New Richmond Record, Volume 5, Number 41, New Richmond, Montgomery County, 18 April 1901 — Page 5
Wm. Lynch and wife of southwest of Crawfordsville were Sunday guests of M. L. Claypool and wife.
It is rumored that certain of the elite of New Richmond wishing to lose no time sacrilegiously celebrated the peaceful passing of Lent by a progressive euchre party on Easter Sunday evening.
Envelopes with your name and address printed on then, 100 for 50c, 300 for $1, at the Record office.
To The Citizens of New Richmond....
Dr. H. E. Greene, specialist, Crawfordsville, treats all diseases of eye, ear, noseand throat. Glasses fitted.
Epworth League Anniversary at Sugar Grove May 12, given by Shawnee Mound and Sugar Grove Leagues. A tine program has been arranged, which will appear in our next issue. The Leagues will entertain at the schoolhouso with a basket dinner.
On account of the scarlet fever scare in town the production of the “Peak Sisters'’ by the order of the Rathbone Sisters has been indefinitely postponed, the date of its appearance to bo given later.
The Tippecanoe county court house too is to undergo extensive and much needed repairs this summer.
H?o« arc corbiallp invited to call anb sec
tbe ©ranb Exhibition of
•arpets U W VPER er bolt. ’ To Hang. ains i Pair. . iDES 15 cents.
Dry Goods, Jewelry and r Store.s3*^5^6
Is not New Richmond to have a Horse Show or some sort of a great big day during the early part of the summer?
New steel rails are now beig distributed along the Motion railroad, and will bo placed in position along the entire line from Morion to Louisville as rapidly ns the work can be done. —Ladoga Leader.
On account of the Free and Accepted Masons of Indiana., Grand Lodge, Indianapolis, Ind., May 2829, 1901, the Motion will sell excursion tickets Linden to Indianapolis and return at 82.15 for the round trip, tickets will be sold May 27th and 28th good returning to and including May 30th, 1901. Wanted —Trustworthy men and women to travel and advertise for old established house of solid financial standing. Salary §780 a year and expenses, all payable in cash. No canvassing required. Give reference and enclose self-addressed stamped envelope. Address Manager, 355 Caxton Bldg., Chicago. A petition was being circulated about town yesterday to which the signatures of the heads of families who saw the paper were affixed with a willingness, addressed to the state board of health asking its immediate action in absolute quarantine and the intervention against the scarlet fever epidemic. The date of Rev. Z. T. Sweeney’s lecture before the New Richmond Lecture Course has again been postponed from Wednesday evening, April 24, to Thursday evening, May 2, the change being made this time as a favor of a convenience in the behalf of Mr. Sweeney. He lectures on the evonof May 1 at Darlington and hence will be here on May 2 without fail.
Ipcmnsnlar BMamsheb Steel IRamjcs
Commencing Hpril I7tb, cloeing Hpril 20fb. «Xbc Greatest fuel Saving anb ©nidi Baking IRangca Ever flDabe. Bake on Oven 1Radi anb ©ven Bottom at same time. Shown in full ©peration. Balling buscuits in 3 or 4 minutes, free Itfcfresbments Serveb iDailp. Guarantee bonb given bp fiDahers with each IRange.
Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Hall of Wesley spent Sunday with their daughter, Mrs. J. C. Henderson, northwest of town.
Did You Ever try a week at French Lick for that tired feeling in the spring? Better than a wagonload of drugs. Five trains daily via the Morion Route. S. Ridlen, Agt., Linden, Ind,
The youngest child of Perry Coffman is seriously ill with scarlet fever—-the fifth case in that family with one death.
Tommy and Grace, the youngest children of Mr. and Mrs. James Withrow, have had the scarlet fever since last Saturday.
See the No. 9 Deere Corn Planter. Grain goes edgeways; perfect cut-off; no clogging at heel; always ready for drilling. Don’t fail to call and see the planter running at A. D. Snyder’s hardware store Saturday.
A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Calvin N. Wise, of :ilo east Fifth street, Peru, Ind., on Wednesday, April 10.
ms.
Seems rather late in the season to be laying in a supply of heavy clothing, but such seems to be the case with the thief who stole Charles Kirkpatrick’s $3.50 suit of winter underwear off the clothesline Monday night. W. W. Washburn, accompanied by two friends, Messrs, Tillotson and Stilwell of Crawfordsville, left Saturday night for a several days hunt at Lowell, Ind. Mr. Washbum returned Wednesday morning with sixty jacksnipes. Montgomery county has a poet who writes the stuff by the pound and peddles his verses about the Hoosier Athens like hominy and horse radish. His name is Elmore and he writes poems while his customers wait.—Frankfort News.
Bi- HAMILTON
Re (Satbeccb jfrom 3.«=®omfl0 of Idgbboro.
The Kingman Star came to Us last week in a brand new dress of type and changed from a five to a six column quarto sheet.
Furniture & Carpet Company,
Mike Foley of Crawfordsville spent Sunday at his old home in Coal Creek township and circulated anong friends hero on Monday. Seth Swank, of Elmdale, and Miss May Wilkinson were married last Thursday afternoon in Esq. Stilwell’s office in Crawfordsville.
622—628 East Main Street,
LAFAYETTE, INDIANA.
' time.
>u have visitors
ig the ads. in the
WE FURNISH THE HOME.
I a town election
Linden is organizing a new baseball nine under the name of the Merchants Baseball Club. The sum of $27 has been subscribed to its needs.
Third quarterly conference will be hold at the Sugar Grove Methodist church on April 20 and 21. Service at 3 p. m. Saturday and at 10:30 a. in. Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Davisson, a bride and groom of Easter Sunday, were Tuesday the guests of his sister, Mrs. John Phillips, and his uncle, W. S. Turvey.
Quarterly Conference will be held at Sugar Grove Saturday afternoon. Dr. Cissel, Presiding Elder, will preach at 3 o’clock and on Sunday morning at 10:30. Citizens of New Richmond take particular pride in the appearances of their homes and premises and scarcely a property holder but that is adding some imjyToveiifeits this spring. y* WOlftata Vincent and family ,.o/e to-day to LaFayette to reside and where Mr, Vincent assumes a position with the John B. Wagner & Co., wholesale confectioners.
The commissioners turn* accepted the plans and specifications of architect George Griffith for the improvement of the court house and have advertised for bids. The structure will be treated to a new roof, new chimneys and cornice, an exterior coat of paint and other improvements the estimated cost of the whole being from $5,000 to $7,000. -Crawfordsville News-Re-view.
Both ttie sites for Crawfordsville’s new Masonic Temple and Public Library, the latter for which Andrew Carnegie has given $10,000, has been selected for each side of south Washington street and on the north side of W’abash avenue.
NO SWEAT-SHOP J.ACOR.
T H E “S W E A T-S H O P”
Do you know what it is?
Dr. Kelsey and wife have gone to housekeeping in the W. S. Alexander property lately vacated by C. N. Boyland and family. Dr. Kelsey moved his dental office Monday from the Washburn block to the south room of his residence.
It is a squalid tenement house—op-i worse yet —a poverty-stricken apartment-l— j one room —in a squalid tenement house-— located in the poorest, dirtiest and most unhealthful precinct of a big city. It is a breeding pen for germs that carry contagion, disease and death. It is at once a kitchen, | a dining-room and a sleeping-room. Somt/times its occupants number four—and soyhetimes eight and ten—half-starved, emaciated men, women and children—and their principal employment is tailoring (?) piece-workers on garments sent them by tailoring houses and clothing manufacturers.
The Epworth League of the Sugar Grove Methodist church are arranging a spring lecture course. Their first date will be April 30Rev. A. C. Geyor, pastor of St. Paul’s church, LaFayette, on “The Young Man and His Mission;" the other by Rev. Davis of Craw--fordsville, subject “Napoleon,” sometime the latter part of May. Admission to both lectures, 25 cts. Single admission 15 cts.
Bible School will meet at 3 o’clock at the M. E, church on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons of each week. All that desjpi/'to ■'.ttond should bo this (Thursday) afternoon that all may beginT,: 'coursmjfof study at the same timeX..^^
The new church at Wesley is now assured, about $3,300 having already been subscribed. The committee have an architect now working on the plans and they will soon he before them for adoption. It is expected that the building will cost at least $1,000. The structure is to be of brick and will be supplied with all the modern church conveniences, and in every respect will be a model church, a compliment to the energy of the Wesley people.
A brick famine seems imminent and they are now hard to get anywhere. Crawfordsville with her Ojfie or two brick factories and prospects ot a couple more is out of them and work in many instances is said to be at a standstill for a lack of them.
S. S. Kirkpatrick asks all ers and horse fanciers to call at his farm northeast of town and see his eight head of fine pure-bred stallions, all of which will make the season at homo.
We breathe freer when we \ recall the fact that we sell tailoring made by The Royal Tailors, of Chicago—a vorld famous tailoring house—a house that employs no “sweat-shop” labor—a house earning on its entire business in a mammotlisanitary building on Chicago’s beautiful Michigan Boulevard. |
Some idea of the extent of the match company’s business here may be obtained from the statement that its pay roll this week was SI,400. This is twice as large ns the pay roll of the old wire factory that the trust gobbled.—Crawfordsville Journal.
Rumor has it that a new concrete sidewalk will shortly bo ordered built along the north side ot Tashington street from W. S. ■ander’s residence to the east don line. (
(Lj. . by a weak digestion, 3 of constipation, try few doses Chamberlain’s mach and Liver'\Tablets. Evbox warranted. iV&ySale by J. Hollin & Co., dniggistihv
OST —Between my homV-, at jnd Hill and the Vail sell! V nouse, about Thanksgiving time, a '* inch hay rope 160 feet long and Imost new. Finder will confer a ivor by reporting same to me. James D. Wilson.
On Sunday afternoon Will H. Hollin left his homo and went into his grocery store, l oc ked the door after him, that he might there enjoy his afternoon cigar undisturbed. A little later two young ladies, Misses Grace White and Mima Patton, were passing the store and saw that Mr Hollin had fallen to the floor and they gave the alarm. While in the store Mr. Hollin suddenly became ill and started for the open air but fell to the floor just before reaching the door. Ed. King, life grocer derk was sent for, the store was opened and Mr. Hollin was carried into his home where he wasf oll , u j lo l|e suffering greatly from congestion of the stomach. He was much better yesterday.
We have just received from th| house nearly six hundred exquisite pattrns in Spring and Summer Suitings of Fortin and Domestic Weave.
GeorgeGobon of Linden on Monday witli a largo force of workmen began the work of putting down the new concrete sidewalk on Franklin street. Mr. Goben has the contracts for putting in the greater part of the walks of the ■'tiro length of this street.
Something to please everybody!— cut to individual measurements—for botlmen and boys —at the lowest prices ever Aoted for high grade merchant tailoring. Royal Tailoring is good and wholdfne/ and is sold under a guaranty which irtfir perfection of style, fit and workmanshij THE BIG STORE/ Claypool & Fry, NEW RICHMOND;'
X. Morning Journal: The hcispe of Dr. S. L. Baugh, near FtflHper’s Institute, was slightly damage! by fire Saturday afternoon, The#imes started in a smoko house at tnS, rear of the house and spread to thCkroof of the kitchen. Dr. Baugh his way to the city at the time the fire was discovered. The neighbors
Oq account of the I. O. O. F. rraittd Lodge and Rebekah As,6tnbls| T Indiana, Indianapolis, Vlay 2t)tb-23rd the Monon will sell tickets, Linden to Indianapolis and return : at S1.60 for thelround trip, tickets will be sold Maiy 20tb, 21st and 22nd good returning to and including May24, 1901.1
hurried to the assistance of the" family and the flames were extinguished before much damage was done.
