Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 13 March 1893 — Page 3
Negligee Shirts.
We have just received a fine
line of
Fancy DressShirts.
They are simply elegant.- Do
not fail to see them.
Our
Neckwear
Our line of
for Spring is
here. It comprises all the
latest designs.
Spring Suits
are
arriving daily. Don't fail
to call and examine them.
The admiration of all is our
new hat case. You can see
our great line of Hats by
calling and looking in this
case.
LEE S. WARNER,'
The leading and only OnePrice Clothier. Corner of Haiti and Wash° ington Streets.
fAKF
PLEASANT
^H£ NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND MY COMPLEXION IS BETTER.
My doctor bayn Itacls gently on the stomach, liver anil kldnuySt anil a pjewsant laxative. This drink la niadu from herbs, and is mcpartxl for lUJuasoaaUy *9 tea. Ids called
A N E S E I IN E
All drusvMfl null It at jwe. nnd $I.0 per jiockAira* Buy
OIIO
to-day. Lane'* Fninlly Mudloluo
IIIOVCH
Ihfi bowel* t?nch tiny.
LU
uedthy, thid nixvsiuiry.
order to be
MUSIC HALL, Thursday, March 16.
Lincoln J. Carter's Grand Scenic Production,
THE FAST MAIL
Ten sets of special scenery, the Dago drive, flight of the Fast a N a a a a light with boiling mist, practical working engine atid 14 frhight cars with illuminated caboose.
Prices, 35 and 50 cents
When you want a BABY CARRIAGE why don't yon buy a good one 1 you go to
the right place it will cost you no more than to buy a poorer one somewhere else.
Call and inspect our stock and be convinced. Sec our "Gendrons" and "Ileywoods/' Sold on the installment plan.
ROSS BROTHERS., 99=Cent Store.
DAILY JOURNAL.
MON1UT MARCH 13, 1893.
ANEW HOME INDUSTRY.
A Company Organized to Manufacture Pressed JBriok JtJisc Money In It. The Crawfordsville l'reesed Brick Company has been organized with a capital stock of §20,000. It ia a bom© industry, organized entirely Of home capital and will turn out a product worthy ot our city, The stockholders are J. K. Everson, William Murlin, William K. Martin and John T. Ferguson. Mr. Everson several months ago discovered material tor making a lirst-class quality ot pressed brick on some land north o£ the Sugar Creek bridge just this Bi'lo of where the wreck occurred. It is a shale, not a clay, and experiments showed it to l« of nn unusually flue quality. The land, 131 acres in all, was bought of Dr. I. A. Detclion and Appleton Elmore for the sum of 80,000 by Mr. Everson aud he sold a portion of it to the company which he esmites will produce shale enough to last them fifty years. It extends down to a depth of at, least one bund red feet. The work ot building the plant will begin in a few days and bricks will be timed out by June. A 100-horse wer boiler, nn 80 horse power engine and lino shafting have bsen
IT-chased
and together
with one rick machine, a crusher and the necessary elevators and kilns of the modern up aud down draft will forni the plant at first. As soon as the plant is in running order a second machine will be added. Twenty-live men will be employed under the superintonoency of Mr. Ferguson and 25,000 brick a day can be made. The crusher will reduce the shule to a powder line us (lour, the brick machine will mold it dry by bringing the immense pressure of 150 tons on it, and the nation of the heat turns it a deep rich red color and nmkes it like stone. Experts at Chicago say it is equal to the St. Louis or Philadelphia brick in color and hardness and these two, it is well known, are the very best in the country. Mr. Everson and Mr. Wm, Martiu have just returned from Chicago where they made arrangements with'the Monon railroad to build a five hundred foot switch to their .factory. It is probable that Wm. Martin will be treasurer of the company, \V. K. Martin, secretary, and J. K. Everson, president. Mr. Everson, however, will in a short time turn the entira management over to his partners and devote all of his time to the mill business and to farming. It looks as if the company had bonanza for the demand for pressed brick is great. Already Mr. Everson has had applications for several carloads which of course had to be refused. The company will also make a vitrified paving brick, which is accomplished by adding a certain quality of clay to the shale. The tests show the shalo and clay make as good paving brick as can bo made anywhere in the country.
MARRIAGE LI0ENSE.
Homer Long and Lizzie A. Myors.
EVE, ear and throat diseases only, Dr. Greene, Jool Block. Fitting of glasses a specialty.
In Paint
the best is the cheapest. Strictly Pure
White Lead is best properly applied it will not scale, chip, chalk, or rub off it firmly adheres to the wood and forms a permanent base for repainting. Paints which peel or scale have to be removed by scraping or burning before satisfactory repainting can be done. When buying it is important to obtain
Strictiy Pure White Lead
properly made. Time has proven that white lead made by the "Old Dutch" process of slow corrosion possesses qualities that cannot be obtained by any other method of manufacture. This process consumes four to six months time, and produces the brands that have given White Lead its character as the standard paint. "Armstrong & McKelvy" "Beymer-Bauman" "Eckstein" "Fahnestock" "Anchor" "Kentucky" "Morley" "Southern" "Shipman" "Red Seal" "Collier" "Davis-Chambers" are standard brands of strictly pure Lead made by the Old Dutch process. You get the best in buying them. You can produce any desired color by tinting these brands of white lead with National Lead Co.'s Pure White Lead Tinting Colors.
For sale by the most reliable dealers in Paints everywhere.
If you nre going to paint, it will pay you to send to us for a Book containing information that mny save you many a dollar it will only cost you a.postal card to do so.
NATIONAL LEAD CO., 1 ftrondway, KcwTorlt Cincinnati Branch,
Cincinnati, Ohio,
A SANITARY ENGIBEEH'S ADVI0E.
From His Experience He Give an Opinion As to the Best and Most Lconomioal Method of Oity Improvements,
We take pleasure in printing below a letter from Prof. Charles C. Brown, of Union College, a sanitary and civil engineer ot wide experience. A study of the proper methods of city improvements is his special business, and therefore his opinions should have great weight with our council and citizens. He says:
Thore ar9 four city improvements whibh are very closely connected and which should be considered together in devising the most economical and the easiest way of making the improvements.
These are street grading, street paving, surface drainage and sewerage. It is practically impossible to secure the best and cheapest plun for doing any one without ft consideration of the other three. It is evident, therefore, that, for a city which is just beginning the work ot city improvements, a comprehensive plan for carrying ont ail these improvements should be worked out, so that any work to be done will be done according to the plan Bnd will therefore be-right at the beginning and will not have to be done over and will not modify other parts of the work to the detriment of both. There is also a best order in which the improvements should be made. It this order is not followed it is often necessary to do some of the work twice over and come ont with a worse state of affairs than in the beginning, sometimes.
The question of street drainage and street grading are very intimately related, street grading in most cases being for the purpose of making drainage easiest and safer. Street grsding is also closely related to sewerage where the drainage is carried oft' in the sewers nnd also in some places where it is impossible to carry a sewer through properly without filling a street. This often happens in crossing gullies in cities wjth the topography of Crawfordsville. The matter of paving has some connection with grading and draining, and it is necessary sometimes to use a certain kind of paving because the grade requires it or because the amount of water (lowing over the street is large and demands special treatment. It is evident that Bewerage and drainage aro close'v related in getting up tho general plan for ill some places it is necessary to iif-e the sewers for both house nnd street drainage, while 10 many places the two can bo separated to great advantage both 10 the aani'.ary condition of the sowers and to the pockets of the taxpayers.
It is also evident that there is a close connection between sewerage and street paving in this, that all kinds of pavement are greatly injured by having holes cut in them, and so the expense of re-paving and keeping pavement in repair is much greater if the paving is done tirst and the sewers are put in afterwards. The expense of repaving is shown by the figures given for the different kinds of pavement in bids for doing sewer work. Wherea fine pavement is to be cut into and replaced in as good conditions as found a large figure is given for the ro-paving which forms an appreciable addition to the cost of the sewer system. It ia a fact, moreover, that in nine casee out of ten tho pavement is not re placed in its orininal condition and is always a source of trouble and expense. There are other points of connection which will present themselves to a thoughtful man and in any special case there are particular places of intimate relation which can only be shown on investigation.
There is but one a-ay to get all the improvements planned in the most economical 1c1.11/, and thai is to secure by a detailed survey all the information that will be needed fpr all the proposal improvements.
With this information, to be secured only by a thorough sanitary survey of the city, comprehensive plan for the improvements can be made which will show just what their relations are aud will show which improvement should be made first in any particular locality, the cost of the respective improvements, the methods or making them, and tho relations to the improvements in each locality to ull the ethers. It will then bo nujecofcsnry to spend time in considering for each
section of work the
conditions of other related sections, for the plan will show these relations and will have taken them all into account in fixing the lines of the work. No work •will then be done which will have to be undone becante it will r.ot fit other loilities which were not considered in first making the improvement, of a locality, for all localities willbave been taken into account 111 the Wan and everything done will fit with everything done efore or to be done afterwards.
It has been the experience of many Ilacex that the sanitary survey pays for itself over and over aijain..
Often it costs no more for the whole city than a proper consideration for a small section ot the city, since the proper consideration ot the small Bection should take into account muoli of the city beyond the particular locality, The cities which have had such sanitary surveys made alter part of thoir improvements are made are the best witnesses to tlio value of the surveys and talk the loudest about the short sightedness of their predecessors in not having the survey and plan mnde first, for in practically evory case it is found that work costing several times tue cost of such
a survey must be done over or abandoned. Indianapolis is good example ot such a city.-
AB regards the matter of paving before sewers nre laid, there is but one opinion nmong thoso who look into the subject, The villages and cities in New York, Ohio and Indiana with which I am acquainted flnd which aie putting in ^uch improvements are, with hardly an exception, putting in the sewera first, and those which have put in a little paving in advance of the sewers are lamenting their short sightedness. I would refer specially to Cortland, Jamestown, Tonananda, N. Y., ull with not far from 10,000 population to Dayton, O., somewhat larger, and to Indinnapolis, Anderson, Torre Haute, and other places in Indians, where anything more than ordinary macadam pavement has been put in.
There is no manner of doubt but that the proper order of procedure in making city improvements is: 1. A sanitary survey and comprehensive plnn for all the improvements, giving full information as to conditions and methods. 2. In nearly all cases the construction ot the sewers aod street drains nnd the necessary grading if nny. 3. Street paving.
One of the great advantages of the plan is that any part, large or small, ot the work can be done with absolute certainty that it will fit with every other part and that once down it will never have to be reconstructed because it is out of date.
Gambling House Eaided-
Saturday evening the tiger's lair over Dave Johnson's saloon was cleaned out again and eight animals caught. They were "taken up before the Mayor and promptly fined. Officers Grimes and Gill who made the arrests were refused admittance at the door and had to kick it in. The poker players were all hid under tables and in closets but not one escaped. It appears that two young sports had been barred from the game and in revenge had given the whole thing away to the Law and Order Leagno. Its officers waited on Councilman Reynolds, who waited on the Mayor who waited on the police who waited on the poker players. The whole -owd was fined and then Mr. Johnson filed affidavits against Mart Sullivan and Fred Coombs charging them with being c.million gamblers. They were arrested, pleaded guilty nnd were fined. It ap pears to have been a case of dog eat dog all around. ..
The Frank Fox Social,
Tho social at Center church to morrow evening will be a benefit, to assist Key. Frank Fox, in his missionary work in North Carolina. Mr. Fox is down among the heathen clay eaters and moonshiners •ind is trying to build a chapel to take the place of one of "God's first temples" where he now holds forth. The social cannot bd too largely patronized and the good people should turn out in Hocks.
Entertained.'
On Saturday evening John D. Moore and wife entertained the local members of the Traveling Men's Associaton and their wives. The affair was a most delightful one nnd the evening pleasantly ^passed by cards, dancing and various other amusements. During the evening an elegant collation was served.
Great Realistic Performance. What promises to be the greatest attempt in the domain of realism will be seen at Music Hall next Thursday evening, in the n.elodrama of Lincoln J. Carter's "Fas^Moil." The play is famous throughout the country for tho completeness and magnitude of its mechanical effects. The production is under the personal supervision of its author—Lincoln J. Carter. Special scenery is carried for the ten complete sets used in t.h6 piny. In the second act a steamboat io shown with the boiler rooms and their intricate machinery nnd glowing furnaces. The boat is blown up by a tremendous explosion, and the wreck is seen going down in mid river. The great railway scene is unother of the unprecedented achievements of their performance in the direction of realism. A freight train ot fourteen cars is rtin across tho stage with an illuminated caboose and a practical looomotive. Tho liruman nnd engineer are seen at thoir respective stntions, look like reality itself. A mail train comes speeding by and catches the mail pouch just as every one has seen it do many time.
In the last act Niagara Falls are shown in all their natural beauty. A cataract of real water is put on tho stage, and it boils and foams in the most naturnl way. The soft moonlight adds to the effect and the scene needs only the addition of the suspension bridge to complete the effect of reality.
DIES A VEUY OLD MAN. We oft on hear of men reaching their nineties, but very seldom is the uge of on- hundred gained. A careful estimate on reliable authority indicates that the number reaching ninety would bo able to live one hundred years had they in middle age UBed the LOB Angeles Uaisin Cured Prune Laxativt) to give vitality to the digestive organs and keep "the bowels open. J.t is purely vegetable. Sold by Moffett it Morgan, druggists, and recommended bv all as the beBt family medicine.
BISMAHCK'S WIFI1
tms Causa of Many of tho •:?, Chancellor's Troubles.
Iron
Although Dut Little Known to the ont' •Id* World tho l'rlncrss fa a l*uwer Among (Jertnan Xoblrn—ll«r
AN
tipathy for tho I'm poror,
Bismarck's sorrows arc crowding1 liArd upon him. These last years of his life aro not happy ones.
What few people know is that Princess Bismarck is in reality responsible for many of his misfortunes. The outside world is almost unconscious that she exists, for she keejis in the background, but when she does speak she is likely to show little of that diplomacy which has made her husband famous, says the New York Press. On one occasion when she abandoned her habitual reserve, although she, startled her hearers, she revealed herself as the counselor of her husband and as a woman of extraordinary strength of mind and daring.
The occasion will be well remembered—indeed if ..an never be forgotten —by those who were privileged to be. the guests of the prince at his officii farewell reception. There were present several members of the. cabinet (among them poor Von llottichcr. who had been forced to act all along as buffer between emperor and chancellor and who not seldom got abused 011 both sides,) the whole staff of the foreign office and a large number of dignitaries of state.
Bismarck was unsnally silent and apparently in a mood of grief rather than resentment. The princess, on the other hand, was almost beside herself with rage. She exclaimed in a loud voice: "It was I who advised my husband to bear no longer with the emperor's petty interferences in matters which he does not understand. But to accept my husband's resignation was an act of infamy which the knave shall repent to me. He shall recall my husband on his knees. To dare to treat Germany's greatest man like that! Woe upon him!''
Tho word translated for want of better Interpretation ivith knave was "Bube," the most offensive term in the German language if applied in the sense of anger to a man, and the threat against the emperor was conveyed by the following words: "Das sol mir der Bube bussen."
There was a moment of awful silence and then followed a stampede led by the ministers, who rushed out of the palace as if a pestilence were upon them, aud in an incredibly short time the Bismarck family found themselves alone in the brilliantly lighted saloons. I do not believe anybody has dared to repeat the princess' dreadful words of import to the emperor, though, no doubt, the fact of somethingvery shocking having been said by the princess was probably reported to his majesty. When people talk of the mere possibility of a reconciliation between the emperor and Bismarck they are ignorant of the conditions under which they parted.
Many men have, after all, been more unfortunate than Hismarok. lie has been well paid: no statesman ever better. He has been raised from the obscurity of a Pomeranian "krautjunker'' with an incumbered estate and only enough worldly possessions to eke out a bare living to the dignity of a prince of the empire and the di-ke of LaucnI burg, endowed with a inagaiticent estate in the Sachseuwald. the ancestral estate of Schonhausen, purchased for him by the nation, and the estate of Yarzin, clear of mortgages. To put it in plain figures. Prince Bismarck enjoys now a competency closely estimated at fifty thousand pounds a year, and, better than all, he is still the idol of a large part of Germany's population.
INATTENTIVE HOUSE MEMBERS. A New York CoiiereoBinan Tlilnks Their Writing Desks Should I'o Tukon Away. "There is but one way in which this can be marie a decent legislative body," said a member from New York to a Washington Post reporter as ho surveyed the house and heard one man speaking while one hundred and sixtysix others chewed gum or rustled papers, "and that way is to take from the members their desks. They should be given no opportunity to write while legislative business is on tap. 1 placed upon straight, hard benches with "nothing to do save talk or listen they would know more of what is going on. Long, long ago the English realized this fact. In the house of commons there is never disturbance of any kind unless an extremely heated and factional debate is on. Everybody in the chamber hears what the man who has the right of way is saying. If the members wish to write or read the newspapers or swap yarns that used to be funny many reons apo they go into a room provided for that purpose. I am not much of an Anglomuniac myself. In fact, I think that cockney immigration ought to he permanently barred. But there are things other than trousers that might copy from England and be nothing the worse for it."
A Bright Lad.
There is one Belfast (Me.l vonth who will make a general some day. if be properly develops his natural traits us they appear at present, lie isbut three years and eipflit months old, but showed engineering- skill in getting- out of a. scrape last week that few big boys would have equaled. While at play in I a camp with some other boys he wsi's accidentally locked in, and his comrades all went off to school. Finding himself a prisoner. Instead of sitting-down and crying our youngster first built up the articles in the room until he could reach a window, which he promptly smashed.
Next he threw out the various articles which he could lift until the pile outside was within safe dropping distance from the window, when he climbed out and dropped to the pile. He -ivns nearly two hours doing tho work, but. says he wasn't going to take any chances ot breaking his neck by jumping from that liiirli window.
D-PRICE'S
The only Pure Creaui of Tartar Powder.—No Ammonia No Alum,
Used 1 Millions of Homes—40 Years the Siaudard.
The
OUR ADVICE TO CUSTOMERS:
We have just received a car load of SUGAR and will offer it to our customers at the old prices lor a short time. Will say to those that want to lay in a supply, now is your time to buy Sugars do not wait too long for you will have to pay more money.
Twenty-two pounds Yellow Sugar ..-One Dollar
Twenty pounds New York A... *One Dollar
Nineteen pounds Conf. A Sugar .One Dollar
Nineteen pounds Granulated Sugar One Dollar Twenty-live pounds Ben Hur Flour Forty-five Cents Fifty pounds Be.i Hur Flour Ninety Cents Twenty-five pounds Pride Peoria Sixty-five Cents Fifty pounds Pride Peoria One Dollar and Twenty-five Cents Twenty-five pounds Pure Gold Sixty-five Cents Fifty pounds Pure Gold, best Minneapolis.One Dollar and a quarter 1 bushel Potatoes Ooe Dollar 1 gallon Syrup, fine. Thirty Cents bucket, 2 gallons, Syrup Seventy-five Cents
Furniture===Ncw {Furniture arriving
GII/VNITE and marble monuments of all descriptions and at low pi ices at Fred Handel's. d.twt£
The I'roof of the Pudtllna. Have you humors, causing blotchesf Uses .vour blood run thick and slupnish Arc vou drowsy, dull and languid! Is a tasto in your mouth, and Is your tonfjuo all furred aud i-oateil! Is your sleep with bad dreams broken 1 Do you feel down hearted, dismal, Dreaming something,what, .vou know not! Then be very sure you're bilious— That you have a torpid liver, And what you need is something to rouse it and make it active enough to throw oft the impurities that clog it something to invigorate the debiliated'system, and help all the organs to perform all the duties expected of them, promptly and energetically. That, '•something" is Or. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, tho great bloou purifier which its proprietors have such faith in that they guarantee it to cure. If it does not your money will be retunded. But it will. Buy it, try it and be convinced of its wonderful power. If the proof of the pudding is in the eating, the proof ofthi3 remedy is the taking.
I was troubled with catarrh for seven years previous to commencing the use of Ely's Cream Balm. It has done for me what other so-called cures bave failed to do —cured me. The effect of tha Balm seemed magical. Clarence L. HofT, Biddeford Me
After trying many remedies for catarrh daring the past twelve years 1 tried E'y's Cream Balm with complete success. It is over one year since 1 stopped using it and ha-.o had no return of catarrh 1 recommend it to all m.y friends.—MiltonT Puhn, [trading, Pa.
daily. Wo have the lines! line of Bed-Room Sets to se
lect from of any .house in Crawfordsville.
Barnhill, Hornaday & Pickett.
Warner
(iSO to 700,
WCBI8th
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Sastoria.
.-I Little l'atherly Advice. "If you over marry," said an old gentleman to his son, "let it be a woman who has enough judgment to superintend the getting of a meal, tasto enough to dress herself, pride enough to wash her face, and sense enough to use Dr. Pierce's Kuvorilo Prescription, whenever she needs it Tho experience of the aged lias shown the "Favorite Prescription" to be the best for the euro ot all female weaknesses and dcraugements. Good sense is stiown by getting the remedy from your druggists, and using it whenever you feel weak and debiliHted. It will invigorate and cannot possibly do harm.
A Man Thermometer.
1 -.can men make the. best thermometers. Fahrenheit never invented better ones. If the weather is warm and sunny, they aro cheerful, jfu .'ld and frosty, they aro irrilahiu and snappy. If damp and cloudy, they are downcast and gloomy. But if either lenn or fat men are suffering from biliousness, headache, constipation, or indigestion, tho weather will always bo damp and cloudy in their locality, unlrss thev use Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. These Pellets arc small, sugareoatcd granules, calculated to start tho liver and digestive organs into healthy activity, aud thereby raise low spirits, and dispel gloom.
IMPORTANT TO ADVEIlTISIMtS. Tho cream of tho country papers is found in Remington's County Seat Lists. Shrewd advertisers avail themselves of tlieso lists, a copy of which can bo had of Itomington Hios., of New York & Pitts'ourg.
Children 6ry for
Pitcher'* Oastorla.
A Life Saved.
Iu many instances where pure and nutritive tonics worn used. The greatest system builder for invalids, convalescents, week find aged people is the "Old Gibraltor Tokav Wine." Sold only in quart bottles. This wine is tho vintago 1881, bright and clear, has a marvelous boquet, vory invigorating nnd strength ening, very apetizing, good also in dyspepsia. Jiecommended by the medical faculty on account of itf strength-giving qualities, this being a pure and unadulterated wine, well matured, is truly the wine of life. Be sure to specify "Old Gibralter Tokay." Only SI.00 per quart. Hold by Moffett & Morgan and Nye & Hone. 3-13 4-2-1
Father ot
The Warner Elevator M'f'g Co.
Hydraulic Elevators.
See thoir 1892 Jiftrlitne
street Cincinnati,Ohio
The Finest Ljne of
Baby Carriages
In this City.
The Fair
CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND
F. W.JACOBS,
,, And Collodion Agem. Collecliony a SpoclaUy.
Agents Wanted on Salary
Or commission, to handle tho Now Pntout. homlcul Ink Erasing Pencil. Tbo nuiekept and greatest.
HOIIIUK
novelty ever producodo
hraso* liik thoroughly In two seconds. No HhrHsloii ol puper. Works like iniifflo. yi0 to JUG percent, profit. One ag-ent'u suloif amounted to WJU iu six days. Another. In two hours. Previous experience not necessary I1 or terms and full particulars, address, Tho Monroe Krusnr Mfir Co. LaCrop^o.Wln 445
PAUL J. BARCUS, M.D.
I'liyslclftn and Surgeon,
Office:
111
W-Mt, tin Street.
