Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 11 July 1891 — Page 5

The Soap that Cleans

Most

is Lenox.

DAILY JOURNAL.

^ATUKIUY. .1ULY 11, 1891.

I'm |)UI.Y Jol'KN.W Htilnnf-on .V Wallace.

is for sale by

THE INJUNCTION GRANTED.

AuotlicrClmpter in the Paul-Doherty-Roljb Muddle.

The mjunclion suit, brought by .lohn

I', liobb against. Sarah O. Doherty. a.l-

imnistratrix of Doliertv. to stay an retil estate of Mr. Kobli, was tried in th«|

execution on the

ji.,one county circuit court iind the injunction granU Seemlier hearing of tlu

yesterday, until the

1

case. The

complaint of Mr. Kobb is an interesting document and reads like a fairy tale. Tl,e storv as set forth in the complaint

is iibout as follows: 111 1 SS'J, Mr. ]{obb. who had been encnired in the hardware business here, ln-ciiiiie financially embarrassed and encngcil his father-in-law. Fisher Doliortv. to effect a compromise with his creditors and pay them off. Kobb put forward the money to do this and lJohertv niiitle an agreement with his creditors niul paid them off. Now it so happened tliiil W. l'nul was lusting as Uolierty's iitlnrnev in this transaction and ho ae|uestered from the creditors notes and propertv to the amount of S-I.'.IM.O'J. He then git up a complaint on these against

Hdhl) in favor of Uolierty, but without the knowledge of either. Mr. Paul then e,.t AV. K. I'lirnell, of Lebanon, to act as attorney for l.loherty and this gentlemnn filed the suit in Jioono county in l*S:j. ^Ir. l'aul appeared as Kobb's atytonu'v and consented to allowing a week. favor of expert

'ijliiignienl dei'lared in 1 .hect v. He then took a tranifript. of this and hail it tiled with the clerk of Montgomery county.

Paul signed the niime of Paul, White ,V Humphries to this ami let it slide. While all this business w:.s ,11 progress. 3Ir. Kobb was away off in Colorado and knew nothing whatever of it nor indeed tlnl Inherly. What Mr. Tntd's plans were is not just evident but 111 someway lie liiid matters tixed up to his satisfacticic without ever getting an execution on the Boone county judgment and just let the transcript rest peacefully in the clerk's ollice. Ko matters went on until l'oberty died and then Mr. liobb caused un obstruct of the title of his real estate here to be made. This of course disclosed the existence of the transcript to liim. Naturally he was greatly surprised as ho had never owed Doherty iiiivtlnng nor employed Paul as his attorney in any such 11 case. O11 the 22nd ef June Mrs. Doherty as administratrix of lier husband's estate had an execution ..••issued 011 the judgment and proposed to sell Mr. Kobb's real estate to satisfy it. Sheriff MeClaskey has had the ..property advertised to be sold on duly -0 hut is now restrained by the Moono •county court from so doing. The suit to set aside the original judgment will lie tried in Lebanon next September. .••Anderson ,t Crane appearing for Kobb, find Hurley ,V Clodfelter for the Doherty .estate.

Carried ou to Lafayette.

Misses May Hudson and .1111 in Soring are two charming young Indies residing in the vicinity of the Monon station. They were following around the tracks yesterday as is their wont anil finally climbed into the caboose of a stuck train. There were two or three charming young brakemen in there and •1 very pleasant occasion it

proved

These young brakemen told the girls not to get off until the calmoso stopped (it the Btation and then they could tell their friends that they hail been visit111 in Ladoga or Greencastlo. The girls chuckled at this and stayed right with the caboose when the train Blurted. Mhen the caboose got to the station' however, it was going about '20 miles an hour and the girls didn't jump for fear of getting their hose dirty. They were carried clear on to Lafaj'etto and had to walk back, but then those brakemen were such chnnn ing fellows that they didn't mind it bit.

—Everybody is coming to the Auditorium to learn the Eclectic Tailor SVB tern, the best in the world, 119 north Washington street.

HOBBIBLY ORDBHED.

Edward Kinney, of Spencer, a Big Pour Brakeman, Meets His Pate. LIIBI nighl iibout 12 o'clock a horrible accident occurred near the .1 unction by which Edward Kinney, of Spencer, lml., loses his life. Kinney was a brakeman on the Big Four road and I last night was engaged in coupling cars I as ono of the freight engines switched around about a square west of the

Junction house. Kinney was working between the tender of the engine and a t)ox ear. Ho had just attempted to

the Junction house and the road's physician. Dr. Eiisminger, summoned. The injured man showed remarkable nerve and requested his conductor to take charge of his watch and effects and take them to his home in Spencer. After

liim under the inlluence of opiates. This

normn

eal

|,.,|

prH (\,wan and Knsminger

illl( W()lkf

,tl

wit

i, him |(ll-

Mr. Kinney died shortly after twelve to-dav. His remains were taken to iiarnhill's undertaking establishment and prepared for interment. They will be taken to his home in Spencer where the funeral will occur,

0DR OWN ELE0TR10 LIGHT PLANT.

It Will Be In Working Order by August 15 And Possibly Before. The Mayor and members of the City Council are looking after our new electric light plant with as much interest as if it belonged to them individuallyThey say that the light will bo turned on August although the contract with the Water .V Light Company does not expire until August.15. Kvervthing is! now 011 the ground but the engine and that is expected the last part of next

The poles are all up and an will soon arrive from Chi-

i*a go to hang the wires. There are seventeen miles of it ami he

will out up between two and three miles I,

1 1

a tlav. All of the machinery is of tb

descent switchboard which is as delicate

and beautiful as the works of a watch.

cause they expect to use it as an adver- ,)Vlr

tisoment. We may expect visiting delegates from other cities quite often, coming to see our electrit light plant. This in itself is a good thing for the town as these visitors, if they are treated well will carry away good reports of us.

The Fair Association.

The adjourned meeting of the Fair Association held forth this morning in the small court room. It was decided to employ the Greenwood female band

CHIPS.

the estate of 1. isher ^imc seemed plain from the lirst tie Lottie Connors. Mrs. (J.uinlan re-j continotis from the prison to the lake. that, the case was a hopeless one and fused to plead guilty and stood trial. Acting on the good laith of Michigan that bis death was only the question of -^Miss Emma Allen, of Torre Jlautei the impropriation was made. The

—Typographical Union, No. *221), will meet to-morrow afternoon at 3 o'clock. —John Ui'ooker will soon remove here from Chicago having tired of that G. X. Metealf. Secretary,

the track with a Rack of corn on his shoulder. K. Clodfolter was in a slight wreck at Indianapolis yesterday. A freight train ran into a Big Four passenger train and both engine.-? were do-

an exaininatioii l)r. Knsminger placed railed. No one was hurt Mrs. Sarah (t)uiidnft'"-iiwo's lined £10.-p) by Mayor Can* this morning for

a few hours. Kinney suffered intensely who is visiting her sister Mrs. Dr. Got! authorities used the .State's share of

before the administration of opiate.', but will go to Germany in the fall to take after that he rested comparatively easy, special instruction on the piano upon Kinney is 2-1 years old and is unmarried' she is already a skillllis conductor reports him as a steady man of good habits and well thought, of in Spencer.

scientists who are going to Crizalva, near the City of Mexico, to spend several months investigating the mountains near there. -Rirt'tnuiul Ih in. -Yesterday evening the vicious young parrot of Mike Callahan escaped anil soon had the whole west end in pursuit of it. Leslie Phillips finally captured it in the top of a tree but not until it had almost bitten 11 linger off. 3®®:

Dr. T. F. I.eech wishes it to be understood that he still maintains that the disease with which John Albright is alllicted is cancer. He found this opinion early in the history of the case and still holds it even if the sore lias been mjuratory.

II. D. Yniu'leave has been employed

1 to defend M. Kerr, the forger. Kerr

1

very finest quality ..specially the ineun- .riU(,n

S

worl

produce 011 exhibition during the fair a Kokomo, Crawfordsvillo. Marion miniature farm. His plans were very

attractive and a committee was ap-

opinion of the Asssoiation that the appraisement was away too high. Ac­

cordingly M. B. augli, J. M. Mount, and John L. Davis were appointed to appear before the Board of Review, and and have tho matter righted.

Still at Large.

ilIM

pointed to investigate the matter. Christian church. It was decided to make a great kick committee1 is said to be 011 llie assessment of the Association nl,si favorably with the work of Mr. real estate. It was the unanimous ]jnl|y, the Kokomo man.--Fntiik-

Mrs. Nor.. Whitelv. the terrorizer of every study

the southeast end. is still at large and

tho police are unable to find her. It is said she walked to Mace and then

1)oaril(H le tra or

Jimtown. A man

who claims to have met her as she was counting ties said she was gaily singing as she proceeded: ,•. 'Tlici'renltor me. they're lifter me.

To capture me N everyone'P desire Tliev're alter me. thev're alter inc. I'm the IntHvuUiul they- require.

Another Thresher Burned.

Yesterday afternoon as the threshing machine of Frank Montgomery was at work on the farm of Ii. P. Hible in Coal Creek it took lire and was destroyed. Air. Montgomery lost a thresher in the same township last year in the cyclone. Ho is a poor boy and can ill aford tho

loSS. •,.

WHY wiiiii

YOU COUGH

when Shiloh's

Oure will give you (immediate relief. Prioe 10 oente, 50 oenta and $1 Moffett Horgan & Oo.

jn i)u

.lllllloMi

Va„

Of course the manufacturers took special —Tli Postal Telegraph Company is also engaged in the chair department, pains to make this plant a good one be-

wi ri

,m()V(.

H((llinson lV

to play during the fair, and the com- 1 Warner is flourshing in Oklahoma. He mittee was instructed to contract with 1 hehmgs to the firm of Turk A- Warner '••V'.'•'•:• and is interested in four stores at.

them. :i and is interested in four stores at. differ-!

a project he had in hand. This is to 1

W. D. Harlow came before the meet-' .,ll jK,ints. His firm is doing a great, eipallv are making barrels, chairs, shoes

ing and wanted the association to adopt business with the Indians nrd cow boys1

ml(

Louisville architects are competing

or

jM jihins and specifications for the

Tho building impressed the

WIIB

man class

THE NORTHERN PRISON.

Its Sanitary Condition and Management— The Urawfordsville Continguut. Dr. .T. X. Taylor, ['resident, mid Dr.

place. Hoard of Health, made their annual in-—•-THE JOUHNATJ has received a copy of s]H.'ction of the Northern prison on Dr. Tuttle's alumni address at Marietta Thursday. These officials were aceoinCollogo. pan iod bv B. K. KIKSSCI), Dr. Tiieo. Me-' —Alvin Breaks this week sold two Median, W. W. Morgan, and the editor car load of choice cheep and ono load of I 1 JoriiNAi. They found the sailtine cattle. itary condition of the prison good and —Ben Kwnnk and Dan Curtis were

K,)

arrested bv Constable Hanna yesterday have suggestions to make to further im-

ffiako a coupling and failing had stepped and pleaded not guilty before Ramsey, prove the institution, but they will be down again to do it but the cars giving Their trial will occur on .le.lv 20. a sudden lurch ho was caught in some —A straw stack on the farm of Geo. way between the bumpers and fright- Smith took fire last night and burned, fully crushed. Both legs were man- The wheat had just been threshed and gled, crushed and lorn out of all sem- I the straw was worth considerable." bianco to limbs and ho was likewise in-1 —Last night the south bound pnssenjured internally, especially about the ger on the Monon killed an old man at Bhoulders. lie was carried at onco to Battle Ground. He was walking along

of the State

report. Of course they will

of minor importance so far as the prison proper is concerned. The principal criticism will pertain mainly to the sewer I which lends'from the prison to the lnkr, the defects of which are mostly attrihutablo to the corporation of Michigan City. The prison authorities have constructed a sewer leading to a small stream a distance of perhaps nearly a i|iinrlcr of a mile. This little stream with all of its tilth rial garbage rnns through the western part of the city and empties into the liaibor. ... The. city I

.submitted a proposition Legislature that for an propriation oi' perhaps she woulil furnish the remainder

Home I slapping tlie pretty, rosv cheeks of lit- money and complete the sewer making

to the

iP-

•211.000 of tla­

the money and built the sewer through the town. When this was exhausted the work suspended and the stream for about a ipiar.ter oC.a, mile is opn-n and, where are

which instrument full performer. the following Odd Fellows attended the festivities at Lafayette last night: Kd Sargent. W. 11. Webster, .lohn AVilliams, A. II. Hernly. \V. J. Dims. C. Davis, Harry Mikels, ]•„.(.5. Wil.-on. II. Ji. man be.ings inhabit. Of course it Unlet and Isaac Wilhite. an injurious effect on the health of •—Harry Kenton left for Torre Haute I people not only of those living adjacent last night where he meets a party of but more or less all over the citv. The

reports show that the per cent of diphtheria and kindred diseases of Michigan City ranks next to Indianapolis of Indiana cities.

Under the management of Warden 1 French, prison affairs have greatly improved. The convicts all speak 111 the highest terms of the kind and humane 1 treatment at his hands. The Crawfordsville contingent residing lit this! popular lake side resort are all with the! exception of June Bias, able for their I recreation and their meals. W. F.

Pettit, probably the most distinguished prisoner within the walls of the pen. is engaged in the chair department, lie is given a task to perform each day which he usually completes by 1 o'clock',

For overtime he receives extra pay and

has not given bail but Mr. Yancleave 1 has now a neat sum placed to his credit,

j|4, ialki-^1 quite hopefully or the pros-

where Kerr has an uncle peels for a new trial and altogether was

[, 1.0(10. I as cheerful as a bird. Charley Coombs

ils t) tho r( ir room

]le is in good health and makes the best

Wallace's book store I of his environments. Win. Shular is in

on the first of next month. The people the blacksmith shop. He is hopeful of are all crying to climb a pair of stairs 1 receiving a reprieve soon and of course to get to a telegraph oflice. is anxiously looking forward to that

Last evening a car load of stone passed over the Monon and in passing under the east Wabash avenue bridge a misplaced stone struck the frame work of the bridge and smashed it up in style. The bridgo has now been repaired and travel o\er it is resumed. -Col. Burford reports that Sig

happy day. John Campbell is in the woolen department and is ageing rapidly. Juno Bias complains of having the consumption and was in his cell lying down.

The prison is over crowded there being now more than SOU convicts while its cell capacity is something over 700. To accommodate them several cells are double berthed.

T1»-

getting wealthy quite rapidly,

1

furl .Ycrr.s'. Prof. F. 1'. Mount has received word from the authorities of Welleslv College in regard to the examination papers of Miss Jessie Davis, which were sent there

industries carried on there prin-

from ,lu

1'11(,M

1,1 ie

luves il,ul

feet.

Miss Davis came off in

some days ago. with fly colors and by a good grade

admitted to the 1-resh

of Welleslv College.

—The ladies of the ild section M. E. church will give a social in the church

ago while working as a section man on the Monon, a few miles north of the citv. was struck by a train while attempting to remove a handcar from the track, nnd had his leg crushed and was otherwise seriously injured, is now able to be about on crutches and left yesterday for Crawfordsville, where the Monon people have given him a watching post. —Lafayette Courier.

coarsest, coarse

mittens, spinning wool into,

PEHSONAIiS."

—Mrs. Charles Goltrn is |uito ill. ..r—(». F. Hughes is in Indianapolis. —-C. M. Berry, of Veedersbnrg, is in the city.

Col. .John Win^ate was in the citv to-day.

Milt Jiurk returned from Chester, 111., to-day.

Prof. Norriw wont to Indianapolis tliis morning.

—J. It. Hrvant returned from Now York Just night. —Cornelius and Tod Jiiroh aro visiting in Kokomo.

Miss Ifonriotta AHon has returned to Totro Haute. —Alf Hailey has returned from (Irand Rapids, Mich.

family. Mrs. Mattio K. Ihiik. nati, is the guest of.-. \Irs. south «.»f town. I .fudge Allen and son

1

•i

Counted luoanil seventy steadies, u'oli ielineii and sevtrral stniks. And the banks of this open stream are lined with houses which hu­

with Mr I (iott.

U. M. Scott and family.

ll as the

are soon to be married.

CHURCH NOTES.

yarn and manufacturing it into hose. Michigan City is a town built upon the sand, but it has withstood flood and of smell and completely derange the storm and the penitentiary sewer until whole svsteiu when entering it through it has grown to be a town of 11,000 in-!

Shaken Up.

Yesterday as Isaac Allen, of this city, nnd Mr. Larkins, the old Crawfordsville hotel man, were setting fruit treeB at Champaign. Ills., they met with a very serious accident. Tlieir buggy collapsed suddenly and both were thrown out on the ground. Air. Allen was badly scratched about the face and Mr. Lar-

parlors Thursday, Juiy lGtli. Tho regular supper including cake and ice cream will be served for 15 cents from .1:30 till 8 o'clock. All the ladieB of this section are requested to meet at the home of Mm. Jeff Scott Monday at 2 o'clock to make the necessary arrange- p]Mr lip was so badly cut tliat it ments for tho social. fell down over his chin. He was also —Gilbert Fauber. who several months seriously bruised.

Information Wanted.

The following letter has been received at this ollice: WAYNKTOWN. July 10, 1891.—Editor of the .fontsAi..—liegardiug the Courtney divorce suit please let me know the religious qualifications of the two prominent doctors. I see you said "Hebrew merchant." What church do the other fellows belong to? M. HKKZXXI.

In reply we will Bay we do not know.

Uu*

7

It has about nine miles of paved

streets, of block and brick. Two well conducted daily newspapers, the I'isimtfh and the -Veicx are the vehicles for booming the town. Each vies with the other in its loyalty Michigan City interests.

MISCELLANEOUS.

—Only live crocodiles have ever been captured in Florida, although alligators are numerous. One difference between the two is that the crocodile works with his upper jaw. while the alligator snap© a man in two with his lower jaw. "Well, Willie, how does tin* prass prow that you brought home with you?" "O, I made a mistake," said the little farmer. "I brought home a lot of hay sod instead of prass sod. It's all turned yellow."—Harper's Kazar.

His Latest opus.-—Musical Kditor (meeting composor)--"Mello, Tewnes* 1 haven't seen you since you pot married. Doinp anvthinp in our line?'* Composer -"Nothinp much, only a little—or—cradle soup in A Hat.M -Chicago Tribune. "Mamma." said Mrs. Do Porpue's dauphter, "you oupht to po over to the

National museum. There are things

»J. H. Burford came up from Wave- there that are thousands of years old." land this morning. dear me!" ejaculated the worthy Miss Marv D. Gilkev has relumed /".ftfully "f *'J'le they must no. Washington Post. rrom Indianapolis. -The first water mill over built was

Albert Baker, of Indianapolis, is the -erected on the Kivor Tiber, at Kome, A. ptiest of Prof. Campbell. 1). *0. \Mndmdls wore in onpinal use |. in the twelfth centurv. Tide mills were -Mis. 1. 15. Collins and dauphter. ....

1'

Pearl, are visiting in Brazil.

Mis

l-d He^ Holds and Walter Picket re^ turned from West liaden vesterdav, Mi -s Kva ^liller is here to I guest, of Miss Ad day. !Mrs. llobeit W. Allen, of I'asndena.

the

operated in \enioo about l»u. ^aw-

Harding over .Sun- .of those Indians." "Well. 1 should hop® *o. Hut why. particularly?'- "because, they are disarming them." And then

v, he was plad it hadn't happened to him. Lid.. Ui visitmp ..Joseph Milligan and -_st. Joseph Nows —Or. i. i\ Voipt. of Columbus. O.,. (!inein- 'P°

rls

of

st

U. Ke

Mack after a visit

returned to Torre llauW

-Mil Scott and daughter, Totie, —It was shown

went to Kankakee lo spend Sunday with

nn,i

two of Torre Hunte's popular young down to the well and through the orsoeietv people, both well known here, chard, clean off the cellar doors, ami then bring up the water from tin1 well and a few buckets of coal from down

Misses Daisy Doherty, of I horn- stairs." Itov "And then, ma'am. I suptown. and Laura llrrris, of Ft. Wavne,! pose you'll want to have your grass who have been the guests of Mrs. ('has.

Smith, went to Torre Haute tins morning. —Miss Lulu Brewer will leave here Monday for Crawfordsvillo to visit lier parents for a few days, when she will go lo Chicago, where she will spend the summer with friends.— Fruul'fori Ovx)t t.

I

Services will be held at the church to-morrow at the hours: Sunday school at a. m., preaching at 111:•!and evening service at 7 :M0. Parents and pupils will please note these changes.

The usual services will occur at the First Presbyterian church to-morrew. In the evening there will be a short sermon, subject: "How Beadest Thou.'1

Usual services at the M. E. church tomorrow conducted by Rev. G. W. Sw tzer.

Kev. G. P. Fuson will occupy the pulpit of the Baptist church to-morrow morning and evening.

Dr. B. J. Cunningham will conduct the usual services at Center church tomorrow. Miss Thomson will sing in the morning.

Bev. A. K. Glover, Rector of St. ohn's church, will eoncuct services tomorrow at 10:30 o'clock a. 111. and 7:30 p. in. Sunday school at 2 p. in.

Ilcirtirr lh, it

tillim-nrs I'or Catarrh Contain Mrrrurii

"is surfaces. Such articles

..... should never be used except- on proserin-

habitants. Its principal industry ti„ns from reputable ].hvsicians. as the lumber. Willi a line harbor its receipts they will do is tenfold to the for the product of the pine forests from good you can possibly derive from them. across the lake amount to billions of

Catarrh Cure, manufactured by

1 A O a

no mereurv, and is taken internally, and

acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Chenev Co. "Hold by Druggists, price 75c per bottle.

llucklcn'H Arnica Salve. The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilapinbs corns and all skin eruptions, nnd losstively cures piles, or no pay reqursri. It is guaranteed to give perfect satiid faction, or money refunded. Price 25 centfl per box. For sale by Nye & Co

My son has been afll icteil with nasa catarrh since quite young. I was induced to try Ely's Cream Balm, and 1hfore ho had used ono bottle, that disagreable catarrhal smell had all left him. Ho appears as well as any one. It is tho best catarrh remedy in the market. --J. C. Olmstead, Areola, 111.

When 1 began using Ely's Cream Htlm my catarrh was so bad I had headache the whole time and discharged a large amount of filthy mutter. That has almost entirely disappeared and I have not liHd headache since.—J.H.Sommers,Stephney Conn. •.••."

at

mills are said to have been in use Aupsberp. Germany, about —uO Charlie!" said the sweet yung*thinp, as she nestled a triiV closer to him, "I am so so piad you are not on«i

havinp relieved a woman by.:v

means of an emet ie of a stomach boarder,*

a living toad about an inch and a half loup, perfectly developed, except- the have bind lops. Wo have always hern inclined to doubt these stories hut, this one appears in the Sanitary Kra and should not be an error.

in a suit in Cincin-

the other day that one shyster law-

Tr

uut-

visite.l thirty-six ditlerent peo-

I pie )n the course of a year and encour^

Mrs. D. (icrard, Miss Anna aped them to bepin lii»el s\iits apuinsi Dawson, Miss Maine Gerard and Clyde different newspapers, ollering to take a erard returned to-day from I'aisley. —AV. K. Wallace and T. D. Brown

retainer of Sf anil half of what might be got before a jury. A trood share of the libel suits come about in this way.

htue returned from thePir.c Hills where —Housewife—''Willyou clean off this they have been preparing for the King- mow for 11 quarter?" iioy—"Yes'm." fishers. Housewife Well, after yoie have cleaned off the front walk and steps. 1 -Curtis Gilbert and Miss Mabel Cook,

BhaU wnilt vou ln

.lkl,

lli(V

,,.lUl

Podpe City has only three prudes of society, aecordmp to a reeont arrival from the west. Tho tirM. or "aristoejraey." is eomoosod of those who put out their washinp. Tho "middle elnss" does its own washinp. and the "lowest, 'class" is that which takes wahinp.

This is the most simple and complete distinction yet known, only it leaves one larpe class unaccounted fop—those -who think washinp an unnoee.-Nsary lux-

urv. Hoston POM.. --This discreet resolution was adopted

Christian recently by the trustees of a schoolfollowing

1,mso

M°uticello, C»a.: "Whereas.

the bip hickory near the loft hand of Ken llill academy beinp dead, and that if it should fall on any of the children between their seventh and seventeenth year, and near the small of the back, they should surely die: therefore resolved that we hire an unbleached American to raze the aforesaid hickory tree .to the pround.'' —A man who is the father of eight boys finds that they cost him a suit of clothes, from hat to shoes, once a week. Children cost money, and most parents find it is only a question of how much they can or will spend on them. Hut we have here in town a mother who has upset this rule. She has a little boy with an anpolic face and she keeps him before the camera half the time posinp him as a cupid or a Kauntleroy or as choir boy. The sale of his photopraph* nets her ?f00 a year, and the worst of it is she does not need the money.—N. V. Sun. "In (iod wo trust" first appeared on the copper two-cent issue of lsr»4, and is the first use of the word (iod in any government act. This sentence was introduced by .lames Pollock, an exgovernor of Pennsylvania, director of

I tlu? mint, with the approval of S. 1'.

as mercury will surely destroy the sense 1 Chase, then sectary of the treasury. It appeared 011 llie lS(Wt issue of the double-eaifle. eaj.1.-. half-eagle, silver dollar, half-dollar, and nickel, five-cent, piece, in lieu of the long-existing motto of A". I'ltiriljit* I'11 mil. In the tradedollar issue (ISTlii both mottoes were retained, "In Hod we trust" appearing on the obverse. —The New York County Medical Society frequently brings into court persons practicing medicine who have no legal right to do so. not having diplomas: and the convictions are quite numerous. In a recent case the offender had been before the court once before, but claimed that bis lawyer had given him a paper which purported to le a decision reversing the former conviction. The lawyer was a shyster, who is now serving a term in the state prison for forging a divorce decree. The judgo said it was simply a case of a modicf shark falling into the hands of t» legal sharks, and sentenced the bogu doctor to imprisonment for 100 days in the penitentiary, together with a fine of 8100. —Judge Richards, of Chicago, once had a very exciting experience when he was a justice in Hosque county, Tex.

One day, when prisoners were few, a little man was brought in by a constable anil two assistants for the offense of carrying two revolvers. "I told him." said the justice' "he must pay S25 and lose the weapons. At that the little fellow broke down and actually cried. Finally, with tears streaming down his checks, he said: 'O, judge, jes'let me bid 'em good-by. Ma gave 'em to me, an'1 can't go without handlin' them jest one®.' 1 consented, and the moment he got the weapons, he straightened up, and leveling them, yelled: 'I'd like to tee the galoot as can get ma's pistols aow. !\ow I'm a-goin' 011 my journey.' Nobody tried to stop him."