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Logansport Pharos-Tribune from Logansport, Indiana • Page 13

Location:
Logansport, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

OUR HATS ELEVATED. In Quality but not in Price. SPRING SEASON. All Nature is putting attire and it behooves every man and boy to crown his bead with one of our Handsome Derbys. DEWENTER, The Hatter.

DAILY JOURNAL. FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 27. YOUR NAME IN PRINT. OBSERVE. See my new Spring 1 Suit! H.

G. TUCKER, the Pearl St. Tailor, made it from one of his special importations of Scotch Cheviots. They have just arrived and are the finest I ever have seen. He guarantees them not to fade or shrink.

I advise all ray friends lo call on him at onec and make an early selection. These goods are imported direct from Galashiels, Scotland, by H. G. Tucker, and cannot be found elsewhere. If you want the correct styles and admirable garments follow me.

Yours Truly, STOCK COMPLETE. The Styles we are showing in BOOTS and SHOES At Prices to Suit. Where can be found the latest styles in new goods. 403 Broadway. 2afl.

Door East or Fourth Street. F. M. BOZER.D.D. S.

DENTIST. tunce Over J. HEcrz' Tailoring: llnJuncat, 4O9 Market Street. DR. E.

HATCH, Physician and Surgeon. McCaffrey Block, Broadway, Sixth Street, logansport, May 11, iS92 This is te certitr that mjloss, Maj 1S92, on TVoolen Mill by fire. Insured in the Phenlx and American Insurance Companies of S. M. Clossoa, Ageat, has tWs day beea setUed In Inll and to my entire satisfaction.

il. H. NASH. Fred Braginton, Veterinary Surgeon- Kldgllng Castratloa a (Graduate and Prize man of tie Out. Tet Collets.) HeaflQaartws at J.

L. Hanson's Drug Stow No. 416 Brondwuj wiciat North St, Hoose. J01 of a Personal CJiuracter Cons r-nsl Their Friends. Al Merritt, of Delphi, is in the city.

Ed. Twomey ivent to Chicago yesterday. Miss Corda Coates is visiting friends at North Manchester. Mrs. Am Barnett, of Nashville, is visiting friends here.

Hon. John Green Timmons, of Idaville, was in the city yesterday. Miss Maggie Falvey, of Lafayette, was visiting friends here yesterday. Mrs. A.

G. Jenkins and little daughter are' visiting relatives at St. Louis. Miss Anna Cjnn has returned from a several weeks visit with friends in Wisconsin. Mrs.

John C. Keitemeier, of Lafayette, was visiting Mrs. J. R. Keite- meier on the West Side yesterdav.

Mrs. H. S. Wilson and children of Chicago, are visiting the lady's parents, Mr. and Mrs.

A. J. Sutton. Mr. B.

F. Havens, of Terre Haute, executive commissioner of the board of World's Fair managers of Indiana, was in the city yesterday. Miss -Minnie Boggs, stenographer for the Dodge Manufacturing Company of Mishawaka, will visit Mrs. J. C.

Beatty for a few days. Mrs. WmSon Dunn and daughter Amelia, of Los Angeles, are visiting in the city of guests of Mrs. Dunn's mother, Mrs. E.

T. Stevens on the West Side. Harry Shultz went to Terre Haute yesterday to cake part in the field day sports of the Rose Polytechnic Institute which he has attended for the past two years. Mrs. H.

G- Williamson and daughter Maud, have gono to St. Joe, where they will spend the summer with the family of Homer Kline, formerly of this city. To Cancel Forced Xotes. Yesterday in the Circuit Court nine cases were feted against the First National Bank and the State National Bank, asking that that number of notes said to have been forged by defaulter Henry Winklebleck, be cancelled: The plaintiffs, Jesse Conn, Wm. Gundrum, Lafayette Coleman, David Vanaman, George W.

Eistler, John Ubelhauser and Hiram Harvey, all of Boone township, are represented Myers. Following is the amount of each note, together with the name alleged to hare been forged thereon: First Conn, Walters and Gun drum; $900, Conn, Coleman and Gundrum: $3,600, Conn, Vanaman. and Kistler; ser and Kistler-, $200, Ubelhauser and Kistler. State Coleman and Vanaman; $200, Conn and Harvey: Gundrutn, Harvey and Coleman: $700. Conn and Gundrum.

"Wncn XwiTellnjj Whether on pleasure bent, or business, take on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs, as it acts most pleasantly and effectively on the kidneys, liver and bowels, preventing- fevers, headaches and other forms of sickness. For sale in 50 cents and alllead- druggists. I E. Winter all the new style lasts for his $J-50 $5 shoes. RAILBOAD BUMBLDfGS.

from the- Note-Book of OUT Rail-way Per- iional and Ollierwlne. Pan Handle engine 438 was in the shop yesterday for light repairs. J. P. Newell, B- O.

yardmaster at Garrett, is in the city visiting friends. Pan Handle fireman L. C. Smithson is off duty owing to sickness in bis family. Part engineer Chas.

Hand is laying off on account of the sickness of his wile. Pan 433 left the shop yesteriay. She-, will go to work in the'Logan. yards. Bert Hawkins-'-Is' calling engineers and firemen the sickness of Jno.

regular caller. Pan Handle fireman. L. G. Woodruff reported for work yesterday having recovered from'his recent, attack of sickness.

A new side track and scales are being put in at the Pan Handle shops for the purpose of weighing material loaded in cars. On account of a scarcity of firemen several Pan Handle engineers who have been lately promoted have been set back to firing again. Geo. Roderick, Pan Handle operator at Beverly Junction is taking a few weeks lay off visiting his parents a few miles east of the city. Ferdinand Scheuman, the Pan Handle machinist, received a message Wednesday that his brother had died at his home in Adams county.

Yesterday afterooon ho departed for that place to attend the funeral. One of the smaller drill presses in the Pan Handle machine shop will be taken out and placed in the car department to make room for the large machine received a few days ago. The new drill will be placed in in a few days. The wiping force at the Pan Handle shops has been increased several men, and has been divided into two gangs. This was necessitated by an increase of work as between twenty- five and thirty engines are wiped there in day time alone.

Cornelius McGaughey, the Pan Handle hostler, is at present acting in the capacity of night foreman of the Pan Handle round house during the absence of Fred Hartle who is laying off on account of scarlet fever having attacked one of his children, which is slowly improving. Mike Courtney the telegraph operator at the Pan Handle yard office, returned from Nashville, yesterday, having.been a delegate to the 0. R. T. convention.

Geo. Hench, who was working the wires at the yard office during Mr. Courtney's absence, has returned to his old position at the tower house. The Pan Handle railway through Xenia, which persists in having the station known as Converse, contemplates moving the station-house one- half mile eastward, out of the corporation of Xenia. This is a punish- mtnt of the town for suing the company for the increased corporation levy.

The Xenia Journal has apeace- offering for the rail way. It proposes to change the name of Xenia to Converse rather than be passed by. It's a go if the suit be A novel marriage is to take place on the rear platform of train 31, on the Cincinnati, Hamilton Dayton, nexi week. This train is the Chicago vestibule, and the is large enough to accommodate a dozen persons. An employe of the road at Connersville will marry a girl, and the ceremony will be performed en the train while it is running from E.ushville tp Connersville.

the minister will leave the wedditig party. The bride and groom will go South on a tour, but- they will cot" ride all the way on the platform. Indianapolis News: more fast trains will be put on the Louisville division of the Pennsylvania lines. This will be surprising to the railroad men and the public generally. Superintendent Miller is anxious tohave one, but the management down East will not have it.

An agreement has been made for "common Thus the train from Louisville to Chicago lays here forty minutes and at Logansport thirty-five No. 9 on the Indianapolis division gets into Indianapolis at 9 o'clock at.night'and lays here until 11. fit simply- gives the Monon a per. cent, on the. Chicago business and w.e.can not help it," wailed a Pennsylvania man this morning.

TTlimt a.Ptty the otherwisebeautiful girl should lave-such had teethT Aid all because she did not use SOZODOXT. It costs- so little to buy it considering- the it does, and its benefits stretch out into lier future life- Poor girl! Xo Loan. $5,000 to at 7 per cent, interest on business property. Apply to An Suspicion Removed. Publication made a' few days ago of a serious charge which was brought against- C.

the artist, who was -accused by Mrs. Susan Corwin, who boarded at the same house with -Pettit of- stealing her pocket book'Containipg about $25. Mrs. Corwin missed her pocket book and without proper investigation caused the artist's arrest -His trial before 'Squire Smith resulted in his triumphant evidence being -adduced him. Mr.

Pettit was so painfully affected by the charge against him'that -he and his wife left town. '-Yesterday morning any possible suspicion' against him was overthrown by thafinding of the missing pocket-book beneath the mattress of Mrs. Cow win's-bed where she had so carefully placed' it that she forgot where to look "for Moral: don't accuse a neighbor until you are sure he is guilty. Havens on his Lojransporl at the World's Fair. Mr.

B. F. Havens, of Terre Haute, chief commissioner for Indiana of the World's Fair, was in the city yesterday looking about for Logansport exhibits at the coming Exposition, He received considerable encouragement several manufacturers signifying their intention of applying for space. No applications will be received after July 1. Mr.

secured the following names list yesterday: W. H. Aldrich. wind mills. liolbruner Uhl, vehicles.

William Dolan, water wheels. King Drill company, grain drills. C. A. Clark, paper.

Ash Hadley, furniture. S. E. Howe, hard wood specimens. Obenchain Boyer, patent boiler cleaner.

Logansport Manufacturing company bent wood specialties. Peru Peru Republican: The street corner vender cf purported Shaker medicines who held forth here with a negro quartette for about a boasted at the National House that Peru was "the easiest place ia which to get money he over struck. By this he meant that it had raoregudgeens, subject to the wiles o' fakers of his ilk, than any place he had ever visited. ADDITIONAL LOCAL. Clam chowder for lunch at the Glen to-night.

rl; The greatest'seamless socks ever shown here, -i for 25 ''cents, at Harry Frank's. All crdc'iS delivered promptly at John Kothermel's meat market. Tel- phone No. 60. Oranges, pineapples, bananas, and all kinds of fruits, at Parker's, 12th street grocery store.

Sana Small will lecture at the rink this evening under the auspices of Broadway M. E. Church. See advertisement for full particulars of Otto's hat sale. Cups and saucers free in shoe department.

Three hundred and twenty-five bed spreads, worth $1.35 each, only 91- cents, for six Palace. The Painters and Decorator's Union of this city adopted at their meeting Monday night the nine hour a day system to go into effect August 15. William G. Foust, aged seventy- seven, and Mrs. Lydia Long, aged forty-five of Huntington, have been united in marriage.

There was an anti-nuptial agreement by which Mrs. Foust receives but from her husband's estate he cies first. An unknown miscreant poisoned a well on James Caraway's farm, in Vanderburg county, and Mr. Caraway and wife with three children narrowly escaped Quite recently Mr. Caraway's'enemies, ruined his orchard by digging aad cutt-isy oil' the, roots his fruit, trees.

The 6-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Franz Orshowatiky, of street, died at 6 a. rrr. yesterday.

The funeral w'll be held 7 o'clock this morning from the St. Joseph church. Rev. Father Kcehne officiating. Burial in Mt.

St. Vincent cemetery. Tbe voluntary return of Aithur Bisot. of Bedford, to the prison south and his subsequent-, pardon, recalls that in 1881, Julius A. Coleman, a lawyer, of- Evansville.

convicted of conspiracy to commit a felony, and he was sentenced to two vears' imprisonment. In April of the following year be, escaped prison in company -with. Harry Fox well, a "lifer," of Rush couciy-. K. Klttenhouse, a jn August, 1886 Coleraar; returned to prison, and i.n be was pardoned by Governor Gray.

Wm. H. Irvine, formerly of Marion', who shot ana killed Banker Montgomery of Lincoln. while' the hitter was seated at "breakfast Th-ars- day morning, was J. MeSary's i partner in the real estate business at Salt Lake City and, has masy acquaintances in this city.

The news of his sensational was received" with -general CHOICE OF ALL HATS SOFT HATS. Includes John B. Stetson's and New Shapes, STIFF HATS. Best all Colors, all Shapes. Knpx and Youman Blacks.

CHOICE OF ALL We present the purchaser either a Genuine Japanese Cup and Saucer or Oak Stand. region in" which he was formerly well known. Ho left Indiana in 1885 locating at Lincoln. Two years later he moved to Salt Lake City and was elected a member of the territorial legislature on the liberal ticket. Following 1 the Greys inspection last night the Military Band 1 marched down to Eel River avenue and serenaded Mr.

Anthony Gruscnmeyer, who yesterday celebrated his COth birthday. The band boys were invited into Mr. Gruse.nmeyer's pleasant home to partake of his hospitality and a pleasant hour was spent there. This action on the part of the band was not only a gracefully bestowed compliment to Mr. Grusenmeyer, pere, but fitting little act of courtesy toward his son Charley, who is a popular member of the band.

Engineers. The questioning of licensing engineers is being so agitated in every State in the Union that within a short time, for the protection of human lives, it will be impossible for any one intrusted with steam to hold or secure a situation without passing a rigid examination and obtaining a license. Stephenson's Illustrated Practical Test has been published to aid engineers preparing to pass such examination, and as it embraces all the questions asked- on the boiler, pump, engine, dynamo, Corliss engine, it has already met with such a demand thst it is now in its fourth edition. This work, which only costs one dollar, can be obtained of the publisher, Walter G. Kraft, 70 La Saile street, Chicago.

with it all times. No other rometJy can take its place or do its work; 25- and 50-ceut bottles for sale by B. F. Keesling and J. L.

Hanson. Kniuse's Headache-Capsules, at Kesa- Hng's. A TlioiiKhtfal Person consults his best interests by having 1 a box of Krause's Headache Capsules at hand; taken as directed" will prevent or stop any kind of a headache, uo matter what the cause, in fact your skull was cracked it would vent pain. For sale by B. F.

Kecb- ling and J. L. Hansor. Are you troubled with, aay skin disorder? Hot Springs Skin Salve is ali that the name, implies. The from the evaporated waters are embodied in its composition, anil 'it.

should be used wherever a salve or- ointment is necessary. For sale by HF. Keesling and J. L. Hanson.

In a recent letter to tbe proprietors Mr. R. M. Bangs, the druggist at 111., says: "I am very much pleased with Chamberlain's Cough 7 During the epidemic of la grippe here it took the lead and was very much better liked than other cough medicines." The grip requires precisely the same treatment as a very severe cold, for which this remedy is so aHioient. It will promptly loo.3e:i a cold relieve the lungs, soon effect- in? a permanent cure, while laost- other medicines in common use 'or colds only give temporary relief.

Fifty cent bottles for sale by B. F. Keealing and J. L. Hanson.

Won't Cure Hlicmu.itlHin, But Krause's German Oil will rob rheumatic sufferers of many of its. terrors, being a powerful absorbent in all caoes furnishes temporary relief. It is a recognized fact that any stimulating counter irritant that is penetrative when properly applied pain, and that is what Kraiise's German Oil a cure fo? rheumatis'm: sale B. ling and J. L.

Miss Grace Littlejohn is a little aged eleven years, residing in Baltimore, Reid what she says: was troubled witK rheumatism, for two years, but could get nothing to do me-. any was helpless that I had to be carried like 'a babe, when was advised to get a bottle of Pain Balin. I got it from our J. A. Kumbler, and in three days I was up and.

around. I have Jelt any return of it since and ray limbs are as limber as they ever were." Fifty-cent bottles for sRle bv B. F. Keealing -and J. Hanson.

Tiie saloon keepers of New Castle are in desperate They are running their applications'for renewal of liquor licen-es on the- doubleheader there are two- applications for each location, so thai -if c-ne oiisses the other may get it. Greys' Icxpectlon. The largest crowd that ever gath- eree in the Armory to witness the regular monthly inspection of the Logan Greys was present last night to sse Captain Chase inspect his yeung soldiers. The' company was never in better trim for the inspection and the rivalry was spirited. The favors went to Co-poral McKeever, for neatest non-commissioned officer: to Private Knowiton for neatest private: to Private Pierce for best drilled and to Musician Crlss for neatest member of Military Bund.

Seventy head of horses passed nr.der the hammer in the Capp lys-neuy sale of Crouch Travi-. of Lafayette, and ilcDoA-eii of VLccecaes. were heavy buyers Many cf the horses were at Col' 'foe IS cures haia won it ptvu-i, f'niA to Every feral For referrim; to ft subject so it may possess interest for Bo that lj ri-r price of the otfcen' wo the quality r.ct -Klat It be. of coarse tt no; K-u rodder Companies ssj- r.p:bing eir prices, bst taS: too- Ur o' tba isdestlsai lead fjicUsJ vromea ty.

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About Logansport Pharos-Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
342,985
Years Available:
1890-2006