Bloomington Courier, Bloomington, Monroe County, 10 September 1895 — Page 2

If you Don't Trade At Wicks' Bee Hive you Ought to - IT PAYS

THE WEEKLY COURIER

BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA NEWSPAPER FOR EVERY FIRESIDE. PUBLISUED BY ttKAVtggS liltOTUERS. Or'KlCE IK MAY BUILDING TERMS OF SUBSCRIP1ION. BY MAIL POSTAGE PREPAID. One year $1.00 Six months 59 Three months 5 Singk copy 05 The following persons have authority to receive subscriptions, and transact all other business for The Courier: Stinesville - - Miss Jane Staley Ellettsville - - - 1). C. Miller (Jnionville - - - VV. H. Kerr Smithville - - Theo. Thrasher THE MORNING WORLD BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA, Published every morning, except Sunday. JOHN W. AND OSCAR H. CRAVENS, Editors and Proprietors. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. By Carrier Bloomingtoa and Suburbs. One Year ?3 00 Six Months 1 SO Three Montis 75c One Month.,.. c One Week 9c Weekly Edition, 1100 per year. Entered at the post office atBlooming'on, Indiana, as second-classmatter. Mrs. T. L. Gregory has gone to Indianapolis on business. James Millen made a business trip to Indianapolis yesterday. Dr. and Mrs. Swain are at home from a pleasant trip to West Baden. A. O. Henry is visiting relatives and friends at Crawfordsville this weeK. Mr. and Mrs. James Karsell have returned from a week's visit at West Baden. The Monon handled 466 loaded cars last week as against 390 the proceeding year. W. C. Snyder, Ex-County superintendent of Washington county, is up from Salem for a few days: Mrs. Lou Hetyon and Mrs. A. K. Helton are at Michigan City, the guests of Lewis Helton and family. The new M. E. church on West 8th street will be dedicated next Sunday. Dr. Haktead will have charge of the services. Waldo Vanzandt has returned from his vacation at Indianapolis. It is needless to say that he enjoyed himself during his outing. THE NEW AMERICAN NICKLE CETRE-DRAFT LAMPS ARE JUST THE THINGS FOR STUDENTS' R O O MS, AT LINDLEY'S. T. H. Willis and wile, are attending the encampment at Louisville and visiting their daughter, Mrs. Fred. T. Brown in New Albany this week. The Local Union of Cii-istian Endeavor will meet at the Christian church Tuesday evening at seven o'clock. All Endeavorers urged to attend. John Brogan, stone mason on the new Hinkle building, came near receiving a serious injury yesterday. A piece of timber fell and struck him jusj above the eye, making a bad cut. Claude Malott, of Indianapolis, spent Monday with friends in Bloomington. Mr. Malott is enroute to Washington, where he will teach science in the high school the coming year. Dist. Attorney Ed Corr returned to Indianapolis yesterday. The Coffin Bank wrecking case came up in the Federal Court this morning which will demand his entire attention the remainder of this week. Mrs. Eva M. Dillon opened her dress making establishment in the new Allen block yesterday morning, and before 5 o'clock in the afternoon she had taken in twenty dresses. Her force will make fifteen dresses each week.

Uncle Tom tonight.

Big Parade promptly at noon today. Mose St. Clair is doing Louisville this weeek. Ed Tourner is now employed in tha Kirby grocery. Miss Lizzie Reister is the guest of New Albany friends. Mrs. T. H. Willis is visiting in New Albany this week. Major Perry is at Louisville doing camp work this week. Mr. and Mrs Henry C. Ithorer are visiting Louisville relatives. Miss Dessie Bruner is at New Albany visiting friends this week. Capt. W. B. Hughes and wife are at Louisville taking in the encampment. Frank Miller is viewiug the sights of the large city of Louisville this week. Mrs. Mike Volpert is spending the week in Louisville and New Albany. Miss Sarah Carr i visiting friends at Louisville and New Albany this week. Mrs. Elizabeth Coffin returned from a visit to Indianapolis relatives yesterday. Robert McMicheal is spending the week with New Albany and Louisville friends. Gen. M. C. Hunter left yesterday for Louisville and Will attend the encampment this week. .Misses Kate Clemens and Irene Bates of Lafayette are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wood Wiles. Mrs. S. V. Hays and little daughter left last night for Bloomington to stay until the diphtheria scare is over. Bedford Democrat. Perry Harris will go to South Carolina to spend the winier. He is in poor health and hopes that the climate will benefit him greatly. Mrs. D. W. Brandt, of Hopeville Ga., who has been visiting her sister, Mrs, John Hunter, in Bloomington for several weeks, has returned to Bedford and is the guest of Miss Mate Palmer. Bedford Democrat. W. A. Coons of New Albany, is doing extra dispatcher work for the Monon this week. There being so many trains it requires the service of competent men for the work and Mr. Coons was among the three selected.

Cheap Meat and Groceries. For young, tender Beef, go to Soucler Meat and Grocery Co. 12 lbs. for a dollar.

You can get 18 lbs. of Granulated

one dollar. By taking a strip of thin side meat, 15 or 18 lbs., you get it for 9c. a, pound at S. M. & G. Co., cor. 4th and College Avenue. You can get a bushel of corn from the S. M. & G. Co. for 50c. You can get one pound, or as many as you want, of the best steak in the beef at 10c. per lb. You can get 32 oz. of Ohio full cream cheese at the S. M. & G. Co. for 25c. The S. M. & G. Co. handle Collins & Karsell's and Dill & Co.'s flour and it will pay you to buy of them. You can get 100 lbs. of nice, clean, new oats for one dollar of the S. M. & G. Co. The best Bologna Sausage for 10c. per pound at S. M. &Co.'s store. A large willow clothes basket for 50c. at S. M. & G. Co. Only a few left.

Butter, Eggs and Chickens at the S. M. & G. Co. till you can't rest. The S. M. & G. Co. is not in business for fun, but a small profit on first-class goods. Everything gotten from the S. M. & G. Co. is guaranteed as repre

sented or money refunded. White House Imporsed Castile Soap 10c. per cake at the S. M. &G.C0. Remember the S. M. & G. Co.'s goods were selected and bought for

cash from one of the best houses in the country by an old experienced hand at the business. Souder Meat and Grocery Co, SARAH SOUDER, Prop. O. SOUDER, Manager

P. B. Willoughly is visiting ti

family of W. H. Fogg. Levi and Fr-d Butman arc here' from Bedford to en'er echool. Nat and riiillip Hill have returned from a visit to brazil friends ' and relatives. ! Mrs. Emma Ryors and childn n 1 have returned from a pleasant visit to Loganpport friends. I. Milt Rogers will assist Joseph 1 Woodward as treasurer until he gets the "hang of the thing." W. L. Bur well has purchased two choice lots in Kenwood and will erect a handsome residence at once. Norman Andrews of Arkansas city, is visiting home folks this week. He is engaged in Civil engineering in that city. The Board of county commissioners adjourned yesterday afternoon until December. There was not much business transacted this term and the term was put in, in allowing bills and inspecting public buildings. Special excursion trains from Greencastle on the north to Bedford on the south every day the Big Bloomington Fair, reaching Bloomington in the morning and returning after the fair is over in the evening. A special train, handflomely decorated will be run from Chicago" to day. The train will carry the Lawler Post, a famous G. A. R. organization. It leaves Chicago at 7.30 this morning and will be due at Kirkwood Avenue station at 3:50. Traveling Auditor Carter, of the Monon, says this train will be a thing of beauty and a joy forever. The accomodation train will be ruu as a special excursion from Gosport, Wednesday. The heavy travel for the G. A. R.'s at Louisville compels the Monori to put every coach in service. The traLi men all sleep Under orders at the Louisville depot so that they may hold themselves in readiness fof emergency . Remember the Glee Club, Old College Chapel, Friday evening. This will be the best concert of the year. The members of the club have been under special training for from five to teven years, and their voices are simply Unexcelled. Thev have had considerable ex perience before the public, and their success has been great. This is a rare opportunity to hear de lightful music, and excellent read ing, at popular prices. You can't afford to miss it. Tickets at Faris Bros.' and Bruce and McGarey's. 1 t. Sugar from the S. M. & G. Co. for

AYER'S Hair Vigor Prevents BALDNESS

REMOVES DANDRUFF AND ca Restores Color to Faded and Gray HAIR THE Best Dressing The marriage of Mi?s Anna Thrasher to Mr. Richard B. Brine gar will occur at the Baplisl churen at SHanfjrtl, tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock. The ceremony will be performed by the Rev. William Neeld. Tbe Indianapolis DAILY & WEEKLY SENTINEL Circulation has reached immense proportions by its thorough service iu receiving all the latest news all over the State and from its dispatches from foreign countries. Every reader in Indiana should take a State paper and that THE SENTINEL. LARGEST Gl lOULATION Ot Any Newspaper IU THE STATE TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Daily, one year $6 co Weekly, one year. ..... 1 00 Sentinel and Courier . . , 1 50 The Weekly Edition Has Twelve Pages Subscribe NOW and make all remittances to INDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL CO.. Indianapolis, ind. The Semi-Weekly Courier will' be furnished with the Weekly Edition of the INDIANA STATE SENTINEL for 11 50 cash. Homer E. Strain DENTIST Prepared for all kinds of Dental Work Office in MtOco THcclc, South Side. Indana NOTICE. All persons owing accounts for meat will please call at the Audi tor's office and settle at once. I have left all my books and ac counts there. J. M Hinkle. Awarded Highest Honors World's Fair. DR CREAM MOST PERFECT MADE. A pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. Fre from Ammonia, Alum or any other adulterant, 40 YEARS THE STANDARD.

mm

1 V "4. S

After THREE MONTHS

of Daily Wear This Collar Is Still in Good Condition. That,sbecauseit'sthe"CBX.COi.oiD" Collar. Its original cost was 25 cts., and it cost the wearer nothing afterwards lo keep It eleatii When soiled, simply wipe eff Willi Sponge or wet clout: .. These collars and cuffs ore water' proof, and are the only waterproof goods juade with an interlining of un?n ; therefore the only ones that can last and give absolute satisfaction . Every piece of the genuine is stain pea as follows: - TRADe S ELWLoin Refas anything fe , not so marked; and if your dealer has not got the right kind send direct to us, enclosing amount, and we will mail you a sample postpaid. Collars 25 cts. each. Cuffs 50 cts. pair. Give size, and slate whether stand-up or turned-down collar is wanted. THE CELLULOID COMPANY, 437.39 Broad war, NEW YORK. How I l Done It takes eighty men and women to make a postage stamp. First the white paper is cut in sheets, each large enough for a hundred stamps. The stamps on each sheet are counted twenty six times to make sure they are correct. The printer counts and pa. ses the sheets to the gummei; the gummer gums the back, and having counted, gives them t the perforator, who divides the stamps by rows of little holes, not forgetting to count". W. N. Showers, Pres'i

WALL MEfetlNG

THE BIG BLOOMINGTON FAIR

Sept. U, 25, 26,

Thn Rdd flnrl Pa aloef Rotfulatmn Ha Oil p. Trar.k In Indiana.

As all Horsemen Know, Money Paid

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These Elegant New Barns Guaranteed or no Entry Fee Charged. 50 Box stalls, 12 ft. square. Water-works Connection to each barn PROGRAM.

Wednesday, Sept. 25. 3:00 Trot $250.00 2:40 Pace 250.00 Thursday, Sept. 26 2:30 Pace $300.00 2:23 Trot 300;00 Free-for-all Pace 300.00 Ruu, 43 furlong and repeat 100.00

CONDITIONS. Entrance fee 5 per cent, of purse, and 5 per cent, additional from win-

ners. American Association rules.

4 to start. Distancing horse one money only. Money divided 50, 25,

15 and 10 per cent., runs 3 monies. served to start races between heats, gram, aua absolute control ot &peeu Sept.

Entries Close Krlday, September 20. C. R. WORRALL, Seo'y. Bloomington, Ind.

Th Fal lei. Take a walk throucrh a CeineV.

tervj says a contemporary end you will pass the last resting place of the marl who blew into the muzzle of a gun to see it it VitS loaded. A little futher down the slope is buried the crank vili:i tried to show how close he could pass in front of a moving train. fn ctmltinnr nH-inf tmit cart llin modest monument of the lured giil who started the fire with kerosine, and the grass covered knoll th.t covers what is left of the boy who put a com cob under a mule's tail. The tall shaft of the man who blew out th rrnn of the boy who tried to jump a a. r - o ' ti t moving tram, oiae oy siae the etheral creature who always had her corset laced to the , last hole : and the intelligent idiot who rode a bicycle nine mileainten minutes sleep on undisturbed, ttefe r&poses the remains of the doctor who took a dose of his own medicine and just over there with the top of a shoe box driven overhis head lies a rich man who mar-; ' ried a young wife. Away overs " V-J . VT . I MU - ..3 who kept strychnine side by 3idJ with baking powder in the cup! board. The man who stood ml o J ' " " v"ffc 11 out ui mowing macmne to Out the sickle is aure": now.and h? rstr' C . t 1 . .."i bv the side of the careless hralc--; mau wno tea mmseit to a seventy tool Kuier is gathering them in on liv nnp still lira jo snmpt!mp tv hind with his orders. Ex. L. U. .QRiMiss, TVeas. 1 27 and 28, 1895. as soon as won. V

TfATR PT.AV RTTPRBT STAHTRR AND TIIDfiTCS

Friday, Sept. 27 2:40 Trot $250.00 3:00 Pace . . 250.CO Free-for-all Trot 300.00 Saturday, Sept. 28. 2:23 Pace $300.00 2:30 Trot 300.00 ku . nine ana reneat . . . ioo.ooMile neats, nest 3 in 5. 5 to enter, Usual weather clause. Right re postpone or exchange order of proKing, uia juistauce Kuie. car

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