be correct, and that work may be resumed at once.—Brazil Democrat.
Democratic Convention.
The democracy of tho 8th congres sional district will meet in delegate convention at 1'erro Haute, Ind.. May 19, 1892, at 10 o'clock a. in. for the purpose of nominating a candidate for congress, to bo voted for at the November election. Representation same as state convention.
By order of committee, J. M. HOSKINS,Chairman. 8th Cong. Diet.
Struck By Lierhtniner.
During a thunder storm at Waynotown last Monday afternoon Wm. H. Ellis was struck by lightning and r«ndared insensible for soveral miputes, After recovering not a scar of any kind could be found upon his body. His only "distinguishing mark" visible was the loss of a portion of his flowing uius tache. just half of which had been burn ed otT.
To Teachers.
Tailoring Department We
lias received our espcchl attention this spring. AVe are not advertising to
1
If you expect to teach next winter, and want to make thorough preparation for the work, attend the Ladoga Summer Normal. The course includes a thorough review of the Common Branches, Mental Science. Teachers' Training Class, and Literature. Academic work will be done in all these, and you will also be taught how to teach. Examinations are becoming more rigid. Prepare. Profs. S. E. Harwood. of Atica, and J. F. Warfel, of Ladoga, will be the instructors. The school will begin May 30th and continue eight weeks. Tuition $8. Take what books you have.
Write to either of the above named gentlemen for particulars.
See the "aristo" E. Main St.
Catch," but will give better values
than can be obtained elsewhere in the city. We desire to make your clothing, and make vou feel good as regards the fitting. wear and price. Our
New Suitings
Are Beauties and should be seen by all.
photographs at 210'
Hood's Sarsaparilla
a concentrated extract of BanaparlU^ fellow Dock, Plpslssewa, Juniper Mandrake, Dandelion, and other TiluUs vegetable remedies, every ingredient Mag strictly pure, and the best of Its possible to buy. It is prepared by thoroughly competent tluriBMists, In the most careful manner, by a peculiar Combination, Proportion at
Process, giving to it curative power
Peculiar To Itself
It will cure, when in the power of mediolnet Scrofula, Salt Rheum, Blood Poisoning, Cancerous and, all other Humors,
Dyspepsia, Biliousness, 8ick Headacta, Catarrh, Bheumatism, and all difficulties with the Liver and Kidneys. It overcomes That Tired Feeling, Creates aa
Appetite, and gives great mental, nerve, bodily, and digestive strength. Hood's SarsapariHa is sold by all druggtata. 91 six for Prepared only by C. Hood & Co., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. N. B. If you decide to take Hood's Sirnptrilla do not be Induced to buy any other.
IOO Dosos One Dollar
APPLICATION FOR LIQUOR LICENSE
N otlco is hereby given to tho citizens of Coal Creek township nnd the town of Pleasant HIU, in Montgomery county, Indiana, that I, tho umderwlgnod, will apply to tho board ol Commissioners of said county at their regular June term 1892, for a license to retail SDirltuous,' vlnouB, malt and all kinds of intoxicating liquors In a less quantity than a quart at a tlmo nnd allow tho samo to be drank on tho premises whore sold. Said premises are described as follows: Piirt of lot No. 47, as tho same is known ana designated on the origlnnl plat of the town of Pleasant Hill, in said county and state: Beginning at tho southeast corner of said lot, running thence north twenty (20) foet, thenco west tifrjr 50) feet, thonoo south twenty (20) foot, thence uaHt fifty (!j0) feet to the place of bi?giuning.
N
JOSKPII BUSH.
fa I'l'i'.ICATIOX FOK LIQUOR LICENSE.
5
Notice Uliereby given tothelcitlzens of Madison township, Montgomery couut/, that tho under signed a male inhabitant over the age of twentyone years, will apply to tho]
Board of Commission^
ers, of Montgomery County, Indiana, at their regular Juni-, 1892, session for a license to sell allklnds of intoxicating liquors in a loss quantity than aquartat a timo and permit tho same to bo drank on tho premises where sold:
My place of business wherein said liquors are to bo sold and drank, iB described as follows: Jteginning at tho northeast corner of lot numbor thirty-two (:12) in the original plat of tho town of Linden and running thence west eighty (80) foot, tlionco south thirty-seven and ono half (3"X) feet, thence east eighty (SO) feet, thence norih thirty-seven and a half (874) feet to tho plan of beginning and in a two story frame building situa ed on tho north oastcorner o£ said dJS.Tibo.i ground.
JOHN VYSE.
OTICE OF SALE OK REAL ESTATE.
Iti the matter of tho estate of Uarvoyll. Davenport, deceased. Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an order of tho Montgomery Circuit Court tho undersigned administrator of 09tate of'Llarvoj\K. Davenport, deceased, will offer for sale at private venduor all of tho real estate of said decedent. subject to a mortage lion of $1500.110 held by Wabash College, situated In Montgomery County, State of Indiana, as follows:
Tho north west quarter of the south west quarter (Xl also twonty-six and sixty-six one hundreths (26-60-100) acres oft of the west side of tlie east half quarter [jf] of tho same south west quarter all in section eighteen [18] township twenty [201 north, rango feur [4] wost containing in all 66, 66-100 acres moro or less.
Bids will be received at caid administrators residence in Coal Creok township. TERMS OF SALE—One-third cash, ono third in six months, one-third in 12 months, with notes at 6 per cent Interest from dn'o waving valuation and appraisement laws with good fowhold security. ISAAC W. PATTON.
Administrator.
ADMINISTRATORS NOTICE.
Notice Is hereby given that I, Amanda Davis, have tliin day been appointed administratis of tho ostato of James K. Davis, deceased. Said estate Is probably solvent. AMANDA DAVIS. Mayy, 189-J Administratrix.
Abstract of Title.
Haviag secured tho service of Wm. If. Webstor, late ol the firm of Johnson «fc Webster, abstractors of title, I am prepared to furnish upou short notice full and complete Abstracts of TUIe to ail lands in Montgomery county, Indiana. at reasonable prices. Deeds and mortgages carefully executed, Call |at Recorder's odlce.
THOS. T. MUNHALL.
DEAF
NESS HEM UISH UIE(br I'ock's LNV1SIBLB TligUl hl CUSHIONS. Whlapen heard. Com-
Jfcrtable. SaNMifalwhireall BallbrF«IUCOL Mljfi JUw Y*rk« WrIUfir Imk if |mk IUUL
Dr. E. Detchon makes a specialty of the treatment and euro of disease of tho Nerves, Lungs, Liver and Kidney, Diseases of females and children also, indigestion, dyspepsia, scrofula. St. VituB dance, blood poison, dropsy catarrh, bronchitis, chronic cough, tetter on tho hands and all disease of the skin. Also prepares valuable prentives of scarlet fever, diptlieria and la grippe. Ample supplies of latest and most approved remedies kept constantly on hand. Office in drug store, south-west corner
Main and Green streets, Crawfordsville, lnd. Jan. 10, 4w.
You All Know That
Beat Them
-IN-
Dress Goods
From the cheapest to the best grades in Cotton, Woolen and. Silk Materials we have the Choicest Stock, and you can. always hear the remark on every hand, "We can always get what w® want in the DRESS GOODS
LINE at
All
