Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 25 February 1895 — Page 2

THE BANNER TIMES, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, MONDAY FEBRUARY ‘J5 18B0

Now

IS

Youp Ghancc:

But once in a lifetime do you have the opportunity to save as many BIG $ $ S as y ou now ^ iave at ^ ie A/or/o/. liH -' in Am0,

What Town Topit s TMnks,

I The editorial writer in the Town

Koiiiift uinirr Ttti> Hhiki, Topics, Oi Sew \ork, hns the iol* Charley Broad street spent Sun- lowing about the soldiers’ iimnu-

SHORT CUTS FOR IT.

some of Hie I>est Newn of tli«* Day to he*

ment racket at Indianapolis:

These reductions are disastrous to us but a great saving for Hon. J. R. East, of Bloomington, M . , j!j ! ! , , , , ‘ l ,'S ,U an. l r’ 1 thT 1 i-onin.i'ttee'

you. Choice of all Si 5.00. S18.00, S20.00 and $22.00 Suits, is here today,

in Sacks, Regent brocks and Prince Alberts for Clarence Vestal is in Brazil to-

, day buying horses.

SI 2.50 Choice of $15.00, $iS.oo, i20.oo and $25.00 Overcoats for

J £

clim^ii of the ludianapnlig soldiers’ : monument, the authorities may lie I technically right, but the sculptor is | i certainly riglit artistically. The contract from which Mr. MucMounies has

Miss Ethel Arnold is quite sick withdrawn calls for groups of “War” with catarrhal feyer. ! ll,,u > belie ) ,e th “ l t '“‘ ,,,0 . n I u -

ineut is ninsneu except on the two 8iu«*s

Capt. Jesse Lee, of Chicago, is to be oeciipied hy these groups. Mr. ... . . . MacMonnitvs wished to substitute u

visiting relatives here.

“■*2.50

S9

38 50

&12 50 Suits and Overcoats for 10 00 Suits and Overcoats for 7 50 Suits and Overcoats for 5 ^3 Many Overcoats and Suits for $2, $2.50, $2.75, $3

and $4.

Pants at almost half price. Our 60 cent and 75 cent unlaundried shirts Q 0^ still going at MODEL - Clothing - House.

This space will be taken by GEO. E. BLAKE, INSURANCE and LOANS.

DAILY BANNER TIMES

Published every afternoon except Sunday •it the Hannj-.h Times olliee, corner Vine and

Erdtikliu streets.

ADVERTISING. Kkadino Notices

5 cents per line. < >ne line paragraphs charged

as occupying two lines space.

•-"» lines 4 cents per line 80 *• 9H 100 “ :l “ ** “ 2.vi “ 2*4 “ ** “ oOtt ** 2 Oisp’Hy rates made known on application.

lion and advertising and our efforts of eighteen months are now being appreciated. The daily has come to stay and to die posted on local and general news you should Itaye it ivgul'irly. You see in it the best local bargains in business snaps. It’s but ten cents per week. There was a “private car” of a high official 'n the L. «fc N. wreck Saturday in Alabama. This fashion of having private cars of officials in railroad wrecks is a pretty good arrangement, and the more of them, especially the high officials who get jolted up, the fewer wrecks there will lie.

They Die Hard.

On the debate matter the Bloomington World climbs down off its cellar door as follows: “The decision of the judges was made entirely on argument. Had it been made on oratory and rhetoric, the result of the debate would have unquestionably been different. The burden of the speeches made by representatives of Del’auw was the public hatred of monopolies em bodied in the present railway sys. tern. The debate was maintained abiy on both sides. One of the

ci.a'i.t'c'* n>rdisplay wivertiseim-nts muni t>o 1 nidges said afterward that I. U.

huiiiied in by 10 o’clock n. in. eachdity. Head- j u

ing tulvcrt !<«mu *nts will be received each day bad tile beet of it

up t > 1 o’clock o. in. 1

ings at College Avenue church. Miss Etta Henry, daughter of Congressman Henry, returned to her home at Anderson yesterday after a very pleasant visit with Misses Nona and Arta Smythe. The Woman’s League of College Avenue church will meet in the church parlors at 2:30 p. m. Wed nesday, Feb. 27. Isaac Watts and his hymns will he discussed. All

are cordially invited.

Wlierodelivery w ivrejfiilnr nleiiBe report ' sun Another. Two varieties of telenhones are naino promptly at publication office. ! a wo vat idles 01 u.iepnom s aie

•Alinn tVl. Kl\ in VS. John llionii 8 OH tri*!.! ('nonor

Specimen copies mailed free on application. , ... Oil trial at i ooper 15F08. rms 0.

| Hivin is the

RATES Or SUBSCRIPTION

One Tear in advance Si.r month* Three months.

One month 50 Per week by Carrier 10

until Mr. Mur-

ray's last speech, hut sulllce it, ‘We

we are

All communications should be signed with

thenarneof the writer: not necessarily 1'or have met the enemy ULul

pubiioition, but as '’videuce of good faith.

Anonymous communications can not be no- theirs.’ ’

ticod.

Mrs. Geo. W. Campbell, of Leba non, visited his daughter here over

Sunday.

President Swain, of Blooming ton, was in the city a few hours yesterday. Mrs. John O'Brien is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Dr. Milliken, in Oieenfield. John W. Layne was called to Terre Haute yesterday by the illness of his sister. John Morris came down from Indianapolis Saturday to see the ‘Tin Soldier,” and spend Sunday with his parents. Mr. S. Keeney, of Terre Haute, made a hying trip yesterday to visit friends who were visiting here over Sunday. John Trischer, of Terre Haute, quartermaster sergent 1st regiment, was in the city Saturday evening, the guest of Capt. Fee. Mrs. W. If. Dodd, of Lebanon, will arrive this afternoon to spend a few days with her parents, Mr. and Misses Al. Ilibben. Will Mooney went to Indianapo

group to be oiled “Navy” for tbe ‘ Peace” group. He pointed out to the committee that the monument is inscribed “To Indiana's Silent Heroes.” This includes the navy, of course. He told the committee that “a group representing‘Peace’ will weaken the inonu merit, is trite as a subject, and lacks the originality that a navy combat would have. A group of soldiers returning would he too much of a repetition, in detail, of the 'War' group; while a ‘Navy’group would afford a magniticent plan in arrangement and detail, of vast interest, differing entirely from the other side, uno still in harmony with it.” The committee would not listen to Mr. MacMonnies. It is bound to have the ''Peace” group or p> rish. The committee lays great stress upon the fact that most of our soldiers in the Civil War were volunteers, who returned to their homes when their term of .service expired or at the end of war. What of it? .So do regular soldiers return to their homes, if they have anv, at the end of their terms of enlistment, unless they choose to re-enlist. The committee is simply the victim of the conventional idea in soldiers’ monuments. It wants a man in one of those ugly old soldier cape overcoats kissing his wife at the dooi of an English cottage while his mother has both hands crossed over a large crutch, and her eyes raised devoutly to heaven. Little VVillie, who must he barefoot and shock-headed, in sprinting in the middle distance on his way to go and tell grandpa, who i< bent nearly double over a plow drawn by two consumptive steers in the background to the right. Fourteen children of assorted -izes and ages are clambering out of a I'leni

Carpet and Kui!: Sale! To make room for our spring purchases we place 0:1 sale our elegant stock of carpets, art squares, rugs, etc., at the following prices: CARPETS. Kxtra super all wool ingrain carpets, including Lowells, worth 70 to 75 cents go at. • r, 7 l 7 cents Extra all \v<> 1 carpets worth 00 and 05 cents for 52cents 50 and 55 cent all wool carpi ts will be sold now at dg l ._, cents 40 and 45 cent carpets 36 cents 35 cent carpets for 27J 2 cents 25 cent carpets for 1!) cents

RUGS.

$5 On Smyrna rug- for

ft.'l 87

4 (M)Smyrna rugs

2 98

3 on Smyrna rugs

2 13

2 00 Smyrna rugs

1 56

1 25 Smyrna rugs

98

1 00 Smynia rugs

79

5 IK) Moqiictte rugs for

8 59

3 50 Moqiictte rugs

2 37

1 25 Moquet.te rugs

98

2 75 and 3 On fur rugs

2 19

ART SQUARES. Large size ingrain, fringed. $4 50 Art Squares for $3 03 5 (K) Art Squares 3 87 6 00 Art Squares 4 OS 0 00 Art Squares 0 ^7 HASSOCKS 75 cent Hassocks for 50 cents ?1 00 Hassocks 70 cents 1 25 Hassocks 08 cents

The above prices are for cash down. Our assortment is good, handsome, new patterns, and these prices will make them go. so come quickly. Our new Spring Dress Goods are coining in and you will find our store brim full of Bargains. The D. Langdon Co.

Studebaker wagon on the left. Rose,

lis yesterday afternoon, where lie , the yellow dog. i- frolicking at his ma-

ter’s heels. Hens, pigs, trees, apple

will wotk upon the looks of the llumbarger Live Stock company

for a few days.

Rev. J. K. Newhouse spent Sunday at Salem filling the pulpit for Rev. Southerlin of the Presbyterian church, v ho is engaged in a revival meeting on the Ohio river.

blossoms, encumber pumps and other dome-tic delicacies may he worked in according to the taste and fancy of the stone-cutter. It is an excellent plan to insert a lamb or two a< a s\ mhol of peace. In Indianapolis, however, this would not be feasible, as the majority of the Indiatiopolitans hold that free wool has killed all the lambs in the country. The main thing is that vi-it-ors to tndianapidis shall be able to look

It was announced yesterday that; T'Tf a branch of Gen. Bootli s Salvation eonnnisseurship, “That’s a prettv g«d- , , . , darned good job of stone-ciittin’.” Array would visit this city tomor-

row and open a series of meet- i

title of a suit for di-

^jVorce filed by Attorney S. A Hays -'*1 this morning. The complaint states the}' were married in 1881 and separated in February 1895; failure to provide and dissipation are alleged against the defendant ana the plaintiff claims she had to earn her own living; that her husband

her and has

i struck choked and abused her, setThose who understand the art of; ting out specifically an occurrence advertising invariably succeed and ° n Saturday night last. The plainamass a fortune. There is not a tiff asks the custody of the children

When delivery is made by carrier, all subscription accounts arc to be paid to them as

they call and receipt for same.

M. J. BECKETT Publisher HA KEY M. SMITH. Manajnnir Editor

Address all communications to

The Daily Banner Times. i . , Greencastle, Ind. i abuses aim curse*

—Leona May aged 11, Minnie Ethel aged 10, and Thomas Claude aged 4 years, a divorce, and that she have judgment for $500 ali-

single exception to this rule. Advertising, to lie successful, should not he spasmodic and intermittent, but continuous. There is no such

word as fail

vertiser. Should he expect his re j support of said chiiuren and that i r. G. Fry made a good Capt. Fee suits from a single advertisement | plaintitf he restained from dispos-1 an( ] p re( ] Chittenden a good Dr.

V i. I . 7 ! ‘ . ...... . . —.

fice, having been sent here to he tested by the Greencastle Telephone company. One is made by an Indianapolis company, and the other by a Pana, 111., firm. Both

are good boxes.

The “Tin Soldiers” on Saturday evening was well put on consider ing the work was that of amateurs. { ^ ^ Wilbur Starr was the author of the drama, which was a burlesque on the celebrated Cannelburg campaign of last June, in which Com pany I enjoyed a picnic in the woods on state pay. Mr. Starr, aside from being the author, was. in the character of Rastus, the j colored cook, the star ol the play.

Efl. Miftridan’ft Mission. Chioairo Inter Ocean.

N. Fred Pfeifer, the greatest, cleanest and cleverest second base man m America,blacklisted recently for alleged treason to the national agreement, arrived in Chicago yesterday from New Orleans and Louisville. Pfeifer will leave for New York on Monday, probably, to attend the meeting of the league schedule committee, before which body the petition for his reinstatement will be placed. The petition now consists of nearly 20,000 names, every name representing a base ball crank and patron. With Pfefier will go Mr. Edward Sheridan, of the Record, who has been selected by Fred’s friends to present the monster memorial.

Brazil has an extra $125 in their library fund and the author! are contemplating spending the whole amount on “Trilbys.”

Health All Gone Unequal to Family Duties—No

Appetite

Hood’s Sarsaparilla Cave Strength

and Courage to Work.

to the persistent ad-j mr > n y an d $30 per month lor the j f urn jghj n g t| ie fun and the music.! even about the house to Rttend to lion;>-=-

hold duties and care for my chil-

Want to Know About It.

There are about one hundred fellows in Greencastle who go up against a raffle at every opportunity they get that want to know about their latest venture. A stranger drove in here about two weeks ago with a horse and a sleigh, and put up with Charley Cooper. He soon offered his horse at raffle, and the gallant one hundred stacked up against the arrangement with an avidity that, no doubt, surprised the gentleman. As the Banner Times hears it, the follow has the money, and last week drove out one fine day with his horse and sleigh and is still out. He was to return last week, and on Saturday Air. Cooper said he thought he would return, but th's morning the outfit ts still out. The holders of the tickets want to know about it. If the man, horse and sleigh combine is coming back, they will be satisfied; but if not, they are wre paring to emit a roar that will be a daisy. It is said that the court l house crowd bought heavily of the !

T!

if) Docks are Here.

)rs

j.

•y ani ilUllaii

stock.

One sport said to the

Times that he was now in two uncertain rattles. That a Greencastle citizen began selling chances on a watch several weeks ago, and still 1 has the watch, money and chances; that he steadily persists in having ing no drawing, and laughingly tells the speculators to gel even on the horse deal and then call on him. Surelv, the way of the

chance taker is hard.

The Well Known Opticians, 1126 X. Penn. St. Indianapolis, Ind

Formerly of Chicago.

At the Commercial hotel, can b • eoni suited free of charge in regard to the

] adjustment of

Spectacles and Eye Glasses.

M is, sick.

South Oreencngtle. Payne (colored)

>r laitM rr, " loirn'iison, i> .aiiiu;?\ y. N A Alien, Miss K Mayes, C II Tat Itiley, C H Bashtorl, < Owens, C , i M Kelsey ami wife, M J < anine,

today

A new armature arrived for the electric light plant.

Today is pay day at Cole Bros. Old “Button,” the faithful family horse of J. W. Cole’s, while making the rounds of the electric lamps this morning, as it does every morning of the year, had a severe fall, which cam * very near being disastrous to both horse and driver, Stewart. Some say that Mr. Stewart turned on too much current in

turning the corner.

it is no more reasonable than a man would be to expect favorable results from taking down his shutters one day in a month and keeping them dosed the remainder, or than a man who shrouds his signs of business except on particular days, nnd for long intervals of time.

We have had several calls for extra copies of the daily Banner Times of the issue of February IB, which contained a wiite up and poetry selection of the 21st anniversary of the Woman’s club. Notwithstanding we requested orders for extra copies and printed a large number of extras the edition is exhausted. These calls come, several of them, from non-subscribers, who are continually missing a good thing by not taking the daily regularly. The Banner Times placed in your hands every evening is an investment that you should not overlook. The paper is now en joying a rapid bcotu in subscrip-

mg oT nhy of his properly pending

the suit.

ITtiHe Tom Coming, The next attraction at the opera house will be Stowe & Co.’s Uncle Tom’s Caf'in. It lias been over a year since Uncle Tom has appeared here, and during this long interval the house has been without any Uncle Tom. Numerous companies have offered to produce this play, bit the management has refused them all, because none were consid ered of sufficient merit to suit the critical taste of our theatre-goers. The company hooked to appear here Friday, March 1, comes well recommended by press and public. They carry thirty five star artists, white ami colored. A pleasing street parade is given at noon on Friday. Just received, a nice lint* of late style jewelry, which I shall be pleased to show. H. S. VVerneke. ]0!)-0t

Brown. Will Graham acted Char ley nil right and Hubert Jordan showed Homer Jones’ stem character. The other characters were of a minor nature and what little to he done was well done. Jimmy ! Kelly and Johnny Stillwell were two fair Cannelburg belles, but “Saphead,” a reporter, wasn’t given show enough. A reporter generally cuts more of a dash than did DeCoverly, or else he isn’t much of a reporter. As Rastus Mr. Starr did the part well, his singing and coon acting bringing out much applause. The play was short and was over by 9:30. The battleship fund re-

ceived a handsome sum.

Subscribe for the Banner Times

dree end family. 1 iiui not nave the atrengt hof a child. I waH treated by several physicians, who prononneed my troable Scrofula and Female Weakness. I could est only a slice of bread and drink a cup of tea, three times a dav. Home-

Mr». John Haw time* I could stand Oran, N. Y. a soft boiled egg tor dinner. I became reduced to skin and bones; at last they had to draw me abont the house seated In a rocking chair. I was in a terrible state when my husband, having noticed advertisements of Hood’s

Sarsaparilla

food’s

Cures

After Wanting Disease*.

Greencastle, Ind., Jan. 21, 1895.— I have taken Hood's Sarsaparilla for a tired and run down system and 1 received more benefit from it than from any other medicine that I have ever taken. I recommend Hood's Sarsa-

parilla to any one recovering from fever can go up stairs easily. I or other wasting diseases. enough in praise ofJdoqd’sjB* Addison Hkbkr.

Hood’s pills eute biliousness, indi- Hood’s PillsuV.^AilTiS'glsu? 1 ^:

Sarsaparilla, urged upon me to give It trial. After taking

one bottle I received sufficient benefit to know that I had at last found the right medicine. I have now taken several bot-

tles and am able to

Attend My Housework.

In fact, I am on my feet about all day, nnd

I To suit lh<* sight. Don't tall to consult o« B l n N KI * i allow! you I* i *y os. Wo are enabled to tell oil ' ' on Ihctli-sl ‘.xamiimtion any ailment of your raillmi sight and iriveyou glasses to sufr the defect ami strengthen the eyesight of the old and young. *Ve have made the adaptation of spectacles a sp end study. Regular grad nut s of leading Ophthalmic Institutions and more than twelve years of practical experience, enables us to correct scientifically and practically the most complicated cases of defective

vision.

Artificial Eyes Inserted. If you have lost an eye be sure to call on us

'We will Inset t an artificial one which will

look and move lik * tin* natural eye. 1 RAW FOltDsVlLI.E HKFKIUaNX'ES, K<*v. l> Bflrtluyund wife. Dr. Davidson, A.

P. Mahorney, Win Martin. John Iveent y. Rev G }* Kiinon ami wife, Mr« Lc Reeder,.I‘Lyons. V. ( urlcs, M Tall'< rt, W Tomenson. L Miller,

M Insle). ton, C R j Grimes, l

. I (’ H "hoe. L Boris, M Bennett, A R llolie!i#kCj UItC worth and wife. Q W Robinson, W K Turk \, A J Pullenwider, !•’.1 Moore. M T Austin, A • lemmons, M >tookdale, T A Martin, W s Constancer, W Davis, ii N Marshall, d W i Bioss, 0 M Ball, M ^ninek, ( W Moore and wife, J Sullivan, L «) Dillumn, S Bojree, AS Holbrook, J Grimes, YV s Fry, < II Green;, .1 Goyl, M «>rr. Miss N Holbrook. A Burch, A Singer, J Kile, VV Holden, N A Wallace. L K Benson; C Hutton. A () Hoover, A Jones, Miss D Benson, Mrs. A Munres, l. F.lmore. L A /.eijrler, L Vickery, Mrs I Richardson, Jno Mc< aleb, J (1 < A ortoi, D Harter, D W Gerard, L M Martin, (’ W Lltzroth, S M Harter. F M Linn, Mrs Will Martin, L Kmtlnke, D A Reed, Murv Ensminger, Laura Davidson. E A Seolt, DW Hartman, It Meyer, Dora C hamberlin. M TSnider, A It Thomas, PT Bell, W B Lyle and Wife, F A VannosdalL S < Ballard, CJ Lydirk, Is G Courtney, Jaa Williams. L p Wesson, R II Wtaltted, M Thompson. E steel, s a Warblmon. Mrs T Schweitzer, U M >eott. M Mitchell, ( ora Shirley, I) H .Martin, H II Crist, Jacob Horner, II H .lows. J N Vansleklo, Mrs W Robb. A M Griffith, Mrs.) K Daley, H M Harter, MGs Annie Keeney, GW Brown, Will Bryant, R M < iirmiw. \V K Kelso, and wife, M M Vunoleve, T Albrijrht, J W Lav son. 7L F. A'!/; , , x Mo is. Miss Iri V oopiT. T ) I*ehr, .J G MeMurtrv, P W Gunner, .T/ih M ‘ < r. , Jr:«’5, YS i Lvck., L G Autbro***,

May Ayer. K .1 Baldwin.

Offire at. COMMERCIAL HOTEL

■Will Remain until

FRIDAY, MARCH 1st, 1894.

/Joyou know what this rojxrosonfa:-* lr. i* one of tin* new Improved rubber soles attached to the Ih.Uoih of a shoe. P.R. CHRISTIE sells them. Price 50c put on, 35c de- , inched. 118-2w

cannot say

enough in praise or Hood's Sarsaparilla.’’ Mrs. John Hase, Box 92, Oran, N. Y.

DORMITORY. RILL OF FARR FOR TOMORROW. Lettuce. Celery. Soup consomme Mixed sweet pickles. French mustard Tomato catsup. Roast beef. Drip gravy. Spring lamb a la poulette. Mashed potatoes. Sauer kraut with salt. pork. Home-made mince pies. Brown bread Crackers. Cream loaf. Honey. Sassafras tea. Green ten. Java coffee. Sweet milk Rates, $2.50 per week. Breakfast, 7 a. m; dinner, 12:30; supper, 6:30. Breakfast, Sundays. 8 a. m. Dinner bill of fare will appear each day. 110-4 w

Certain Jones’ Cough Syrup. Mild Jones' Little Cathartic Pills. Effective Jones’ Toilet Cream. Pure Jones’ Baking Powder. Best JONES’ DRUGS.