Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 18 October 1893 — Page 3
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2:22 a.m Night Express.. 1 -.02 a.m 12:30p.m....Passenger (no stops)— 4:17 a.m G:40 1**1.... ..Kipress(811 stops)- l:65p.m 3:0B p.TO Local Freight 0:15 a.m
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VAIDiLIA
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9 44 a 8:10 am 6:90 0:19 •2:18 pm Looal Freight 2:18 pm
A. C. JENNISON,
The Old Be'ilable
PIONEER ABSTRACTER Loin, Rul Estate And Insurance Agent.
Over 121 B. Main St. Grawfordsvlllo, Ind.
A. H. HERNLEY,
Special Collector.
All kinds of notes and acoounte promi looked after. Settlements made and all buslim entrusted to his care promptly done. Office with J. J. Mills, 109H 5. Washington St.
B. F. WOODSON
—SELLS
Bugg
iesA» Buckboards
Repairing a Specialty.
305 North Washington St. AH roi Fred Boudinard's Bread. I
And ytu will get tbe Best.
Rye Bread a Specialty. I
Bakery, Corner of Main and] Walnut Sts.
DAILY JOURNAL.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18,1893.
PERSONS LEAVING THK CITY Can have Tbe Journal sent to them for 10 cents a week, postpaid, the address being changed as often as desired.
FROM HURE AND THERE.
—Doney's Iceland Cigar. -Postmaster Ed Voris. -Col. Spragne is in the city. -Ex-Postmaster John R. Bonnell. —Oloero McClnre was in Waynetown today. —Jaok Baldwin went to Danville, 111., to day.
—D. W. Gerard went east this morning. —D. H, Rogers, of Elwood, spent the day here. -Wilber Cooley has returned from Missouri.
J. K. Everson went to Peoria, III., this morning. -Dr. H. B. McClelland, of Frankfort, is in the oity. —Frank Kritz, of Waveland, was I the city to-day. -Mrs. R. A. King went to Indianapolis this morning. —H. W. Qreer, of Decatur, III., was in the city to-day. —Morris Herzog, of Waynetown, I spent the day here.
I
vestigate. If you wear
tailor made garments in- '"ends here iaBt night.
—Wm. Crawford, of the Midland
road, is in the city. I —Sam Burrell, of Terre Haute,visited
I —The Mooon station is being piped
The Monon station is
for natnral gas to-day. —Miss Mabel McClellan has left for a visit in New York Oity. —Rev. H. M. Middleton, of Greencastle, was in the city to-day. —Mr. Barkett, the new editor of the Darlington Echo, was in the city to-day
A trained nurse arrived from Indianapolis to day for attendance npon J, J. Insley —The Center chnrch social last even ing was well attended and proved very sacceesfnl. —The little danghter of Harry Nay lor has returned from Chicago and is ill with the scarlet fever. —Don't miss the New York Store ex oursion on Friday, Oat. '20 train leaves Crawfordsville at 9:07 a. m. One fare for the ronnd trip.
—The Monon road had up to Satur day night handled one million gers sinoe the first of May. The road bandied them without a single accident. —Con. Cunningham is again baok in Washington on a Consulship trip. He thinks that he has no ghost of a show. Persistency has been known to win, how' ever —Mrs. Sarah Ward, aged 86 years, died last night at the poor farm. There has been a startling mortality among the paupers out there during the past few months. —The County Medioai Association met last night in the small oourt room, The paper for the occasion was read by Dr. H. E. Greene and was followed by a general discussion. —Last night some thief stole a fine looking black, family horse from tbe sta ble of Dicky Hall, near Waynetown The horse was twenty years old. The thief left in its place a fine six year old gray horse worn out by travel —Joseph Grubb was oalled to Terre Haute yesterday evening to resume work as storekeeper in the Wabash Dis tillery. The length of his stay will depend somewhat on the time that the ohange will be nmde in the Collectorship.
Young Desperadoes
The other day John BowenJ and Wm Sikes, two voung men of near Bower' Station, drove past the Bowers' Station sohool house while school was in session and deliberately emptied the contents I of a 32 calibre revolver into the build ing. One ball went clear through and sang a lively- tune over the heads of the pupils burying itself in the lunch cup board. Prosecutor Moffett has the names of these reckless young vagabonds and they will be prosecuted to the extent of the law.
LINltEN.
Farmers are laying in coal and wood. Prank Dunkle is our new postmaster. The new brick building Is going up fast, Frank Elston has been to the World's Fair.
Frost is on the punkin and the stove is in its place. T. D. Mason will bo in his new house by Christinas.
Our school is doing fine, and tbe teachers please the patrons. The new house of W. E. Rash will be ready to occupy.
John S. Bennett attended Haddock lodge last Saturday night. A Frankfort man has shipped away the limber that was at the depot.
Linden has anew barber. W. S. War ren has set up shop in the harness shop of Wm. Stephenson,
The Good Templars of Wheoler lodge are expected to be on hand next Tuesday night, at 7 o'clock. Important business.
IT18 A 00, ANYROW I I
The Sohool Children of the County Offered Uhanoe to Bee the World's Fair Cheaply.
The arrangements for a school children's excursion to Chicago to see the World's Fair are rapidly taking form.
The day for the starting of the excursion will be Thursday, October 2G, at 12:80 m., from the Monon station in Crawfordsville, and all school children of Montgomery county will be entitled to transportation at the excursion rates. The excursion will reach Chioago in time for the fireworks Thursday evening. The children will be allowed Friday and Saturday on the grounds, the excursion returning Saturday evening.
The excursion rates will be $1.75 for all ohildren not in the high school. A $2.25 rate will be charged the high school pupils.
Professor Wellington, ot the oity schools, will go up Friday to make arrangements in Chicago. Supt. Lowell of the Monon will be at the keys in Chioago and will act as train despatcher and see that the train gets through all right.
The admission to the Fair grounds for the ohildren will be but ten cents and beds will be provided at the low rate of fifteen cents each. Several of the county schools have already pressed a determination to go and large numbers will go from Crawfordsville, Supt. Wellington will accompany the exoursion and will be in charge of affairs. Here is Bn opportunity for child ren which will not be presented again in a life time.
A committee of four will probably be appointed to solicit subscriptions in order to assist the poor ohildren, of an appreciative age, to make the trip. This is a good idea.
For every twenty children there will be a lady chaperon appointed by Prof. Wellington. These will have charge of their respective divisions. They will go up at the $1.75 rate and must all receive their appointments from Prof, Wellington. All schools outside of the oity should report at the earliest possible moment to Prof. Wellington in order that the road may be apprised of the number expeoting to go.
Elder John on a "Tower."
When the police went after Elder John Schleppy yesterday afternoon to pull the old sinner before the Mayor for hie lecherous rudeness to Nettie Tonev they found that he was not in town Immediately after his bad break he stuffed his valise full of shirts, bav rum and Bibles and left for the west "preBchin' tower." He began opera tions at Montezuma and is probably there at present. He will continue hiB missionary efforts through Southern Illinois and finally worm his way up into Iowa where his wife and daughters are visiting. He will probably be gone for some time but the affidavit for his arrest will be kept packed in salt in the official ice sheet and the hooks will be thrown in his amorous old carcass the day it next appears oh the streets of the Hoosier Athens. The elder is a ridiculous old vampire and has been a notorious "chaser" and blasphemer for years. People who have been oonversant with his hypocrisy rejoice to know that the cloak has at last been torn off. It is not a case of a good man going wrong but a bad man being found out.
Hope For Bulett,
The Washington correspondent of the Indianapolis News says: It is the understanding at the Treasury Department that Joshua Jump will not be appointed oolleotor of internal revenue for the Terre Haute district until the silver bill is disposed of by the Senate. Secretary Carlisle to-day, in talking about internal revenue appointments for another State, remarked that the President had put his foot down upon all Presidential appointments, and that there would be a cessation of that kind of business until after the silver question was acted upon by the Senate.
From that text it appears that Grover wishes to wait until the goods are delivered before he pays the price. If the goods are not delivered it is only rea sonable to infer that the Fat Fisherman will withhold payment. It seems that Walter Hulett's chances for the oollectorsbip rest with the silver bugs. If they are successful in preventing a repeal ot the Sherman law it is very likely that Walter will be appointed. If Voorhees succeeds, however, he will be rewarded with the spoils of viotory and among them will very likely be the appointment of his friend Judge Jump.
I have not usod allot one bottle yet. suffered from catarrh for twelve years experiencing the nauseating dropping in the throat peculiar to that disease, and. nose bleed almost daily. 1 tried various remedies without benefit until last April when I saw Ely's Cream Balm advertised in the Boston Budget, I procured a bottle, and since the first day's use have had no more bleeding—the soreness is entirely gone D. G. Davidson, with tbe Boston Budget, formerly with Boston Journal.
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A BAD MUSS. GERMAN COLONY AT JAFFA. may uiy Looked Up in Jail for Attempted Murder.
May Bly was arrested last evening on information filed in the cirouit court by her sister, Mrs. Clarence Baylese, charging her with attempted murder. No one has gone on the girl's bond and she is still in limbo, probably the best place for her. The assault complained of oocarred on September 18 and was upon the person of the prosecuting witness. May drove her husband, Clarence BayleBs, out ot the house and then hammered her up in good style with the poker. She was arrested at the time for the assault and served a jail sentence for it. May's mother, Mrs. Cnsminger, is anxious to have her placed in the woman's reformatory, so Mrs. Bayless averred when she swore out the information.
The case is quite a sad one. Several months ago May Bly was seemingly a perfectly straight girl. She carried herself all right and was a very hard worker. She was the main dependence of her invalid mother and sisters. After the marriage of one of these sisters to Clarence Bayless, however, there was a grand family row and May was soon a oommon street walker. She has been one now for about three months, she is better off in jail than out of if in the company she has lately kept.
Many of her neighbors are very outspoken in their sympathy for her and do not place the blame of her errors with herself but with her sister and the rest of the family. May olaims that she was expected to be a slave to all and would not stand it. The affair has been a scandal in the east Main street neighborhood and has caused no end of gossip and talk. It is at best very unfortunate.
11Q BR VALLKY.
A. Davidson has a pet goat. Corn fathering time is here. Melvin Trout has been at Ladoga. Corn-cutting is a thing of the past. J. M. Walkup has got $40 lor a hog. Peddlers, tramps and thieves abound. Preaching at Union Hill next Sunday. The r»heat prospect was never better. Corn is sell for 40 to 45 cents a bushel. Hen Hinkle Is a porter on the Air Line. Tom Lockridge has finished cutting corn. Ottis Robbms still thinks of going west. The Armstrong saw mill is again runuing. Bruce Faust was in Darlington Sunday. Ora Armstrong talks of starling a beef shop.
Hickory nuts sell for 4r to 50 cents per bushel. Ezra Armstrong will go to Virginia this Winter.
Henry Morris has been to see his broth cr-in-lavv. Four of our boys visited the poor farm on Sunday.
M. Peterson talks of joining club of Linnsburg. Jim Coulter is holding his wheat for $1 per bushel,
M. L. Peterson has two pet- walruses on exhibition. Eph Snarley and wife have been visiting at Lebanon.
Bruce Morris is marketing W'. Cellar's wheat this week. Tom Lockridge is feeding 50 nice hogs for the Fall market.
H. Trout has sold a fine herd of cattle for 3)4 cents per pound. W. Canine and wife, of Mace, visited Ode Woliver on Sunday.
H. Thompson is the best telegraph operator ever in Linnsburg. John Crawford and wife were in Crawfordsville last£unday.
A large crowd attended church Sunday night at Walnut chapel. The Weaver Brothers have gathered 13 bushels of hickory nuts.
C. C. Vancleave and H. Finch are busily engaged in steel roofing. Harvey Morris will finish up the Fall repairing of roads this week.
The new church atMacewill be dedicated one week from last Sunday. Cip Wilson's horse ran away last Saturday and demolished the buggy.
Armstrong Brothers sell the cheapest and most durable boot ever known. Bert Retnley, B, Finch, H. Freeman, C. .. McClure, and Martin Linn will eash get a bicycle in the Spring.
Lookout for Hallow'een—the last night in October. The police force will be reinforced at Mace that night.
There is a huckster, a tramp, a beef peddler, a notion man and a thief in our megh borhood every day in the week,
The.LinnsburgZiolonite and opium eater should explain himself before he talks about the Tiger Valley boys again.
The Linnsburg hen Jockey will quit buy ing chickens and will canvas this whole universe selling the temnerence book ot St. John. He will give a lecture at Mace on Nov. 18.
This community was shocked last Sunday night by a roaring noise that sounded like distant thunder or a cyclone coming, and several Jumped up and ran to '.he cellar to save their lives. But it afterwards proved to be Andy Fearless passing through going home from R. H. Virts's.
Headache and Dy*pep8ta. William E. Rockwell, No. 512 west 57th street, New York, says: "I have been a martyr to bilious headache and dyspepsia. Any indiscretien in diet, overfatigue or cold, brings on a lit of indigestion, followed by a headache lasting two or three days at a time. I think I must have tried over twenty different remedies, which were recommended as certain cures by loving friends, but it was no use. At last I thought I would take a simple course of purgation with Brandreth's Pills. For the first week I took two pills a night, then one pill for thirty nights in that time I ained three pounds in weight, and never ad an ache or a pain since."
Disease in one part of the body will eventually fill the whole body with disease. Every year or two some part of the system grows weak and begins to decay. Such part should be removed at once, and new matter be allowed to take its place. There's no need of cutting it out with a surgeon's scalpel. Purge away the old, diseased and wornout parts with Brandreth's Pills.
Hawkers and Peddlers.
What ear-splitting cries we bear daily in the streets of every large city! But these itinerant dealers who hawk their wares about, are, when under proper restrictions, a useful portion of the community, and are notsuch nuisances as the catarrh hawkers. This is a stubborn disease to conquor, but Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy does it. Itis mild, soothing, and antiseptic, unlike snuffs that irritate, or solutions that burn. It corrects offensive breath, and restores taste, smell and hearing. Nasal catarrh often ends in consumption. Apply the only cure in time. Price 50 3ents, by all druggists.
Children Cry for
Pltoher'i Oagtorla.
WE print sale bills on short notice. TUB JOUBNAII CO,, PBINTBBS
Hardships of a Religious 8oct That SeU tied lu PalMtlu«. The Gartenlaube tells the ston- of a religious enterprise which has 111 the romance of the strange episode of Mormonism without any of its repulsive features, says the Manchester Guardian. About the middle of the present century a Swabian peasant farmer Ohrlstoph Hoffmann—conceived the notion that he was divinely called to build at Jerusalem a temple in readiness for the approaching millenuium. By degrees this sturdy fanatic gained considerable influence over Ills countrymen—an influence which may be estimated by the fact that he successfully contested the seat for Ludwigsburg, in the German parliament, in the year 1848, though the famous David Strauss, himself a native of the town, was his opponent.
After spending some years in proselytizing and.oollecting the necessary funds Hoffmann made some overtures to the Turkish government for the acquisition of land, but the episode of the Crimean war indefinitely postponed any chances which he might have had of success. In 1858 three members of the sect were sent out to tho promised land as pioneers. By and by these were followed by others, who traveled over the country literally from Dan to Beerslieba. Many died from fever and hardship, but a nucleus still remained. These were joined at last by Hoffmann himself in 1869 and a colony was definitely founded at Jaffa, which Hoffmann administered till his death in 1885.
Whatever this country may have been in ancient times, the Swabian peasants did not find it "a land flowing with milk and honey." They earned their bread at a greater cost of effort than they would have Incurred in their native country, and they were, besides, exposed to the hatred of their Mohammedan neighbors. Yet, like the Mormons, they showed how muoh can be done by a community moved by a strong faith, however delusive they grew steadily in numbers and wealth. Last year the oolony numbered fifteen hundred souls and cellared no less than three thousand hectoliters of wine. It is not a little due to their persistent agitation that a railway has just been opened between Jaffa and Jerusalem. Who can say how Jarreaching may be the results both of the colony and tho railway?
INDIANA'S THOUSAND LAKES.
A Hlngular Group Bat Little Known Even In Its Own State. A person might look on the map until he was blind, says the New York Sun, without discovering the ourious fact, too Insignificant from a geographical view to be taken into account in the collection of general topographical data, that, huddled together in the northwestern corner of Indiana, are more than one thousand natural, lakes, ranging in size from ten to one hundred acres. They are all within the boundaries of Steuben, De Kail), Lagrange, Noble and Kosciusko counties, three hundred and twelve of them being In Noble county alone. Such is the Isolation of this extraordinary group of lakes that the average Indiana citizen, outsides of the smaU area In which the system Is situated, Is unaware of its existence. It is entirely separate from the river system of the state, and corresponds in oharaoter with that famous group of lakes in Orange and Sullivan counties, New York and Wayne and Pike counties, Pennsylvania—literally great springs of crystal water, with bottoms of the whitest sand The wild charm of mountain environment that is the characteristic of thei* eastern counterparts is lacking, however, in the Indiana lakes, although they occupy the highest situation in the state.
Nowhere else in Indiana is there lake of any size whatever. These sheets of water are the natural homes of the small-mouth black bass, and ex-Fish Commissioner Dennis, of that Btate, declares that the small-mouth black baBs that Inhabit the wa.ters of every part of the country came from that group of lakes. Nowhere else on tfle continent have these fish been caught equal in size to those taken from Indiana waters. The largest small-mouth black bass of whioh there Is any record was caught this season in Sylvan lake, at Home City, by Sldliey E. Smith, of that place. It weighed nine and one-half pounds Last season Dr. Moyer, of Kendallville, took one in the same lake that weighed nine pounds. Sylvan lake is the largest of the Indiana waters, Its natural size having been enlarged by draining to make it a supply reservoir in the days of canal navigation. It Is five miles long and a mile wide.
Your Painter
has often wasted time and material in trying to obtain a shade of color, and has even resorted to the use of ready mixed paints, the ingredients of whidi he knew nothing, because of the difficulty in making a shade of color with vyhite lead. This waste can be avoided by the use of National Lead Company's
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Our extremely Low Prices should open the purse of all shrewd shoppers. We have cut clear to Ihe bone and will make prices so low that our competitors cannot compete with us. We will let our competitors know how to sell goods cheap. We have bought a big lot of goods for spot cash and our willingness to take small profits guarantee to our customers absolutely the lowest prices. We have the best lot of Dry Goods, Cloaks and Millinery Goods you ever saw in your life. Price the goods, the buying will follow. Yours Truly,
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LAXATIVE
LAXATIVE rom
Will run their Semi-Annual Excursion over the Big
Four Road, from
Crawfordsville to Indianapolis
Friday, Oct. 20, '93
Train leaves Cinwfordsville at 9:07 a. m., arriving at Indian
apolis at 10:45
si rings O
Boards
THIS WEEK.
Solid Oak
One like cut for-
$15.00
Will oontinne the sale on Bookers one more week.
$1.75, $2.90, $3.45, $4.65
And Upwards.
vegetable,pleasant and agreeable to take, acceptable to the stomach, safe and effective lur olJ ami young. Acts quickly and geiuly on the stomach, kid' neys, liver and bowels. Cures Dyspepsia, Constipation, sick or nervous Headaches, by removing bile and cleansing the system. Tispe)s Colds and Fevers. Purifies the blood. The best Family Medicine. Price* 50c. Sold by druggists. Take no substitutes.!
CO., LOS ANGELES, IT
IALB
ooTToar «c
The New York Store
CALIFORNIA.
'r'
a* m*
FARE FORTHEROUNDTRIP, $1.30.
Returning, leave Indianapolis at 5:10 p. m., same date, or on
any regular train next day. Ask for New York Store
Pettis Dry Goods Co.
The Warner Elevator M'fg Co.
700 Weat 8th street, Cincinnati,Ohio
(^rawfordsville Transfer Line
C. O. McFARLAND, Prop.
FftsaengerB aod^Baggage transferred to Hotels, Depots, or any part
PATHKR OK
Hydraulic Elevators.
BM Their 1802 Machine.
of the Oity. Omnibuses, Cabs and Hacks. Leave orders at
the Stables on Market Street. Telephone No. 47.
