Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 26 December 1874 — Page 7
^aturdai) 05uoninrj Journal
OUR NEIGHB0IIS.
--•The Logansport Sun. is advertised for halo. Dwelling houses lor rent are in demand in Veedersbttrg. —-Phil McCusker, of Willirunsport, is a confirmed somnambulist.
A thief entered a school room at NVilliamsport last week and stole two overcoat i.
A young daughter of John W. God•'•man, of La Fayette, had her hand bitten by a vicious dog last week. 15y the first of January ten new rooms if. the burnt district, of Grcencast.le will be ready for occupancy. —The Jivvivw at Veedersburg wants a •manufacturing establishment located •there, and suggests a candy manufactory.
Ivl NVoliver, express agent at Frankfort, has a bruised head in consequence nf his mules upsetting the express wagon. —On Thursday morning ol last week
A. Zeigler's store, at Attica, was entered by burglars and goods to the amount of stolen. —Martin, the Chm-rdalc wife murderor, has plead guilty and has been sentenced by Judge Turmuu to imprisonment for life. —The patrons ol the North Side ••chool, Logansport, are dissatisfied with no of the lady teachers because she is too "line hr.ited." So the Pharos puts it. —Mr. Jas lv Cowan, of this city, and .Mr. Will S. Masterson, of Urawfordsville, have commenced the publication of ihe Court Reporter, a semi monthly publication of priceless value to the legal profession.—Frankfort Banner.
The Benton county Herald shows that many of the farmers of Denton, Jasper and Newton counties were swindled, two years ago by a seller of $35 nearly worthless h:ty rakes, for which they gave notes and are now being dunned and sued by the lawyers. —Samuel B. Mathias, of Warren coiintv, la-t Spring built him a hog house which has already sivedhiin the lives of 100 pigs. They will not average less tlian '200 pounds which makes 20,000 pounds of pork next Fall, which at 5 cents per pound will net him $1,000. A goml investment of $50.
—John McClor-key, of Deer Creek township, sold to Win. Johnson, yester-| dav, a hog that weighed eight hundred and fifteen pounds, and forty-five others that weighed on an average of two hundred and eighty. This is the best lot of hitiiS sold in this market this season. Cm anybody beat it 1—Loyansport Phtrox. —One of the most remarkable things we have, ever heard of occurred near
Frankfort a short time since. Mack Gard was escorting iwo yountr ladies home from a spelling school when one of the busrgy wheels struck a stump and threw him out, cutting his face severely on the frozen irround. With a young lady on eaeh side of him! Where were his arms?
—A shooting affray came off last night at Phelpstovvn between a ouple of brothers named Landsiw, and Mike Mullin and Ddly Co!i dd on the other side, where on of the. Laumaw bovs pointed double birrelled shot gun at Mike and small poxed him severely, while Billy C. ran !iis h'*a against a sluti* shot. We hid not learn l»-»iv seri rn the Minds of either party wcra.—Cichiyton People's /«),:•. —Mr. Brings, of Covington, had occasion to come home unexpected one night last week, and knowing that his pardner, .Mr Laird, slept in a room on the ground II ir, thou'lit he would get in through the window and not disturb his slumbers. Mr. Laird imagined he saw a burglar entering the window, grasped his revolver, cockeil it, leveled it at the head »f the intruder, and would have fired hud not Rriggs spoken just as be did. "'Vv
—Mayor McFadin, of Ixigafrsport, lias maie arrangements with the County Commissioners to innke ready one of the appartments underneath the court house for a lodging house for the destitute ..itinerant travelers who will mike application to the police or Townshb Trustees for a meal's victuals or a Digit's lodging. A stove will be put up in the room and the fuel will be furnished by the county, while the eatables and teds will he paid for by the city.
In the afternoon of Saturda* last, a couple of young men, named Scitt and St. Clair, stepped into Peter McMnhon's .saloon, on the west side of the auare, and engaged in a game of chuchlluck With John B. Murray ami other^ and alter playing some time the parties fell out concerning the count, when hard words followed and were succeedel by blows In the inelee, J. D. Mucray was severely punished with a patent saw handle iu the hands of St. Clair, ant was also severely cut with a knife in the hands ot Scott. The wounds were on the head and in the right side, the la.ter lortunalcly striking the second rib, ^e serious consequences would have idlowed.
St. '"lair was arrested and taken elore Squire Itawles, where a preliminiry examination was held, and the prisoner, •liter the testimony was beard, was sen tojail in default of bail.
While the prisoner was bvintr condutv
ed to jnil'bv Ctmslnble Hurston, followed by Marshal Donaldson, a crowd of some twenty or thirty per.-ons. prominent amniiL'sfi whom were John Sayers, Win. Martin, "Hoot" Murray, William Siniih. better known at "Texa-*," Joseph Blake Iv and others, t^e names of whom our informant has ilort'otten, followed the officers and pri-bner a few paces when
1
A prominent attorney of Lebanon i, 11 into a Oitlle guard a few day." ago. A new bell has been put in the t'lirisiian chinch at NVilliamsport, costinJC §140.
the prisoner was knocked senseless by rocks, cluhs and fists, and while down was kicked and beaten terribly about the head and lace by the .ttoresaid parties and their friends.
The Coi stable, Mr. Hueston, also came in for a sltt.re of the knocks that came from the missiles that flew like hail through he air for a short time. His wounds, though painful, are not severe, and he is able to attend to his duties in a better prepared manner than heretofore should a recurrauce of the above damnable outrage again he attempted.
On Sunday morning lastMr Mitchell, whom Scoti and St Clair are working for, came to town and released St. 'jlnir from jail by giving a bond for the required hail", §25 The prisoner was very feeble from the loss of bl-«d and complained of being very sore from the wounds infli 'ted by the mob. None ot the parties to the above affair have as yet been arrested save one, William Smith, alias ''Texas," and he was tried before'Squire Still well and mulcted in the sun- of $10 and cost.-. Not having the wherewith to -ettle the little bill he took up board and lodgings at the Hotel de Glover. St. Clair, the injured man, is still in a critical Condi ion. but the chances lor his recovery are much better.
Western Wealth.
Mr. Stickney, the cadti of the Stock Yaids National Bank, is reported as saying Unit the Chicago pork packers have already paid out —according to the actual figures on the Stock Yards bank the enormous sum ot $10,000,000 for hogs packed here since the beginning ol the eking season ou Nov. 1 At first~ thought this will seem almost incredible, but when ii is remembered that the pork packers have paid for (350.000 hogs since
Nov. 1. (saying imiliing about the number packed iu October), at an average of say $l(j per hog, it will be seen that the statement, of Mr. Stickney must be correct. Beside-1 this, we estimate that at least $4,000,000 more have been paid in the same time by Chicago shippers for live hogs to go forward to the Fist. In eluding the October packing and shipping there has not been less than $15000.000 paid out at the Stock Yards since the middle of Oetob-r. Estimating the Chicago packing and shipping at onelull'of all that i« done in that line in the Western State-, -v^ should have the grand totai of $30 000 000 paid out for hoxs in the West io th.i I i-t tiny days. The greatest pur' of this has been paid to farmers in Indiana. Illinois, Iowa and
Wisconsin. Its effects lor stimulating the demand for ds and facilitating collections have air-ady been experienced by the wholesale meichants in tbi-» city. Thirty nvdions of dollars is a much larger sum than was ever paid out in the West before iu any similar period of time for hogs and it is probable that at the close of the packing sea-on the farmers ol the West will have received at leas' $8 000 000 more for their hogs than they have ever received in any ,-revions season. In view, also, of the fact that the farmers of the West will have received several millions ol dollars more for corn iu 1874 than they ever received any previous year, it must be appar ent to the nm-t obtuse that the West is growing rapidly rich.
A
Xose Ma
nil
fact red.
[.Staunton V».) Vindicator.J
About three weeks ago Oliver ITarman, seventeen years of a^rc, a sou of Col. Aher W. Harman, was taken by his father to Philadelphia to Dr. Pancoast, a celebrated surgeon there, to have a most remarkable operation performed. The youth a few years a no had a pimple on his nose, which, notwithstanding medical .treatment, compleudy et away that member, leaving the face smooth. The sore then healed up, showing it was not. a cancer. The operation, which consisted in taking a piece of the lip and another out of the forehead, and making a new and very natural nose, occupied about two hours, the patient n«t u-sing chloroform and bearing the pain manfully. The wounds have commenced heaiing, and by the first or Jahuary the organ will be as sound its that on the Pace of any one else.
Such is Fame.
Curiosity seekers sometimes venture within the invitinr precincts of Longfellow's estate at Cambridge. A party Rome lime a no made, such a venture, and were hospitably received by the poet, who astonished them with the historic associations of the House. As they were about leaving, one of them asked: "Can you tell us who lives here BOW?" "C ertainly, sir I live here." "Oh, you. What is your name?" "Longfellow." "Any relation to the Wiscas^et Long fellers?"
The poet bowed out tho party reflectively.
Remarkable Krowth of Corn. JKrom tho JjiiFayette Courier.] Henry Whitesel, a tenant farmer on Dr. Moses Baker's farm near Monroe, in this county, has brought to the Courier oflicc fourteen ears of corn all produced from a single grain 'Thirteen of these ears of corn are in two clusters, one large ear in the center, and the other clustered around it. It is certainly a very remarkable yield from a single
t5rai"*
I'iety and I'oliticH. I Now York Times.]
""TV"
in bouth Carolina appears to be, accord-
mg to their own interpretation of it, somewhat arbitrary. Ilev. Mr. Jacksonj an enthusiastic preacher and politicianiii Charleston, has stricken from the list of members of his church all who vote'' tie Independent Republican ticket, i" the recent election.
The Senatorial contest in New Jersey is thought to be narrowed down to Ex Governor Randolph and Attorney-Gen-eral Gilchrist, with the odds in fa'vor the former.
Twehc I* mills «f Pork for a Knshel or .y^: font. A Bcntonville correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazette says:
I will give my experience in feeding 100 hogs. 1 hey belottiel to B. Caldwell iSi Bros., and 1 cont ract- I to feed for $1.50 per hundred nf trie- a-e of weight. Tiny were fed for sixty-seven days, making again Oi two ami a hall' pounds per day ou each hi'IT, .• 1I'I7 itiuds. We es.imated the cornd-l at 1,400 bushels, or fourteen bushels p.-r head making about twelve poua Is ,if'pork to a bushel oi corn. At $! f. arrives fW'tytv four cents bushel tor itte corn, or at $7 (which the liors wo ill have brought me day we weighed them) it would make eighty-four cents bushel. So you .-ee. then, if you have m»ial hogs, and plenty of good water, you can make, pork even at a low price. I think it is toe most profitanle wnv to hog the corn iiff a, we di I. It, di.-trih:i es the olfal evenly over the ground, an I this I think is worth more than the p,t« tire and the price ol hiisKing.
IS HI.1X A IN)LIS SI! VTIX KL.
I'rank, fcarlt'ss ami moiled.
tiilram-
At ihe beginning of the
1
•w year the ii "some detlie work past twelve lidence for consciousoions which iitirini the ml politics mcmor-
S ntinel gre t-» its patrons gree of hone-i pride" o. which it ha-tdoiic during t.i (tcHihs and with a fit 11 the lut.nte, growing out ol ness ot tilt same upright i'it have heroioiore guide I it. toriny events in society which have made the lasi \.-•ar aid'-, it pursued a bold. lea. Mverying course. It has bert principles .nder a great, variations to truckle and falter, not been vtsi mary or inipr unv occasion, but has
V« IIud
ii-
ti tie t' its of teinpYet it has ticalde on vs chosen :e in any
a
what it considered the best cintest. municipal, State al, and has .-truck into ihe t). but lairlv. It still iintaii
Nationheartily
us hereto-
fore, the opinion that tile
1
urs of the.
National noverninent have oni gro-slv mismanj.e I iu aim st ve,r.v t!• uartment, from the smallest detail iu the corporate cutirerns iu the city of Was ngton to tho broadest interests involved ui the re construction of the Southern ."vates, and ii claims a place among the Naders ol that great uprising which I is taken place aiming the people against the dishonesty and the demoraii/.aii .n which have made our political system rotten to tne core. In the struggle for .lie overthrow of the present administration, the destruction of which is tlie great political necessity oj the day, it ha Mken no small share, and ic will be foun a steadfast chauiiiiou iu carrying-on tne revolution which has begun.
FUR THE NEXT YEAH.
the Sentinel reaffirms its attitude in the past year--the .-lavish orsian .if im party ur creed the temperate advocate only of tlv" most generous measures in eiiurch or Stat.-. It will continue to publish all the news at the earliest moment. It will reflect ihe sentiments of the people, ft will support only hone-t men for office, and demand[ ajiledge ot character ratner ban of a mr t, y. "*~t 11 *u pft 11 & ~*zea 11 ui sly the hands of all men honest and earnest iu reform, and it will strive to give all sides a hearing on the changing toi ics that, fill the public mind from time to time. Oil the great industrial questions, now moving the public mind, the Sentinel will maintain a hearty, earnest co-operation with all struggling men seeking to better theuiselv's mentally, phvsically and every way. To the opposition to monopolies it will continue an honest supp irt. While furthering all
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A Knok for liny* mill UirlM. Of this boolc Charles Dudley Warner writes:
In the bound volume of St. Xicholas, with it# glory of red and gold, we have a permanent addition to the literature of the young. Never before has so much literary and artistic talent co-operated in the service of children, it. is a continual educator of their taste and ot their honor and courage. I do not see bow it can be made any better, and if the children don't like it 1 think it is time to beirin to change the kind of children in this country."
ST NICHOLAS FOR
1S75.
The prospectus of the second volume shows that there is to lie no falling of]', but an increase in its literary and pictorial attractions Among other attractive features are two splendid serial stories
"THE YOUNG SUIIVEYOH,"
b.i J. T. Trowbridge, author of the. Jack Hazard Stories, etc.
"EIGHT COUSINS,"
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*.vs
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and girls handicraft, kindergarten
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TO THE HOME CIItCI.K,
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"MY TOL'KMAI.I2TE,"
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poems, editorials and reviews, cmheliished with nearly two thousand illus-j j,
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trations. We have reprinted at ereatl ..Ki.no expense the earlier volume-, and now ofler a limited number at reduced rates' in connection with subscriptions No| other opportunity will probably ever be given to et complete sets of this niir'valed monthly, the expense of reprintii in small editions being so great as to be prohibitory.
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"THE BTOHY OI'SEVEN OAKS,"
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About (On'erce *"ihi« LMK! Jvinjr wonth of the Criwfnrtlsville mi. Yoiuitsville Tnnipik" unii en-t oT iMthlie ln^''\V!iy. noiv lining opened lliroitifh the Mrin Irom .Villi to south iitul ponnectiiiL'with Miirket street, u'lcreil for "»1« in Mn *11 I rue i* to suit iiiuehiiMis :it {I"i0 per iierp. Re i| pst'ilt* in this viuuut'V, which is ju=l
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MIII|us
ture of the American people. I he etch-1 tnorp »iun«}ic tup fnunr. i.nnri imnipiintp|v nigs will be .still further improver! and e,V.n'n,ntf J'JJUM* is
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tlie Pity is lust iHiilmnir in ... till*
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The Ilosl Wonderful Discovery ortli- lOth Century, s.
IIOWDS
American illilk Cure In.SP.-mOH Of' ll)p Tin-out, I'lie "iilv meilicitip or thn nl»M11Mte lor Cod Liver oil. I'enn nipii'lj- enips A-olinei. Rrnneliit is. lncipiPiu 'on-iimptinn. lulu Swents, l,im of Sleep. Slioitnp-H ol Ni-pnili. Cut.iTI-II, Croup, oiinlis, ITnld-, pte., in a ten- duvs, like iii:ijr]r I'rtco St per liottie. Al-n,
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j«n«t Lnnirn.
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Which ditrcrH from till otlicr |ro|vir'*rion« in the mnnrtiiiiio iH'tiou
IIJKHI
th«» Livor, Kuln«»vs tinci
H|n.|, It iH pnroly iho ofjill iinpuritiVs. inti-ls ft vijjht wpiMiv iip. :n«l pur**, rich ii|o«)il. It i»nrr».«i scrofiiloi)H ili!»CMi-r? of nil kin-!s, roniovcs c.instipnlion »nl I rcj niji|py Mio bovv»'|«4. Imh* not von« rh*hihtv, lostv11 1111y, uriti 'ry
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hroUon ilnwn (ion-
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I is, .11111 asuobcription lor oi It „1(VMO ^„l)s
LIVER PILLS.
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HPAIOIPSS.
'thotlt ,,,-o.tneing pliin Ol
Price i» Pents per tw.x.
'1 he postage OI1 all new subseriiuions Cnnsimiptivps shoulil nsp nil three of tin will be prepaid bv us. The sub-criptioo
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Mrs. time's Certion Cure for Ingrowing Nnilfi. asmil
THE JOURNAL.
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