Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 29 July 1893 — Page 8

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DARTER &CQatthe

Must Have Corn!

WILL PAY FANCY PRICES!

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.'DARTER & CO'S PROPHECY.

Here is something you never heard of before in your life. In conversation with a REVIEW manthis week Mr. W. M. Darter, of the grain firm of Darter & Co., said: "I want to make a statement to the farmers which I have every reason in the world to be honest, and which is bound to benefit them, while Fam in the business aad am prepared now and want to buy every grain of wheat in the county, yet my advice to them is to hold it. I prophecy, and not without due consideration either, that before the next narvest wheat will have advanced from 30 to 50 per cent, over the present prices. I am not guessing at this for my prophecy is well based as I can convince any farmer who will call on me."

This is a fair and honest statement made by a man whose business at present it will injure and should be appreciated by all .v-.-

?!Qarter & Go.

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Old Brewery Elevator.

Everybody to call at the

Health Office Saloon.

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old Brewery Elevator, canaot supply the de­

mand for Corn, and have decided to offer extra prices for seven days beginning Saturday, July 29, in order to secure 5,000 bushels. Here is an opportunity you cannot afford to miss. Bring it in at once. i,

HOLD: YOUR WHEAT!

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128 West Main Street. -v

Gus Karle. Steve Allen.

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Honest Goods at1 Honest Prices.

Business is conducted on the "Live and Let Live" Plan at

CASH FRY'S

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See him before selling your produce. It will pay you.

THE SACRIFICE SLUICE!

ppif Out in Solid Stream!

A LEAD AND SPEED THAT NOTHING CAN ST0T.

THE CROWDS .GET THE BARGAINS. WE GET THE ROOM,

We Want Room, Not Profits.

Everything ut to Go.

Remnants of Silks, Dress G'ooas, Lawns, Batistes Challies, Calicoes, Ginghams Muslins and Linens, Laces and Embroideries, Hosiery Odds and Ends in Gloves, Muslin, Underwear, Corsets, Napkins and Towels. The accumulation of weeks of the Great Rush. They must be sola. All marked at prices to sell.

No Preferences. No Reserves.

L. S. AYERS & CO.,

INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA.

8^"A full line of Dr. Parker Pray's Manieure Goods.

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Mgoiry Coity News.

LADOGA-,

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A large crop of corn is coming. We have three tailor shops here. A good rain here Tuesday evening.' Mrs. Thos. Martin is here with relatives.

Our post office will have a new box outfit made in Chicago. Mrs. Ada Robb will spend a couple of weeks here during the heated season.

W. B. Gill's new residence is going up. The stone work will soon be completed. J. H. Woodruff and family, of Indianapolis, are camping out at the Garland Dells.'

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The keen whistle of the threshing machine can be heard throughout the land.

Frank McGinnis and family, of Tiffany, Ohio,'are

visiting

his

F- Kyle-

Bister,

Mrs. S.

The gas||well in Ladoga is a first-class artesian|well, with good mineral water. It is 1,400 feet deep.

The great question is: "How to keep cool when the thermometer registers 100 in the shade?" Our town has plenty of ice.

Ladoga is up on the horse question. Two of Ladoga's horses took first money at the Aurora races. Carl Scott and Jim Taylor feel well over the result.

Gold and silver can only be controlled by the supply and demand, and will soon regulate, themselves if left alone. There is too much humbuggery in finance.

A union Sunday school picknic, of Ladoga Sunday schools, was held near Brownsvalley Wednesday. They went by the C. & S. E. and had a good time in the woods.

Rev. H. R. Prichard, of Indianapolis, will preach at the Christian church Sunday at 10:30 o'clock, on the subject of "Christian Baptism." A large audience is expected.

Drake Brookshire's drove of big fafr cattle harvested Jim Grantham's corn crop last Sunday night without either the consent of Jim or Drake. The steers had it all their own way.

Quite a lot of new wheat is being shipped from here over the Monon and C. & S. E. rail roads. J. M. & George Harshbarger threshed on their farm, nineteen hundred bushels of wheat last week from eighty-five acres.

Darter & Co., offer some advice to farmers in their advertisement in this issue that is so out of the usual line of things as to startle you. Don't fail to read it. The idea of a grain buyer advising you not to sell your wheat. Did you ever hear of the like before?

SOUTH WEST UNION.

Hood Nelson and family visited W. B. Hardee Sunday. Wm. GrubbB and wife spent Sunday at Clore's Grove.

Aunt Nancy Keller has been quite poorly this week. The U. church will hold its quarterly meeting August 5th.

The blackberry crop will be very short on account of having no rain. James Stump and family, of Crawfordsville, were the guests of James Harwood Sunday.

Mrs. Catharine Moore died last Monday at the ripe old age of 80 years, She was a life-long sufferer and her death was not unexpected. She loaves no husband nor children to mourn her departure, but a host of friends. She was laid to rest in the Weir cemetery."

William's Downfall.

B. William Smith, wno nails from the neighborhood of Jamestown, arrived in the city Wednesday evening. Bill had been following a threshing machine-for some days and naturally complained of his lungs and throat being clogged with dust and chaff. Some friend prescribed an internal application of hop extract and the manner in which Willie adopted his friend's advice was a caution. About 9 o'clock the police found this Jamestown gallant blowing foam from the beer of several gaudy gazelles in Becky Oatman's joint near the Mo non depot and run him in. Ho contributed the usual amount in the Mayor's court Thursday morning and departed a sadder but wiser man.

Justified the Act-

Mart Liter was arraigned in Justice Chumasero's court last Saturday on a charge of drawing a knife upon the person of Ora Busenbark. It appears from the evidence that both men were engaged in loading wheat from shocks, and Busenbark, claiming that Liter had told others that he was going' to give him a threshing the day ho was 21 years of age, demanded that he come down off the wagon at once and let the sport begin, at the same time holding a pitchfork in a threatening position. Liter opened his pocket knifo and started to climb down when friends interferred. The jury found that Liter was justified in drawing the knifo and consequently acquitted him.

Grinding, exchange and all kinds of mill feed a specialty at Darter

old brewery elevator.

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A Threshing Machine Burned. A threshing machine and straw stacker belonging to George Puller was burned on the farm of Albert Snyder and occupied by Albert Utterback, southeast of Elmdale, Tuesday evening. The machine had been running but a few minutes, when a hot axle on the stacker sot fire to the 6traw and both machines were totally destroyed. Mr. Fuller's los6 is complete, having no insurance on either. ,,

It didn't take fanners lung to find the new firm at the old brewery elevator. The simple announcement that Darte^ & Co.. were again in the grain business was sufhcient.

Dislocated His Jaw.

Monday Indianapolis News says: "William Miller, who lives near Shaunondale, was spending Saturday evening in Orth. He attempted to gap and he opened his mouth so wide that his lower maxillary was drawn from its socket, and left his face in a very bad shape. He hastened over to Dr. Bowers, who replaced the dislocated member.

Marriage Licenses.

Farm for Sale-

I will offer for sale a farm of G8 acres of new land, two mileb west of Crawfordsville, on the Yountsville pike Farm under good fence. Call on 2M, MIKE ZELLBUS.

If you want to see the busiest place in the city just go-to the old brewery elevator. Darter & Co., invite everybody to come and see them.

Sheriffs Sale.

By virtue of an execution to me directed from the Clerk, of the Clrouit Court of Montgomery Ooanty, State of Indiana, in favor of John Busenbark issued to me as Sheriff of said County, I will expose to sale at public auction and outcry, an

SATURDAY, AUGUST 19, 1893.

between the hours of 10 o'clock a. in. and 4 o'clock p. m. »f said day, at the Court House door in the city of Crawfordsvillu, Montgomery County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, the following described real estate in Montgomery County, Indiana, towlt:

The north half of the west half of tho nortn oast quarter of section twenty-Ove (95), Township eicbteen (18), north range six (li) west si .- uated in Moutgomers County and state of Indiana, to be sold to satisfy said execution, interests and costH, and If the samo will not bring a sum sufficient to satisfy said execution, I will on the same day, at the same place, offer the fee-simple of said real estate to satisfy a judgment for twenty-threo and twenty-five one-hun-drodths dollars, together with interests and costs with reliei frein valuation or appraisement laws.

Said real ostate taken as the property of William Britton. JOHN P. BIBLE,

Sheriff Montgomery County. Ind.

July aj, 1893., By Jos.S. Henry, l)oputy.

Assignee's Sale.

Having been appointed Assignee of the firm of Robinson it Wallace I will offer for sale at the old

Corner Book Ston

At Retail, in Job Lots or in Bulk, the large and well selected stock of Miscellaneous School and College Text Books, Bibles, Albums,

Blank Books, Stationery, Picture Frames,

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Belle

William N. Hole and Lola Hughes. Charles A, Caldwell and Elizabeth B. Hughes.

William N. Eaten and Virginia Taylor. George Clodfelter and Froney jB. Keller.

Plantation colored people are often afflicted, as Dr. ==Fenner found _\ when traveling the south.

Their diseased were painful.

Many of them had what they called "a rising under the jaw." This was a swelling of the paratoid or submaxilary gland. He used with them, invariably, his Golden Relief. A it relieved the pain and reduced the swelling almost immediately in every case, they called it Golden Relief Quick," a not inappropriate name. Dr. Fenner meta planter who informed him that he would sooner be without corn meal and bacon on which his colored help subsisted, than Golden Relief, which he used to cure their aches, pains, summer complaints and flux. This Remedy cures any ailment which has Inflammation and pain as its base, from chronic bronchitis to a pulmonary consumption. Inflammation can no more exist in presence of this remedy than can th® honey bee under the fumes of sulphur. No inflammation, no swelling, no pain, no bronchitis, no consumption. One tablespoonful dose is a certain cure for La Grippe. No narcotics or mineral poisons in ft. Safe and certain—never disappoints. Money refunded if satisfaction not given. Take a bottle home to-day.

And Curtains,

And all such goods as are contained in such stores. Particular attention is called to the Largest and most Com plete Stock of

WALL PAPER AND BORDERS

In the county. All to be sold lor cash and at prices to suit the times.

L. A. FOOTE,

Assignee.

A DISCOUNT SALE!

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give'a discount of ',

25 PER ENT. 25

Or one-lourth often every purchase oi one dollar and over. *,

This sale is tor the month of July only.

This is the best opportunity of your life to buy

Yalises,

for less than manufacturers cost. Just think of it! Those nice all-wool Mens Blue Suits, we sell regularly at $6.50, only cost #4.90 during this sale. These prices are net cash. Come at once.

Benua Bros.,

Suecessors to Qon Cunningham.

One Price Only,

NEW ROOM! NEW GOODS

H.R. SLOAN,'

Is now Located in his beantii'ul new room on north Washington street neer Opera House Block and has the Finest and Most CompleteLine of

Staple and Fancy Groceries

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.. .Ever Offered in the City. A full line of

Canned Goods and Fruits.

Everything New, Neat and Clean. Farmers, bring your Produce to

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We are Overstocked with

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SLOAN.

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all Styles., If we can't get our price we

will perhaps take yours.

THEY MUST BE SOLD

CALL AND SEE US.

COHOON & FISHER