Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 22 March 1895 — Page 12
RICH
Cut Glass Cut Prices
AT RICH
Large, New Stock to Select
From.
See our Display in the Show
Window.
CIGAR
Is Not Too Good For The Farmer.
Stop buying Tobacco at the same place where you buy soap and try the new
Palace Cigar Store
207 East Main Street,
A brail new stock, a big stock and a reading room at the rear where you are invited to rest and read the papers.
F.C.Bandel
Proprietor.
Hi Hi Hi Hi
Hi
Hi
Hi
What
sidewalk with our goods.
Our new Laces and
Hi
No more
iH
Hi
Zoa Phora
won't do for WOMANKIND no medicine will.
Sold by Nye & Booe and Moffett & Morgan.
Dr. H. E. Greene,
Praotloe Limited, to Diseases of the
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat.
OFFICE HOURE— 9 to 12 a, m. 2 to 4 p. in.
Best
Joel Bloofc" Crawfordsvllle, Indiana
WEEKLY JOURNAL.
ESTABLISHED IN 1845.
FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1895.
CliAKK'S HILL.
Measles has struck our town. W. H. Bassett is ill with pneumonia. Henry Parish and wife are visiting at Darlington.
A. W. Price and wife visited last week in Darlington. A. W. Price is working in the interest of a sickle grinder.
Little Jim Zion who has been sick with pneumonia, is able to be up. The grain merchants are paying 40 cents for corn and 50 cents for wheat.
We have three churches here and good schools, but one thinge we lack is another good doctor. Please send a good doctor to our town.
TILNEYVIIXE.
Gus Bowers left Monday for Alamo. Frank Stout and family aro visiting at Llie Orphans' Home.
Dr. Chester Britton has given Bodie Swank his fine mastiff dog. Myers & Swan are laying the brick for Bodie Swank's basement.
Hontz Myers and family have joined the Trinity Methodist church. John Goben has bought the Brookshire lot, which faces on the hill.
School closes on Friday of next week with an entertainment of a fine programme.
Are
are carefully selected for quality, style and exceedingly reasonable prices. In
Embroideries
of the best departments in our store. You have only to look at our
are simply beyond comparison.
old stock. All the latest things at present low prices. These with our new stock of
iii making it a coir, plete store for all floor,""window and wall coverings. As our stock of
mm
THE TRADE PALACE,
W
The new wall of the McDonald green bouse has caved in too much dirt filled in too soon did it.
John Darter has bought Rogers' part of the Vanhook farm, and Collett Darter and family are living there.
Tom Cagelhas moved into the "round house" in the grove, as Dr. Tilney would not let him hold dances in the house he had rented of him.
We are very sorry to hear that our teacher, Frank Maxwell, will not teach here next term, as he goes into the Auditor's office as deputy.
When hoodlums go outside the city limits they think they can do as they please. It would be well for them to know that the police have powers for two miles outside the city limits, and we have the telephone handy to call them.
NEW MARKET.
Frank Royalty visited here over last Sunday. Miss Minnie Walker, of Mill Roy, is visiting here.
Joe Cox was here Monday looking for a place to locate. Mrs. Fannie Davis is visiting her father, Tell Hall.
James Caplinger attended the convention last week. Mrs. Don Brown returned to her home at Rockville on Monday.
Mrs. Mary Hicks .and Mrs. Betsy Hicks visited at Mrs. Belle Brush's on Tuesday.
J. A. Hicks and wife visited their uncle Van Sidener, near Crawfordsville, Tuesday.
Several from here attended the funeral of Mrs. Rebecca Servies at Lapland on Wednesday.
Dora Hicks and Ivy Stonebreaker will have their millinery shop at the store of Glover & Wray.
The Rathbone Sisters have postponed their supper until next Wednesday night on account of so much sickness.
Barney Puckett, who has been sick for four months,died Wednesday morning and was buried Thursday rfternoon at 2 o'clock at the Presbyterian church.
Miss Eva Davis, of Ladoga, spent one day here with Mr. Crist's family. She went from here to Oakland, 111., where she will run a millinery store. We are glad to have her name for THE JOURNAL before she started.
Frank Coons has been looking for some time for a driving mare. He wanted a good one, but didn't like the prices asked for them. But on last Saturday he found one and the people expected to see he and his family out to church, but they did not come. He got the mare from his brother-in-law, Frank Vancleave, and we have found out that he was afraid of her, and so in the barn she went and stayed. At the last version of the affair he had asked Mr. Vancleave if he would take five to rue.
SAY, neighbor, when in town put up your team with Porter Bros., at the old rink barn. wtf
high prices, but the handsomest garments you ever saw at prices that at once recommend them, replete with everything in the line. The finest stock of Made Sheets
You will say,SO.
Hosiery
and
and
BITS OF INFORMATION.
Still another will of the late Senator Fair, of California, is said to be in existence, and in possession of Mrs. Bessie Paxton.
Irving Justice, a prominent merchant of Cherokee nation, was summoned to his door and killed by two unknown assassins.
Directors of the Wood Harvester company hope to end the receivership by effecting a settlement with adverse creditors.
Mrs. Blake Snow, of Somerville, Mass., was stopped by a highwayman, but she whipped him with a righthand blow.
Warren Sherman, a farm hand of Michigan, has confessed to Lansing officers that he burned his house thirteen years ago.
Attorney General Churchill, of Nebraska. has gone to investigate the lynching of Mrs. Hilton near Brocksburg. Two men have been arrested.
The South Dakota board of agriculture has decided to hold the state fair in Sioux Falls for six years. This year's fair will be held September 30 to October 4.
The marble monument of Heinrich Heine, rejected in Germany because of his republican utterances, will be erected in Central Park, New York, by German-Americans.
John A. Lowry, of Gibson City, 111., has been selected to fill the chair of mathematics in Eureka college. Prof. Lowry was graduated from the university of Illinois last June.
The Lochiel Rolling Mill company has issued a notice that a reduction of 10 per cent, will be made on April 1 in the wages of all its employes, 250 in number. Under this reduction the puddlers will get but §2.50
per
ton.
Harvey O. Carr, superintendent of police at Grand Rapids, Mich.t who is the secretary and treasurer of the Chiefs of Police National association, has issued a call for the association's second annual convention, which will be held in Washington May 14.
Navigation Opened.
WESS SUPERIOR, Wis., March 21.— Lake navigation at the port of Superioi and Duluth was practically opened Wednesday by the tug Record which left her dock and commenced making a passage to the slips.
Noted Beauty Dead.
LONDON, March 21.—The Yorkshire Post announces the death at Mentone Tuesday of the duchess of Leinster, the noted be iuty.
A Mftu's Prosperity
Depends largely on the health of his wife. She should maintain her health and promptly correct any weakness by using Zoa Phora. Sold by Moffett & Morgan and Nye & Booe.
FOR artistic work see THE JOURNAL CO., PRINTERS.
FOR posters see THE JOURNAL Co., PRINTERS
No combination of words in fine phrases can add force to the plain statement that
THE HANDSOME NEW SPRING GOODS
iU just purchased by us in the Eastern Markets are arriving by the car load. The wholesale landing ot these goods in front of our store makes our 141 competitors wince and causes the Marshal ot the "great city of Crawfordbvjlie" to swoop down on us and cause our arrest for obstructing the
"great city of Crawtordsville." But never mind friends, they can't stop the boxes coming. $25,000 worth ofnew goods at once bought direct of the manufacturers at the.unprecedented low cash prices of to-day means something and can't fail to not only slightly obstruct a sidewalk but fill a store of even the magnitude of the Mammoth Trade Palace chuck full of the choicest goods and rarest bargains of the season. The following great attractions include but a few of those in our splendid stock. Our
Elegant Line of Silks, Dress Goods and Trimmings
Linings
Underwear.
H! Our Elegant Stock of Spring Wraps Will BeRevelation to You
Pillow Cases
HI Carpets, Mattings, Window Shades, Lace Curtain*. Draperies, Wall Paper,
cited to appear Thursday morning, March 21, at 9 o'clock for trial. Think of such petty annoyance from the
our stock embraces everything from the finest
We have added an entire new line of
We have the right stock and values.
HUNTER'S IlXDfire.
Two more weeks of school. Frank Stout's smoke-house burned Saturday morning with all its contents.
Frank Stout has sold his farm to his brother John, and will move to Crawfordsville.
There is a tree on the from of Rufus Clevenger whjch is 47 inches in diameter. Who can beat that for a tree?
Walter Fagon and Ollie Boutoffe were quietly married on Sunday evening at the home of the bride. We wish them a long and happy life.
ZOA PHORA brings health and happiness.
INDIANAPOLIS MARKETS.
The Live Stock Market. INDIANAPOLIS, March 21.
CATTLE— Receipts light. Shipments none. The general cattle market continued steady.
Export and shipping cattle we quoto: Good to choice shipplug steers, J5.2o@ 5.GO Medium to good shipplag steers, 4.75© 6.25 Common to fair steers 3.75® 4.50 Choice feeding .steers 4.00® 4.50 Fair to medium steers 3.40® 3.90
HOGS—Receipts 2,500 head. Shipments, 1,000. Good to choice medium and [email protected] Mixed and heavy packing [email protected] Good to choice lightweights [email protected] Common lightweights [email protected] Pigs [email protected] Roughs 4.0G©4.35
SHEEP—Receipts light. Shipments light. Choice to extra lambs $5.00®5.50 Common to good lambs [email protected]
The Grain Market.
WHEAT—Dull No. 2 red 54c bid, No. 3 red 53c. CORN—Firm No. 1 white 45c: No. 2 white 45c, No. 3 white, 45e.o No. 2 white mixed 44J4c. No. 3 white mixed 44!4c. No. 2 ye'low 44^c, No 3 yellow 44J4c, No. 2 mixed 44)4c, No. 3 mixed 44J4c ear 43c.
OATS—Dull No. 2 white 33J*jc. No. 3 white 32c. No. 2 mixed 30^c, No. 3 mixed 29c, rejected 20@3Oc.
RVE—No. 2 45c car, 43c wagon lot. BRAN—813,25. HAY—Timothy No. 1 89.00 No. 2 88: No. 1 prairie 87.50. mixed, $7.00, clover #7.00.
Batter, Eggs and Poultry.
The following are the buying prices offered by Indianapolis shippers Butter—Fresh country, 8@10c. poor 0@8.
Eggs—Fresh, per dozen, 10c. Live Poultry—Hens, 7c a pound springs 1894 7 cocks, 3c turkey hens, 7c heavy toms, 5c light toms6c: ducks, 6c geese, full feathered, 84.8085.40 per dozen, latter price for fancy large young turkeys, under 15 lbs, 6c.
Local Markets.
Crawfordsvllle dealers were paying the fol lowing prices for produce on Thursday: Wheat per bushel 50 Corn 38@40 Oats, new Rj'e 45 Timothy Hav [email protected] Navy Beans [email protected]
ButterEggs I Hens and chickens Cocks Hen turkeys Young toms Old toms Ducks GeeseLard per pound Countrj hams Side Meat Shoulders Best quality wool
Oar
in the city. We have
Wall Paper
in this line. In fact the Old Trade Palace in her presentshape is just twice as large as any dry goods store in jntgomery county an:l twice as well prepared to give you the right goods at the righj prices. Having spent the past month among the Eastern factories and agents we know whereof we speak, and assure you, you will be well repaid for a visit to
MM HlllillB
I*** siiaisissii
o@7 8 2)4
6 5 6 4
6@7 8@U (5@7 6@7 15
Hair Cloth
Muslin
Silk Waists, Laundered Waists, Hisses', Boys' and Infants' wear
and
Wash Goods
and
SStiS^ll t. ...i#
HAVE YOU CATARRH?
Then Read This. Part of the Testimony of One Day.
January 15, 1895.
Mr. Colman:— DEAR SIR:—I must have some more Petroleum Balm I can't get along without it. It is the best for catarrh of anything I have ever tried. I had a thumping in my head over a year. That was the first thing that stopped it. Since I began using the Balm I have not felt it at all, so I am recommending it highly. Address,
MRS. NORA DAVIS, Box 20, Adams, Mass.
GARRETT, IND., Jan. 15, 1895.
Mr. Colman:— The sample of Petroleum Balm and Emolient you sent me has done me great good. My throat is better than for six months before. I enclose pay for another bottle of each.
MRS. CHAS. SIMMONS.
CARTHAGE, IND., Jan. 15, 1895.
Mr. Colman:— Please send me two dozen bottles of your Petroleum Balm. I think I shall have no trouble in selling it as it has done my husband more good in one week than all the medicine he has used in years. MRS. CHAS. WILKINSON.
HANDSOMS, VA., Jan. 15, 1895.
Mr. Colman:— DEAR SIR:—I received the Petroleum Balm all right. Enclosed please find 30 cents for a box. It's the only thing that has done my leg any good. Five months ago my leg broke out with a burning ulcer, and our family doctor has tended it all the time, but it daily grew worse, with no ease of life. Your medicine is all that I can get that eases it. I think it will be sufficient to cure it. I shall try to be of all the use to you I can in selling your medicine.
Respectively yours, L. JOYNER.
HARPER, Mo., Jan. 15, 1395.
Colman Bros. & Co:— DEAR SIRS—My husband has been troubled with catarrh in the head for twelve years and has tried several remedies, but received no benefit from them. He bought a box of your Petroleum Balm some time ago and has not used half of it and thinks he is well.
I would very much like to take the ag-ency and think I can help myself and you too, by doing so. Please let me hear from you at once.
Respectfully, MRS. W. D. MCCI.AJN.
We could fill this whole column with such testimonials all written in one day.
During next week you can get a free sample of these remedies at the drugstores of Moffett & Morgan and Nye & Booe.
to the cheapest
Nainsook Underwear.
White Goods
added the Sloan grocery room to our store filling it full of
is all new, very large and at bed rock prices. We especiall} ask a look
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Hi
Hi
IU
Cambric.
No
make it one
Hi Hi
departments are
NORTH WASHINGTON STREET
~r
Hiff
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