Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 24 October 1872 — Page 1

Til JOURNAL

*v •«'.% i, at 'a

«f CRAV' FGRObvlLLE,

11 1 r-i 1 |s

Morton.

"Kim HiI• Indian j• I:,1 i- rji ,|.J A notalilf r«ijiclu-ion in bclnnvn I'n.m l:ui I'li'i'linn i-. t'it- Milid iniunvcriii:r |»i|.iiliii'iiy n|'o. |. M,| it!, Illf I tt'j ill 11! ji us of 1 :uliaii:l. Tiiis is 111,. ni"1''' jir.-itilyiiiLr lo liis Ji ii tuls IHVIIUM.' tin' l)i.:mu«ni!ic press of U„. country .-cr ,! hi liuvi' siiijilcd him on! fur iln'ii" in,,, !, viniiMii. alnisc, :i11i cvcii nin or two K:i-.t-(MM pnpris, i-jiliiii tlii'ili-clvos Kepnblic::tn, hiivc ihlilfil their voices in ilel-iniinj: llim. Oilisj.ifilnlis :iinoii tlirin i\l! is tin- wliicli, with '.n u!i"e-t lel iii'.f iinpartii'.iily nuil jmlieial I'ainiess. lo^e.s lit. opportunity In throw lirl al Morton, anil ''!er.s In Iiim as one of tlie In-aviesL 1'ia.ls the l!e|iill)lican pnriv lias to earrv. The X"linii is either ma!ie'iuiislv I.lin.l stupidly ifinoraiil. I is opinion.^ .HI international huv, or iinestions of literarv lay lie worth soini'tliin" Im't its jiidfiiin ni as to SVnaior .Morion's, Slandiiit! ilie Keptililiean parlv is evia is to a more popular in th- State than he ever was, and by far the nio-L p„|„i!

i'e a:: organized Republican parlv in the Slate II-.' as-isted in firming it, he nni'sed it iu his infancy, guided it in its youth, and li:i- over and over ::Lrain led ll to victory in its matuii'r years. He is the bc.-i organizer and the best worker parly has ever had this S'ate. and bcM among all its living leader-. W'c •e saiil before, and we repeal j| u.nv, '1 front of the lieis ihc 11«' the lias*1 of voter 1'ini :i- Mir},. H,.

the party has ever had in this S'ate and

the best among all ii* living lea.ler-.' Wei

publican parly iu I his S'ate. lie is the!"''"

him othei

NIIO^

I. I'. Morton, lie has more than cam•'

ed every election, every promotion and

every honor he lias received, and the in-i

lawyer or railroad man, '.Morton could

v.eallhor luxury about iiini. nor ab ml

oi Iiis life to money making he has'de loti'd ihcili to building up ihc I' can party, strangling th -iippi'iv.ine tlie icliellion, piv-erviii" tlii 1 iiioii and establishing the government.

The Republicans of Indiana, where lie live-, know thi-, ami ikey delhrhl to honor him. Their Legislature will reelect liiin to tiie I'niled Slates Senate, wilhoul a di—'eiiting vote. Whatever l-e was periled in I lie recent election, the people were determined to make sure of his triumph. No politician has ever received a more illustrious indorsement from his constituency than Morton has in llielale ehviion. lie has come out of the hottest light ever known in theState, completely victorious, and is more than ever our admired and trusted leader, the Republicans of Indiana hurl back

the llimrs Ol the X.ilion will', scorn. We

man in thi- Stale than anv of thos,

I lie Knti'm supports in New ihere is no oliice or honor in the Republican party of Indiana that lie can noi have while he lives.

A SUM'.V for !ii!li it AIHMII Home

tli«' '-rlliv.i l'\ill.« (»l.i h-t

This isa picture of Horace Greeley. I I'ieture necessarily omitted cr ill imagine a very sorry picture.) See how sad he looks. I le is a very great man. He was once a poor editor. An editor is a in.ill who lives on what other men owe him until he starves to death. 'Mr. l.recley did imf starve to death, be-j cause he a so much (iridium bread. Do, lull iovc Graham bread" Sonic times Mr. Greeley would write pieces for the New York Ti''dmti\ lie belonged to the New York Tritium, or the New York

HI

2

S'J ll(l

tUse he did no| huv a„v politics,

Ul 1

friends Ib.raee (it.'firjo

:lr

„ian

in tne K"pnli!ii'an ].:irtv. lie won! ii,.II lU.iiuii more votes to-morrow for (lovernor i.| Indiana thanany olhc ill the State, Ivi'puhliean or 1) The i«-op!f believe in I

i.nir.f in luuj, iTsj.i-ct ]iiiu

Im ill M*, 15 UM ill HI II»VC? Ili.:i. Xo nui ill oth.jr St.U«» of i| :iu

•ilo as

IIHHI hiH

«. y. Jirly in hi.Mc»rl«in li:W «litne lur it in !nr.'.n for him t!i ere would ha nil

moral ol this sad story is, if

L*r »:111

'•'iroerut.

Im-lu'l wen

('!1,11mumled

l'.'11

01,1

l.1"'

ha', said before, and we repeal j| now, inoiintains some of the himself with Morton IS the Head and front of the e-|'

S

keystone of the arch, lie is the base of' "'"'"I"' 'oine becau.-e the purer davsof the pytaniid, and cA'ery Kepub!iean voter

11

in Indiana recognizes him a- ,-uch. 1 le I i'

ha.- the conlidi-nce of the K. publicans in ^"'MIIIIIL' and chatting, with datica far higher degree than Mr. Hendricks ".-.i'"

lls

ba.s oi I'einoerat-. lie is, not onlv the I'a—ed on the opposite side of the reeo-ni.'.ed leader of tile parlv in' this

W(

lainou in--iiiuat ons of his enemies tii:tt tliinir called death, and of that -""''"'nitia11 wealth during his '"""'"I place beyond, where unrepentant political career, an' cruelly false. '".As a I"'''

Vl,ll!

make twice the salary lie does as Senator, 'a-ted forever, and even in a climate with halflhee-.peiise's. There is not a man

1

Trihtim belonged to hint, and I have forgotten which. The Trilillhr many subscribers. A subscriber is a person whotakesa paper, and lie tells every body else lhey ought to subscribe. Aflie has subscribed about wv '!i he editor writes lo him, and asks him to let him have (two dollars and lifty ecu's), and then ihc si.'bseriher writes back to tlie editor, and lells him not to ."(•iid him his old paper any more for there is nothing in it and then ihc poor editor goes and starves sonic more.

Now. I will tell von ulioul Mr. Oreclev. lie Used to wrap up strawberry plants, and beets, and things and send them lo lii.i subscribers. His paper was ''not an organ." so you sec il would bold a great many strawberry plants. Mr. Greeley had heard that any poor bov might be President of the I'niled Slates, and have plenty of money and Alaska diamonds and Si. Doiningoes and tilings so lie used to sit and think how lie might become President. Then he would

iini|

"li'I'i' a go.,(| I 're sj, |,*-m as hew on hi

not ha\e any of those things

l(1

bother

li.in. they told 11i:n to dress hiniseli i"| Mire. and to black his boots, and I i:u around the circle." Von hive to v. in .', do yoli not, cliil Iren lev "as like a child

Mr. (Jree-

K"'at many

t'i play about the md eabb/iL'e,

I billys, Jovei garden anions the rhubarb, iind ^iiano. etc., and catch I (einocrats in 111." la,-ire While hat. A I Vmoorat is a l"» thai cats crow until it. is gorged and thi easily caiiLdit bv Mr. (ireelev I'lit. alas, made .Mr. (ircelcv -,erv Melc to •'winjr. and it made all of'those* wick'd incn sick that told him to »o and swill,:, and they all wept and said, "Dont you reniember how sick it made old .Mr. .loll"-,"! to swing- around the circle'.'" Milt Mr. (,'rei ley said, "You are always saielesi, while I swim:,'' and

a

Alter the perusal of about a half oi ]io!itieal exchanges yc.-terdav, settling down to the belief that' th.' country was corrupt beyond rcoeniption that the greater the man the the scoundrel that wealth was n-cd but as a club to break the heads I •'"'ii hearts ol ihe poor that ntscalitv

a preniium, and vir! ue was

licit for the good of: by a converse ineth

''ranci-eo railroad editors should be

1

'o Stockton, and in fact hat a coinel

'-'tilers \vere past, with their saintlv

x:1

"iplcs ami hallowed memories, .lus't

'""'I 'lainIy dre.-ses, some

:il1 l,

Wlt ils

n-preseiils than for himself. T': ie is room, with seat.- so high no little noi a public man living iu anv Slate !i'"

1

ha-- reiniei'ed more di-timruisln'd l'''"i' so severe that the coming of the -el vices -o, his State, hi country,and his! '.d Somlay was a terror that the pailv. and ha- les- iohow i'.ir it than I ^ning and ('Veiling ptayt-r, those daily

VOIIIIL'

'i' :I|:u iIioti turned the

vate, bin the position accorded lo '"'"'vi't ol our thoughts, and we found \vith_ pride and phasure. (if the "".''••i,'Vl's f'-kiiifr the oncstion, if in.!. leaders some are bold, sonic are "'"I'l its old age was so bad biiSlianl. siiine liir sighted, and sonic ",' ailioit. Morion is all. ||. js wise in I l"'ii in fancy the wheel of time ttirnet.iinsel, :aga ions ill Iiolicv, hold in ac- ''aekward for two hundred years or lion, and untiring in labor. True, he and we tried, with a cntempnrarv, ai::|iles ,i ii!s encniies, leu he holds "''"Ji^l'pcned on a time to lie. in a sinii-lii-friends with hooks oi steel. I le. mav ourselve.-. to imagine a New itv of thi b.j ainbilioiis, but. his aspiration- are iH^:-'' as it must have been and the Spu tnlnr havi mere for the gnat cau,-e and parlv he

ed

after

church, its uiiinviling

reach the floor, with a disci-

l||"'.ivln.-s

lo the loving Infinite Cre­

"oven tir.d with diead, and

l.'"' w','''"'-v

Sunday rehearsals of that

il1

1 asl

•publi-

strangling the Soiisof Liberty I J1"""-' anil tlie icliellion, pn -erviii" tlie' eurls. ribbon--.

men, old women and

"omen, and little children, were

uri :l

''iirned load would

!f iiis ability ill Indiana to-day who lias ^iroke in a liiou not aeeiimuiated more than he has. He I''1''1'' 'oise than that .-urroiinding a Hari- a poor man. There is not a siirn of

primary until the very lia-

vs l!

his home or about his lamllv. I le has I ''ceainc .-olid ei' anil stern. not devoted tiie best years and energies I ''e" our hevv of young ladies re­

t'"" people were changed", and

turned, and, furgctliug oursclv Were on the point of screamimr to livest themselves of pannier... i...,. igh heeled shoes, and put on a calico dress, straight in front, straight in the back, with a great double-hanked bonnet to cover their head-, or they would be burnt for witches, when the illusion pas-ed away, and we felt thankful that things were not alter all as bad as they ased to be, and might be a little wor-e than thev are.

.i'l'cll lie Trulll."

I'nder this caption the Louisville /.•(//v I Democratic) reads a lecture to those unscrupulous parli.-ans who pretend that their late disastrous defeats in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana were

al,oul

lu

fraud. It says

Tlie real cause is well understood by every man of average common sense, and

lias"a "relit "tteinpts to cover them up only deceive tlio.se who make them. It is vastly better to admit the truth, and labor lo apply au available remedy. Ill those counties there are no Liberal Republicans, and rt.vtiU Deiiiocrats ii'f'iisi.".! to vote the combination ticket. It was very perverse and unreasonable in tlieni thus lo take ihc Siilks, because a majority of their associates perpetrated a lolly lit lialtiniore.

\milol|. ol' (.rlilll.

A correspondent of the Loui'ville ('tiiiwirrriitl savs "A volunteer soldier ol the late war, with whom I am acquainted, a man of truth and honor, who was with Gen. I iraiit lit Viekslnirg and other important places, tells the followini:: 'A fop of a Lieutenant, with a f.'idO suit on his back, kicked a soldier who among others was unloading a boat, bul, as the Lieutenant thought, rather slow. A common looking man without shoulder straps walked up lo him and

scratch his bead, lie did not have any inquired of liiin what company and reghair on his head like you and I, so lu\ inient he belonged lo. lie named them, lnnde his head very sore, and people used Said the man without shoulder straps.

call him the "Great Sore Head," then '(.lo and report yourself to your superior Mr. Greeley would say, You lie! von oiilcer, dismissed by order of General lie I" There was a great many bc.-ide Grant.' The Lieutenant departed, crestMr. Greeley who ilelud all over in spots fallen, and the General rolled up his lobe President, or Governor, or eonsta- sleeves and assisted the boys to unload lile, or some thing else besides wlial God the boat.' intended them to he. "Wonder if that Lieutenant will vote

These men were all very sorry when for Greeley That same soldier assures tliev saw Mr. Greeley's head, and they us that it would require a thousand such said, lei us make hint President,and may speeches as Sumner's to convince him be his poor head will get well. So they that President Grant is either a thief or all got together, "without regard toeoun- a tyrant, or any thing of that sort.'1

try, creed, politics or religion," and lin called themselves Deiiiociatic-Republi-catis, which isa Greek word, and means "any thing to get at ihe Treasury." The Treasury isa large building at WashingIon, where all the gold in the i'nited States is kept until tlicie is a corner in Wall street. You don't know what a corner is, my children, and 1 will not make you unhappy by telling you.

Well, as 1 was saving, all the people got together at a place called Cincinnati, where they pack a great deal of pork, and thev all agreed tlint Mr. Greeley was

How lo I!ore Holes 111 (J 1 lew.

Any hard steel tool will cut glass with facility when kept wet with camphor dis-olved with turpentine. A drill may be used, or even the hand alone. A hole be readily enlarged by a round file. The nigged end of glass may also be thus smoothed with a Hat file. Flat windowglass can be readily sawed by a watch spring saw. by ihc aid of this solution. In short the most brittle glass can be wrought almost as easily as wood by the use of cutting tools kept constantly

I'rn,» i*|. us Sc-icii*'!'. .. Kl.nn III.- II,. \. I. -.

l'nif. Tyiiduli's arrival in America biiiig-- nearer to us a notable di.sL'iission now agitating the polemics i.f ICngland. l'an science reduce nrayer to exact system I.- it possible to test by experiment and ealeulaiion, as chemical properties, or planetary atnio-phcrc, or u'eoIngical periods are tested, the cllicacy of those appeals lor mercy or favor which religion enjoins '.' I'rof." Tyndall injr in his mini

1

logical truth

imv

111 tie boy wants to be President ol tiie-e I Hitei, .-tales, he must around the circle."

never "swing

A S'l'l'.A Yi'.n I)i

.tliulit tic Worse.

[I'o.iM

UI.-Io,.-- VI,T:..Y I'iV.ji,J

indui'tioiis which lie has shoekei

swinging, and his head go, son" all the lo iHpr'nSl'nMi^V'^nulT"

raving crazv, and his

•"•I know whether he \va.'I'eeley, or Daniel 1'ralt, or raneis Train. children, the

thcoligans and Dr." rush

armed into hi aeain-t the spp'cla

die of sun- equally convenient fall iu gold whether and in an almos-j it will scatter bread al the feet of a liegar, or erect temples for impecunious congregations whether it will avert bullets in battle, or the tiger'.-, langs in

1

its want of success to the frauds of tiie

York iind adversary—to assert that though ntinilie "ill" ,,f berini/it decided majority, this had been erburne by the illegal, forcible, fraudulent operations of the other side. Now, plain, practical people of common sense do not believe a word of such nonsense, as a geneial rule. For instance, in the districts in which the Democrats have an unquestioned and deci-

The read-1('01' uiajoriiv, practical men will be slowto believe thai, this majority stood slill and inert, while the minority, through illegal votes, or other unlawful means, swelled its strength. Ill thirteen strongly Democratic counties, we have a ju:t

Kiss, in majority, of it,iitiu votes. Can it be supposed that it was possible for the Cameron ring to have imported that number of repeaters ill those counties? Hardly.

good man because he did not have any moist with enmphorized 6il of turpen-, -The German voters do noi all sneeze OIldon and London from Paris,

I

Mn 1

time, and he got raving crazy, and his for a .lefi.iite period in a hos-pital el''. I in t'h'e li "ti'ibnti° """V® 1'

li'l Iiot know whcilu.r 11N ......I eerl'iin nniiilii ro1'or'iv,.,-. ,i"

I

er.-. langs in

African jungle'.' that, religion and hence

we mailer of hard material fact, bul of spirtlieni itual, soul necessity that it is not amenable lo mathematics, nor is it to be •Htnlit'l Ull UK' lO] of Oliservaioiic... J'l.os ihe old conflict between science and theology appears in a new and somewhat amusing form while the old mistake of takimr different sides and arguing it upon opposite premises and in parallels, is ever repeated llappilv the days are past when it was possible to incarcerate troublesome philosophers in dungeons, like Galileo, and make them "see star.--" through monkish spec'avles. l'rosissor Tvndall may goon with his cuiiotis speculations, fearful of no more terrible fate, either here or in Knglaiid, than to be transfixed by the shafts of metaphysical logic while his opponents have nothing more

in

flic theologians protest

to apprehend than being lost for aWhile I kisson. :.. .. i.. i' ..

-.

know .Morton, and we know our business. It has become quite too common for:"' labyrinth of perplexing and perhaps forget—there ia Huthing in the Knglish lie isa far more popular and trusted

ilefeated party in polities to attribute unproliiableargutncnt. language equal to £•., defense." The

The \i.clioit

Mv friend, Major C., had an old darkey to whom he was much attached. One evening, at a party, Peter from imbibing too freelv of various mixtures,

room rose to inquire what was the matter. He opened the door of Peter's room and reeonnoitered. l'eler was kneeling by a window pray-' ing. Amid his loud cries Ihe Captain: heard the following "O, Lord, have pity on thy poor old servant. His ma^sa who he used to take upon his knees when he was a boy. is vexed with his poor old darkey, and I don't want lo live any longer. 11, dear Lord, please scud the antrels for old Peter. .Itist send the angel Gabriel, this minute I am ready to go

Captain K.. ever ready for fun, immediately seized upon a white counterpane, and enveloping himself in it rapped three I imes at Peter's door. "Who's dare exclaimed Peter. "The angel Gabriel come lo take old Peter to Father Abraham's bosom replied Captain K., in a sepulchral tone. "De who, miissii fearfully asked the suppliant. "Old Peter." "Well I'il jiisl tell you niassa, dat nigeer don't live here I don't know linn at all!"

Captain Is. rushed back lo the company convulsed with laiiL'liter, and old Peter relates to this day the wonderful answer to his prayer -*.

I'jMinil £i«cli Oilier Onl.

"Veil den," said Hans, "I takes de I ouse, and I wants to tell vou I've asked all about you among de peoples, and doy all sav that yoi: is de meanest landlord in de town, but I takes de hou^e all de same." ..

religion, and that lie tu a great man be-, line. hen bchurz takes unuff. 1 Pane from the Devil.' amid tho tears of hit iubjects.

IVriiinul Itci'ollecllons ol Mr. Sr»iu-t. |-|..ii, t»'»!.ltnl.u-J,near,I.] A gpiitlpinan of this city who lias been an intimate Iricnd of Mr. Seward since whose acquaintance with .Mr. Sewjird's public life ilatcs beyond that—lie having been a resident of 'the .Senatorial I'lstrict ri.presented by Mr. Reward in the New ork Ivegishiture for SODIO years prior to that—li is detailed to us in niiiversatioii

should not be -ubuiiite 1 to this I'mei ring o' |-hn ida. Orange c.'uiiitv' N Y*! T'

ai.biiralor ai:d be judged by the same very v.ealthv man. He" mad,. i.t

slablisl, other lime a v. ill" wldelTlcft'^he'Tholeof "life

I

1 r,l

prof-.-soi, a- i. he were .stilvinittin.'a der the new will, he gave f'0 00(1 for acia, theo or calculating ihe anti.p the es,ab!isi,„,e„t I,f a se nhian at Flo

I ain Obj.u- lot ce tain time purpose, with additions of a sujtablp let such and such a thing he regularly -haracte,. William executed 2 and earnest.lv pelii ."!. lor l.-i thelives trust in this matter^j'th great liberalitv o! the ho-pilal patients he a-ked for with- Some of his friends out favor and at liie end oi the cxperimental period, let us compare the relative number ol lives spared with that of the previous experience oi the hospital, or with the contemporary experience of •nine other iio-oiial. If all or the

JW ...ill, ailv,.V:Vv..:i'V51 M£ i,1"'".'''! I «.V.T l.llSSdSS K.

lil( a 1,,us

Meanwhile

proofs thai, according to

history, prayer is not clfectivc. and cannot become a true science. He shows, that there in the woihl so constantly and so zealously prayed for astheir Majesties Ihc crowned head-of Kurope vet that the loyal people, on the averair",'enjoy a shorter duration of life than less exalted people. The -praying men /,ur r.mlliiirr. the clergv, aie it as loiiLi lived, suggests Mr. (lalton, as iho-e engaged in other prons-ions whence he concludes thai to pray for specific material good is to engage in a rather worse than bootless task. 1 his cool application ol the crucible eeedingly outraged am. the spectrum to a spiritual subject in aim t.- naturally aroused the ivady |niLrnac

Cw wil1

y\y iairlyj Mr, Seward Jicltl Hut, as mi advocate

]»!uK's(ir will liow to In' lui'I no riaht to refill tu ilofpud *mv

Ihe dictates o, ,„ritual pliih,op|,y. case broughtSo hiim 'Vie

"eicntiiie pundit, h|iiently employed frequently iu eases of li.i- been busying the most unpopular character. The last

McCosl, lull-arm-

laboratory and the. la-s.room. The prolessors are intruders on a domain with which thev are ipiilc uulamiliar prayer by no means, says the I'rineel i.'iaphysician, can avail lo induce Cod lo invert physical laws bul prayer, adds Ihe Sjii,/,!/,„•, has availed to establish Christianity, as a historic faith, throughout ihe most enlightened regions of the earth. 1 he professors ask whether pravcr will save a drowning man whether'it will effect a convenient rise in Krie, ol­

speech lie nude in court was in the Hudson Kivcr bridge ease, iu JSf.S.

prayer, is not a that justice had not been done that he kept on turn, he bad Iried jho prison. Ihe

1

his way steadily. After \m reprovailed upou the Judge who, pnif f«i vUU

A l'OIil SVI1,I.E, IM)„ OCfOBKK -2-1. 187-2.

S&TSBWJSS!

the triumphs which sei- raphies of Mr. Seward, which -ire t.».

once ha-already won, busy among his sented without anv eflbrt to make a coogl.n leis, and s|iectriims, and niamnialia, nected narrative. and vcrtcbr:.., docs not ee whv praver I r. Seward's I'l'lii^r Mr L.

nin 11. ith remonstrated with

mm for appointing a principal who was a resbvterian, he being a strict Episcopalian. .dr. Seward replied that his object was to obtain the best teacher he Could procure, and he refused to eonsid-

For

years

previous he bad been employed as counsei of the New ork Central Railroad,

I'.rastus (.(irnmg had opposed Mr. .Seward '. ..0l".e8. ilestitnte colored until lie found that his tranoendent abil- 'P Virginia, the Carolina* am ii.v made it almost necessary to employ mi. They were always personal friends. "lie of these celebrated cases with which Mr. Seward was connected was reenian ease

th a convict in Ihc Auburn Penitentiary soon after his discharge he killed three

.i-..: 1:..

na of' discussion a it

persons at one house, as fast as thev came to thi* door. lie people wore were exby the murders, and saw a whole g'alaxv ost any other community in this top fell on his head. 11.onn11y ne would have been lynched.

A

ni\ crsalist minister and several other kind hearted people urged Mr. Seward toj defend ihe wretch, lie was overrun with business and at fir.-t declined, but finally gave way. The Prosecuting Attorney! was assi.«ted by John Van Hiiren, then Attorney General. The judge and jury were opposed to the prisoner from the beginning, and he was refused a change of venue. A conviction followed. Mr. Seward held that the man was insane made so by ill treatment while in prison. IK- then appealed to the (.inventor (Silas Vi light) to suspend sentence until points could be taken to the Supreme Court. 1 his was refused. Mr. Seward then sought onl. one of the Judges of the Supreme Court, and argued the case in I liambers. A writ of supersedeas was granted and a new trial ordered. All this time there was a great clamor kept up against .Seward, but so sure was he

Judge was astounded to

Iind that the prisoner was unmistakably insane and iu a dying condition. He was considerably afleeted, and turning to Mr. Seward, said, "Air. Seward, you were right, and we were all wrong "the man shall never be tried again." Soon alterwaid 1* reeman died, ami a post mortem developed the fact that his brain was almost destroyed by disease. This case added much lo Sward's fame, both as a lawyer and a just man in the end, though il had made him excessively unpopular for a time. His defense of Freeman was pronounced by Gladstone the ablest defence in the Knglish language. An English gentleman slid, "You forget llus

Gladstone rcpliod, "I do not

defense was without fee.

A "(Jeriiiaii Iny."

began dancing around with a waiter con-j hopes of German liberal papers with rt° taming some ice and cakes, and soon be- ^ard to the 8th of October. They had, came uproaiious. Observing his con-j in anticipation, denominated it the "Gerducl, the Major publicly reprimanded day"—the German day on which lmn, and at once dismissed him from the the 'Germans iu the We.t and in l'emiposl Of waiter for the evening and ap- syh ania would give the itepubliean parJn" K"r .scr.vft"1 I,lill?:ity tho e.'xi/i ati& secure for stiohe was too much for old Greeleyism a "glorious victory." 1and he retired to JiU bedroom in Kven tfehtirz, on the eve of the last dcspt.ii. hat night Captain K., a lolly elections, spoke of a Liberal victory in young oflieer in the room adjoining l'e- Pennsylvania and Ohio as absolutely eerier s, hearing sobs and groans in the next tain. To such a degree had the noise

[From tin* Illinois Stiiuts7,rilung.] is impossible to suppress a pitying of the glowing

•jinile when one thinks

made by the Greeleyitcs of their recep tions of him in his stumping tour intoxtoxicatcd to such an extent had the glare of their torches blinded him. He really imagined that with his oratorical talent he could, without more ado, lead the Germans from one nolitioal oamp into the other. J|e had no idea that the large majority of the Germans who llocked to bis speeches did their own thinking, and that they came to investigate, not to obey his behests.

This investigation has gone against him the most of the German Hepublicans did not permit him to make them recreant to the party of National union ,1111(1 human liberty,and even upon many of the German Democrats his manner was calculated to drive them away rather than draw tlieni near. They shook their heads in a they heard his

It is not neeehsary to go very far now to hear onl of the mouths of Anglo-!I

Amrrican Liberals

cu?^HiMruiiiBt

VARIETIES.

Leavenworth claims 29,000 people W omen vole in Kansas school ings.

SluU

'WWa VjiSlS! "ie-t.theastern

«*hich tW!^'

iiUiitn.ii of his property

''T 1 «*tln-r public bequests made iin-

,or

?ren

1

""t

ineci-

The Colorado mines seein to In inj: well.

Ague, corn and pigeons I.inn County, Kansas. The daily shipment of coal northward

1110'IftUV

1

Kansas, as a .-*tato, bus to donate £!M,500 to the Centennial Celebration iii 1870. 'Ihe total sum is estimated at *10,000,000.

Kansas editors are kept busy descant ing upon tall corn, mammoth sijuashes, big apples, and other bucolic phenomena of the season.

There is a coal miner at Osage ('itv, Kansas, who never makes less Unm one hundred dollars per month, and has made one hundred anil fifty dollars.

A colored^ relief association has been formed in New York, which proposes to people olhc .•southern bUites.

A

Variety weddings, to take the place of tin, wooden or crystal weddings have been introduced. As the name indicates

Kreeman had been the utmost latitude is permitted in the choice of presents. It is said that a man at the bottom of a well can see stars during the day lime.

A man in this position,out West, recently A brick from the

AW.

A estern farmer bought an old hearse at auction, because, as he remarked, he'd "been wantin' a rig of some sort to take Alnriar and the children to circuses and fairs, and haul potatoes in."

One of the amusements at

Two undertakers meeting tho other day, one of them remarked on the vast increase of mortality. "Hell," replied the other,'-you're luckier than I, for I have not buried a living soul for three weeks."

Professor I'laiitaiuour, who prophesied that the world was to be burned up a few days ago, is now in Paris. He desires to read a paper before the academy to prove that we will all be frozen to death about A. D. 2011.

Daniel Drew's wealth is stated at $40,000,000. Henry N. Smith, one of the ItlOSl. •ijii'tlllitllir.S IN Wall street, is reported to have cleared $r,000,000 to SO,0(10,00(1 in the last twelve months, and .lay Gould has added $2,000,000 to his capital since the Fetnt iu Krie.

A Schoolmaster gave out one morning as a reading lesson to his lirst class that portion of the "Merchant of Venice," in which the "pound of flesh" scene occurs. The reading finished, he asked the class what Shylock meant when lie said, "Mv deeds upon my head.' "Well," the tidiest boy, "1 don't know, unless ho carried his papers in his hat."

Sergeant Hates, who earns a frugal living by carrying the American flag in the most daring manner through peaceful rural neighborhoods, has sailed for Knglaiid. An Illinois man has made abet with llates that he can not carry the American colors from from the Scottish border to London without being insulted. Hates proposes to sacrifice his vote this Fall to the interests of business.

Molly Strong, of Newton, Mich., dug a well forty feci deep, last Summer, and received §130 from her father therefor. Then a lot of fellows went fooling around after Molly, and wanted to marry her but she pensively kicked them "out of doors, with the remark the she wasn't going to take fellers who wanted her just because they had found

was in th»» habit of putting his German-i-1on have filled 24.320 such re ej)taism under a bushel, now so ostentatious-1

All lnuiesl, well-to-do German in il Connecticut city, applied to a wealthy landlord who rents a great, many In.uses. "This house is to let, certainly," said the owner, "and if. upon inquiry I find you to be a responsible a.id suitable man for a tenant, you shall have it. "Very good, Mr. II—, you niakcMjusl as many questions as you mind, I takes tlie house when you gets ready." 1 1 days afterward the house owner era Is imagined, a day of German obedi- kindness. The residents of the smaller ilh il upon the German. "Well," he ence to German demagoguery, but rather islands hud inter-married with relatives said. "I've inquired pretty generally re-: a day of German fidelity to principles f„r so many generations that they were spcctlng your character and means and and convictions, and German lndepcnd- sinking into hopeless imbecility" lie as everybody speaks of you as an honest, ence. broke up this practice bv giving them respectable inan, of abundant property, In this sense the .Ith of November will better farms iu different parts of his doyoti can have the house." in a much greater degree, be a "German main, and so scattered them, lie has

c'l"s

1 lv put fit tli his claim as the "German .f

Senator," he only strengthened them in:nn*

their fal^e hope. Now they prouounoo:

DUI

could work like a horse.

... times to keep away from the !olIs entiredubious manner when \y

un

Schurz.

They liad actually believed that he would

be able to bring over the German vote

lrt 11

h. III I.Dtmt

are plenty in

slupnuMit of (-oal nor

0tt S 1 li, 0

,'

bllsll!,s

nva 1,ss

land tin

an

a Chicago

picnic was to pace a silver dollar iu a dish containing an inch of molasses, and a squad of boys compete iu trying to take out the piece with their teeth.

that the

Gen. F. A. Walker, Commissioner of Indian Affairs, and late SuperiiiU*ii(K*nt of the Census, acccpts lii^ appointment to the professorship of history and physical geography in the scientific school at Yale College, a« the successor of Professor (tilman, and will assume the duties of the place in a few months ft is eonidered a fortunate appointment for the sollege.

It would be interesting to know precisely what the Atlanta JferM means by the following "Better a thousuml

patiently wait and watch for the

hitter denunciation ufj hour mid the opportunity when wceaii

(iiant, whom but a few years before he ju«ert our liberties and defend our iirinhad exalted to the skies, and who, as: eiplcs in a more ]»rnctical way than by their sense of justice told them, did not making concessions or de*erve this abuse. sionrt."

1

following illu-

oxpernnent for the long

cv^,M,nKB

Wl

,lt

that would decide the election and as I two the second, four the third, and he who in former days, as a politician,' keep it lip

a vessel that

"2o,iK)0 tons then get a lot of

Drop one needle in the first

i)r

yoar. Ijy that time

Vi'Ty^

v|

"K

liim political clinrlatun. Anglo-Amer-1 Some fo.-ly years npo, plain AiijriHtu.s ieuiTO-pulilienna, however, nowsny with Smith, of London, leased the Hicilv Ixii inill!: "Schurz has not got the Cier- lands from tho Duchy of Cornwall' and

man vote in his ]ocket after all. Yes, tho 8th of October was a "GerI man day," but not, as the German Lib-

day." I enforcsd education rigidly, and has kept at his own expense a stair of clergymen An old Scotch preacher is reported to of different denominations. Of a smuglmve said in one of liiH seimon-i at Aber- gling, cheating race he has made an hondeen: "Ye good people of Aberdeen get est one._ Ufa lazy race he hiu made an your fushiong froin Glasgow, and Glan-. industrious one. One life has rarely gow from Edinburg, and Edinburg from done so much good as did that of "King

mi

pleasant liule jrjune,

lve ou

ie

pio111y to do toward

liecame "King Augustus,'' Jle has been absolute ruler all the time, and has administered a despotism tempered with

I I I I I I

all do-

Iowa lias .r)!!7 children in her Soldiers Orphans' Home. 'IIH1 voting fanner: Territory want wives.

w.v

ill Washington

roi

anv Ne-

in the Union

except

part of Nebraska alsupplies its demands

The diamond excitement, still holds the attention c.f a few credulous inhabitants about Denver.

The school land in an average Kansas county sold at an average price, brinus $10(1,1100 per county.

The Boston car drivers complain that old ladies punch them in the back with parasols when tliev want the car stopped.

A '?:."

Miscellaneous, Juvenile,

Tit ACT SOCIETY.

Hymn, Prayer, Music. College, School, Blank, Memorandum,

I'AKN t\l (M'Y ItOOKS.

i:iiii.KN. ai.iti .ns,

Killet, Nole, Letter, Fools Cap, LE3AL CAP, BILL AND INITIAL

I WKr.OIM-N. SI.A I'KS,

M'cns, IViicils and Ink,

"Wall Papers

find

I O I I S N A I S

A lid Molding*

nn.Don'fciuisuiKe uie placo, Corner Main and Green Btrccts.'oii L. A. FOOTK.

JOHN R. ROBINSON, Salesman.

MEDICAL.

SIMILIA SIMILIBUS CURANTUR I IIII.MI'lIltr-v..' HOMEOPATHIC SPECIFICS

H-AVI-:

rtiup

The Amherst (Mass.) Cabimt says a most remarkable family gathering'was held at Lower Gilnianton "recently, the occasion being the sixtieth anniversary of the marriage of Mr. ai.d Mrs. William Newell and their twelve children, all of whom are married, were present to join iu the festivities of the home visit.

I,

'H,

SILVERWARE

mjAM) Ac

IH'.Al.Klts IN

I N

SOLI I

'!.,

'IvW,

SI'IH "L'A I

••X°-

Special atU'iiiion paid lo ItopairiMK WjuoIh-s „„i

I'l-aclical Wurluiicii. All work uar'ran«l.

I.V «'x Old (»Id and Silvor boii^lii.

BOOK STORE.

Vt (lie Old Reliable

(Olt.VFlt BOOK STORE

piovcl. rntn the tm.-t ampl- \prtiS I

r.llH iellt an.I Welmhle. They »r«. llv m.'ili•ii'e-. pel'] ei-11 a«iapte| to poioihu n^e—-j*o imi»l« that lnistalii'Houiuiot hu nui|e in u-m^ ih'*n» harmh'.--* as to he n.-c fnun ihni^er, ui„l ejheient a^ to he always je|i„hle. They have raise.l tjM» hinhi-teoinmenil:ition fioin ail, nn.l will aUvavren4l»Mftaii~t'aetion.

'II

i'fi IV\ers. '«»ni»esl ion. Inflammation* If, (*ure« Worm*, Worm l*Vver, Worm

I:XTUA'T

liiiru*, linn*!-*, or»*in'ss, Soi** Thro it. Sjinunx, Tootliarhf, lCmmlu'. N«'urnliiiii. I« ll'MItt i:lt III. I.lliill.n^o, HoiN. Slili^^, Sor1'iVf-. nh-O'liliy of l.uinf-, Sloiuu('l), of of IMo«, t'orn»«. 1'I'•«•»•», H'i Suii'«. ox., .10 •!•*. I'inlN, 81.50* Oh.. 81.75. *WTIM,wO

PER

SI I .V I]|fW

f^i r_/v i»i,.-VTi

if s-:.

liKTHKSI.A

I-,I|1(.

:i. (Nin.-S ('QiiiL'-' olie or teething of Infants...l.'.Vi •I, Ouivk Dinri lt.i'ii, of Chillt eti or Atlultx i»:» •'. Cino* ItyKi-iitcrv,«it ipiiiL', Uilioii?* ....!!» •I, ('iirei ('liolcrn lnrhuM, Vomiting 'J.'i 7, I'm ee 4'auullK. 'ohln, Ui oiiehl is K, ('ure.- Nfurnluln, toothaehe, fm-eai'he ...] "ii". !•, Cinv.x llcudiirhi-s, sieh heiolarhe, vertigo ,'Jrt In, Cure* ll.v*|Mp«iH, hilmiif stomaeh :tf» 11, Cure- .Kii|inr«-KM'il, or psinfnl perio.lf lif, (Jnr»!^ ^VIiftcN, too prot'iisc pei lotls ti'i l:j, «^ires Tnnip, eouyh. «linicult hieuthitijj.!!.!!.'^^ I I, f!nre Sitll Hli.imn, «!iyHip,-|as. eruption Vr», C*jre.- UliiMiiualUui. rhenmatie ]miiM Jr., Cure* Ki'vt-r »V Amu*, hill lever, a^ue** .....M) 17, .'uies Plh-s, hiinI orliloeiling ,'n IK, (.'ut'en nmi sore or w«'al even!...".Ml Ui, n-ues Catnrrli» ».-nte or I'iironie, uillueny.ji.l.r'0 'JO, tJinen Wlinnphtt: Coimh, violent ou^hs f»l •Jl, litres Asthiiin, «»ppr«»-.si»»l breathing 60 11, Cure^ K«r Hls« hnrtfcs, impairni hearing...!.! .M •2:t, (.'mes Si rot'ulrt, enlmye.l ulainl-. swellings....r»a 21, ('ure^ (Si-m-ral !Mnluy, physieul eakness. t'ures Draper ami .-ean.' H.Vn-t ions V) H\, Cures Sra-Sirkiickk,si« ku,.,.y fjom riilinjj ntt 27. Cares Kliln«'y«IHKfnMe, gravel 28, Cares Norton* lh'hHIt).smimil emisions. involuntary ili^i-htiryes r,n

FIT41 Hoxrs. with one Sjvial of pow «ler. neee'snrv in serioti« eases nn

20, Cures Sore Mouth, c.mker f,n .«•, Cures I'rlnnrv neukiM'KH, wettinu heij

-urei 1*h1 iiful

I'itIojIh.

ith spje-m- r.n

J12, (hires SufTerln^N at ehan^e of life n/i :M, ("tires Kpih'pM)-. spn-ms, St. Vitus lanee...l tw»

res Kpi|i'p«y. spii-ms, res Dipt licrla, uN-eri I'AMII.Y

i-o or vpe-

Of 35 to tO vifits, ittoroi rosi'wuoil "•oni.'njun^ it fiti«-foi'^vi-ry oi.liujuy htiiiily i" Mflijc-t to, mill booU of dirc« Hons from 8IO (o Simtllitr I'nniilv im-rrriivcliii^i-aso, with -JO to visits fioiu 95 lo &N iliff* for Ml Private I l»otli for Curing »n«l for Pn-vont vi* ti'-iitnu'iit, in viitlH utid |ork«-( ft'Z to $3 i»o\n\s

I'oihl'**

IIHWT»IKIH'«I

pwpcr for

Kxtrw-t, hv

th«» cji-ii* 1 tox, nr«- to an j.ai of thi? rot ill

IV.or

1 jy m-ill ol rxjirr-H, fin* of t'|inv«»r, «|l IV'

rr Jit of j.i I.-.', A l'l r«— iirnv11itr.v»s si»in•. iioni-orATiuc

MKDMI.M:

ro..

Hlir«. .ui.1 I t, |,.»i, \o ,t 2 Itroiidu i.\, N« VorU Kot i:. J.m.vroiti) a-f.jf'ii.-'Vlllr. Iliil. ijrrlu

REAL ESTATE.

itnino.\ cv Kiu:\i irs

A E N

(Irawfordsvlllc, fnd.

rpll

Im vc Inr^r

I

is

I

WAM rACTi

day-

of prt.ji^rty

1 for rfn-il»thnr of livrll Hitf*. i-hoin. Willi' lot'',

I MUM IT 114 I

urMfrii

IJIIKIS. '1'|JO0

citlo-r buy or

HPII W

ill tlml it to tlu-ir .ofi^in.'Apw

to cull on them at Ihrtr ollirr. novatf HUrJTt»N«i MKI?NK|(.

SHOEMAKER.

BOOT & SHOEMAKING.

W.II. VANSLYKE

/U:K

or

AN» M.AI.I.II IS

BOOTS & SHOES,

South Side Mulu St., Wmt of \Viuliln|,-lon,

€.'rn lb rds vi I lc Indiana.

INTOM.TIAIH WOItli.

)|f mnntjfftotur»H Hoot*, on tho pjttrut IMumt'i which ciihI»1c«- Inm to v* a ticat nn.l cuwy |Vt prcpurod to do custom Moil cither uewrd

or pogKed, on nhorl notlcc. HopuirinK Uono with

nf.t,n

"?l1

Ji"Palcl1'

He

A a a-:.

.L^L'IMXIII KI.M'K.

I'.iiKi-a\inj |i'oii)|)i-

STRANGERS* DIRECTORY. mri.'cHKv' 'I'A cii li, ubj'.sh A titi| Wuit-r.-tiv.M.-. K,\.s. »*r K. I ustnr. SiTiitvs Sun.IMV ii:,ii i.'i,..,i i'iik

U. mikJ e\ m? nt

•Mini:

*X-2 j'.

Borders '/•.

WINDOW PAPKH, CURTAINS, AN'l I IITAI\ »Its, Rustic Shades, Pictures, Frames,

CORD, TASSELS,

II

Varloly.

Climbs, It rushes. Toys & Notions The most oxlonsive News Stand in the city whoro can be found all tho leading papers and magazines of tlie country. In fact complete stock oi all (roods found in such an establishment. Call and examine our stock before purchasing as we mean business.

it.

'"N

l'u^tor in.| thofvo

riKNTKi: Wa-lnn

CliuiSTlAX

I «•].

nr.ny M',' uu.h,'C

VT'lil'1' I'Kl'-flWTKIIIAN rill'Hi ll 1. tUo ami iiw-i- str

JJ IM'IH.'I'II :I„,| .!,-tr,.I ^,,1, SI,

••JHK'J' (it VrtMwell.

Suii«li»y iiHHuinti »»i u'rlooU if in S iv I

I'UK.-BYTICKi.W

n-liuij.-:tcin :ui«i stn'.-t

I'H.I, S-rvures Sntwinv aii'l ni tlii evenihu at 7 School jit o'clock.

HI'Ui ll. v:i.-.'v. i,,„i "..r

Mil. I ll, ,-|| Avclllh'. i:i.!.-|- \V. ',|..«('li l'],L ...r I". A. M. Ittxi »•. M. Sun.l:iv

"honl at

I'nrkrn, u\, ''"nii-r |'ilo i'Yi'llrli .1 I.'.' .'V,', hun.iHv IK li-'. m. an,| Nnulr.y

A,TI

.^-Ihm)| at«»i»Vl,,e|

!U:M:\ »»!.K\T «1

iW ni•'*11SiitII11i.iv vi iiint ,,i uro il hill IIIOMll, III Masollll' I.!»\ in-, W.

pH UVI*uK|iSVnj,KrilAPTi:iirN^.V40 "u 'In- lull iiimin, in MuMimc

A- L-UUT.-. U. 1».

It 1. Soloct

."MII^ti-r

CJ

KNVAML'MKNT. N O

a

N II I I

m.'VllOK I.niM.K, .1 No. 1: "fimcri MIL'.

N"i. :IM, T-. n. lal How

INI-I

ts

»M

T.

ON (h

('II L!|STI.\.\ 'LA'J'I* N,

Il ITI-MI,TY in

\NMTI!'HJI:('ST,

H'

HDKNAUP'

VfoMu-i Noiih ,,,,| U'nlmii .-n»-ris. kev.'Kail,, Walter.1*, raptor. „i i. i' Suinlay tin at |I'A ami

HI

In- v«*iitntr at 7

FURNACE.

Tiie Peerless

WARM AIR FURNACE

Tor Ileal in» Chit relic*, Ntorc*,titullmid l*ullie. llui!«|i

?{'-OSU£ ?.••• j?

Wikmi

rll

It h»y it grcattM- nidiiitiiit' Mirfurc, more crotionnrjil iii ihc list- til fitfl mid i» the liiif.»t |o\vcrhll heater »»ovv Ml tixr. The atmosphere tillbmni, pure, hostility mo! fire from du-i und dirt.

Helereiice^ In. I liu'Ol ,-tdl and P.-t.-loi'd Urm-e eh11reh, I.jiKavett.-, Ind. l'ahtorof M. I-:, ehim-h Knuilifort, Iiidintm.

Mutiufs.etur.-d iiid .-.old l»v «Jiole^-.-de und retail in 1-uFuyetlo, Ind., l-\

'J'lieodore Knisc, IIH Muill SllMM'l, I'ealerin Putent Ventilator* and He^istern.

SAW R/i|LL.

10,000 Saw Logs Wanted

AT

THI:

cr rv SAWJMILI

SAW OIT SHAEES. We ill I my |OJJ», (i litlcl' HI th! Uood.-^, Ol Ifjjr delivered attutloiis on t?itn«'r id' tho railro:t«h

lor which wo will pny llio hiijhe^l price in on^h. We :il«o huv l.hedc ivulnut, pop'ur and n.^h linn-

her. Wo havo now in operation Muclliiiory

nt'.Sawliiff, .Mulcliiit^: and NilrlaoiiiK, and solicit work l»oth from the city ami country. Wraronow proj»arol to*furni-h on h«»rl notice

llnrii and llous

•THE JOURNAL

AUVKRTISING RATI''

Iw

Tn^ •Jin olll

1 1 7.-.

""i a

:.ii| i/tij

KT.\T!I..N., .'.

I-IN-H MI.MIH

al 7 p.m. Pravrr m. uuiu At r.:.m 'jVachrr: «viiiiit)!. Itonm in No. i'mnuwv H. Kyle, Pres. K. Ct.yle, (N.r, Meflnr.', Tn-a«

"TINII I'VERY TUO«ilny

ov«».

IM«

nv.-rv TIMUII»V ml How.

A' hei

tlir«

4.-HI «,VA,

4 7.~

•tin: •l 1 :.««!: 7-

^IHM| II ...

•'inj i'• 4 1, O.., 1 oin, JiuT

S*ni

'I. I.CI.V

Hi 7.1

"i ri

'M on, ii ,,iii f|| 17 'HI- auM

oin, JiuT Ji.:'-'?. "'i oujio ?.*!i=i *j.*, ii*

•i ..Ml U!)| tl (Mil

Vjtr 7- »j|n »kiil'{ 7.',{K 'J.:. no 4:ii!r» ««,' ^|li no 27^1} 17 11 in: •s ... I«» -j-* «ni t«( .'oji'o iHij JO(H), r.-jtMi 1 Jiuf wO li OOii (Ml) IK IMK-JI 7*,i IL'.'VM •V. tAt

isiui II imuii mm-, ri~i| n.i l',s (ini4snif" -Mnvlil (I

I

ti lietH imy

PTI .^S IMI

1

:|T. MI TIP LFWT *.

I'lv.-nicem.-nts, Si |ktin-.-h for «7s't inMM't 1(111 Iin.i .-,II,.M»||S per incli f..rcuctj siilisM|ii(nft insertion, ili^ ii.n.y t.i l„- j.ni.l in mlvnnur or funpi'ily

RAILROADS.

Haihvtiy,

'r»S\MlbMVr.Vft Hi IfJ.Xf

M:ii? I'sn'itif I.jiui. .\» ninmoiu\tion

01 Nt» WKNT.

MI.il I'iH.'il'n- I.me

"».v

ion

Kx|»ro«:«..V

I.Uuitv]ior(.

Tr: :n«

A- t'.lluW

AUKI VI:.

JMII MV

6:M a«ii UiM vm. ra f.4y r.»t*

.... A:** p.*. .... ?:.(6

A.M.

.... r.H. 1*4

A.M.

t'rnwlorrtsyille Month* ueMtct-ii Kiillwu.v. teutuml ivuv* Cn,wforU»*iii« dailr

«OJ.\U BOVTH.

LBATKA

«'lfa\ ,v villi- Arfiiiri. uu !t.t *ii-\ A: "J". JI. Mml.

•1:1'' p.m. h.»n. a.m.

NOHTil.

»lf«.v .v K.x-KvilJ,. «v T. II. A.Muil.

iniMhitiou ti* in Kiilr

». John H»tnni!T,ini» sit !•}.

IIA INh Kolil'H ''-"I- I'.M.

mtt att

Mum wtrvft,

•"IWRIL.,

No.

I.UHS

•'I HI

:M, K.-N-NL NIPL

i'il iiiontlu AIUM.IUI. flatly Main M...V.

LUAWRUIT HSVJIJ,K L.T I|N!M, I.i MRI-tx I-vt»ry

Sattir

a

Hall, tiriM-n trrot.

I'Vi.'lllli^ :it '•hi Kt-lhuvs'

I0:.'isn.m.

At nlTiiX tin-m«rninj trains enjmort with dm

':'27

A.m.iti^

lor l.j»I':ivott-

till* ftC'djil

*n tln I., c. »v L.

Louisville, New Albany & Ciiieaft« Kailroa'j

SHORT AND POPULAR ROUTE A I.I. I'OIMS -LCsisil,

-TVoi-lli Ac South

I.U\J'NI«isvill.'

a

Tr I.

US FO||NWN

'Jay l*.\pre*-H. I'foi^ht Train, Froi^hi I'ram.

1J:«HI m.

l?iir» niv

MIIIU

nei Ti.

10:11

A

.n.

7

A

7:4i I .M.

IKMI lo l'r„iK|,

I rains for th« imiv wifih to Ml.vrv, i-riiiM tnt»::.*'T, Neu Alhany, Ind.

ii' in. IC. II.

Ii. IHMtl'l "•11 1 I'l.'l A(!«'|||, Ni'W Allnti.v. Itl.l.

M.

a

M.ITN J»TR«-I-T, 1

Ncliraskii, Kiinsiis an»l tln (ireat West,

i'v» me

I.ejtVe Crawford.':*, ill4 Art'ivo Hurl Hilton i. .M. K. u: l.eav« r.ui'I«ti*rt• »n. Arrive I'.'iii liehl Arrive ^tumwa in:- M..I\KK vAir.vur»: Leave nmwn Arrive l'e||.,

Mouilav

•vt-n-

PliO'HIA lt)o

DLN

I'IKICIIIN

coiilplolc. Also, Fencing, Foiwt* nnd Picket*. Special att«Mition niveu the liuildin^' »fI'an«*y Iron IMckol which cfi«t»

no mnro and i- hand.«»mor ainl more duraMf than wood pirketH,

solicits a share ol tho on reVJlpt" of "prico

pUDUCCUitOm. Altr9«t rUn/.lntlAl

Mill north sido ,f College Htrect. fienr the .Iniirt loll.

K. M. & W.

(J.

ATll'^NTION.

WANTICI)—Kv«.*r\liodv

A. M.

L0CKIIART.

MEDICAL.

r'J" p. ni in.

I.eavc Mitnmwa Arrive Aflifii 'Icinloii ''ic.-ton

I.'I JO.

JIriniii*

Arii\.' Hi. 'i,|| A!« }»is« it Leavenworth....

a. ni'.'

IU 67 n.. I2:0o a in.

in.

Moines

a. m, a. in.

Ft. Pod^re u. urine.

lii:0.p» ni. 1 ni. -I'll I' m. 11:00 in

11 :L" p. m. a. m. l:.*o a. n. ill. _J:lOa.

Moplijitf

-'i'j:. m. 1p ui. p. tu. p. m. p. Ill

Bl,

K. «•., ki". .lo.'TiT:'. ii. u'Yil l.'-n\»' 11"|i.iii.*

1

7:10a. in. I0:u.l a, ni. Ut17n. m. VJ:-|o p. ni. '•HQ p. m.

K:»n-a- City

IL A M. IL lT. l:7

Lea VO 1 'rc:l on Arnv- l!ed llmiiliur^....

HJJH.

ATTiiUMOY

fc:.Tr. p. UI. 11:110 p. ill. 1 1 Ul. •1:1.1 a. 111. a. tn.

•I -.U a. in 7.11 u. in. a. m. I't-ttu a. a. in. H»:iMi a. jn. a. m. p.

NeLra-Ua C'-itv. Council lUiitlv.. "miilia I'hillMnoiiOi Liin'oln

fnt,S p. 8 -l-l p. U: .7 a. in, 1 :-M» il in. p. m. 11 p, tu.

Ill

Ilio Fao'tic ICxpreyw Tra Through Ccmoh initl 1 ii.liurm Mcepers to Omaha, Ac., and alien on a Pullman Mceper at nmliiiL'ton for hllllSll.-M itv.

The Mail rri.in has Through CoachoK to OiuftAc., Without ehtinno. I'HIM tin* IUR and lcur.^r ROUTE, and Pann. eiii/c owe time aim money Ly ^onm oNowhern.i

ATTORNEYS.

It. It. F. I'olroo,

AT LA W, Crnwfordsvillo. Indiaiu.

Hlire over raw lorn A nlliken'sStore Will tri ve prompt at lout ion to biifrincsM in all thoCourU mMonl»oiiMTy count v. 1.I.W WAI.I.ACi:. ,h S|. TIt A 18

U'iillacc Travis, 1 I I»N lv. AT L'AW, CrawfordHVille, Indiana ill at tend with prompt lies* ami care io roll.-,-tion* of nof»»M jind accountvrtilementH

01

Orttates, collection of -oldiera*

•hum- and to le^al hll^mf.sj" yenerallv. Ottico. Jintdc •r Flston'? m. w. ISIH'.SKit

KrUion iV Kriiner, A

TVi'

1

^5 A M» C«I N S ML ill AT LAW'

rVCiavUord-nille, lud. Willattcinl to all leiful ontriiHted to their care. Special ntt®nvent ctll ee ioun. Al^o, to st»i tl cine lit" |»y (•uardituiH. K.\ecutoi'M and Admini«tors. Thov will continue tlie LiisiuV** in Sohlier^' Maimu\ -oiivcyaucin^ jind IN-al Instate, her«'tofore cm. lueted \y W. I'. Knttoii.

K(||||((I,V

TV

ISriiKli.

I 11 'li N 1,\ AT LA W. C| au ford *ville, 1 iidlana. I ec Jii al.intrcd III tdl ea^e* uudei taken lie Lie!«. are eorrcctly rcpiv«ontcd otherivi.^c no te* ill |M.charged. t!oller(ion* inado iu i'....P:" t* "f ilo' Fnited .States at rciiHonMhle rntce. i" L'amphelt A Tin,s|r*y'n Hardware

Stor«*

DENTISTS. I'l. Tullvu,

I 1. I, feroiid floor, corner room, Kinlier'n Liork, Cr wford-vtlle, Ind., roMpcetfully In.- profesMmitl M'l vieon to thw public.

II.

I TLST, CrawfonlMViUc, lud. t»nirnon 1.' t.^um.street, over tlie Corner I'.ooU Storo. ., IL V. Ll'.V, lon^ and favoral.tlv known ta tho community siM a fnt-elu.-s Iientiht, •uipUiv.

inj

.Tlt.Tli'fhjin,

lvS||»K.N'T hlO.N'TI^T, Crawfordsvillo, Ind., rn» II "pectfullv tenders hi«- ervicc to tin* public. Motto, «'iooi) work ami m»derato pricen."

and residence on V,., ••ud W.:!.: *fi avetiiie.

IMCH.HH

•all. iflii-c, oriier .^lain and (Jree .*tro»«tM next I'l^i «/jic«'. •-1 it I !'*•.

PHYSICIANS.

yi. N- USASV Ts. a».. i:virn ..r

M.MI1

hi? flit ile all •d'idilio. CjdN

lo thopractioe night or day. '•etwecti l'ili»

"EAL ESTATE ACENT^ A. .loimisoii, IjAI. I'STATI*. A'iKNT urn] .A!I'.rncv IIt I.iur Lii Ileal property of all kind* bought and nohl on oinmisMt.n. IJeiits collected, Tuxes paid, Js'otiiM»l biiMiiessof all kind?", and conveyanrine attended to nromptlv and exoi*utel correctly Oftiee ovrr S. -J. Kmpii'e Indiana.

i^mpii'e Kloek, (!ra\fordeville,

PHYSICIAN.

WJI. 8*. KLMS.111. |r~ I )in^K'lAN ANI» SI "Hi Fo.\, late from Kngland, IlitH removed liih oilire i'lolli Mail! Mlfcen the oll'iec of Iir. 1 rvviu, on MArket !«treot, and pioparoil to treat ehroni' tlivcasos and dif»jftw of the ear and eye on tho Kuplmh system. p«kcial attention t» midwifery, urtlce h"our», 7

and I to e.

M.

STAIR WORK.

Important to Carpenters ami Contractors!

H(YawfordsviUe,

to now that Ir.

1»'AH('KT I'tcnoh Compound will for*e 11 vad or hrnooth

the ha to ^row on tho Hid est Kuoo in 18 dtiy* (without injury}, 'i'lns perfectly pure vegetable compound. hout }»0!»t paid on reotttpt of pricoi §1.00. AUUitfts Leonard apr2a Willihmn, Clnclnntll, 0. *pWo)0

AVING permanently locfttcil in I am now prepared to d» all kind* of

STAIR WORK

On tho nioMt impE0Vod and workmanlike manner. All older.* from the country promptly attended to, with pricea to suit the Mine*. juneJumb M, 22LLZ0«