Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 7 August 1896 — Page 4
WEEKLY JOURNAL.
ESTABLISHED IN 1848.
Successor to The Record, the first paper Orawfordsvillo, established In 1831, and i' Ae People's Press, established 1844.
PRIKTED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING
THE JOURNAL COMPANY. T. H. B. MCCAIN, President. J. A. GREENE, Secretary.
A. A. MCCAIN.Treasurer
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION 1
One year In advance Blx months Three months
Payable In advance. Sample copies free.
One year in advance Bti months Three months
1.00 .50 .25
THE DAIXY JOURNAL. ESTABLISHED IN 1887. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
1
Per week, delivered or by mall Bntered at the PoatofDce at Crawfordsville, Indiana, as second-class matter.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1890.
THE REPUBLICAN TICKET,
National.
For President,
WILLIAM M'KINLEY, Of Ohio. For Vice President,
:.
GAKRETT A. HOBART. Or New Jersey.
State.
For Governor,
JAMES A. .MOUNT. For Lieutenant Governor,
1
tW. S. HAGGAllD. For Secretary of State, W. D. OWEN.
For Auditor o( State, A. C. DAILY. For Treasurer of State,
F. J. SCIiOLZ.
For Attorney-General, A. KETCHAM. For Reporter Supreme Court,
CHARLES F. REMY.
For Superintendent Public Instruction. D. M. GEETING. For Statistician.
S. J. THOMPSON.
For Appellate Judge. First District, WOODF1N D. ROBINSON. Forjudge Appellate Court. Second District,
WILLIAM J. HENLEY.
For Judge Appellate Court, Third District, JAMES B. BLACK. For Judge Appellate Court, Fourth District,
D. W. COMSTOCIv.
For Judge Appellate Court, Sixth District, U. Z. WILEY.
District."
For Congress.
CHARLES B. LANDIS. For Senators. ROBERT CARR1CK. SAMUEL R. ARTMAN. For Joint Representative
JOHN M. KELLAR. County.
For Judge of the Circuit Court, MELVILLE W. BRUNER. For Prosecuting Attorney,
DUMONT KENNEDY. For Representative, EDWARD T. McCREA.
For Clerk,
RANKIN C. WALKUP. For Treasurer, WILLIAM JOHNSON.
For Recorder,
WILLIAM H. WEBSTER. For Sheriff, II. C. HARPER.
For Coroner.
PAUL J. BARCUS. For Surveyor, HARVEY E. WYNEKOOP.
For Assessor,
HENRY M. BILLINGSLEY. For Commissioner. 2d District, HENRY W. HARDING. For Commissioner, 3d District,
ALBEKT T. HORNBAKER.
THE Treasury deficit in July was 813,000,000.
EVERY workingman should be able to
see clearly that free silver will double his expenses without increasing his pay.
UNDER a free coinage regime the government would cease redeeming its notes in gold and begin redeeming them in 53-cent silver dollars. If that is not repudiation of a governmental obligation, what is?
THE JOURNAL has been asked the question, has Mexico any gold coin of her own minting, and if so is there any of it in circulation? Mexico coins gold, in denominations of I, 2%, 5, 10 and 20 pesos (dollars). They are not in circulation. The common people never see gold coins. The gold peso weighs 26.111 grains, S75-1000ths tine, and is worth, in American gold, 98.4 cents. The Mexican silver peso (dollar), nominally of the same value, circulates at 50 to 54 cents, American value. The gold peso buys about twice as milch as the silver peso in Mexico, and everywhere else.
THE
political outlook is certainly en
couraging to the Republicans. Scores of the old leaders of the Democracy in every State in the Union are revolting against the betrayal of their party to Populism and organizing opposition to that cowardly surrender. Of the present National Democratic Administration only the Vice-President is ip accord with the platform and candidates presented by the pseudo-Democratic convention, and only one member of the entire Cabinet haB pledged them even quasi-support. All over the country, from ocean to ocean and from the great lakes to the great gulf, statesmen, merchants, ministers, lawyers, bankers, journalists, employers and employes, who neyer advocated aDy but Democratic principles and pol-
icios or voted other than Democratic tickets, are repudiating Bryan and Sewall, Bryan and Watson and the Populistic, communistic and anarchistic platforms upon which they stand. Many of these have declared that they will vote for McKinley, while others are preparing to build an ark expecting a long wet spell. Bryan and Sew-Wat will be carried down the river among the debris.
WIIAT IS THE ISSUE#
Since 1SS8 William McKiuley has grown in the hearts of Americans as no man has since the days
oX
Ilenry
Clay. His every act and utterance lias increased the love the people have 'for him. They know his ability as a statesman. They know he has labored for country instead of himself. After long years in the service of his country he is still a poor man. He still stands as he always has—as Lincoln stood among the common people, and is one of them. He saw his protective ideas fought in 1892 and saw them voted down. He witnessed the people rallying from their mistake and in 1894 he stood higher in the estimation of the people than any living man. This feeling of admiration continued until in 1SSO he was the unanimous choice for President, and stands now where he has always stood. Is it necessary then, after all this, to ask what the issue is to be? The tariff is as much an issue now as it ever was. The money question is no more an issue now than ittever was. A sound currency like we have had for thirty years has always been an issue and is yet. In the judicious application of a protective tariff applied to our enterprises, these enterprises will grow, and the money, the same that we have always had, will seek investments. What the laboring man wants, and what every one wants is a chance to earn some of the money we already have, and not to see more money, with no more chance to earn it. For years McKinley has been looked upon as a statesman, matured, and experienced in governmental affairs, honest and pure in all his dealings, both public and private, and we feel safe in saying that the people are willing to try him, and not be diverted by a false issue raised by a party that fooled the people woefully in 1S92
Till! MEXICAN DOI,LAI?. The country is being flooded with Mexican silver dollars. Nearly everybody is carrying one as a pocket piece. The banks buy .them for f)0 cents, but to cover express charges they sell them at 55 cents. The Mexican dollars have about five grains more of silver than the American dollar, and the question is asked every day why is it that with more silver than is contained in one of our dollars they sell for half as much. The answer is that the Mexican dollar passes only for as much as the silver in it is worth. Our silver dollar passes for about double its real value, because it is indirectly redeemable in gold. To adopt free coinape would be to knock out the gold prop which holds it up, and our silver dollar would then buy a little less than the Mexican dollar. Under free and unlimited coinage the value of any coin is always just what the bullion in it is worth. Gold has free coinage in the United States, and a gold dollar is worth exactly what the same amount of gold bullion is worth —no more, no less. And undei free coinage, our silver dollar would buy just what the silver in it is worth. That is, the silver dollar would buv just about half what it buys now.
WESLEY.
Cap Utterback spent Sunday in North Union. Miss Mabel Baldwin is quite sick with measles.
Aaron Monroe was in the county seat Wednesday. George Moore is threshing for the Wesley club this week.
Several from here attended the Red Men's picnic at Covington. Miss Alice Baldwin is able to be up after an attack of measles.
George Moore had his hand badly mashed while threshing Monday.Rev. Trotter will preach his farewell sermon at Liberty Sunday night.
Albert Quick was over from Danville to attend the funeral of Steb Quick.
Miss Gertrude Petro has returned home after a visit with Crawfordsville friends.
There is some talk of having a supper at Sand Bank school house for the benefit of the Sunday school.
Misses Mertie Petro, Laura Smith, Cap Utterback and Howard Patt.nn attended church at Union Sunday night
UPLAND.
Mrs. Claud James, of Anderson, was here last Saturday. John Smith visited relatives in Boone county last Sunday.
Misses Lucy and Jessie Davis attended the old soldiers' reunion at Waveland last Thursday.
Some of our boys gave an ice cream supper at Lapland school house last Saturday night. .sThey report a fine time.
William Davis and wife and Miss Lucy Davis attended the correspondent's third reunion of the CRAWFORDSVILLE JOURNAL. They report a fine time.
Johnny Burgess is having a driven well put down at a cost of one dollar per foot, for a four inch casing. This is getting so cheap that every farmer oujrht to have good pure water for house use.
ADVANCE. .J
:J
Miss Lizzie Brown has returned home to stay a while. Rev. Airhart has repaired his garden with anew fence.
Albert Miles, of Waveland was seen on our streets Tuesday. Henry Brown, of Orth, was calling on friends here Sunday.
Prank McCormick has moved neai Advance one mile and a half soutlf west on the Midland.
We were at the reunion Saturday and had a very nice time. All of the correspondents that didn't get to come missed lots of fun and a good dinner.
KUSSKLLVJLLK.
The threshing of oats is about completed. Will C. Goodman has his new house nearly completed.
A. L. Bass has sold his interest in the hardware stock of Ross«& Mayes to F. A. Laken.
Frank Evans was at Crawfordsville this week. He has been reroofing and and repairing his farm building. Frank knows how to make a farm look well, be comfortable and productive.
WRING NECK,
C. Fink and wife were at Darlington Monday. C. Hunt, of Darlington, was on our streets Tuesday.
John Kellison has moved into the Brassfield house. .Joe Manning, of Indianapolis, is visiting at John Paxton's.
G. W. Conrad and wife spent Sunday with T. C. Wisehart and family. Charles Petro, of Ills., is visiting friends and relatives at this place.
Bill Christman and family, of Crawfordsville, spent Sunday at Sam Allen's.
Layton Stingley and family, of near Linden, ..spent Sunday at Tom Paxton's.
Mrs. Sam Johnston and son, Everet, spent Sunday with her mother, Mrs. Green, near Srnartsburg.
Mrs. Hulda Paxton was called to Indianapolis Friday by the sudden dea'.h of her sister, Mrs. Sarah Ayers.
Frank Fraley and wife, of Greencastle, are visiting Mrs. Frailey's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Campbell.
Howard Gillis is contemplating going to Illinois soon where he will spend the rest of the svmmer and fall.
The rains of last week did great damage to the farmers, especially those on the creeks where their crops were ruined by the high water and fences entirely swept away.
LINDEN.
The reunion last Saturday was enjoyed by all the JOURNAL correspondents.
The new house of Jane Stoddard's addition will be ready to plaster this week.
Alva Allen has turned house painter and is painting J. L. Church's new dwelling house.
People should sow their turnipseed anytime now if they would have turnips this winter.
There were eight tickets bold to the business men's excursion to Chicago Wednesday morning.
J. M. Croy is hunting another location. He will locate in some other place if he can find one that suits him.
Uncle Billie McClelland, of Ronvney, was down here after bread on last Tuesday morning. He knows where to get good bread.
A. K. Rash is down sick with neuralgia and not able to be at the store. W. E. Rash and A1 Cone attend to the wants of the people in his absence.
Dan Marford, of Kempton, was here Wednesday on a combined business and pleasure trip. He attended lodge Wednesday night, being the presiding officer of Lodge No. 393, I. O. O. F., at Linden.
Riley Vail bought a cheap 1-year-old colt not long ago, and some fellow had a bicycle almost as good as new that he wanted to trade or sell Riley heard of it, and now he rides an Ss5 wheel, costing him 85.85.
The Prohi. Club Silver Spray was here on Tuesday night, and gave us some excellent music and short talks yet the whisky element, some of them at least, did not like to hear the saloon or quart shops run down.
The old double pump was taken out of the pump house this week to be bored out and brought back. But the pumper had next to the largest sizes of double action horizontal pumps on the road to use while the perpendicular pump .was at the shop.
The New Richmond bakery burning last Sunday morning, the baker from that place brought, his dough here and baked it in the oven at the Rush & Blair bakery. Mr. Huff is a good baker and an old veteran of the late unpleasantness. He fought for the stars and stripes.
NEW RICHMOND.
George Crotham, of Momence, 111., was in town Monday. Jno. McDill has moved from Geo Julian's place, to the Breaks vicinity.
Mrs. Job Westfall is visiting at Covington this week with her brother and family.
Corwin Beach sold goods Monday in the absence of Sam Beach who was at Crawfordsville.
Jobe Westfall and Charles Shobe moved Harry Wilson's "bag baggage" to Crawfordsville Tuesday.
Our enterprising barbers have added a 'shine" for the benefit of their customers to their already efficient services.
Job Westfall with his mowing machine cut and removed the crop of grass from the M. E. church yard last Friday.
Henry Long got his hand in the weigher of his threshing machine Wednesday and it was quite severely chewed up.
Dan Ebright, Ed Jones, Charles Taylor, Ed Waltz, R. S. Orsborn, Sam Beach, Rev. Shagly and wife and Miss Dewey were in your city Monday.
Judge Ebrite decided that Miss Morris should keep the watch given her by Jacob Fisher, after hearing the evidence and eloquence of Ben Swank
and Attorney .Tones for two hours last Saturday. "'v Perry Wills, F. M. Smith and Jobe Westfall deposited their cards of membership with the MePherson Post, G. A. R., at Crawfordsville last Saturday evening.
Jno. Conoloco, of Sand Creek, was here Tuesday with a load of melons for sale. He said the Wabash bottoms were washed clean of melons and crops by the late flood.
Mrs. John McCardle got home last Saturday from a four weeks' visit to relatives in central Pennsylvana. She also attended the convention in Washington, D. C., while gone.
Presiding Elder Cissell delivered a powerful sermon last Sunday at the M. E church and those who failed to hear it missed a treat. However a crowded house attended.
Perry Wills', F. M. Smith, George and Jobe Westfall, Geo. Phillips and Daddy Huff attended tbe district soldiers' reunion at Waveland yesterday. Ihey started early in the morning and Perry says the chicko js roost too high down that way to be available.
Clark's bakery caught fire last Sunday morning while arranging to bake the usual loaf and burned to the ground before the bucket brigade could give aid. Mr. Huff took hia dough to Hallowell's bakery at Linden and got out bis regular supply.
We didn't get to attend the JOURNAL correspondent's reunion but was glad to hear that friend Landis was present and gave the JOURNAL editor the credit of being the originator of the country correspondence. We heartily concur in this, knowing editor McCain was the first to adopt the publishing of items.
Walter Thompson and Albert Snyder purchased the 85,000 stock of hardward of HaVry Selby and are now selling the solid goods to our people. This is a good solid firm and we predict a good trade for them. Perry McClain will remain with the new firm as salesman. Harry Selby has not announced his future intentions.
Assets Cover the Liabilities^ MEDIA,
Indianapolis.
WHEAT—Quiet No. 2 red, 5Sc. CORN—Steady No. 2 mixed, 25c. OATS—Strong No. 2 mixed, CATTLK—Heavy dry fed steers, S4.20@ 4.40 shipping and export steers, S3.75(g 4.00 common to fair steers, $3.35(^3.00 feeding steers, [email protected] medium to choice heifers, [email protected] medium to choice cows, &J.25(®3.25 veal calves, J3.U0 @5.25. Market active.
HOGS Packing and good to choice, $3.20(8,3.50 lightweights, [email protected] pigs and roughs, *3.00(g3.10. Market active.
SHEEP—Common to choice lambs, $3.75 @4.75 export ewes and wethers, S3.00© 8.45 common to choice sheep, $1.00(33.25 bucks, per head, [email protected]. Market quiet.
Cliiccgo Grain and Provisions. WHEAT—Sept. opened 5S%c, closed 58%c. Dec. opened tfl^'c, closed 60%c.
CORN—Sept. opened 25%c, closed 25k'c. May opened 28%c. closed 28&c. OATS—Sept. opened lS£c, closed lSj^c. May opened 20%e. closed »j%c.
PORK—Sept. opened $7.45, closed $6.So. Jan. opened $7.35, closed $7.35." LAHU—Sept. opened S3.42, closed $3.47. Jan. opened S3.To, closed i?3.S2.
Kills—Sepo. opened §3.55, closed §3.57. Jan. opened $3.70, closed *3.72. Closing cash markets: Wheat 57%c, corn 24%c, oats, 17^0, pork 0.80, lard £3.45, ribs ?3.oo.
iiciniiali Grain and Stock.
W LILAI'—Finn No. 2 red, 02c. Coh Kitsy No. 2 tnixed, 2oXc. OATS—Quiui: No. 2 mixed, CATTLE—Strong at #2.25^425. HOGS—Steady at -i2. i5(ft3.05. SHEEP Steady at #[email protected] lambs, firm a 1 [email protected].
Toledo Grain.
WHEAT—Lower No. 2 cash, fi4^c. CoiiX—Steady No. 2 mixed, 27c. OATS—Active No. 2 mixed, 20c.
East Liberty Live Stock.
CATTLE—Higher at $3.00$4.40. HOGS—Active at [email protected]. SlliiEP Quiet at $2.i0 ui 3.75 lambs, Bteady at [email protected].
Summer Resorts on the .Monon. The summer resorts on the Monon are more than usually popular this year. West Baden and French Lick Springs, in Orange county, are overflowing with visitors, and the hotels have all they can do. Paoli, the county seat, has opened a rival sanitarium, which is well patronized. The waters of the various springs differ materially in their constituents, and are successfully prescribed for a great variety of maladies. The woods in the neighborhood abound in game and all the streams teem with fish, some of them having been stocked by the Government fish commission. All indications point to West Baden (and the neighboring springs) as the great sanitarium and popular summer resort of the West.
Cedar Lake, forty miles from Chicago, is a favorite picnic and outing spot, where the Monon has a fine wooded park of nearly 400 acres. The fishing is first rate. eod & wtf
The Garden South.
The South is destined to be, and is rapidly becoming, the garden of the United States. Here life is easier to live. The rigorous winters do not eat up the fruits of the toil of summer, nor are the summers so trying as many northern people have supposed. "I used to live only half the year," said a northern farmer recently settled in the South, "and I used to work all the time then. Now I work half the time and live all the year through."
Homeseekers' excursion tickets will be sold over the Monon Route to nearly all points in the South at the rate of one first class fare (one wav) tickets good returning on any Tuesday or Friday within 31 days from date of sale. Liberal stop-overs are allowed. These excursions start (and tickets are sold) Aug, 3, 4, 17, 18 and 31 Sept. 1, ?cfc"
5 19 and
20-
HW
Pa., Aug. 0, Judgments
amounting to §75,000 were yesterday entered against Rhodes & Bros., textile manufacturers, whose mills on Chester creek were closed yesterday until further notice. The assets, it is said, more than cove* all indebtedness.
Weather*
Indiana and Illinois Increasing oloudiness local thunderstorms cooler. Ohio—Fair continued warmer.
MARKET QUOTATIONS.
Prevailing Prices For Grain, Cattle and Provisions on Aug. a.
1
Cal1
_?n
A TI
L-
A. Clark, agent of the Monon Route, for further information, eod A- w-tf
nnn
uim
Tim/1—r
ninu
r.?r\L
Bourke Cockran Expresses Himself Vigorously In an Interview.
HE EXPLAINS PREVIOUS TALK,
Singular Ittisnpprohension of Some N'ews1 papers JLrroucous Assumption That 1 His 1*1 an Contemplates Merely Assembling- ol" Convention, Adoption of Platform and Nomination of 3IcIUuley Electors.
NEW YORK, 4-ug. 4.—Hon. Bourke Cockran was asked yesterday if he •would support a third ticket if one were nominated, notwithstanding the views expressed in his interview published yesterday. He said: "If a convention be held, at which all Democrats can be represented, who, believing that the party has been betrayed at Chicago, are determined that its principles shall not perish for lack of efficient organization, and if a free interchange of opinion be liad among its members, I should be strongly inclined to accept its decision, whatever it might be. I think it more important that the Democrats opponents of Mr. Bryan should be united in one movement, than that any-particular-form of co-opposition should be adopted. "By the way," said Mr. Cockran, "in the comments on my interview published Monday morning, I notice a singular misapprehension on the part of some newspapers. It is assumed that the plan suggested by me contemplated
BOCRKK COCRKAX.
merely the assembling of a convention which would adopt a genuinely Democratic platform, nominate McKinley electors and stop there. When I said that Democrats, meeting in such a convention as I suggested, 'while nominating McKinley electors, would provide for a really Democratic opposition to the McKinley administration during the period of its existence,' I thought it would be clear that I meant a substantial and effective opposition. Such an opposition could find an expression nowhere but in confess and it could therefore be maintained 011I3- by bringing those Democrats, who in face of treason and cowardice remain unyielding and unterriiied, into a new organization which would nominate candidates for state officers, for congress and for the state legislature in every state where the existing organization had denounced the ancient creed of the party by indorsing the Populist platform and candidate. Every Democrat who refuses to support the Chicago platform regards the defeat of the absurd propositions for which Mr. Bryan stands as the paramount issue of the campaign, and since the simplest and most effective method of accomplishing that result is to nominate McKinley electors. I believe in following that course. In a contest of this character I believe the people would prefer a direct to an indirect method of expressing their abhorrence of communism, Populism and anarchy. With Mr. Bryan and his socialistic programme disposed of, opposition to McKinley aiul McKinleyism would become the duty of the Democratic party. No organization which had indorsed Bryan could ever after be considered Democratic. If we are to have a Democratic party in the future, those who cherish its principles must be organized to take up the defense of them in city, state and nation the moment the so-called regular organizations join the Populistic forces. "These are my individual views and I have seen no reason to modify them nevertheless, I have no doubt that if a representative Democratic convention be assembled, whatever coarse it may decide to adopt will prove to be the wisest and best method of dealing with this crisis."
PATRIARCHS MILITANT.
Nntlonnl Cantonment Will Open In Buffalo Tomorrow Night. BUFFALO,
Aug.
4.—It
is expected that
there will be fully 6,000 swords at the cantonment of the Patriarchs militant, I. O. O. F., which will convene in this city this week. The national cantonment will not really begin before tomorrow night, but the hotels are already filling up. Nearly all of Thursday will be taken up in competitive drills, for which prizes are offered and for the best drilled chevalier or officer in each of the two classes. The prize money aggregates over $1,700. The local Cantons keep openhouse all the week.
J. Burning Houses of Christians. ATHENS,
Aug. 4.—The Mussulmans
shave burned 200 Christians houses in Itiie village of Kakodike in the province |of Selino, island of Crete, and it is feared that the Christians as a reprisal are burning the Mussulman villages. Hostilities have been resumed in various parts of Selino.
I Won't Accept a Reduction SHARON,
Pa., Aug. 4.—The furnace-
men of the Shenago Valley met here today and decided not to accept a reduction, in wages. Asa result all the fur-
1
naces will be banked.. About 400 men 'will be thrown out of employment.
Fntnl Cuban Windstorm.
HAVANA,
Aug.
4.—A
windstorm at
San Luis, province of Santiago de Cuba, demolished the barracks there, killing two guerilleros outright and burying seven others under the ruins. Five perI sons were killed by electricity.
TV r* -mm mm-
LA/uio iYiAirsi), rr:?
Attorney at Law
GENERAL INSURANCE.
Office
wiih Ristine_& liistlne. Booms 3 and 4 isher Building.
KDVORIS. MACSTILWELL.
Voris & Stilvvell.
(Established 1877)
RcpresontlUK 20 of the Oldest and Larpesl Hre, Life and Accident Iusurance c, Companies. Farm Loanaa Specialty Prompt and ISqult fWRrtA Settlement of Losses. Office 3d door north of Court House, Crawiord3Vllle, Tnd.
C. RICE. Solicitor.
GEORGE W. FULLER,:
Crawfordsville, Ind. Hreeder and Shipporof thoroughbred POLAND
CHINA hogs,B.P.Rooks, While Guineas and Fan Tail Pigeons. Stock and
1- Egtfs for sale. Eggs il.'J5 pnr la. Write your wauts.
C.W. BURTON ATTOENEY-AT-LAW
",,a
Offlce over Mat Kline's Jewelry stnir-.
w. K. WALLACE
ti1,e.Connecticut
7
Fire Insurance Co..
swYnlb CO.. Of
Of
1
a
iJif.-T ,11 l''(! Insurance Company, of I hilitdeiphla. London Assurance Corporation of M°chigan
11,1 HalMds Fire
I»suranco Co.*
Office in Joel Block with R. E. Bryant South Wash. St., Crawfordsville.
Albert W. Perkins AUCTIONEER.
Stock Sales a Specialty.
&.11 inquiries by mail or telegraph will receive prompt attention. Office with
A. S. CLEMENTS,
107 N. Green St. Cravvfordsqille, Ind. P. S.—Mr. Clements will receive orders and arrange for sales.
Free Feed Yard
I propose to add to my list of patrons and to retain my regular^customers at the
New Central Poultry House
And nave secured tbe use of a commodious feed yard in which all farm ers can hitch their teams in shelter..' free of charge, when they sell us their poultry and produce. Come around and see us and get acquainted.
Louis D. Beecher.
N. E. Corner Green and Market Sts. Headquarters for Montgomery County Produce.
I
II 6?
8 S 8 8 I
om Made
Powder I
Is the purest. You know
the ingredients without being told This safe baking powder can be had in 5c,. 10c and 20c cans at
1
V)
Dickerson & Truitt's I 8
Corner Grocery.
69 The Old Truitt Corner. fa
"Tell Them That You Saw Me"
•-•••-a
I keep a first class feed yard,. located across the street east of the new Ramsey Hotel, know how to please the farmers and that's why they feed with me. Try my yard just once. It will cost you nothing extra.
JOHN H. MOUNT
Successor to Chas. Hirst.
FARMERS!
-GO TO-
Music Hall Restaurant
For best square meal In the city for 20 CENTS. And also the best IS CENT lunch. Beef or fish, with two vegetables, pie, bread, bntter and coffee^ f'
And for IO CENTS, at luncli counter, beef or fish, potatoes, with bread, butter and coffee.
Lunchcs Served Between 11 and 2.
