Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 20 January 1891 — Page 3
Indiana!
tffoetf Cfef fhere Just the same, AND SO DOES
:SNKKC\J&S SON?.
MADE ONLY BY
NK.FA1RBANK&C0. CHICAGO.
None belter, if asoocd, as
Hamilton & Brown's $2.50 Ladies' Don^"ol 1,1 Kid Button Shoes.
All sizes and in 1), E and lite widths.
20 pounds Xew Orleans Sugar. 18 pounds Golden Sug. r. 7 ibs. White Extra Sugar.
jO lbs. Confectioners A Sugar. j^IUh. Granulated Sugar. ..
J^KEILY
124 East Main Street.
Sugar!
Bainliill Hornadaj&Piclett
Fui'iutlire. Stove and (i roocrv Store.
POSITIVE
LL BRE
ImKSiK QUICKLY MARRED
SAPOLIO is one of tbe best known city luxuries and each time a cs&e hi used an hour is saved. On floors, tables and painted work it acts lik* a charm.' For scouring pots, pans and metals it has no equal. If your store-keeper does not heep it you should insist upon his doing so, as it always gives satisfaction and its immense sale all over the United States makes it an almost necessary article to any well supplied store. Everything shines after its use, and even the children delight in using it ia heir attempts to help around the house. 0
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ELEGANT. ILLUSTRATED
$-#113
OM liry,\nt'Ai Stratum School, N,.r
Dr. Koch Has told the secret of his lymph to the world Gen. Miles
ctmirc*!
bATARtf
rrlraoOeu.
University
'mess
.vitnU% St., Wh«n Block, Opposite Po«t«0®oa,
the demand for its craduaths is greater than the supply, ustamlsut the head of Comuiereial Sr-honl:- 41st year enter any time elective or proscribed course Individual instruction l)vn lar^". strong faculty lectures time short: expenses low complete facilities for BUSINESS. SHORT-H AND, ENGLISH TRAINING, ETC. diploma tree at graduation a strictly business school in an unrivaled commercial center superior equipments. and unequalen In the success of its graduates no c!»nn:e for positions furnished.
67II'ALOGUE. FREE.
Has ended the ghost dance business and the Indians are feasting
on bciled dog, but
W. Otto Is the only jeweler who always gives satisfaction. His repairing is done promptly and well.
HCE8 & OSBORN, PROPRIETOR.
CJ
Macbelli'.s jxiuM'l top and "pearl i^lass lan/ip-chiinncys ai'c made of tough glass that costs lour times as. much as common glass and Vlie work on them costs a good deal more than the work on common chimneys, just as the work on a dress is proportioned to cost of stuff.
The dealer is right in saving lie can't afford to sell them at the prices of common glass chimneys.
And what will become of his chimney trade if his chimneys never break He is apt to be wrong there. He can afford to charge a fair price and give new chimneys for all that break in use.
Have a talk with him. Pittsburg. Gto. A. Macuetu CO.
DAILY JOURNAL
TUESDAY, JA.N, 20, 18'Jl.
THE CITY.
The Weather Report,
for 'milium—7a.m.. l'uir. warmer.
4. Ratty Description.
The following is tho description of \V. I Pot tit uiitorod oil tho prison register at Michigan (Jitv:
William I'\ Pottit—Vge, rt'-l yours weight, 181 pounds, height, 5 foot 9•nelies complexion, light hiiir, light uir'hpluce, Now York widower ocouuiition, preacher, painter, paper hanger ind Iwokkeeper distinguishing murks, ^o:tr on left big too, right eye defective, sharp and prominent nose.
Pelt.it, is at work on a sanding innohiLe iu the chair manufacturing depurtuiont, tiiil his hands were quite sore tlio tint few days. He bears it patiently, however, in the hopes that ho will soon be relieved and put on lighter work.— .Lafayette Courier.
Wot Gnilty.
the assualt and b.ittery ouso against •Simeon liryuut oocupiod all day yestoi1 iy in the oirenit court. Afcer tlu evsJyuce and speeches were made by W. R. Wood, of Lafayette, and Prosecutor .U ll'et for the State and F. At. Golitsbeiry, of Colfax, and Hon. Al. I). While for tho defense. The jury thou retired und after a few minutes returned a verdict of not guilty. Bryant as convicted of assault on Win. Hormy iu Sqil'ie liumsey's mrt last August ai.d app^ih il the e.me to the circuit rwuit. If lie. hid b"en convicted ye.steiilay the costs would have a0iouul.o-! 10 se\o al hundred dollars.
Wreck at Cherry Grove-
li'iM. evening about 7:3 o'ohvk ii* a lieavv freight train loade I villi !ark ooal wiiv pissing Cherry Grave a brake bourn broke aud caught, the suUm. Eleven oars were derailed aud sm'ishi into Muiiheroeus, a wrecking train a odoo ciuio down from Liil"a.oi.t« mi 1 by 12 p. t'.K track nhi'h li-un I a 1ly damaged rep.iired, aud the issenger trains passed on time. The fragments were picked up this tu'-rning and tikou to tho company's ftio]s. Fortnnntely there was no loss of life and as the cars destroyed wore loaded with slack coil tho loss was minimum
Brewer Made Good-
The LaMour county Chionielei of January 10 contains full particulars tioneerumg tho shortage of W.
E.
The Uaptniu In t.
C'a])t. Jerre llauser, who left this city several years ago to out*r 'lie Soldiers' How, is now engaginl in the Land and In-ura- co business iu Djytoii, Ohio. He has married a wealthy and ae^omished lady and s'-iude hifh iu tli» sicimI ciie.los of Duyto'i.
Sous of Veterans Att^utionTravis Caui[, S. of V., will into! •Tinuar 21, ]noinptly at 7:30.
E. W. IjEiion, Capt.
Jtes'v frobale Court. Harvey Wilkinson has been appoint'd administrator of tho estate of Sarah Car\er deceased.
WAVKLAM).
Bert Kritz ro'urnod to Wabash College mis morning. S wit Moody is up from 1'erro Haute visiting homo folks.
Tho Vaudalia pay car passed through yesterday and made glad tho hearts of the boys. ,T. II. Moore, general ageut for tho Western Sportsman of Indianapolis, was here yestoulay.
Jus. M. Rice was over to town yostor day for the first time since ho was taken oick iu November.
Henry Mcintosh, jr., a former sideut of this plate visited relatives here Saturday and Sunday.
Kov. J. Q. McKeehau will come ui) from liethauy and couduot serviaos at tho Presbyterian churoh We Inesday night.
Don't forget to subscribe for Tub Jouhnai* for 1891. Every fumily ought to subscribe for their county paper and Mort L. Butcher would be pleased to receive your subscription.
A Pleasing Sense
Of health aud strength renewed and of ease and comfort follows tho use of Sy up of Figs, as it acta in harmony with nature to etTootually cleanse the system when ooetive or bilious. For sale in 50 cent and 81 bottles by all leading druggists.
DBAI, PEESONALITY.
A QUEER STORY TOLD BY PROFESSOR WILLIAM JAMES.
TH« Wonderful CAM of Mitn Who Wu Somebody Else for Two Hontbi-Wlieu Hypnutlinl lie Coald Recall Ewry Detail of IIU Experience.
Professor Willtum James describes a case of don ble personality of the so callcd ambulatory type, the Investigation of which he lias just concluded.
The subject is a tnan, now aboot 00 year* of age, residing in a small place near Pawtucket, I. This person was a carpentcr until 1857, when, by a strange visitation of Providence, he was induced to adopt, altoget her different habits of life. He had been in atheist. One day, while walking In the open country, he thought he heard a voice saving: "Go to the chapel, go to the chapel." "To what chapol?" he inquired of his invisible monitor. "Tn the Christian chapel," was the reply.
Now tho carpenter was on unfriendly terms with the minister of the Christian chapel, and he exclaimed aloud: 'Before I go to that place I hope God may strike me deaf, dumb and blind."
Instantly ho fell to the earth, enveloped in darkness and silence, and without tho power of speech.
The events which followed, as Professor James said in telling this part of the story, were such as generally occur in cases of the same sort, wliich are frequent in religious history. Suffice it to say that the fventn culminated in the man's restoration to his senses, in his conversion and In his adoption of the vocation of jiii'rant preacher.
For thirty years he follower ailing, doing a great deal of missionary work, and tccoming well known over a large area of New York state and western New Kngland.
Early iu 1H87 he had abandoned Ills preaching, being advanced iu yearsand desirous of living more quietly, and had taken up again his old trade of carpentering. His health wa«- still good, and he worked twelve or thirteen hours a day in preference to nine or ten.
In what follows it is well to remember Professor James'assurance of his conviction that the man iu question is sincere, free from deception and a genuine subject of strange physical phenomena.
THE CA"TY MKHCI1ANT.
One day, while living at Greene, It. I., he suddenly disappeared from home. Every effort was made to find him, but to no avail. Ho was completely lost.
Two months later, in Norristown, Pa., a man named Brown, who kepta littlecandy store, woke up in the middle of tho night and found himself In a strange place. His bed was strange, the room in which he lay was strange, aud the shop into which he groped his way was so unfamiliar that he Ix'came thoroughly alarmed. Kearing he would be taken for a burglar he cried for help. The neighbors rushed out in the night and discovered Brown, the candy merchant, iu an unaccountable slnie. "Where am I? Who am 1? Who are you?" he cried, in great perturbation.
They thought their neighbor must have suddenly gone crazy. When told that hU name was llrown he denied it, and gave as his name that of the erstwhile preacher and carpenter of lthode Islaud.
The village doctor was called upon for advice. He saw in the case something different from ordinary mania, but still he thought it was mania. However, he communicated with Brown's alleged relatives iu lthode Island, and, to be sure, lirown's assertions concerning himself were found to be true.
But Brown now had no recollection of his exjierienco in tho candy store, nor did he know how lie got there or hmv he left Rhode Island.
The case became noised abroad and was investigated by a Philadelphia physician, but with no results.
All that was known was that the man had been away from home two months, six weeks of which he had spent at Norristown, but the remaining fortnight was a blank to liiiu and could be explained by nobody else.
In the course of time the circumstances reached the notice of Professor .lames. The man was now- again at home, peaceably pursuing his trade of carpenter. The professor visited him and found him to bo a hard headed, matter-of-fact Yankee. After considerable persuasion he was induced to come to Cambridge and be hypuotized. The professor thought that iu a hypnotic trance the man might remember his Brown experience. And so ho did. This is the most valuable phase of the phenomenon from a plnuica! point of view.
WHEN
Brewer
tho retiring county Treasurer. It was O'Uiied by tho failure of tho Hank of LiMourwhero Mr. TJrorcer 'd his deposits. Tho shortage, however, has been mndo good by Alfred Pickoy ard Jhu H. Watson.
HVrNOTIZKl).
He was very readily hypnotized, aud as soon as he passed into tho trance began to talk of Norristown and tho candy store. He also explained those two weeks that had been up to this time a mystery to everybody. While prosaic enough, his account was perfectly circumstantial. Having conceived a notion that some trouble was in store for him at home, he got on a horse cjir one day and rode to Pawtucket, proceeded thence to New York, stopped one night at tho Grand L'niou hotel, went on to Philadelphia, put up a couple of nights at a hotel and then took a room at a boarding house.
While there, seeing an advertisement of a small business for sale in Norristown, he went to that place, which he had never visited before, and set himself up in trade.
Such was his story when he was in the hypnotic staU-, and in that state he could rememlwr nothing of his former or norma] condition. On tL^ other hand, while in his waking state he had no recollection of his Brown exjierience subsequent to his boarding tho horse car to ride to Pawtucket, nor oould he tell why he started on this trip.
Ills Brown personality was, as Professor James put it, a weak, insipid, diluted extract of his normal personality. In the two states ho was two entirely different men.
He was hypnotized mauy times and attempts were made by all sorts of artifices to effect at least a partial fusion of his Brown condition and his normal condition, but these efforts were quite unsuccessful. The only result was that his hypnotic memory grew more and more feeble, until finally be could recollect ouly tho barest outlines of his Brown experience.—Boston llerald.
A Crook's Accomplishment*. SAID Gorman, a Philadelphia crock, was turned orer to tbe officers at the time of the big boiler explosion at the fair gronnd. A farmer detected him picking his pocket. Gorman was taken before a justice of the peace, released on bail and speedily left the city, sever to appear here again. Gorman was a very peculiar man. At home he posed as an honest man, and had taken the thirty-second degree in Masonry. His partners were his wife, known as Little Netl, and a crook known as Curley Jimmle. They made a great deal of money.—Indianapolis Journal.
Tlie Mother's Friend
Not only shortens labor and lessens pain attending It, but greatly diminishes the danger to life of both mother and child if used a few months beforo confinement. Write to The Bradileld Regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga., for further particulars. Sold by Nye Oo. Cmwfordsville, Ind.
Gold in tne head? or Ohilbla'.ns? oi Chafing? or a Burn? or any Old Sores? The best thing In the world for it le dolman's Petroleum Balm. Oet a free sample at the drug ebor« of Nye & Oo
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MOTHERS'
Co., Atlautd,
Our Prices
(Ja.
?o by Nye A: Co.
Ih'Htli of nn Illinois Plone«r» Hi.oomin«tin. 111.. Jan.
420.—Mrs.
Mary OreiniorfT. the \vi«low of Thoma}* OtviuioriV, a pionoor *t* Central Illinois, diod Monday, ayed years, having lived hope since IbvM, Her ffiHhood and early womanhood were spent ainonj| tin Indians. She and her husband were the second white couple married in Central illinoib. Their intention to wed was made known by postiny no* tiees upon trees.
Ill£ Monpy for tbe
Wasiungton, Jan. —The House committee on the Mississippi has agreed on a hill appropriating SlU.O'io.UOO for levees alohtr t)|,. Mississippi river, and will asU the lloebe to fix a date for it* consideration.
TIIE MARKKTS.
(•rain. rrovUltini, Ktc. Chicaoo, Jun. 19.
Flour—"Quiet and lower. Spring Wheat patents, HaUers.' Winter Whi-ut Flour, $4.ttttA.uO fur I'ltieul*. M.4IX2.L&J for C!o:ir.«.
Whkat— Kttled wo»U and lower. No. 'i cash, May, Corn—Fairly active «n»l lower. No B, 45c Kebrm»ry, May, 4c, und July at .M^.M \,c.
Oats—Flower. No. 2 trssb. Mi»y, 4 4 S a ad N 3 4 1 S 4 No. a White, vjfrNo. Si, 49i«(&43Vc. No. 2 While. 44-a-l*».
Hyk—'Trade light prlros
.easy. Quotable—No.
Scush. February, 7iv,c, aud May, 74c. Bnmoles at 71®?l»^r for No. 8 nud A70k69r for No. 3.
MKHS PORK- Moderately active and priccs ruled higher. Quotations ranged at •10.3D&W8ft for cash for January, an»l H0.76-® lt».H7H for May.
I,AHi— Uatln'r active and prices ruled higher. Prices ranged al K.7tKfcV77ft for cash IA.7A& for Junuury l5.Sft.Y83Vi for February and ^.17 4ig6.ur» for May.
Hmtkr—Creninery, 1»S.?7c Dairy, Fackiug stock. tVftye. •I'oultrv—Live Chickens, 0^4c per lb Live Turkeys, r^-Se perlh Live Ducks. 7H©0c per lb Live Geese, SS.rjO'^.fiO per doz
Wisconsin Prime White, 8o: Water
White, Michigan Prime White, 0l^c{ Water White, io\ic: Indiana Prime White, Water White, lO^c Headlight, 175 te*t. yv^e (Jasoline, 87 deg's, tic 74 deg's, 9^c: Naphtha. deg's, 8c,
Nkw VonK, Jan. \9.
Wtu:.vr—Pull lower only local trad ing. May, ?1.WWI.H34 June, 11.04"*: «luly. P7^(aW7*,r Auj t:,-.t, PPifcitte December, W7Hi 97HC.
Curn—Quiet H^Scriower easy. No. 8 steamer mixed, 59',,f^(yj^c. Oats—Dull easier. Western, 475tr8c. Provisions—Heef firm Plate, I7.00^7..V3 family, 9.tO/!.y.50. Fork weak dull new mess, fll.fi02fcn.7fi old mess, 75^110.00: ex tra prime, fy.50K10.00. Lard quiet and weak steam-rendered, W.10.
Ci.kvk.i.anp,
O., Jan. 19.
PETROLr.UM-Qulet standard white, 110 deg. test, 74 gasoline, wc: ST, gasoline, 19c naphtha, 7c.
1.1 v«* Stock. Chicago, Jan. ID.
Catti.k—Market moderately active. Prlcos steady for good but easy for common and rough lots, ranging at U.VUV-.VU for cholM to fancy shipping Steers: f4.00^14.80 for good to choice do. for common to fair do. |2.?.7fc&fl0 for butcbcra' Steers I9.25A 8.SO forStockers: $y.H^.ti,70 for Tcxans 13.70^ 8.25 for Feeders 9l.£Vft, .!.?5 for Cows ll.ftOJfc 5.00 for Hulls, and W.(*/(A00 for Veal Calves.
Hons—Market active and firm. Prices 5® 10c higher, ranging at ?2.8A&S.'I0 for Pigs for light C(.40&?1.50 for rough pack' Ing for mixed, and 83.d0^3.7& tor Qeavy pacUing and shipping lota.
Oatabrh Cubed, noaltb and sweet
breath secured, by Shilob's catarrh remedy. Piles 60 cents. Nasal Injector froe. Moflett, Uorg*n&
Oo-
Muslins, Tickings, Jeans, Flannels, Shirtings, Ginghams, Canton Flannels, and all Domestic Dry Goods Will be sold cheaper than other house in Crawfordsvilk will or can sell them.
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FRIEND
ShortensIMOA
rTENDIHG
MOTJOER&CMim
WORTH ITS WEIGHT IN GOLD. "Mothers* Friend." is worth its weight in gold. My wife suffered more intern minutes with either of her other children than she did altogether with her last, after having used four bottles of "Mothers' Friend." It is a blessing to expectant mothers, snys customer HENDERSON DALE, Crvrmi, 111.
Having usM two bottles my sixth child wits born with no pnin comparatively. Mrs. L. O VfiiiRhnn, BhotidfUi Lake, Col .Wonderful—relieves much suffering
Mrs. M. Drewstor, Montgorourj', Ala. w",1 jv, ri,,t «,f
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i,olt|0.
3«»iJ by nil dnjijciHtn. Hook to iiiotln-r# inuili-d free
lIiiAiuitLU licui'i.ATuii
W
N'u pill or nauseating |iotj -n but pleasaut tonic anO purgative i. Simmon's Ltvei Ib'gul it»r.
I'ronuiirieeil Hopeless, Vet Saved. From letter written by Mrs. Ails li. Hurt, of Gortnii, S we ijuoi. taken with a had e.ol I, which H-tth-il my lungs, uougli set hi and linuily terminated in Consumption. Four ilucUn gave me up and said I ou'd live lint short, time. 1 gave invhell opt., Savior, literuMne'i thst if I eouljl n.•« stay with my friends on earth I wn meet my absent, ones above in sl.:inil was advised to get lJr King's N'ew 1i|heovory for consumption, coughs a r! C'diis. I gavo it a trial, took In :i|i »ltl(!» it tins cured me and ihiiuk i.!n I a-n now a well and Iidhi v.on 1:111." inl bottle free at N «t C.'o.'s lii ni store, rogular size, ftOc ami $1.00. ,•
The best medical wrlterselaini that !h-suecosi-ful remedy for nasal catarrh must be noii-irrltatlng, easy of application mid one that will reach all the remote res and ulcerated surfaces. The his t-ii of therfTorts to treat catarrh during tin past obliges us to admit that only one remedy has met these conditions, and that Is lily's Oream Halm. This pleasant remedy has mastered catarrh as nothing else has never done, und -th physicians and patients freely concede tills fact. The more distressing symptom? yield to i.
ChiMrw Cry for PiteW« Castorik,
HoolKlen's Arnio»
The beat salvo in the world for Outs-, JiruisoB, Bores, Dicers, Salt iihouni, Foyer Soree, Tetter, Ohappod Hands Chllhlaine, cms, and all skin eruption and positively cures Piles, or no pay 1.-.-q-.dred. It iu guaranteed to give p«ifecl s-itiafae* Ion, or mniy riftinded. Price, 26 oentas liox, For sale at Ny«
drugstore.
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THE AMERICAN STEAM LAUNDRY
Is li:i|)|v (o n*|)oi'( a l'lipidly iiuTriisin 1 in -•. And lo say tliat a ik-w feature lias Ihm'H ailili'd.
Ili'reafter, all ordinary incniiintr io ^'anncntc W ill lie done I'Vt't? of Charge.
W". Pi. Gosxiell.
SLEEPLESS NIGHTS uuule misi'inble by that terrlbh' couch. Shllnh's Cure is the reuieitv for you. For sale bv Mo"ett, ilorgHU A Go.
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Bowls Irregular and constipated, rt suiting in Piles, avoided by taking Simmon's IJver Kegulatoi.
Shlloh'sOure will immediately relieve Croup, Whooping Cough and BrobehiM PorMl* bv Moffott, Morgan A Co.
CRAWFORDSVILLE
TRANSFER LINE,
R. C. WALKUP, Prop.
PassenperH and BafffffUfe to Depots, HoteLa, oi any partof the City. Also proprietor of tho Bayless Teu-Cent Hack Line
Tlie Cheap Price* will be maintained and Satlsfactoiy service rendered. Leave calls at Stablos on Market stroet, slateatSnodgrass
in,
Murphy's.
Telephone No. 47.
Drs.T.J.and Martha E.H, Griffith °'XX.„co
218
SO"11'
0roon
Mrs. Dr. Qrlffltb gives special attention Ohronlc and Surgical Diseases of Women, Children, and Obstetrics. Dr. Qrlffltb, a general practice.
OON8DLTATION FREE.
Dancing Academy,
C'l.OltE HLOCK. Thesecond toruiofMrs. Clark's school begins this week. Classes Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday evonings. Chlldrens classes Saturday afternoon. Private lessons given at residence, 309
South Walnut Stroet.
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SILAS WRAY,
1
Designer and Eugra ver
Matnifaeturerof all kinds of
Electrotypes and Wood Cute, C'iuwfonlsvdle. Indiana.
Tin: Jot:us .vi.eljeerftilly reeommends Silas
Wray as flr.M urllst, Hi- designed the cut nl the V.M.C..A. buil.iint'.
PIANOSjnd _0RGANS
CLEANKD, TUNED and REPsilRJJD. Or PACJKKD.
JOHN M. MACY, No. 71 Sotith Careen Street.
Diseases of
Women
AND ^UUJKIir.
C^ntu.tiilon roun.r over cttu^ atoic, ??outh ti street, fordsvllic,
:ndlan^.
). I?. 0TTER, M. H.
THK CliAWFORDSVIl.LE
O. ri:« u.
A
Prchldent.
W. H. Moj'kktt, Vice President. -. t». P. IM'KIIAm, Ucoording'Secretary,.. 11. T.
ino,Treusurer,
N. C. -McCay, G«MieralSecretary. 15ail}.-, Tub and Shower Gymnasium, Howling Alleys, Piano, Games lu.d
li. .1
-iik room. Meet
ings Sunday at, 1 :HU, [. in. Visitors ithvaj.s ivulcome. Secretary MeCayV- ofllee hours are ionj 0 to 10 a.m., und '10 p.m.: and every evua* iriK from 7 eAeenilnv .Saturday.
UP H0L8T.ER1N G4
-MATTltKSSES-
FUKXITUKE Iiepalied and Packed lor Shipment. GEORGE R. RICE, Joel Block, 112 West Pike Street. Out-of wwn wriU rtolielteii.
A. D- LOFLAND,
Real Estate, Loan, Insnrance.
GOOD NOTES CASHED.
Fast Main Street, with W.T.Whlttingtou
