Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 9 April 1874 — Page 1
1 II JOURNAL PUBLISH En BY i\l A 1 IV A I It
AT CIIA
wroitnsvii.i.i:, IM.
I' It 1^7 I.
TIUOI!
Oneeopy one year IVn copies i-nc year, eaeh... Twcnty-fiv "!i" v-
\v--t
n-r.ui
MM lioM ui«l Stlrtfi l,«'V»-r unting Wut in :i ii Mvnrth trom $-•» Cj5i tcfi (Job! Cliatn-, Silv«'f.\vnr»», J» u«-!ry. ji.."iO(^ *J*i, l.mijtV.l t-i AkWjmlril |«i Sol 1 'I'lciiet**, Co l-ilioral l'i-4'miiiiiis il I U« paid. Single Tu k«M- $1 iijs Ticket* $.'i 'ru«»iv«' Tiok»
1
00
I 75 1 50
DRUGGIST.
A. AY. BINFOltl),
(Sueees'sor to K..1. Hiu!*irl A li«'.)
.'V WHOLK-AK ANI» llKTAll.
DRUGGIST,
All I'.-..l.-i iiiv
1 10 I I I TV S
1 12
11s.
V.T.NT l'Mi
EiB'S'i: l,HAI
T«iB.r/r ASi'E'E4'a.r vi,
wf.^ixnv s,A.ss
a
.VB'M-'B'S.
I1KIKEIIX
sroxcii-x,
ami E't'TTY.
No. 12 N. Washington St.,
oil rt I ousr.
GIFT ENTERPRISE.
B5
Anlv PiJ.tr'.i.'it ion in th.* u.snirv
.^OO.OOO.OO
In Vnluable il I 'IV I -:ril-t ft! in
I SIN IS-8S
I" !:!•:.n.M: MN rni.v
GIFT ENTERPRISE!
To iM'dnnvo Mon!
(hi.
a
v. Mn.y I, 1HTI.
Tw- of
§5,000 each in Greenbacks 5 Prizes of $1,000: 5 Prises of $500 .... 10 Prizes $100 each in Greenbacks I
hoiM' anil »'UiL'u\, willi har::v
N»-*«.
worth
S'-IKI.
fww Unwtl r.'.srwooi! pinr.o, uortlt
•'Jen J.H'iif «wh.
S:.F»0.
IVn linnijy h-h inn wm th SiOo furh. .1 M' U-it'-lU'S r»H:l l-}|M |f U,I| $:•()() 11. I sjol'i Aint'i ic-ar, lii nt iiij j«-h»'-, «.i vni'h.
Kohl huntinj s)i $im
.Ac.
Tw I'lity-Fivr
Circiihu^ I'onta.um^ lull h-t nt pri/.-w, H(-iiptu»nof tin
tnaniHT ot li'UM'ini5, anil other
infonnaf.on in icptni t» the inann«r at iMytrilmtii.n. will *c»it t*» any nw» c.rti«irin« thcin All I• 11•*r miit le ui• 1 to
WUSOVUCK, L. H.
HN'K, Hox.+i,
IW.KitihSt. *1 N('l NN ATI.»i
WOOL.
"\V I
Exchange.
With vi«u to sruae rhnn^o.-. 1-loin tion til the tirsi or next M.iy
E,. M. Hills & Co.
ill .-HI for
A S O W O O
Tl..- ir -lock of
"NVo'oIons
COTTON GOODS
C) W I"
tin ro-.Mi niAiitifiictur«'l
1ER CKNT. LKSS
'I i( .n o« u«unl prices, nnl to
(irniig'er Clutjs
o, :il.\ nilift: i: hv tin*
PHMMV
Holt or
Al v.-rj 1..U
WHOLESALE PBICKS.
We moan hft we .- \. ...-•
Call and See Vs.
&
It. 31. HILLS
CO.
E A E S A E
BIUTTOX IUN .NEIRS
Ueal Estate Agency,
ri»wroi«I«viUo. IimI.
I UK iiii.|.-rs, ,i,.,| lian- t.r ,. |,st„r i,ior...rlv r«»r srilr, eonsistinuof .lwelW rUol'o towii r»rniH nnd wt-stern latnN. *rho-»» Hh.-i tiuy or Ht-ll will fin.I it
«*HI| ON
ih«M at their otlici
»'ho-e isiiinu to to thtir U'lviihM^e I
MEDICAL-
M'MMKU THIl'S. I will leave *ia\v jrotd^viile, Feb. lo to I»ec, 1 returning 1st and retnainniir to loth of the I tollowing months April, June. August "I'I. »flle», ov»«r First Ni'tion-
Y'Uik. Hours, 1 to 4. To treat Patients. (jittioMO ]HHI:AHEKnew:j
VNI, HTM.K.
VOL. XXVII—NO. 15.
Th» if for tfoing to Indianapolis can be found at Ini»m: nn price*.
starch,-
hf.H
Best of stripe sliirtings,
3 I A I S
BOOK STORE.
The Old KoliaMc
Corner 15ook Store
lli*- Now on II:tnda Vorv
SI«••!»
or
I'tCACX TII.NKY. M. I'.
REAL ESTATE. A. :. .IENMSOXT"
Ileal Estate Agent,
No. 2a l-a Main Btroet.
9RAWPORMVILI.E. IND.
JEWELRY.
or l.aFayette jy to«'U of
STI'DS, SLEEVE HUT"!"
SOLID S1LYEH and PLATED WAKE,
And everything helon^irn: toa flr das'- .Jewelry Stop* i~ jH or goods rei
Mnsonvillc -1-4 Rleaclicd 3liislins. Itigcis.
Lonsdale 4-4 Rlaek Mnslins, 1(» cts.
No. 1 1-1 lJloaclied Mnslin from dressinc: or
vVlltl tll« I jJU'O'l'sl
MM1
'.
And :i I lo\\
thoivi.
lire iin il ((1
of
BLANK BOOKS,
i»f Kvery .SU'N Style oi.Uulin^or nuniing, ..
And 3IVlltun
Lodgers, Journals, Pity-Hooks,
4'n»! Hooks mid ItoniriU,
i'ass
KiXklis. .TIoinoraiHliiitt*
And Diaries for 1SV3.
SCHOOL BOOKS
School and Oilier
A I" I E If
•'oj Kvrrv l'o-iKlo Ii»5. ripiion,
onH,r
i{00li Store,
Cor. 3Inin and (•rooii.
PICTURE GALLERY.
Scenic Photographic!
1) r. 15TDGI'],
(WASIIINCTON SITIR.I'.I' AI.I,I:KY),
Mukes ii11 the hoc-t -tyh- Pictures, such ft- K»»inhraiits, I'.ci'in-, Cumeo mi'l Plnin Photo*, lurcr •ii -inall. Ferrotype- in Itoti Toil', Cabinet*, IniperinK, mi'l all other *i7.e*. Copying n'l'l eiil otjlittf ilone ftn nrlihtie manner, «nl Ht K'a«0|l»hl«- filter
LUMBER WANTED.
*)),))
Liuiibci' Wan ted!
ii thing of tin pa*t, *-inct ii piod as the
(ilOLD AND SILVER WATCH CHAINS,
I I*AJTANRRI:I: SATISVACTION IN UVKKV CASIO,
('!i
OS ii Kp
AJM KM.S SOI.I i:\ilMVKl» l'KKK. I'UIC KS ItOTIOSI
CJ I£ I, It) I IV
DRY COODS.
iowrsr rjrfiis:v
Host make 1-1 ISrown 3luslihs. 12icts.
Second best 1-1 Rrown Muslins. 1() ct-s.
\V. I'At l.,
and Conijilclt
FINK SETS of JEWELRY,
•otnplete. Kv'erv aiticie old to he
unt'-il, A- haltthe beauty of a present i* in being nicely engraved.
11 ni it. -1 M:IMI s111
A
Vowii. 1 «Miii
t. oppo-it«* (»iirt House.
A. ('. JKNNIS0N.
TToKNKV AT I.AW, No. M«in-trvrt for-isviili'. Inl
C. L. THOMAS,
TTOIt.NKY AT UtV, t'rimf.1.(-viII.., In,I Ot«i floor IMio-nix lllork, 'i ner room
Ii. 1$. F. PEIltCE,
A'JT"KNjuvfi'
AT I.AW. V:»w|nr«1sV!ll«\
w. p. morioN.
JIIMTTOX
A.1('rnwliiril-villi'.
11
SON
w. 11
1)1'Al.F.lt IS
ALL K1M)S of LU3111 Kit,
I'l'.HlHI'.S TO I'l HCIIASI".
r»00,00() Feet ol" Pluck Walnut
LIMI3F.R,
T."V
»Il which he 1'
wili pav the highest market
jirieein *nsh. lie i.«*heH nl-o to buy WAI
M'T LOUS delivi'red nt or near my of the rmit-
oa«N. He will alno buy timber in lh« wootin. dtllee over lturhridj£» & llaUHcr'i* hardware Ptore.
luontli of March.
An
12i cts.
10ii cts.
I«•1i
»I* 'l !Y.
ii in tl
'i* ])ric's11i:ni iin.v one ilare
moan .jus we ^Vll
to :i ixl sec on i- iiiiinoiisc
IMJV.
ATTORNEYS.
~J-:. (j. SM'DElt,
ri'liNKV
AT I.AW. tli.-
in I'nioti Itlm-U, uj stair
A Iniiian.'t
PAUL
A
with iho S'loritT rrawfofils rillv,
•tiillN H. ^H'KTM.y. I
& (OI HTNEY.
St.! Cn.wf»rdsvili'.., lli.lui'im.
I
1
0
1
•I AM K.s 1111M 1 si 1N, li.'|ik,M|.s,,
TH0MPS0X & 110.11 PS0X,
Ju' «»na, f-ntntju-e
iiHii Mr.-. Ilntum'- -tore.
Sione Front, Will ^ive prompt ntttentum to inline.-." iu
J»1I
the rourtx ol Motit^otnery county.
w. \v. ni{i \rj{.
*XKH,
& inn
TTiiKNKYS AN'li (-Ot'N-1!I.I.' MIS AT I.AW. tii'l. Will atti-nil tn nil ti'iiui liusini's. entrusti'il lu their ouri
1
IM'III
S|i.-.-nil .-ittfii-
tiun ^iv.-n in I'olN'i'l inns, AI-" ti» -i-Itli-iiicnl- 11v liimr.liiinw, Kxi-riitors iinil Ailnnnistrntf.rs. Thi'V will
lllllf 111'1 liusllioss 111 Sol,HITS' (Tlnmis
CiHivi-viini-inu' nii'l r.-iil cstnti', ttcr.*t.f«i.- im-.lu.-r.-.l l.v \v 1'. Hiitn.n.
KENNKDY & HKUSH.
ATTOUNKYS
AT LAW,
rrawlor.Nville, tn«l.
Sucre-- mianiiitce.l malt eus«*.- utiiiertKlieti '•here rie faet« are eorreetly represente«l: otln-r-wi'-e mi i-f vv?H he eli-ir^"!. Collection.*, uui'le in all part- of the rniiel state- «t re»f«.nalle rate«. Wiee, ver C:tinpleli A Tin-le*-'s llar«l. ware Store, Plheuix llh.cl..
i"i ciiii\, .V'l'.lu-rs' Cluiin Aci'ht,
•IAS. K. I-'.YANS. I Notary Public-!
00N KVAXN,
TTOKNKYS
ATTOHMCYS
AT
AIJMU-.
f,AU :ni'l ior^* Chimi iial !uime-vi entru-N'W to
All
hei l" ea "ill receive plouipt attention. l»enerill culleetifUlH not'le nnl ileeeilent'" elnte-•(-t|e«t nt rea-f»nah|e rale*, itljee, in J'.xehanije Woek, No. -f
1
I ii'l.
Main -tieet, Ci'ftufor'lsville.
DENTISTS.
E. T0TT0X,
7 \KNTls T, '•eeon.i tloor, eorner rooin, Fi-hnrN i. }iloe|\, "raw fonl^ville. In*!., re-peet fully teniiet« his profo-^ionnl to th»* pnhhe*.
M.
L. A. F00TK.
i,
v. r. \.
DF.\TIT.
ksim:N I' I'KM isr.
DKVI»TK
Dnror
M.RV.
(JALEY BKOTIIEKS,
Crr,\rforilviIle, lnl.
mice, cor
ner Mam rml »reen tievt-. nvrr Corner nook Store. -\t-
I'lCllAX,
T. Mc.M
fol«l.\ille, Intl.,
*«orv|ee«. the plih-
1^ rt»pn-tlully tender* hi
lie. Mottt*, "(jooil work atl«l moderate price*." Please call, tltli-'e, o\ t-r po-t otlh'e.
PHYSICIANS.
L. HASS, M. I).,
hi«« etitire attenfon to the practice
of tnedieito-, (!id?- attended tonight r»r dnv. i!i Ht»d resioete i'oti Main st eet, *e«t «if \S*. N. Wa--iilN ^tore
PH. PETCHON,
iT
and ph:innrceui«t, No. 'M, Kl-her
P.loek, make." a 'peeitdty ol tin* treatment ot chronic lii^i iise-. The choicest, tno-t appro*, ed and reliable remedie- are uod :u the treatm«*nt oj ev^rv ca-e.
EDUCATIONAL.
31. K. CL0PFKLTKH,
Sfl'KKINTKXPAST
tin' S-li.mls "f Mont-
^IIIIMTV eoiintv. Office in reurafthe Heeordei oth-e in t'nioti hlock, CrawfonlsMlb". Itul. Kxatuinath'iii of applicant* tor teacher's licence takes place on the last Saturday in each month.
PAPER BOXES.
J. P. WKAVKK.
Manufacturer of
i* It ox
91 1
s« uth Meridinn Street,
n. -J'
IndianupoIiM.
ik, and a I
Shoe. Catxlv, 8tnreh, Millinery, *1 other |b»x»'« made to order.
Owing to the decline of material, I can now of. fer better prieew than ever. 1ft-mil
:rv
A
W A
I.IVI:
election lor State oliicers'iiccur
I rod in Kbode Nl.-tnd mi the 1st.
The Kepublican ticket, with Governor
Henry Howard nt its head, was elected
almost without opposition. the only]
ticket in the field against it being that ol
the Prohibitionists.
Sl'KAKlNU of the proposition to fix the I
inauguration of the President on the!
second Monday in May, to extend the
short session of Congress to that lime.
and to hold the Presidential election in I
October, tin Logansport. .rmrii'il says:'
"The common sense- of these changes
commends tlieni
reasoning is precisely
fli.OOO per annum. The interest on the
bonds is SCJ,000 per annum. The prinei-
pa! of the bonds, ifou.nnO, is due twenty
years from their date. Last week the I
Pan Handle pav car left, about
SII.YOOO
here as the monthly pay of men employ
ed in and about the.-e shops.'' ..
THE 1E1'TII ol- Till: A'A'.
One good indication of the thorough
ness of the woik of the great temperance
movement is the fact thai it is not con
fined to any political party, and of course
not ioauv church. All, of every shadeol
theological belief and political opinion,
I join hands in the ell'ort that is now being
made from one end of the land to the
other to wipeonl, if possible, the iniquity „,„i 1
1 1 1
of intemperance.
meeting held at I
At a temperance
iFayctte one night
last wcel Jlon. .lolin R. ColTroth, a gen
tleman of fine culture, who perhaps has
no intellectual superior in the district!
:and withal a Democrat of the straitest
sect del.vere.1 an ad.lress, portion of!
the
1 onlv came to listen and not to speak, !, "t and confess I feel a little out of place,
h^ prr-inIk»^
I realize the fact that their pathway is not all a pathway of ease, and they must continue to meet willi discouragement. Ladies, you will meet willi difficulties and willi coolness, but if you faint not you will win. have true heart it will not be the first good cause that has failed. There is no reason why tbecause should be given up. W.'-.v, not oulv temperance men but men who are addicted to their cups bid yoli (iod speed, fio on, go on! He that your word, whether you succeed or whether you jail. Yes, press on, press on, ami
tion. Deniuners were filed to the com
plaint, anil it was urged that the court
trying the ca-e having failed to adjudge
a forreittiro ol the licenseasa part of the
penalty, the whole matter of the oin-nso
hail already been determined, and that |, i,,
Hridges could not become a "relator' iu
such a suit. Judge Hicknell, who pre- .T
add lo its sentence a judicial declaration of such forfeiture (see section 7), but that
failure of the Criminal Court to declare the forfeiture does not oust the jurisdiction of this court. Franchises can be
forfeited only by judicial action, and the
I
WANTED.
1
noiiitiMi
1
limn 1,1,0ml '»!*.*'
.J."".'.' !•.
k,-r" t.-'nitic m«.' me ofliciallv, inv public duty require
clinic." Muntgi'iiii'iy county. To tin- right me, under section V-10 of the practice!
1 1
A
IllUllt III' II'' T»l»» I'V,'/»»••« CHOVKIt.V BAKKIIS. SI.
drenN Mw4
CO., I _,
1 ii'l 1 nin*j.olio, in. 1. fo file a proper information.
ORAWFORJJSyiLLE JOURNAL
CIIAWFORDSVILLK JM).: APRIL.
Tin: public tli-ltt wai reduced :i little*t
more than two million.* during tlnv
r,'
plan is, 1 hat it is the old plan, and the weeks, yet hundreds of acres have been
ease, to that of the man who went to mill
with atone in one end of his sack to
balanc" the corn ill the other end.
'.V
Ix view of the almost coitain comple
tion ol the Toledo & St. Ixiuis Air Line
Railway and the further probability of
this city being selected as the place for
the location of the machine and car
shops "on conditions," the following item
clipped Irom the 1-iOgansport may
furnish food for some of our citizens to
ruminate: "The tax income added to
this city bv the Pan Handle shops is es
timated, by competent authority, at
TWO.
J.i-t ni^ht I (Ireiimcil thul ULTI' were tviii, I.ltln*. hi.Mhi liiilrt-il L'frl- like vti 4 Ami Ium.,1 thrill lioth. WI..-.I eo'iil.l 1 ,|„
Hi«-y I»• 11 Iritl just ihi utivv limr, I Ins |Heiiv-j11 .-. 11• ji.• 11 In'iv t[|crt-, tone of voice, laugh, j*e»t urc, a p.
i.* drew m.» with your mo.b^t nvtk 1 he oi|i,-r if )j vnu'r replies Alt'! both were fall of M»rrfti«'s.
An-] I cotilil J\ noil one hft.i gone, which Lingered deepen my •Ji'?iifi»i.
ln»r I lov«'l ail'! n.vtliin^r Jodi -.U h:r!i». «'r oiii\ jj.y Iiothj. •wf w:»- to hoth. .•
Alr
Awaking, ii wn« wpH to fin«{ N,tii r.' h»l not, )n.iv«-'« inf|ii«'.}. Mitii*' two of your «tiMr»i iiiii.' kni
I:I»AKV VII.I.I: JOTTIXWS.
Although farmers have worked un
to e\cry mails good ih great difficulties in gelting their
opinion. The only possible reason that 'crop of oats in on account of llie'grouml
can be given lor adhering to the old being frozen every morning the last two
similar, in this sown in good condition
hood. A good deal of Spring whe
also been sown.
1
W inter has held on so
of our best farmers are running short ol
feed for slock. One of my neighbors
is all over the country. Although to
it may be a blessing in disguise, lor I
have heard old experienced farmers say
that a deep snow on newly sown oats wa-
as good as a coat of manure to the crop
So we may expect an abundant oats crop.
wire "holed away" in the vicinity of
Medaryvillc and are now on the market.
They are worth $1 lo at the cars. No
wheat or corn for sale. Com lias been
shipped here and is selling at do and 70
cents per bii-hel. The potato trade here
make* business ijuite lively. The butter
and egg trade is immense, and furnishes
nearly every family with coffee, s-,.gar,
etc. The fact is. potatoes, butter and
eggs me all that fanners have left to bar
ter (or such things as tbev need. There
will be no hogs or catile fattened for mar-
., ket this Sprins, the cau-e being no corn
ami no money to buy corn. .*-i:'vk lion's
are verv scarce and •attlo very poor, as a
hitle
a
1(1 lf lUll o( i()
which we reproduce below, taken from ... *. letter, not a solitary ease ol sickness in ol mercantile hit it 1 a 1 1 1 1 1
have often spoken at the bar and forum, ""Triages to record, but some how I but this is the first lime in my life I was have contrived to jot |iiile a lengthy ever called upon to make a temperance let'er.
.. to make a temperance let'er. to livrri i!
-^peeeh. lirother Lingle announced in
1 his paper that I had been relamed by
N it a
TlluMP-nN. Motai I'nl.ho,
pliments 1 have received at his hands, Ibis was the kindest. To tell the truth,
„f tl,e Coin-! M'-HUI 110 ISS.'
1
Ululates.
:ire legally per-
and to see that all acts
formed, would tathcr be a dog and hers 7-1 in membership, cat the crumbs that fall from the table
1
of the ladies engaged in this ork than I to be a bar keeper in the most gilded saloon in this city. [Loud applause.]
I the blessing of God upon you and those death ol Mrs. Catharine Seanlon a-.^""-•iilter us will have cause also to .... thank God that in this generation was wiped out Uie itii.|iuty ot inlempcrancu.
llo If .1 J.Hjn Lit I'Kit Ml 1S Kali KITED. An interesting case under the new
liquor law came up at the last term ol
1
the Clark Circuit Court. Some time ago
one Deutchman was convicted for selling
to a habitual drunkard. He was lined,
but no decree o! forfeiture was adjudged, "°'y-
The case referred to was a suit brought
by the State on the relation of one I
Kriducs against Deutchman, asking the
court to declare a forfeture of the per-!
mi!, by reason of the previous convic
The Jud-e sustains the demurrer, '"T® 'V
however, holding that the information completed.— l'hnar.
Hridges. His opinion thus closes:
—The Young Men's Christian Associa
tion of Covington starts off with forty
members.
Mrs. Kinney, of Warren cou'ty.
recently died at the age of almost a hun
dred years.
7
told me this morning t':at he had scarce-1 population the'.Uh District
lv feed enough to last one week, and so it in size, the
Kev. C. Ii. Allen is the newly in-|and
•ail you won't, if you stalled pastor of the Baptist congregation but if you should fail, Lebanon.
—The average length of the school
term ol I'lUnam county was one hundred
and ten days.
—Hon. Will Cumback delivered a tem
perance address at Lebanon on Friday
night ol last week.
all men will yet bless you and call down] —The Lebanon 1'ntriot reports
—The West Lebanon Tiinr.t say
valuable
0
1 1 0
1 1 0
1
after the Fall election. His circuit com
prises the counties of Warren, Fountain
:ind Vermillion.
A
Hridges are the victims of misfortune,
I I
the present court was ousted of all juris- sprained his ankle, and the latter had a diction It was also contended that lingei mashed at the saw mill.— II mt
1
sided over the trial, in ruling upon the ,he thug of the horse shoe, in the intel-
demurrers, held as follows: lectual game of quoits, form the daily-
It appears that Deutchman, having chorus for the ears of Zionsvillians.— the franchise and privilege of selling in- D'ltriot.
toxieating liquors, and entitled to be —We are informed by Win. Tate, of iroteeted and upheld by the State iu the Jackson township, that his neighbor, awful exercise of that franchise and Elijah Clore, went to LaFayette. this privilege, has been convicted of riolat- week to procure a supply of fish from the ing the temperance act of 1873, by tin-' Waoash river to restock the fish pond he lawfully selling intoxicating liquors to has upon his farm.— Coriin/hui lit-tjtublic.
an habitual drunkard. The act of 1S7S
provides that upon a violation thereof, I the franchise shall be forfeited, ami the
Criminal Court, before which Mr. l'resbvterv in Indiana, was eel-bra-
Deutchman was convicted, had power to
slipped otr a load of hay and
"'.'.'f '"e '""I, l-lended
v. ,. with the click of the croquetmallet, and
A
1 he .idtli anniversary ol theorganiilion of the l'resbvterv of Salem, the
ted Tuesday, April 1. Kev. ,1. M. Kishop, who was stated clerk of the Presbytery for twenty years, was to deliver an historical address. J'uliinl.
—The work of clearing on the A., L.
it St. L. Kailroad east of Lebanon began on Fiiday last. Mr. Kersey, one of the
appeal to the court for such is bv informa-, contractors, informs us that tlie work of tion grading from Noblesville west will com-
st, and I therefore sustain the demurrer. .himlil never let mi Aliim its men,' but lh re are forms of greatness, Arrvr for the as this matter is now brought before or at least excellence, which 'die and .i
1
li'iuors ,-l.ippeil to that p«iint dining the
last six months developed the following
amounts: "J. li. Van Arsdall, 1 barrel
whisky, 0 kegs alcohol, liquors and hit-
(er^. .lames Hannah, 1 barrel whisky,
I'l Voirs alcohol, lienors and bitters,
(lec-r^re Coulsoii, 7} barrels whisky. 111
kegs alcohol, lienors ami bitter.-.
Mahan .*c lira., II barrels whisky
and aleoliol, an-l 1 kegs alcohol, lii|iiois
and hilt
of liijuors and hitlers, in the
months."
1
1 he potato crop is being unearthed lip —John
re. 1: appears that they have kept day nt
most excellently. Thousand* of bns/iels forty-Hire
every two years of his life.
liiMine, Clinton, Fountain, Montgomery, ^"lHmsa
is ii,,ss.
HentonV
population
Spring wlicat has CI'')tons ].,:«, and her vote I '"•J^'hiiiery.
Warren'.- lo.-Jo with a vote
GLH
0
such this storm is very discouraging, vet »ui*th, the -1th filth, and '.uh sixth.
3d secoml, the l.'iih third
INDIANA M:\VS.
son of Hon fhos
-Marshall Nelson
M,.. .I N,K,„, i, i„,i„.
—Sarah 1-.. Moon lias been
^..'17 by the Fulton County
1
oral thing, and Aon, the ol county dec,
eoniinir into market I jmlpe they piien atone hon^e. J^poakini^ of their
opens and eomesthere will be oceans people, with a
never
sieknes
It looks like starvation a lew men would
No murder-, no deaths,
are starving to death, lnt when Spring action the ll'inmr says: "We are one In tlii-room is held ser-
common
when we disable one member we endan-
^r the whole body. The concentration
nionopol v.'
gethcr, State, county and cilv, will cm-
pare favorably with those ot any grow-
ing city in the Slate."
ferent churches have been firmly united
the view of the threatened disaster to the
ed whe,it, it is cheering to know that there
101 years and months. has not been f„ years a better prospect When in .South Manchester a bakery
Warren county, is breaking a two hun-j told bv farmers who have made careful
.lame,- (toodwinc since Christmas. ], Mjijr I of npplcs, jears and the smaller^
horses at Greencastle. Some think it ehecring, and if we have a good'peach
est Lebanon Tune* reports
''eat in the timbered lands of War-
considerably damaged by the
'i"
a
changing weather,
—Judge Thomas F. Davidson's term
of ofiice expires November 1, IS70, soon
towns "Do von
1 1
we hear men sav that the road will never
should have been filed in the name of Since the temperance movement hot blaze of worldly prosperity. Ill suc-
tlie State, on the relation of the Prose-1 took hold of Attica two months ago, we sometimes arises Irom a su|crabiiiicuting Attorney, and not on that of have heard of but a single arrest, and dance of qualities in themselves good— r.._ i. .. ,.„. /'..-. r..i Irimi mwiuuotiKo imt e/»ri^itiv»
old gangers say tlie saloon tiusiness is i-'siiu paving mantic, a modesty too retiring .'he *pev
Iain satisfied that the action can not Jt "'certainly is not" pavin' mantic, a 'modesty ttsi retiring. I will be sustained by a private person who l, a y"or frequent dividends. The "nev ""t go so far as to say, with a living
shows nothing moie than a public inter- .,] mij-Jny gi grip on the evil I""'
'""--tenth of the *7o,00 prize greatly .lisfiguring feature of our faelory in the Louisville lottery. towns arc wholly wauling. All about,
Mishler, who died the oilier
for the murder of .lohn Peters, [irepare
for the vigilants by holding all night
1
'A
1 0 I
Clkhart, had killed in l.is time I u" !p°' cotlnges of the employes. 1 iiesecottages aresiniiile, •c hears, an avernco ,,f ,.,.o ..A..: ...
curs, an average of one most allraclive in style, not common, not I uniform. Kae/i stands by ii-olt, a liu/e
Circuit
Court 111 lu I suit against a saloon keeper more property thir.i the
lor selling li.juor to her husband.
—The Fleetwoods, in jail at Seymour
prayer meetings on Saturday nights. I lirothers. One, possibly
—A mass meeting was held Friday "I
1 1
a
a 1
brotherhortd, and
11 »"iness into the hands of I',
1 he Logansport .latinial desires the
press to announce that "the bonded
debt of Logansport is $183,000, instead
ol fljnOjtjon, as heretofore reported. We
arc now having a fiurrv over
ir finan-' ''"'l
-The Fountain county poor farm has situation, but it is an agitation which ,Vufnia\ ixHot!\T Vucb "nJ" .Tvcrv 'town
we trust precedes reform. Willi all our ,,„••b. 11 ic Mrilnnlist. church In the
The Y. M. C. A. at Frankfort mini- firiimbling our (axes, taking llieni all to- village, the plans and organ for which
—A writer in the Muncie ,Ycir.s sums
up what has been accomplished by the
temperance movement there: "The dif-
cemented together iu Chrislion fel
lowship, dram drinking has greatly di
minished and drunkenness has propor-
tionatel abated, public opinion has been
educated to a higher temperance stand
ard, and a most stringent ordinance has
been passed by our Cilv Council to pre
vent drinking iu public places."
1 he Northern huti'iiiian save "In
Out* farmer in Stciihcn township, for Iruits of alt kinds. \Ve li.ive heen had jut ItetMi started. The brutheis
dred acre soil field tor com. e.xamimrion that thev have as vet been P"
I vAtiiiiiiMi.
IIMI
in.ii
UH*\
The fjuiu^y is prevalent among tin*: fruit*. Jn this respect the pcwnect is I
more dangeious and fatal than the epi- prop it will be first of much conseijuence built and now, /or cost
for year- past.''
-j:. ATIie Voter's
1
right to do this—a right guaranteed not only by the Kaxter law, but lv the very letter and spirit of our form of government. It is a right as old as the Declaration of Inilepeiiderce, or Magna Charla. II a man doesn't want saloons about him, he can just as properly sav so as another man can say he does. Most, all grades and classes of drinkers say, "II I had mtj way. there wouldn't be a saloon iu town." Here's your chance, gent'emen Faith
The Man Who Does Not Succeed.
This beautiful extract is fiom the pen or Hon. George S. Milliard: "I confess that increasing years bring with them an increasing respect for men who have not succeeded iu life, as those words are commonly used. Heaven is Haid to be!
on earth and it is sure that celestial grace does not thrive, and bloom in the
not
0 0 0 1
-j act, to direct the Prosecuting Attorney Lebanon Patriot says a recent report of it.,otit the laurels, and
Cfimniitte? to ascertain the amount of
K" hir as to say, with a
1
that 'the world knows nothing of
make 110 signs there are martyrs that
misw the palm but not the stake heroes
1
without the triumph.
ANNUM.
I'TOriA.
Moilol Acw Kiitfland MatiiilVicliiriuir lonii. [Co r«»-poinloi-!«
Of !!i |M
'J'litr silk
Brother.- sue
!jnrt/nril, uii the railroiul rtninrctin
city
UML IVOVMCIHT. THE VILLUIRC
ha- gn.wn up abo :t and because of them in a comer ot the town i/ known Smth Maucheier. 'i'he works are lo-
••rs. Now, you st-e, wc area teni-: catcd on the farm which was once owned pc ranee people. Only u:u barrels „fi''.
whisky, barrels of alcohol, and r.v teirs
he
I hegun ill a modest v.av hv
I he population of the mil District, brothers. The enterprise composed of the counties of Henlon J' 'h:m ..,l „.
1 iITCcanoe and Warren, is lL'VIlj. The know not how much capital. orthe
total number of votes, acconling to the
last census, is ,'il,78S. Of these numbers
0
the
1 1 1 1
icsc numbers
.olo,
and iier
1
""""ulaclure 1 snv nothing
«, ""-t "'tiiv at South .Man!
cliester wonders enough for one article, outside the clean, admirable mills, with
in this neighbor- and her vote their superb steam engine and ingenious IS J'er cent. In these live branch-
l'"ountain's Hi .'iSP, and iier vote' ll.''n this model factory vested, according to the census of 1870, 'o).|. Atoiiti'omei v's -i--. ... ,y, all like a factory vilhnre.
long that many s. an, her vote The mills are not conspicuous. Tall, !'W, while the same amount of capital running short ol ippctanoc ,JJ,,uand her vote ugly buildings are not rudely and at '"vested in the manufacture of nic iron
District being
once fotecd upon you, as if to challenge attention. They are at good distances from each other, located doubtless with respect to convenience, and yet rather in the sccliision, well built, modest, approj riale ill styles as in sight. A factory vil'W without factories asserting them-
I selves at once, and with coarse emphasis, I is unusual, to say tlie least. This peeu-
a it
irregularity prevailing in
ran led "hout it. in every way making a
comfortable, healthful, neat home. -There are many men and women having
occupants of
these collages who live in houses much less pleasing in style and location. In the village are two school houses. P.oth were put up according to plans furnished by the architect of the Cheney
both, stands lis is a model
they gave.
night to give a lift lo the exposition idea inexpensive country in Fori \V.iv.,» iv, school house most complete in its ar-
^vho rangements, and most charmingly situ-
counts the children, figured out a fraud nied in a line grove, well oil' the road,
in the census and claimed some US.OiiO Among the more conspicuous buildimrs, population lor the city.
1 1 1
The (*iHIi.tv- i. a pleasant audience room seating per
interesting is the hall. Here is
iifran^ements as are needed lor
vice each Sunday morning, and at the close a Sunday school. This service is conducted by such clergymen as are invited by the brothers, who defray the ex-
1
'".-
0
'ai.iilies, and' such of
their employes as choose, attending it.
be the worst kind of h,w the audience room is reading
1 1 1
™,
a
is .i rending
room, the fables of which are generously supplied with the best.papers, magazines, quarterlies, etc. Here is a library of several hundred volumes. The reading room and library are free to residents. Here, ton, is a room used bv the Good
kitchen and billiard room.
the brothers furnished, is an exceedingly lustelnl htiiiiiin^, nlniir i!»Iy refuting the fallacy that cheapness atnl ugliness are inseparable. The religious preferences
Manchester.
I
I'ledse.
1' rotu the A't lea J.i duei
'1 here is no method of temperance work so practicable and effectual as the
voter's pledge. It is a comparatively easy thing for a man to say, be be heavy drinker, moderate drinker," or teetotaler, that he will at least not lend his j/frxutiul influence to the e-tablishment oT saloons iu the community. He has a perfect
of the Humanists are met h{ sending a I ?"'r n"L 'V'® T'
morning for their accommodation. The
quiet and orderliness with which this was done was not the least striking feature of the Sabbath I passed at South
1 he residences of the Cheney lirothers and their sous (there are about SO souls I in all) aie scattered about upon pleasant sites, and arc such as would naturally be the homes of men who have created a
I model factory village. They have done what might be done elsewhere with great economy and great benefit to the landscape—given up fences. The gain of such a practice is very great and of various kinds. Once seen it must be admired ami imitated I am sure.
many of their employes had
0 1
l'!^
1
\e ei ileeii ,..i.1 1 a a a
i«»ab to hud a single peach blossom morning. Willi characteristic, energy
eers lia\e been .-t(»len Irom that has been injured, mid the same can and benevolence they at once attempted
0
.""".'B
J° way with the evil. A convenient
W
wnxieil a baker, frosli from
wagon
good bread
as one could desire is delivered at the house iu time for breakfast. A laundry is soon to be put up, where, at cost, the washing of the village nn.j l.r Jone.
What Kind of Morals We Wanf.
We want in this country an improved I moral sense. A moral responsibility that
will "baiii.-h small measures from the counters, small baskets from the stall, pebbles from the cotton hags, clay Irom the paper, sand from the sugar, chicory from cotlee, alum from bread, and water from the milk cans. The religion that is to save the world will not put all the big strawberries at the top and all the little ones at the bottom. It will not make one half pair of shoes of good leather an I the other half of poor leather, so that the first shall redound to the maker's credit and the second to his cash. It will not put Jovin's stamp on Jenkins' kid gloves, nor make l'aris
fully kept, it isa better pledge than all bonnets in the back room of a Boston others put together. Even for the veil- "ollinor shop nor let a piece of velvet der it has its advantage, for it uives professes to measure twelve yards
timelv noticc, and enables him to adjust
1
his afi'airs to the new order of things. It
is in cflect a proposition such as some »'enty yards be nipped in the bud at vote upon—local option. It is, fourteen and a ball nor all wool de-
want or do von not want sa-
1
loons in town?" There never was such amalgamated with clandestine cotton
an opportunity for a fair settlement of
this question What sav the voters b?
untimely end in the tenth
a I
'k that vouches
handkerchiefs be
a I a
1 1
H-'ce (or those who have not succeeded ,c»» !!".i
J\
taste too
conquerors
pressed Jo-
to the unsuspectingpublic
for legal bioadclolh. It docs not put
bricks at five dollars per thousand into chimnevs it contracts to build of seven dollar materia! nor smuggle white pine into floors that have liccn paid for hard pine nor leave yawning cracks in closets whore hoards ought to join nor daub the ceilings lhal ought to be smoothly plastered nor make window blinds wit!.
paint that can not stand the sun, and fastenings that may be looked at, but are on no account to be touched. The religion that is going to sanctify the world pays its debts." It don't lie it will not steal, nor will it bear false witness.
A female lecturer iu California, speaking in behalf of her sex, savs: Man
pleasures would never suit us, profits we have We allow him enough to dress him respectably, and to take him to the lectures and other intellectual circuses but thf bulk of his income
we appropriate."
—.
JJOURNAL JOB OFFICE
I IS I'RKi'AILKD TO
EXECUTE TYPE PRINTING-
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION
A SKAT AXK AUTISTIC STYLE
Mr. Sayler's l'atent Bill. IKroin Hm I.o^msport Journal.)
i,,.,,- i. "pcrch of Mr.Snyler, memhor .. of Congress from this State, on the pat-• hactoncs ol the Cheney e»t monopoly, is attractinj much atr n-
Manchester He appeure to li've studied the
Connecticut, some eight miles east of Hihject thoroughly, and presents some
llial ftartling lads, lie argurs that the
...
that
wa.s
fat her of the brothers, and
At that time there
was upon it a saw
l.tst six I Muny years ago the mauiilacture of sew my
'irii
S
ex
isting system ol patent laws is exceedingly burdensome to the people, and, practically, of very small benefit' to inventors, while enabling manufacturing corporations to reap immense profits, 'i'o prove the latter proposition, he pre-
'i'ls an array of facts and figures, among
liil and a distillery, "hich we find the following: The, India rubber industry, according to the cen-
sus, pays ofl per cent, profit upon the
capital invested. The cabinet organ business pays G1 per cent, profit. Iu seventeen months the capital invested
I in the manufacture of sewing machine'! doubled itself, besides paying for all material used and the labor employed—the profit on a $!i0 machine being $24. The profit on patented agricultural implements is r2 per cent., and on patent med--tee
a a a a
es ol imlustry,, the aggregate capital in-
W
4
••'"ether. There are no
1
,100,000, and the profit $37,800,-
000, while the same amount of capital invested in the manufacture of pig iron would yield only eleven and two thirds millions of profit, and in cotton goods only ten millions.
According to these figures, somebody is getting rich in patents but it is, evidently, not the inventors. The people have some knowledge of the number oi men who make a living by selling patent rights. The true way to avoid these evils, is to give the inventor or owner of a patent right a fixed per cent, of royalty for the use of the invention. Then all who choose to pay the per cent, can use the patent and the patent right extortion will cease.
Tile Trouble at Ashury University. It-'runi the lii-fcni'.asllc Dunner.] On Tuesday a bogus Asbury Jirvicw I was distributed about the city, of the most infamous and scurrilous character.
It slanders every young lady of the University, attacks the professors and a number o! the male students, and drags before the public in the most shameful manner a respectable widow lady who is working hard to give her two excellent daughters an education. The English language is inadequate to properly characterize the thing.
esterday the faculty expelled six of the authors for their anticipation in it— A. IC. Carmichael, A. H. Yount, O. W. Ayer, J. W. Karnes, Ci. D. Karnes and William Flinn, some of whom threaten to lest the legality of the proceeding. Instead of quibbling about any legal technicality the young men ought to bo
thankful that they are permitted to get ofl so easily for their grave offense. It is altoizether probable tliat the number expelled might be increased wi'ii nrollt to Asbury.
Since the above was in type we learn that an additional number have been expelled, and a larger number demeritcd.
One Way of Looking at It. From the Boston Advertiser.1 If we were to increase the paper in cir-' dilation by 10 per cent., and thereupon the prices of all articles advanced simultaneously exactly 10 per cent., the only important class of persons who would be injured would be those to whom debts of definite amounts are due, and the only persons who would be assisted would be persons owing such debts. The mischief is that some prices rise more quickly than others, and the rise on some articles is greater than on others. Hut it is ciear that, if the laboring man now gets $2 a
0
work if the price is
$11 and he receives i?2.20 a day. Simplo anil obvious as this proposition is, unfortunately many persouscan not, or donot, understand it.
Scandal.
The story is told of a woman who freely used her tongue to the scandal of others, and made a confession to the priest of what she had done. He gave Iier a ripe thistle top, and told her to go out in various directions and scatter the seeds one by one. Wondering at the penance, she obeyed, and then returned and told her confessor. To her amazement, he bade her go back and gather the scattered seeds: and when she objected that it would be impossible, he replied that it would be still more diHicult to uather up and destroy all the evil reports which she had circulated about others. Any thoughtless, careless child can scatter a handful of thistle seed before the wind iu a moment, but the strongest and wisest man can not gather thcin again.
liemoval of Die Stale University. I"'"" (From the Logansport Journal.] The question of removing the State
University from Hloomiiigton to Indianapolis, is mooted. It is thought that the Arsenal grounds at the latter place, will be donated to the State for this purpose, by the General Government, and it is believed that, with this start, an institution of learning can be built up which will be ail honor to the State. The proposition strikes us favorably, and we hope it may receive the consideration its importance deserves, from those who are more familiar with all the facts and arguments in the case than vo are. We are decidedly iu favor of locating all the State institutions, that can be put there without detriment to them, at Indianapolis. That thriving city is our
capital and we are proud of it.
4
Light Children at a llirlli. The Huston Sfcdical and Surgical Journal states that 011 the 21st of August, 1873, Mrs. Timothy Bradlee, of Trumbull county, Ohio, gave birth to eight children, three boys and five girls. They are all living, and are healthy, but quite small. Mr. Hradlee was married six years ago to Kuriice Mowery, who weighed 273 pounds 011 the day of her marriage. She has given birth to two pairs of twins, and now eight more, making twelve children in six years. Mrs. Hradlee was a triplet, her mother and father being twins, and her grandmother of five pairs of twins.
A Liepzig professor has designed a furnace specially for the purpose of cremation, which will do the work efficiently in twenty minutes at the outside. The body is to be placed iu ail upright position inside afire proof receptacle, through which artificially heated air is^forced in a current, carrying all the noxious gases up a chimney, "and leaving, after the process a small residue of snow white ashes. The'cost at which the furnace can be constructed is £2,250. The cost of cremation /or each body will not exceed liino shillings.
Whisky Versus Intelligence.
The saloon keepers of this country aro saiii to outnumber the school teachers as two to one, and yet some people fondly believe that government in this country rests upon the sure foundation of the virtue and intelligence of th» people,
