Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 27 April 1895 — Page 8

Mill! Coil! lews

SOUTH-WEST UNION.

Daniel Keller has the measlo3

house

C. Lewellen is building a new in Balhinch.

Mrs. Martha Rush is very poorly at

this writing.

Wm. Tyler, of New Market, \istted Wni. (irubbs Sunday.

Rev. Zook pave a short talk to the U. H. class Sunday evening.

Frank McCormick is out organizing

lodged for the benefit of thetiood Templars.

Newt Titus went to Crawfords illo last Saturday and got too much -'but juice." consequently iie did not get home.

There will be an entertainment given at the U. R. church Saturday evening, May IS. for the beneiit of the Sunday!

school.

OPOSSUM RIDGE.

Wheat looks well.

Stock is in very good shape.

The Ridge is in a prosperous '"condi­

tion.

Charley Rice, went, to, N\?w,,. ..Market, Monday.

Farmers are getting the most of their corn ground broken.

T. II. Wilkinson and .vife were in Crawford^viile last Saturday.

(Irant Uuyless went to Ilrown's Veilley one night last week on business. "•/•$.

•-.'-(Jhas. Eahley is putting up a nice fence alorg the road on place.

tr- ruber's

school house in district No. —. 11.

The Ridge is somewhere north of Rrown's Valley and Waveland. east of the •'Shades" and IJIutV Mills, west of New Market and south of l)al Hinch. The linos are hard to tind but if any one wants to know more call on i. W Whitingtton. •h

The ladies of Center Church gave a pleasant reception 1 uesda.y,evening at. tho church parlors. .»

WINGATE-

Kd Reynolds has moved into his new house.

.John Calhoon has a touch of the mumps.

Planting garden is in full progress at

present.

.Joe lioterbary has purchased a new straw hat.

Jerre Fowler is slowly recovering from a long speM of lung fever.

Ws want some good mail to cotne here and handle coal, lumber and lime.

Cary Calhoon is visiting her father, mother and other relatives at this

place.

Or. Dickson purchased Allen Moo res

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Nelson Rice and 1 ill Lasiev are put tt the wif". aftt-r which they arc

ting up a lot of fence for Ike and .J. L. pi

a

"avis. Saturday night until Monday morniu There is strong talk of a new brick I this way a cure is speedily effected:

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WOOL

0.1,7.".

Mr. Alien has moved to Lafayette

Dr Oland lost his little child with I the measles anu his wife and another child is very low with them at this writing.

.James Wainscott has purchased the interest of his pai tner and is now the sole owner [of the hack line between W'ngateand Crawfordsville.

STATE NEWS-

Franklin will build a city hall.

(Sosbec claims a population of vi.ni. ... •.-

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Huntington is discussing the feasibil-

ity of adopting tie system in b-rmany ,i

^ensej they are com-

pelled to work all the week, turning

WANTED!

insane. Soon after the old man died, and the farm descended to the son by

.... ,,,ncnnt inheritance. lie then replaced his lhere is some sickness at present. father as a suitor and purcnased the Charley Reiner has returned home. terms.

A mildia Wainscott has the lung fever, orge P. Shoptaugh was superin-

The widow Tracey has the lung fever, tondent of the Putnam county asylum

for several years. Recently the county commissioners ordered a change of management, and Will Mark was elected to the su perintendency. Possession was quietly given Shortly after the retirement of the. Shoptaugh family,

Mrs. Shoptaugh conceived the hallucination that the family had been accused of appropriating the property of the institution. and her mind gave way. Wednesday a commission was culled to pass upon her condition. llt?r mclady is attributed to heredity, coupled with tho idle gossip of the neighborhood and the innuendoes of political enemies. hen the neighbors went to her relief, they found the ex superintendents wife vio. lently insane, and it required the strength of several men to restrain her from burning the home. Miss Sophia Shoptaugh.. worn out with watching and sorrow-stricken, had attempted suicide) with morphine, while Mr. Shoptaugh. brooding over the fancied accusations against his honor and physically exhausted by long watching was himself bordering on .insanity. Mrs. Shoptaugh will be removed to the insane hospital

Miss shoptaugh continues lit a critical condition, but sympathetic friends are bringing both her and Mr. Shoptaugh back to a normal condition.

Kotiiiiitci' inunl Willi

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Jot punishing wife-whippers In por• i\. „i |,e marital relations which were tions of (lermany. where husbands are Entered intp twenty-live years ago by

J.John

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over their wages at the close of the romance, tinged with sadness, back

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jail. remaining there from riod life, the Shuttrumpfs found that

wi 11 |j. Stewart settled in Shelbyvillu in I wife, one night, secretly left h"r home

be built on .Joe Laoley farm. and immediately joined the First and sailed for New ork. Shortly after The Primitive Iiaptists' held a meet Presbyterian church choir, where he re- her arrival she was taken with fever, ing last Saturday at William Van mained thirty-eight years consecutively.

.livoree granted last ri.itur

by Judge Luiry. of' Logansport dis-

Shuttrutnpf and wife .Josephine.

Hesse Darmstadt. lermanyi: "There

the proceedings. Early in their mar

they could not agree, and taking their two little daughters, the disappointed

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cleave's with very good attendance I Altogether, he has been a member of hospital, came out with her memory a

and. after several weeks spent in the

They* also had a meeting at Indian that choir forty-four years. Dr. .J. R, I a total blank. Drifting to Philadelphia. Cassady the woman lirst husband, was creek church.

Clayton has been a member of the she opened a little restaurant and newsChristian church choir of that city for stand, which has since attained a lucra twenth eight years. tive patronage. It is situated within a

The story comes from Patriot of a stone's throw of .John Wannemaker's. handsome young white woman who Shuttrumpf. meanwhile grieving over married a colored man, on condition his wife's disappearance, had succeeded that he give her a deed to his farm. The in tracing her to America, and after deed was transferred and the marriage searching and advertising for her for

followed. The father of the colored man was tirst the suitor for the hand of the girl on the same conditions, but 'the voungster caused him to be declared

Highest Market Pr

several years, finally gave tip tin quest, and settled down in Logansport. where he engaged in the shoo business. Fight years ago he was married to a young

woman named Stearns. All might havo ended thus had not the uiemon of the first Shuttrumpf recently returned. A longing to see her husband tei/.cd her and by corresponding with his datives in Uermany, she was enabled to locate him. Not iireainit that ho was by this time the head of another family, she came to Logansport. and there was a pathetic scene when she made herself known at his home. There WHS however. no inclination shown by her to create a disturbance.

Realizing that she had forfei'ed all rights to him by her desertion of two

decades ago she consented to a decree of divorce, and Monday after witnessing the ceremony which legally united him ond his second wife, she prepared to return home The two daughters, who are now grown to woman's estate, are said to be well known in Philadelphia, and are engaged in marriage In two rising young business men of the Quaker

^trai»«4T Than Hrlioji.

A divorce suit of unusual eat tires was disposed of at Kokomo on Tuesdav. The plaintiff was Elizabeth I'assaoy. the defendant Thomas Cassady, The married at the closlc.lfif the!

parties war in ISti", Mr. Cassa.lv com.-g. there from Carroll county. Three .urs later Cassady went to Rusii county lo collect the money for a farm he had old. He collected -iMO. but never returned to his wife. Reports were sent broadcast that Cassady had been bbed and murdered. 1'his information came so straight ar.d specifically to I lie ears of

Mrs. Cassady that she had to doubt of its correctness, and in the-'-'course of time, without tic forma

WOOL WOOL

500,000 Pounds wanted lor which we will pav the

Bring your dip of Woo! to !). F. McOluro, the Old Reliable Wool Merchant,

BTObVia & SBAHAM'S

North Washington Street. Crawfordsville. Indiana.

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11v of a divorce.

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Cassady. though legally notitied of the action, declined to to resist the case.

rir-l lip *»l IIh* rut.

Mcl 'Inre .V Iraham Wednesday purchased of Joseph F. Calvert, the first wool clip of the season. The wool was clipped Tuesday and sold Wednesday ll is of good duality. See McCiur Graham's big wool ad. in this issue.

Important to Horse Brfcetleis,

she remarried, taking for her second apoiis Tuesday where she will take the husband Alexander Hughes, a wealthy civil service examination. She wants farmer of Howard county. After living to leach lo. the poor lndiai

many years of happy domesticity, as the wife of Hughe?, the hitter passed away, leaving her. as she supposed, the second

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time a widow. Recently Mrs. Cassady! brought suit against, the children of Hughes In a former marriage for the possession of a- widow's portion of the Hughes estate. At the trial the -Hughechildren sprung a sensation in court by indisputable evidence that 'I homas

still alive and the husband of the plaintill'. according to the laws of the State. Cassady being a resident of Shelby county at this time. This evidence barred Mrs. Cassady Hughes claim to the widow's share of the Hughes estate. ami the case was dis-]^ missed. In the. name of rs. Cassady.

Miss Fannie Watsoi, went, to Indian":

A freight wreck occurred Tuesday morning at Whttcsville. Five cars of the north bound freight were derailed by the breaking of an a sic. The track was cleared quickly, the afternoon trains not being delayed at all.

The article in the students notes in the morning Argus News regarding the students at the "Social Four" dance is a good example of the sap-headiness of tin Collge at least If going lo a dance with pipes and sweaters and making asses of themselves is the result of the cdueatioM they get in Wabash College it's tune the College closed Icr doors.

the woman a few days ago brought suit. Pj^CheT'S CaStOTia* for divorce from the husband ehe hail mourned as dead for twenty tive years.fe$For all kinds reliable Insurance see The decree was granted by default. Mr. C. A. Miller Co.. 1 IS W. Main St. tf

Children Cry for

Powder

bsolutely pure

The woman now bears the legal name of ladies of Crawfordsville and vunui},. Mrs. Hughe#. *ftpr living twenty years that her Spring assortment uf as the wife of two husbands. She is a [Jonnets. Ribbons, etc., is here, ami

highly respected resident of Russiaville. variety, style and general appearand Howard county, and is about iifty years cannot be exc Ih-d. Ladies call HIT] old.

New Milliiieiy Good.".

Mrs. ('ressodesireH toannounce if,

inspect our goods. We both in style and price, will be found with us customers. Call early g'(M Is.

(. 'ity property for sal e. 'o 1 IS W. Main St.

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'1 he well known horse. Celiera! Smith." with .a trotting record of 'J:'20. a cites: mi! .sorrel horse, weight l.ll'io pound:-, ir- the sire! of. ?Capt. Crouch. with a thne ear old record of This thoroughly excellent horse wiil be chilblains, corns, and all skin ernp. found at tie- bvery stable of J. -J. Insley. tion, and positively cures piles, or m,

Market street, for service until July 1st. pay required. II is guarante. on Mondays and Tuesdays every give perfect satisfaction or moin week. Will serve mares at $20 for the season with return prtvili'ge. or S'Jo to insure a mare in foal -.- I. nof 'tr A S' N.

Money to loan. IIS W. Main St.

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ean suit yoy

rs. I.arshJ

to wait tijiojl

and see

ouVl

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A-Mi^rij tC

Children Crvfor

Tf-h-er's CastoHa

Bnckleu's Aruica Salve.

The lbs Salve in the woil jdt c'i I si. bruises, sores, ulcers, salt r.i-taj lever sire-!, lettc,-, chapped ii

funded. Price -J."i cents per bo\. l-'oi •-ale iiy Nye ,v Uooe. Mar. vr.

A. Miller iV Co. tf

ChiScis-en Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.

Crops a Year

Can be grown on the same lar.uA eastern Mississippi and southern Albania along the line of tin- Mobi )hio Railroad. The summers are ci er. the winters are milder.the death r, is lower, than in .the North. Impro farms ?l) to per acre, iinimpro. land to !f."i an acre near railway ft.

tions. It is the best portion for raFii.l

average student of today in Wabash fruits and early vegetable, stock raisi!.| and general farm crops. Lands area vancing. now is the time to buy. Ve low rate excursions monthly. Tl

Mobile A Ohio has put on two throtif: fast trains* each way daily between .Viu. Louis and Mobile. It is tin- sluuto-'H and quickest route to the south. illustrated pamphlet, tolling all ahur

our country will be sent free to ail 'vr wish it. Apply to F. W. Cireene, (Jc-nr al Agent, No. ItiS North Mroadway. Louis. Mo., or to 10. K. Posey. Ickoj Passenger Agent. Mobile A Olti' lisi road. .Mobile, Ala.

wool.

In Spot Cash

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