Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 28 October 1869 — Page 1
THE JOURNAL.
rUBI-ISHKl) WKKKLY 15
ZMT'C-A-IHSr &c TALBOT.
•OFFICE—"Stone Front," East of Court House,
TERMS.
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iOno copy one year. 02 numbers,.. .r Uue copy six inontlis, numbers. •One copy throe months, 10 number!
Five to ten copies one year, each .. sTento twenty copies, each Twenty copies and over, each
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^3DViCKTISI3Sr& RATES. One in oh in length, one week, $1,00: three insertions $2,00 each additional insertion 50 cents. No advertisement counted at less than an inch. 00 00 7 00 14 00 •JO 00 14 00 20 00
Business cards, oneyear. oneinch ... six months, Quarter column of 4 inches, "month:
it
Ore
y^,
Local notices insertion.
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is 1JS IS
10 cents per line l'or each
ATTORNEYS.
LEW WALLA€K,
A
TTORNEY AT LAW, Crawfordsvile, Indiana Office, opposite the Post Office.
J. MctORMICK.
A TTORNEY AT LAW, Topeka, Kansas. Pnu--Jx tices iu all the Federal ana State Courts.
W. T. BRUSH,
ATTORNEY
AT fiAW, and General Collecting
Agent, Crawlordsville, Ind. All legal bneines ^entrusted to him will receive immediate nttention. Particular attention given to the collection of 'Jebte, settlement of decedents' estates, writing of "wills, writing and taking acknowledgments ol'deeds. and mortgages.
Office in Mayor's Room, second story, Stone Front.
V. S. KENNEDY. R. II. GA.LI.OWAY.
M£M£DY «fc GALLOWAl
ATTORNEYS
AT LAW and General Collecting
Agents, Crawfordsviile, Indiana. .Being members ot the United States Law Associaion and Collection Union, which has a member in every connty in the United States, they have facilities for transacting business in all parts of the country. Okfkjr in Stone Front, second story. ap2H
GEORGE 1. HIKLEl.
A TTORNEY AT LAW, and Notary Public, CrawJ\ fordsville, Ind. Okfiok over Crawford & Mnllkin's store. Will attend to all kinds of leual business entrusted to him. a1
R. B. F. PIERCE,
ATTORNEY
AT LAW. Crawfordsviile, Indiana
Orriceover Crawford & Mullikin's store. Will five prompt attention to business in all the Courts of Montgomery county, a-j:
C. I.. THOMAS. A. D. THOMAS
THOMAS A THOMAS
TTORNEYS AT LAW, and Solicitors in Bank-1 xL rnptcy, Crawfordsviile, Ind. Ovkioe in Hughes' Block, Main Street. a2i) M. D. WHITE. THOMAS PATTERSON,
WHITE & PATTERSON 1
ATTORNEYS
AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW,
Crawfordsviile, Ind. Office—Empire Block, Main Street. a23 S
PHYSICIANS.
THOS. J. GRIFFITH, M.D.
HYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Darlington, Ind., attends to all varieties of practice at all hours of day or night. Medical Examiner for the Chicago Mfe Insurance Company. jan21
Or. J. €. SWlf ARD
OMEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN, Crawfordsviile, Iud. Office with the Township Trustee.
DENTISTS.
-,, H#
DENTIST,
Crawfordsviile, Ind. Office on Wash
ington St., over Mack's Grocery Store. Dr. B. V. GALEY, long and favorably known to the community as a first-class Dentist, is in my emIloy. aug!3yl
T. McMECHAH,
I)ESIDENT
DENTIST, Crawfordsviile, Ind.,re-
epectfully tenders his services to the public. Motto,'"Good work and moderate prices." Please call. Offiok—Corner Main and Green streets, next 1,0 Post Office, up-stairB.
J. G. McMECHAN, M.D.. maybe found at the B&me place. apr23CS
CLOTHING.
NEW YORK ONE PRICE
CLOTHING HOUSE.
L. I. Mossier & Bro.,
Wo. 37. KaM lVnshlnittoii Street,
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA,
Ifeep the largest stock of Men's, Boys' and Children's Clothing in the State.
Our extensive
Merchant Tailoring Department
Will always be supplied with the
Very Latest Styles.
EXTRA
large sizes of all kinds of Goods
constantly on hand. A child can buy as cheap of us as a grown person, as all goods are marked in plain selling figures and sold strictly at ,,
f)
ONE PRICE,
So that nobody need to fear that he will be tatea adTiwtage of. sepSO
MILLINERY.
MI jLl IVB BtY.
Fall and Winter Stock.
Miss F. M. BALDWIN, HrCillEfyis
I.51jCK. iipposite Court
Mouse, now in receipt, of a splendid assortment of
I Millinery Goods for Fall and Winter.
These good* were purchased in New York bv Miss Baldwin in person, and she knows what she is ottering.
Ladies ol' Crawfordsviile and vicinity are requested to call. oct7tt"
TAILORS.
N E W I
EDINGKR & BISHOP.
Aiv now earrvin^' flu
TAILORING BUSINESS,
1 all it varii»n» brancho.
fJUlEY feel from the long experience that A they have had in the business, that they can give entire satisfaction. They are determined not to be surpassed in making up work, and in cutting they warrant a lit every time. Thankful for past favors, we ask for a continuance of tlie same. Give them a call. Entrance, Stone Front. Crawfordsviile. seplG EDINGER & BISIIOP.
DRUGS, MEDICINES,AC.
MOFFETT& BOOE, ~v
DRUGGISTS,
No. 4, Empire Block,
ran iordsville, IiKliaiia,
Dealers in all kinds of
MUGS and MEDICINES,
Paints, Oils, Dye-Staffs, Per
fumery, Fancy Articles,
IPURE WINES AND BRANDIES
For medical purposes.
Lamps, Glassware, Paper, Pens,
Ink, Pencils, Ac.
PRESCRIPTIONS
Carefully compounded and promptly attended to.
'/rhaukful ioi past favors from agenerous public, \vc hope by a strict attention to the wants of our customers, and a just andliberal dealing, to continue to receive a large share of their patronage, and we will endeavor to make it to their interest to continue their trade with us. Give us a call and see for yourselves. nol2
FURNITURE.
Prices Reduced!
Fnriiiturc! Furniture!
A.KOSTANZER,
HAS
a complete stock of Furniture of all kinds, comprising everything from the cheapestto the most costly: both homemade and the best Easern made which he will sell at
Greatly Reduced Prices. Old customers and new customers are respectfully invited to examine his stock and price?.*
Shod on Washington Street, two Squares 8. of C«urt House.
aujatftaS
CRAWFOBDSVILLE JOURNAL.
VOL. 22—NO. !. CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND.: OCTOBER 28, 1869. $2 PER YEAR
BOOTS AND SHOES.
FREE ENTERTAINMENT
At Corner of Main andtircen streets, Curtis' Did stand.
H. J. WEBSTER & SON,
•••.-vicinity a series of general entertainments at the popular
Cinderilla, or slippers to sell Company Recitative—Pedestrian's Lament, I JIow long, how long shall 1 complain,
Do not Forget the Place.
I Corner of Green and Market streets, where may lie found the best assortment of a 11 kinds and styles of Boots and Shoes, at 1 tiie lowest prices. Your inspection of goods and prices solicited. scplGtf
PAINTING.
T.
II. WINTON,
HOUSE, SIGN AND
ORNAMENTAL PAINTER
WOULD
return his sincere thanks to a
generous public for past favors. As a Glazier, Gilder, Paper Hanger, Engraver on Wood, &o., he is equal to the best work| men in the State. Shop on Green street. —————————i——mm—
CARRIAGES AND BUCCIES.
Crawfordsviile Carriage Wagon Works.
jv new iJiebiiot.iJsi
Ity
built :it
Like one who seeks for Hoots in vain Chorus, Not long, not long, for you can lind I That the Webster's keep every kind. anapolis will commence
Part Second.
iXaryaRip Polka Company Parody .Billy Father, dotfcr Father, come home with me now.
My shoes are all out at the toe You promised to shoe Johnnie land 10$ And you know it's very wicked to lie. Metamorphosis and Tableaux, in which the Shoeless Brirade appear in tine and Coarse Boots and Shoes, Balmorals, Scottish lialmorettas. Button Polish,
Congress (T&iters, Black Crook Hoots,Base Ball Shoes, etc Company Reception of Greenbacks,. Company
To conclude with the highly pleasing and sole-satisfying farce of
PERFECT FITS I
This is a new piece, and is in no danger of being played out.
Kdinijm,gh
I thousand dollars.
.u<p></p>Store
Boot and Shoe
Corner of .Main and Jreen strei cerebrated Stock Company, immediately notice.
mil contiiniini: until further
4
THREE PERFORMANCES DAILY, amount of their judgment is over five thousadd dollars. Morning, afternoon and evening, until ,, further notice. Doors open at seven o'clock Miss Alathea Munroe sued A. M. close at nine P. M. O. Leeds in the Laporte
and
D0HERTY & DEIGHTON,
3Ianufacturers of
Carriages and Biggies,
Sulkies, Spring & Farm Wagons
OK A LI, KINDS.
We use
Sarver's Patent Wheel,
Thus obtaining the full strength of the spoke, instead of the tenon, as under the old style.
All other improvements adding to beauty or durability adopted as soon as discovered. We propose not to be undersold anywhere for the quality of work.
New Ilrlck Shop, Washington Street, opposite Center Chnrcb,
CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND..
Old Work Made Bfew. Repairing done to order in wood, blacksmithing, painting and trimming.
Will take Old Vehicles in exchange for new work. BdTRemember the place, Washington
St.,
opposite Center Church. octlf DOHEBTY DBIGHTON.
IMtlAXA A'HWS. 1'ASAGRAPHS.
Franklin is now lighted with gas. Mr. Stewart, though he is called A. The city schools of Terro Ilautc T., is only sixty-seven. I had 171 pupils in the month ol" Sep- Dark brown hair now rules highest| te:rnbi:?.\ in the Paris market.
Anew Methodist church is to be! The Crown Prince of Prussia has a cost of twen- invented a vinegar machine. Boston has a new weekly paper,
The managers, have the honor to announce '"oldest man iii the State the Wheel of Progress. to the citizens of crawfordsviile and died again last week in .lelferson Three hundred and seven ladies ex-' ?.|?.unt,y this lime. hibit works of art in the French
'irmnenci't'^ ollicc of the Delphi .Journal
Vevay has raised eight thousand Academy of Arts.
1 dollars toward the erection of a ten North Carolina court has just thousand dollar Baptist church. decided a case that has been before it A cornstalk is on exhibition at the for twenty years. which is. New Hampshire is, being tngoiiomfourteen ieet nine inches high. etricalty surveyed by a Dartmouth-
Work on the railroad across the College professor.
river is being pushed along rapidly. Not to be sneezed at—The con^
,i jit 4 ft looks like business.— Coving (on. tents of the gold snuli' box California Progrannne—Part First, w„„/. scmIs to ti,ePoic.
Mr. G. 11. Collee, of Indianapolis, quc hundred and forty-four bushhas sold his trotting horse, Esau, for
eis
one thousand dollars. The horse Wisconsin achievement. goes to Kentucky. The Texans complain of pork beThe public night schools in Indi- ing five cents a pound when they can
the first
it the old
Court House. The track ot lie Fort Wawne, Muncie and Cincinnati Railroad has been laid from Fort Wayne to within seven miles of Bluffton.
It is strted that the Bellefontaine Railroad has transported over eleven million passengesr since it was built, and has killed but four of them.
W. W. Thrasher, of Connersville, has taken premiums on his stock, at the different fairs this year anounting thousand and twenty-seven
QnQ
dollars.
One of the oldest settlers of Floyd county, Captain C. H. Meekin, says that the snow of last week was the jheavii'v !'.*• Iv* fallen in that latitude in OcU'bur since 1830.
Abrams1 attorneys on Saturday foreclosed their mortgages upon his
propertv in Indianapolis
The
a little
Walter Circuit
Court for breach of marriage contract, claiming fifty^thousanQ. dollars, and jrot a verdict for fifteen hundred
dollars. The highest Democratic pole yi Evansville, which was erected in 1868, and has stood for over a year, had to succumb under the pressure of the late elections, and was cut down last week.
The line brick school house in Columbia City, which has been building for some time, is completed. School opened up in the new building last week with between three and four hundred scholars iu attendance.
How lovely are the maples on our [streets just now, arrayed in their-Jo-I seph's coat ol' many colors!" The individual without enough of the poetic in his composition to appreciate Jtheir beauty ought to go to VanBuren township and vote against the railroad.— Covington ,Journal.
Wc were shown, a lew days ago, a specimen of pure copper, dug by the railroad hands on the Adamson farm, jusf over the river from Covington. If it should be discovered in paying quantities, it will be a valuable acquisition to our known mineral wealth.— Covington Journal.
The Woman's Rights Convention was held at Westfield on Thursday and Friday last. Mrs. Livcrmore, of Chicago, and Mrs. Swank, of Indianapolis, lectured Thursday night, and on Friday a County Association was organized. Arrangements were made for a meeting of the County Association some time in November.—Nohlesville Register.
Mr. William S. Turpin, formerly peoprietor 'of the Tipton Times, passed through the city last night, on his way to Tipton from Tennessee. He has been publishing a newspaper down there, but gave it up, and walked part of the way home, partly to get the benefit of the exercise, and partly because railroad fares were high.—Indianapolis Journal.
The shipment of mules South from this section of Indiana is larger this year than any previous year since the close ot the war. Several large droves pass through the city daily for the stock yards at Portland, whence they are shipped by boat or rail to Mississippi, Louisiana, Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia. Many horses are also being shipped South from this section. It is noticeable that the quality of the stock this year is superior to that of lastyear.—Afato Albany Commercial.
of oa to an acre is the latest
get beef for two cents a pound. The cultivation of flax in Minnesota has brought the old fashioned spinning wheel into renewed use.
A journeyman blacksmith says he has been striking for hire wages these twenty years witli uniform success.
The new Governor of Virginia is said to be less complaisant than his predecessor, and persistently refuses to grant pardons. :-t-
The annual reunion of the Army of the Tennessee is to take place at Louisville, Kentucky, November. 17 and 18.
Four women were elected members of the School Committee in the town of Eastford, Windham county, Connecticut, at the recent election.
A'i Ohio paper suggests to the Hon. S. S. Cox that he give his new book of travels the title of Sunset in the East.''
An enthusiastic naturalist has been traveling Lake Superior in a canoe all summer, for the purpose of collecting birds and minerals.
An old lad}* in Mississippi lias acquired a reputation for one hundred and twenty-four years ot age by talking judiciously about the Revolution.
The horse Revenue, owned by a citizen of Lewiston, Maine, was sold last week to a New York gentleman for thirteen thousand five hundred dollars.
John Chinaman is an imitative chap. In this country he drinks lager beer and makes Limburger cheese and sausages take the place of birds' nest and dogs.
One of the features of the New Hampshire State fair was a team of eleven yokes of oxen, from Earrington, drawing a handsomely decorated rural cottage on wheels.
Bill Peunywcalth, an Englishman living in Boston, on a wager of fifty dollars eat in succession three dozen hard boiled eggs, without drinking any liquid whatever.
Franklin Pierce was the fourteenth President of the United States. There are fourteen letters in his name, and the first letters of his Christian and surname being and P, stand for fourteenth President.
The New York Tribune tells of two brothers named Call, who went into Kossuth county, Iowa, fifteen years ago, taking with them less than five dollars each, and going to tvork. They have earned and made two hundred and fifty thousand dollars.
A Canadian young lady who had good look at Prince Arthur, remarked in his hearing, He's better looking than the Prince of Wales, and more of a man. I wonder who he is going to marry V'' The Prince smiled and blushed like a girl.
The Independence Beige warns tourists who intend visiting Suez to avoid the sea on November •, as the position of the moon on that day foretells severe atmospheric convulsions, which may cause serious disasters, especially to ships. The ef-' feet will be felt more or less all over the world.
More '"Big Tree Groves" have.,
been
discovered in California. They are giant redwoods of the species famous in Calaveras and Mariposa, and are found on the headwaters of the Tulare and San Joaquin rivers. One of these groves is said to contain trees measuring over one hundred feet in circumference, and even these are reported to be excelled "by those in another grove.
