Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 24 June 1893 — Page 8

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WEEKLY JOURNAL.

SATURDAS, JUNE 24, 1893.

FBOM HEfiE AND THERE.

—Prof. J. L. Campbell will be in Chicago next week. —0. B. Landia and wife returned to Delphi Thursday. —Elder Orr will preach at old Union church, near Waveland, next Sunday. —Some person stole three accident tickets from Cumberland & Miller Thursday. —Mrs. A. E. Ramsey is in New Castle to see her mother, who is not expected to live. —T. W. Laweon, wife and two daughters have gone to Chicago for a couple of weekB. —T. A. Templeton, of Wingate, is in the city and reports that place as on the boom. —Thomas W. Sutton has been appointed anministrator of the estate of W. G. Hutchings. —Mrs. Catharine Hi pes has been appointed administratrix of the estate of John Hipes and Rena Hipes. —Henrv A. Andres was taken to Michigan City Thursday to stay one year for forging checks at New Ross. —To Democrats: A Republican postmaster in the South is to be removed because he goes bare footed. —The Monon is to build a branch twenty miles long from the main line into the coal fields of Owen county. —The Monon is doing an immense World's Fair business. The fast trains carry three coaches and two parlor cars. —Etter & PontiouB are meeting with great success in selling their medical batteries. The demand far exceeds the output. —A plan is on foot to send a mail pouch north over the Monon on the 5:30 p. m. train, the return pouch to arrive at 4:17 p. m. —Newman EBsick and wife will leave Leadville shortly for this city to remain about six months. Mr. Essick will travel for J. R. Bryant & Co. —A suit has been filed by John B. Stingley against Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton, of near Colfax, for $5,000 damages. Her dog bit him in the leg and arm. —The Y. P. S. C. C. of New Market, will give an icecream social on the lawn of R. G. Crist Saturday evening, June 24, the proceeds for the benefit of the eociety. Ice cream and cake 10 cents.

All are cordially invited. —A goodly number of the Crawfordsville visitors take rooms at the Arlington, of which John W. White is the manager. They stop there because the hotel is convenient to the grounds and the rates are reasonable. Besides they feel more at home with a gentleman as manager whom they all know. —The A. O. U. W. haB elected olfioere as follows: D. W. Gerard, M. W. J. J. Mills, Foreman F. F. Bandel, Overseer C. M. Scott, recorder W. B. Lyle, Receiver A. H. Hernley, Financier Joe Galey, Guide Greely Brown, I. W. Frank Nicholle, O. W. medical examiners, Drs. Dunoan and Hutchings trustees, T. L. Stilwell, W. B. Lyle and F. C. Bandel.

The Arlington Hotel.

Where to stop, is the great question which every person contemplating a visit to the World'B Fair is agitating. What visitors desire are clean and comfortable accommodations at reasonable prices and at a convenient distance from the grounds. All these desires can be gratified at the Arlington, a new structure, built of brick and stone, only three stories high, contains 200 well-lighted outside, airy rooms, nicely furnished. The location is most desirable, being directly opposite the main or 64th street entrance to the grounds. An old Crawfordsvillian, in the person of John W. White., is the manager of this house, and those who become his guests can rest assured of most hospitable treatment. The rates for rooms are from Si to $2 per day, and are furnished with first class beds and bedding. The hotel can be reached from the Englewood depot on the electric line on Cist street, or from Polk street depot by the cable line, electric line, or the Illinois Central railway. Remember the location—Stony Island avenue and 64th street, 100 feet from the main entrance.

MULLEN'S great railroad circus will be at Crawfordsville next Tuesday. Prices 10 and 20 cents.

THE CRIBBING CASE,

How the Exposure of Jean Nelson Has Stirred Up Things at DePauw. President John of DePauw speaking of the case of Jean Nelson states it was better for the young folks involved, as well as for DePauw University, that the matter should rest where it was. Dr. John was asked as to the prevalence of cheating in the institution, and said he was not aware that it had existed here more than in any other college. Whereyer it had been reported to the fuculty the offenders had been published. In answer to the question as to whether it had ever occurred that any pupil canght cheating, upon making demand had been granted another examination. Dr. John stated that such a thing might have been done. Dr. John was asked if Miss Nelson has passed this examination. with one more that awaited her, would she have been entitled to graduation, and he stated that it was his understanding that she would. On this point there is a diversity of opinion, Miss Nelson making the claim that Dr. John admits, while Prof. Langdon insists, that Miss Nelson, with the examination that was declared void, is a year and half short of her diploma.

Miss Nelson states that the unfortunate affair which she has been involved will not alter her plans for the future. When her error was exposed she went to President John M. Coulter, then of Bloomington University, now of Lake Forest, and laid the whole case before him.

Dr. Coulter assured her that Bloomington would be glad to have a pupil of her attainments in its alumni, and offered to give her a degree if she would pass the examinations. Miss Nelson has not yet decided as to whether she will avail herself of this ^opportunity. She will ask an audience of the Board of Trustees at Indianapolis to-morrow. If it is granted she will state her case, but ask nothing. If an audience is refused, she will have no complaint to make. She will enter Cornell University next September, and pursue the career she has mapped out, confident that she can outlive an error which she deeply deplores.

The exposure of Miss Nelson will knock out from under DePauw University one of its most substantial props. Frank Nelson, father of Jean Nelson, is one of the wealthiest residents of that county, and has been one of the most generous contributors to DePauw. Six years ago, when Washington C. DePauw announced his intention to endow the institution for present purposes, he agreed to give two dollars for every one that was raised among the several Methodist Conferences of the State. Frank Nelson thereupon gave his check for $6,000, and was mainly instrumental in securing the subscription and collection of $60,000 in Putnam county. Being intensely wrapped up in his daughter, Frank Nelson regards her needless exposure by the faculty as an outrage, and the fat contribution which at his decease was to go to DePauw University will now be bequeathed in another direction.

THE LAST GUN FIRED.

The Reception by the President and exPresident of Wabash College Closes Commencement for 1893.

Commencement week, which has been a continual round of gaiety, closed Wednesday evening with the President's reception at Yandes Library Hall. Receiving with Dr. Burroughs were Mrs. Burroughs, Dr. J. F. Tuttle and wife, and Dr. Fieher, of Hanover. The entire second floor of the building was brilliantly lighted up and thrown open to the guests, and yet during most of the evening the rooms were crowded. Montani Brothers, of Indianapolis, furnished the music and light refreshments were served. It was half past ten before the last guest departed.

The New Iron Bridge.

The County Commissioners Tuesday let the contract for the iron bridge over Sugar Creek on the Covington road. The lowest bid was $5,000 and was made by the Lafayette Bridge Company. There were nearly a dozen other bidders. The structure will be a one-span affair with steel joists and iron hub guards. The abutments now standing will probably be torn down and respectable one built. It would be folly to place a good bridge on such Bupport as is offered at present.

Improving Very Slowly,

Miss Nellie Hipes, who was injured at the Danville road crossing of the Vandalia road last Saturday, is not recovering in a satisfactory manner. She is injured internally, and in her back, heart and head. She does not seem to know much about the accident and can throw no light upon the affair.

Hew Wool Buyer.

Charley Hirst has entered the market as a wool buyer. He is buying for a Boston firm, and yesterday purchased 5,000 pounds. The price paid was from 14 to 18 cents per pound. Some of our dealers have paid as high as 23 cents, but this was a week or two ago. The wool market is demoralized.

The Summer School.

The summer school of Wabash College will open next Tuesday and last unt.il August 4. Those desiring to enter should meet at the lectine room on the first floor of Peck Hall next Monday afterncon at 4 four o'clock.

Two New. Postmasters.,

D. A. Stouebraker has been appointed postmaster at Alamo in place of 11. S. Bell, removed.

John Adams is the new man at Parkersburg, in the place of J. T. Lookabaugh, removed.

MARRIAGE LI0ENSES.

Mason B. Thomas and Anna M. Davidson. Mason B. Thomas and Annie M. Davidson.

COMMENCEMENT.

Continued from First Page.

were "useless indeed^ could not exist. But, in honest humility, it simply =ays: I am a college, and a college I mean to stay, because the work I do is, if humble, absolutely indispensable, fundamental to all true progress. The college trains, it disciplines the man rather it produces, brings forth, the man by discipline. It forms and reforms. It unfolds and it folds under. Thus it sends one into life furnished to live. It develops personality it puts persons into society. The genuine college is nearer to the world at the present than any other institution of learning. Nowhere do you feel the world's pulse more quickly, more surely. The college is no longer a cloister its doors are standing open on the forum rightly the bustle and the dust of life drift in. There can be no divorce in the college of today between the search for knowledge and the thought of the activity to wliich the student goes. Just over the college threshold, he sees the responsibilities, the duties, the problems of which tomorrow he is to be a part. Training for citizenship, therefore, demands distinctively the college spirit, the college work.

College training for Christian citizenship involves that the true conception of education be both kept in the mind and put into practice. Mere culture of the intellect is not education. Man is infinitely more than head. Intellectual progress alone is one sided, unsatisfactory, disappointing. Emerson well satirizes hini who is "all steeple." Instruction informs the mind, but education lifts up the living it imparts, it unfolds, character. This is the work the world is awaiting. Our age, along with its advancement in learning, is advancing also in its conception of manhood. This world wide movement which finds expression in this deeper conception of manhood and the educational movement of our time must be brought together and held together. The Christian teacher finds his mission to be the perfecting of this union, first in his own life, then in his work, as a moulder of life. The life of the teacher is to be the very atmosphere of true education. He is to saturate his pupil with what he is. Only the college permits this. Here the teacher must be the great man, who, without noise or show, wisely fixes a few minds broad, just, generous principles of judgment and action, and gives an impulse to living, which, going out of the college into society, there moves on forever. He penetrates most deeply into human nature and, through the subtle sympathy and magnetism of his own character, shows another life its possibilities, and thus calls forth from its inmost resources what even the possessor knew not of. The production or men as personal facts—this is education, and this cannot but be education for Christian citizenship.

College training for Christian citizenship involves a true conception of the relation of character to citizenship. When on an April day not long since, Bishop Potter preached in St. Paul's, NewYork, before the president and two ex-presidents, together with a notable company of public men, a sermon which had as its text t'fte ideal ruler, made some people who heard it, and liiOre who read it, very uncomfortable. The notable value of the address lay in the fact that it showed, without fear and without passion, the king of these United States, the people, the fact that this nation is not, as it should be, faced toward the goal of righteousness. The problem of government is not that of the evolution of constitutions and laws as selfpropagating and selfworking mechanisms, it is the problem of the actions of men in their relations one to another, the problem of righteousness in society regarded as a living organism. How shall man, a social and religious being, deal with himself in the circumstances of present lite?—this is the comprehensive inquiry, including all others. We have been falsely individualistic. We have had the individualism of selfseeking conceit we need the individualism of heroic, sterling character. Character gives itself for truth, of which it is the child conceit shows forth selfishness, of wliich it is the offspring. We need, we must have, new blood in the veins of the body politic. The college which trains for Christian citizenship will furnish this new blood. Very possibly it can be furnished in no other way.

College training for Christian citizenship involves a true conception of professional life its it stands related to character and thus to society's needs. With the wonderful expansion of life in our modem days, professional life has correspondingly expanded. Three score years ago the ministry, the law and medicine made up the three learned professions. These professions are no longer three. We must surely enumerate them as five—adding teaching and journalism. The former is surely a profession which has come, the latter is certainly the coming profession. And what shall we say of business? Is not even it fast becoming a profession? •Evidently then the time is overpast when one can believe that the Christian in professional life is simply the minister of the sacred desk. As it is to be clearly recognized that beside the church stand also the family and the state, as also divine institutions, so it is to be seen that the ministry of the pulpit is not the only religious calling, if as a lawyer, a physician, a teacher, a journalist, a business man, one give himself in service, with a keen sense of what can be done for humanity, if he devote his life to ail application of the forces of educated character to human existence in society, it is his right to wear that crowning honor, the name "servant." If American life shall, as it grows, grow purer, nobler, more righteous, it will be because this and that one in positions of influence casts his character, as a germ of better things, into the soil oi: society. To do this is to exercise Christian citizenship. The state and religion, the state and morals, the state and social questions— these are the problems along these lines we are to move for the renovation of society. Who constitute the we of this progress? Educated men in all professions, educated men in business—those in whom, through the discipline in selfcontrol of college days, lfiw has found a living expression in character, in whom through broad, symmetrical self-develop-ment in college walls and walks, its principles have taken root and have become vital realities. If these be many, much can be done if they be few, little can be acheived. If these be strong the state is strong if they be weak, she totters to her fall.

College Training for Christian Citizenship involves a true understanding of what Christianity is. In so far as one has that sort of Christianity which so fills him with the service of his fellow that no room remains for the worship of paltry pelf or for the adoration of his own id^as or his own success, in, so far

fs he fitted for true citizenship. We need today anew conception of Christianity, in that we need a living and also a social conception of it. There can be no true citizenship without these ideas as working principles. Jesus lived and died to redeem society. With him the rescue of a man was a means to the rescue of a world, and by a world he meant the course of human life, the sources and the stream of human history. These it was his purpose to cleanse. True citi zensliip, then, can only be Christian citizenship, and no higher goal can be set before the college than to train for this.

This then is our ideal. It demands, that it may show itself in reality, year by year, as men go out from us, the "best material equipment, the strongest teaching force, made up, without exception, of inspiring, Christ-like men, the broadest, most unbiased instruction that looks at every subject from every side. This ideal demands preeminently, in student and in teacher, implicit faith in truth. Truth is it may be found. It is to be sought at all cost, received at any self-sacrifice, championed boldly at whatever odds. Truth four-faced, gazing to the four winds, is to be lodged the mind, cherished in the heart, made the dominant motive of the will. It is to be carried in self into society, there to abide in living.

Is there not need of such education today? Is not such education worthy of all support, by gift of means, by bestowal of influence, by spending of time, by consecration of selt? Of the student it demands painstaking effort, patient endurance, intelligent obedience, walling cooperation. In return for these it offers a devoloped manhood, a fortified character, a power for usefulness, a spirit for service. It transforms life's work into life's privilege it carries within itself its own reward. Of the teacher it demands toil unmeasured, sympathy full and limitless, patience and perseverance that can overcome all difficulties—a giving of life in energy, inspiration, zeal. In return, life springs up to greet the eye. The teacher reproduces self in children of his thought and influence. Here he finds his reward. He moulds the world through him whom he has taught.. Of the friend of the college, it demands large help, great patience, vase counsel. The returns we offer you are not in quantity but in quality. Here dollars are transformed into influence: the tangible becomes the intangible, the perishable becomes tho over-enduring. By the subtle alchemy of soul, time and effort and opportunity are transmitted into character, character which outlasts all time, character which is the goal of all effort that is divine.

Dr. Burroughs' address was followed by a hearty round of applause and after miiBic, John A. Finch delivered a short address, the tenor of which seemed to bear strongly against co education. Mr. Finch's address was a brilliant and amusing one but its sentiment caught only a party of the audience.

President Fisher, of Hanover, spoke shortly and pointedly after Mr. Finch was through and then the degrees were conferred and diplomas presented.

Acker, OUis Edwin, Kurhon, I! S. Armstrong, James Howard, Jelier.souville. IS. S

Ulair, John Allen, Crawfordsville, 15. A. Chiptuan, Walter Wilson. Warsaw. 1$. S. Cutter, Frank Chivpool. Indianapolis, U. S. Davis, Bdjmr U., Crawfordsville, U. f*. Deniaree, Thomas Elmer, Kossville, III., R. S. Galey, Albert Smith, Crawfordsville, Li. S. Garner, Ja -os Here, Lebanon. 13 S. Greene, Philip Farrow, Crawlordsville, R. A. GreKK. Fred Marshall, Crawlordsville, IS. A l-iuvrhart. Arthur A., Valparaiso, It. S. Hutchings. William Von, Crawfordsville, n. A.

Keen, Norwood Park, Evausvnle, B. S. Kiujjery, I). Newton, Cruwt'ordsvillp, U, A. Leech, Ellerslie Wallace, Crawlordsville, B. A.

MeCulloeh, Edward Martin, New Albany H. S. McMurtry, James G.. Judson, li. A.

Meteer, John H., Pine ltidge, S. Dak., H. A. Olive, Edifar Williu'ii, Indianapolis, B. S. lilioads, Paul Mollatt, Newport, J'. S. Starr. Harry Linn, Homer, 111., U. A. Vanderbilt, William Everet, Williamsport, B. A.

VanNuys, J. Chauncey, Thorntown. B. S. Watson, Samuel Henry, Yountsville. li. S. White, Will E., Alamo, B. S. Wilton, W. W city, B. S. Zeuer, Clarence, lndiauapolis. B. A.

R. N. Whitford, of '90, received the degree of Ph. D. Rev. D. B. Greigg, '85, of Baltimore, E. E. St. John. '90, of Hammond, J. H. Ransom, '90, of this city, and Dr. G. W. Hall,' 90, of Chicago, received the degree A. M.

Rev. O. A. Smith, '83, of Evansville, and Rev. John Chapin, '56, of Neen ah, Wis., received the honorary degree of D. D.

Prof. JoBeph Swain, President of Indiana University, and Dr. John E. Simpson, President of Marietta College, received the honorary degree of L. L. D.

All the prize winners of the year were announced. Those that have" not previously been made public are as follows:

The Fowler-Duhme Memorial Fellowship, worth $300 a year, H. L. Starr. The Gould nrize for theseB in Biblical Literature, D. N. Kingery, of the Senior class, and Charles A. Cloud, of the Junior class.

The first Junior essay prize was won by Samuel W. Malone, subject, "Shall We Read Novels" second, Andrew Stott, "The Jew."

The Rioters Fined.

The fines imposed against the Lafayette rioters by Judge Langdon yesterday were as follows: James Carter, $150 and costs, George Benowitz, §50 and costs, Frank Longen, Wm. Biehle, Frank lvoeing, Dennis McManue, John Diginson, and James Matthews, each 825 and costs. The cases against the others indicted were noil prossed.

Wm, Hall Hurt.

William Hall, the well known carpenter, sustained a serious injury Wednesday while at work on the farm of Jacob Swank, north of the city. He was doing a job of work and fell eighteen feet to the ground. He was picked up unconscious and almost lifeless. Dr. Jones was summoned hastily and went out to the Swank place.

Barn Burned.

The barn on the Galloway place, next to the Vandalia Railroad, on Main street was burned Wednesday morning at 11 o'clock. The place is owned by W. T. Harlan, and is rented to Wm. W* Lamb. The people were burning hens' nests close to the barn and succeeded in the destruction of nests, lice and barn.

Dr. Huntsinger, eye, ear, nose and throat specialist will be at Dr. McCormick's office every two weeks. See announcements later in this paper.

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STILL PROGRESSING.

The Trustees of Wabash Oollege Make Several Important Advances. The trustees adjourned late Tuesday afternoon, having accomplished several things in the line of progresp. The Treasurer's report WHS received and showed that, owing to the most careful management the expenses had been kept within the limit, conditioned by Mr. Yandes in his recent gift and that next year the college will be able to do it again. This condition is that the expenses shall not run So,000 beyond the income in any one year. A resolution was passed thanking Mr. Yandes and all those who had contributed to the 860,000 endowment of last December. The Various department libraries neeii replenishing and the sum of SI,000 was appropriated for this purpose. The preparatory department was discussed a considerable length of time and there was some talk of abolishing it. It was finally decided to reorganize it and place it under the supervision of the professors of Greek, Latin, English, German and Mathematics. The resignation ot Hon. S. P. Williams, of Lima, as trustee, WHB received and accepted with regret. He retires on account of his old age and goes with the best wisheB of ail friends of Wabash College for which he nas done so much in past yearo.

The board then elected the following gentlemen to serve as trustees for the next four years: John M.Butler, Judge Wm. A. Woods, and Wm. S. Hubbard, of Indianapolis Capt. Ii. E. Brjant, of this city, and Hon. Charles Landis, of Delphi, who was nominated by the alumni.

Probably the most important change made by the board was the introduction of a scheme of self government by the students. This is Dr. Burroughs' idea and is expected to be of great benefit. The discipline of the college is taken from the faculty and vested in a college council to be composed of President Burroughs, four Seniors, three Juniors, two Sophomores and two Freshmen. Each class will elect its reprt sentatives in the council. This is quite a radical departure but it is a scheme which has worked well at many eastern institutions.

The subject of co-education did not come up owing to the absence of Judge Baldwin.

The matter of introducing a new course leading to the degree of Bachelor of Letters was discussed but linal action deferred until the December meeting.

Two Returns of the Coroner. The coroner has filed his verdict in two in quests, but the inquest of tho death of John Hipes and daughter is rot yet on file. He finds that "Margaret E. Eller came to her death by an overdose of morphine administered by herself, probably for the relief of pain." Also thaf'Wm. G. Hutchings came to his death by asphyxiation, resulting by the overturning of a wagon, throwing him face downward into the mud and water, the wagon bed holding him down."

-THE NEW-

VIBBATOK 'SEPARATOR

The new Steel Boiler Traction Enprine, made onl.v by Nichols & Shepard Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Za*.rU Mahornuy & Sons, exclusive accnts for* Montgomery county and vicinity. Writo us tor |)i ices, terms and reading matter. Sample machinery here to show you, including aswineiiis? stacker if you pre'or.

Also agents for, and have tluni in stock, the new steel Kmpire Harvester and Binder, the neatest, nicest and best machine on the market. ..BARLOW Corn Planter wittt check rower, first class.

MOLINE FLYING DUTCH MAN Sulky liidinsr Plow, all steel BUTLER Wind Engine and Pumps, POLAR CREAMERY, Cultivators, tongue and tongueless, Walking- Breaking-Plow In .'act, a full line of the very best implements and machinery. O'BRIEN farm wagons.

Our stock of shell' hardware and building hardware including

Doors, Blind*, Glass and Sash at Lowest Prices!

Cook Stoves, heat.msr stoves. t!n, sr'ass and quccnswarc is full up, The Ne*v Process Gasoline Cook Stove stands at the nead have sold in the last two years 1%. We have in our up stairs mantle room a full line of Iron, Slate and Wood Mantles, tile Facings and Hearths.

Our stock of furniture is complete. Bed room suns, side boards, extention tables, secretaries, chairs, parlor suits, in fact a full and complete stock. Also

CARPETS, 200 PATTERNS,

Beautiful and at reasonable prices. Our store gives to the old housekeepers the best line to select lrotn the county. Youns? married people, just starting, can SAVE MONER by looking at our stock before buying. No trouble to show goods. Come in everybody and see us.

Have sold poods in Crawfordsville for 35 years, and still at it. Thanking you for past patronage, we beg of you to come, look our store over and see our bargains. Yours

Farm for Sale.

A farm of 68 acres, two miles west of Crawfordsville on the Yountsville road, 50 acres under cultivation, balance in good timber. For terms apply to 24-2mo MICHAEL ZELLEB.

ney & Sons.

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A HEW PLAN.

Proposition" From a Company to Locate a Factory in This Uity. The Hecla Manufacturing Company, of Chicago, has sent Mayor Bandel an agreement, in which is stated a proposition to locate a factory in this city. This company proposes, in case the proposition is accepted, to lay out an addition to this city, and to erect a factory to make machinery, tools, etc., that will represent a capital of $150,000, and employ 175 to 250 men. This is the proposition of the party of the first part, and the parties of the second part are to sign the agreement to pay $250 per lot this "Industrial Addition," each man taking as many lots as he may uesire. As to the distribution of these lots, it is to be "determined by drawing for the same in the usual manner and each subscriber shall receive such lots drawn, with a clear title and deed." The money thus derived is to go to the company. Subscribers to this plan must pay into bauk one-third of the sum due on the number of lots taken, when work is commenced upon the building, and the bank is to pay it over when the building is completed. Then one-third is due when the machinery is placed in position, and the balance when the factory has been running two months. Persons desiring to investigate this plan can Bee the agreement at the Mayor's office.

Alamo Horse Show.

The horse show at Alamo last Saturday was a grand success. The attendance was over 1,500 people, and over 100 horses and colts were entered. l'KIZE WIXNEKS.

Draft- Stallion. Henry Myers 1st, lamp, $3, paid by .1. P. Wirt & Co Rush & Deer, 2nd. Best mare- Cyrns Little, 1st, half season to "Wait for Me," $5, paid by Rush & Deer Toin Rice, 2nd.

General Purpose— Bt-st stallion, Elijah Ciore, 1st, box cigar* $2 50, paid by J. P. Wirt & Co. Frank Myers, 2nd Best mare —George Wilcox, 1st, half season to Captain Watt, jr $4 Cyrus Little, 2nd.

Light harness—James li. Canine, 1st, shirt, $3, paid by S. J. Heath Frank Myers, 2nd. Best, mare—li. Ammerman, 1st, half season to Mambrino Logan jr., paid by Rush & Deer. Nichols Gray, 2nd.

Best span mares—George Myers, 1st, box cigars, S2..")0, paid by B. F. Work Cyrus Little, 2nd.

Best gelding—Dr. J. N. Talbot, 1st, hal ter, .1.50, paid by S. S Hoalli & Co. Geo. Ammerman, 2nd.

MISCELLANEOUS.

Best draft colt—Win. Delf, 1st, brush and comb, 75 cents, paid oy B. F. Work Ransom Myers, 2nd.

Best one .year old—Robert Jeffries, 1st, hat. 75 cent.' paid by S S. Heath. Best suckintr colt—Elijan Clore, 1st, can biikiug powder, 50 cants, paid by J. Wirt.

Best, single driver—Elijah Clore,

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Pratt's Food, *1, paid by S. S, Heath J.,N. Talbot, 2nd. Best saddle horse- WTm. Delf, 1st, pocket knife'75 cents, paid by B. F. Work S. S. Martin, 2nd.

Best Roadster—Eiston Musser. 1st' bottle Quirna, SI.50. paid by J. N. Talbot. Best three year old for speed—Elijah Clore, 1st, whip, J1, paid by D. Stonebraker: Samuel Shuler, 2nd.

Best one year old for speed—A. B. Grimes, 1st, horse brush, 75 cents. For the best sucking colt sired by "Wait for Me, jr."—Willie Pickett, 1st, ODe season paid oy Rush & Deer, $10 Andy Campbell, 2nd, half season paid by Rush & Deer.

Sweepstakes—Elijah Clore, whip, §3,paid by J. P. Wirt & Co. Nothing but ribbons were given on seconds.