Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 22 November 1890 — Page 3
YOL M\
stock early in the season.
5Mm,FICREGULATpR
MENSTRUATION
OR MONTHLY SICKNESS
IF OUfUNG CHKKGE. 0¥ UVt SUfT£R\KG\WLL BE mv&b J300K TO"
BMDEIKD REGULATOR CD. ATLANTA GA. ar\YALL 0P,J£G1ST&. Sold bv Nve tVC
"This is the blanket the dealer told me was as good as a S/&"
FREE—
Ask for
Get from your dealer free, the
S/A Book. It lias handsome pictures and valuable information about hoi'ses. Two or three dollars lor a
30 other styles at prices to suit everybody. If you can't get them from your 3ealer. write cs. h-T:
*ORSt
BLANKETS
ARE THE STRONGEST.
NONE GENUINE WITHOUTTHE e/A LA9E" Monufrt by
Wm. Ayki-s Sojm. niilnd"
make the famous Horse Israml Kuk.-r niuv-
Money to Loan.
Houses and Lots for Sale aUv, Dwellings to Rent.
Abstracts of Titles and Deeds and Mortgages Carefully Prepared.
ALBERT C. .TENNYSON
Loan ami. nsuruneo uirent, A stractor aud Convcuncer. 1-2 East Main St., Crawfordsville
I CURE
FITS!
When
I
Bay
Curb I
d® not mean mertly to
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H. C. ROOT, .C., 183 PEARLST.,NEW YORK
ts
Ladies will be pelased to learn that notwithstanding the fact
that manufacturers have bteen sf-nding out notices of a sharp advance
in all seal plush garments to take eil'ect on and after Nov. ist, there
is ONIC firm in the city that positively refuses to advance the price on
any of its garments. It is enabled to do this by buying a large
D.W'.ROUNTREE
^ADFIELDS
FEMALE?
WO MAN
139 LOST VOTEb.
A Roll of the Townships Shewing the Number of Votes Oast and the Rejected Ballots.
In this election just passed there were cast in Montgomery county '7,332 votes just 567 less than two years ago. To this 567 should bo added the number of rejected votes and those entering the chute and not voting, making a total of 70G. One hundred and thirty-nine persons entered the chate whose votes were not counted divided among the precincts as follows:
Vntcx ca*t.
Mutilntcd: ., JVot iJctn. I {)).
.. 1 —Ki!)
Union
in
:S-1-I4 4-17 I r.-'JOO i—OUS
r-is.-! H-lfi!) 0—IS!)
10—IS!)
11-:21 I 1 r:5 1 :i -1 srj 14-l.-i(5 i.--uii
lJrown ....
ti -i sr
1 —\!:SO 5-'JtO :5—'20:5 1 —1« 14fi —l !»:t :S1 :i—1 ati 1-ior "-l :s :s—no 1—14!t -iti4 1- Hill —190 :5-i)'2 1 lli'_! —1 70 .'5—T.'S 1 1 f)4 2-204 1 —179 •2-144 1-12:5 2—127
Soolt Franklin
Walnut
Clark..........
Coal Creek....
5/&
Horso
Blanket will make your liorse worth more and eat less to keep warm.
5/A Five Mile 5/A Boss Stable 5/A Electric 5/A Extra Test
Wayne
Itiplcy Mtulison SufrurCreek...
Marriage License.
John S. Foster and Carrie 1J. Patton.. Paschal Wilkinson and Ellen Ellis.
A Good Word for Pettit,
BaTjDWINSvujLe. N. Y., Nov. 11, 1SD0. —Deak Sm:—Inclosed you will find 50 cents for the paper for the next five weeks, as I want to g£t a whole of this noted trial. I am very much interested in the case as I was well acquainted wit1'1 Mr. Pettit during his boyhood days. I was their family physician for ten years and consequently weil acquainted with them nil. I shall be very much surprised if is proved guilty of this terrible cine. His parent.0 were pious people, am: Fred was well brought up and fairly edu-.ited. sste C. E. 11eaton,M. D.
Th8 Creamery Project.
Th cvomiiHf ijut not in hamU.^
a
company. W. K.
A'uwiiarlvid left town, and Charley Waterbury and G. W. Clark will carry out their original plan of building the creamery on their own hook. The will either build or lease a building and by Jannary 1, will have things in running order, if&t
consumption Surely Curod. wk To
Tna EDITOR:—I'loaso
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THE PETTIT TRIAL ENDS
THE SYNOPSIS OP THE SPEEOHES OF THE ATTORNEYS.
The Count, Attorneys, Pettit, the Jury and Everybody Were Worn Cut.
THURSDAY AFTERNOON. Mr. llnywood continuing said that sho attended church Saturday night quite well. This is not history enough lor Dr. Taylor but I think it is for the men ol good commou sense. Of course sho had a tired look that mghl after her hard dasy' work for Pettit. She talked with (..'has. Hickman, a young man of truth and candor, and asked him to go home. She tjld him she never fell better in her life. All witnesses agree to tliis except Airs. Si-lionburg.^Ld I don't know or care who she is she can't stand before all others. Airs. Pettit gets sick at the stomach thut night, it is true, but this is nothing unusual, and she is uo us usual next morning. The was well enoug for Pettit to go to Newtown to speak. Dunlavy liuds her well in the afternoon and sho talks spiritedly to him after this Pettit gives her eo»ne tea it does not taste light it is bitter in 20 minutes she takes an uneasy feeling sho believes she is poisoned sho trembles and goes into terrible convulsions. Laura E. Meharry describes these convulsions and they weie strychnine couvulsionisne very paiticular,if we may believe Dr. Peters who described strychnine convulsions as identical with theiu. (The testimony of Airs. Meharry on Mrs. Pettit's convulsions and Peter's testimony on strychnine convulsions were read to show the similarity.) The vomiting produced by the hot mustard water saved her life and finally Yeager came and finds his patient in the after stages of strychnine poisoning. Drs. Peters, Yount, Ristine, Cowan and O'Ferrel all agree that her symptoms were those of strychnine poisoning, (The symptoms were then read from "Taylor on Poisons" showing the distiction between tho paroyxms of strychnine and those of tetanus.) It certainly looks like Mrs. Pettit had strychnine on Sunday, and there is not a reasonable doubt of it. All witnesses agree as to her symptoms and they do not agree with those of tetanus, lhe defense has not been fair as to their theories. They liava nothing tangible, but have siezed little lloi.tmg pieces here and tliere wiii^h only sanli with tlioui. 'L'hey soiii tcd to say Yeiiget's medicine killed Airs. Pettit Out failed to even attempt lo prove it. Our exuertrf proved that w.re peift.-etiy proper and right. Driven Iroin Lhis they took up the shadowy, theory of urenie pois.ning, but they sank with this also not attempting to prove it either. Then was marshaled lip idiopathic tetanus. This is rate but tliey said they would prove case alter, Did they do 1W (jillurn, of Koekville, had a case 2U years ago in Virginia, in tho lorrid zone. Tii^n comes tne rnous Dr. iiillle who had an even dozen cases. Tho only man who escaped from It)file was on tne stand thi morning Ho testified that his tetanus was biliousness and also that the other cases of Riillo's tetanus were spotted fever and so pronounced by Riille at the time. Dr. Taylor and Dr. Gott had a oase they sny. They gave the symptoms and if it was a case of tetanus then Mrs. Pettit did not have it. Taylor could not remember what he pronounced the case at tho time or what he reuorted it. His case was really spinal meningetis and bo was Dr. Hillis' oase. Tnen tho defense takes up traumatic tetanus to the same effect. Tho delenso aslied the doctors it such things were not within tho range of possibilities. They set up a defense of reasonable doubt and that is all. They will argue that there is a reasonable doubt that Mrs. Pettit died of tetanus instead of strychnine. But her symptoms were not those of tetanus. Tho kack of her neck was not sore lor nothing, her jaws were not lixed, and convulsions came on suddenly. There can be no possible doubt even that she had strychnine on Sunday. The bromide of potash and digatalis winch Yeager left caused her to improve and sho was getting well on Monday. The sinking spell on Monday wus merely duo to exhaustion and not one single symptom of a convulsion appeared. Then it was tnat she asked for charcoal and water and it was for nausea and not for what the defense trioB to make it appeur. Monday night she rested well and Tuesday morning she took some breakfast she partook of the tea, toast ana broth. Ethan Meharry says she took much of the broth. Soon after this she took convulsions. If sho got the poison in the broth I admit it would be bitter. Wo did not know at tho opening of the case that sho had anything else und it did seem mysterious. but then came Mrs. Lottie Hawthorn and Buys that just as tho breakfast was taken away Pettit gave a capsule. Mrs. Wallace and Mrs. Julian were brought here to disprove tuis, and seemed for some mysterious reason willing to do so, but could not, as wo placed them elsewhere at the time. Mrs. Hawthorn wus disinterested and told the God's truth and did not perjure herself. Fifteen minutes after the capsule was given tho convulsions came again. Mrs. Lettie
Hawthorne described Tuesday's convulsions and they were identical with those of Sunday except that her knees draw up. She wus probably mistaken in this, but even if not it does not disprove strychuine poisoning. Airs. Bessie Wallace and Mrs. Julian also describe the convulsions as similar to those of Sunday. These convulsions came on very suddenly as those of Sunday did, and this disproves tetanus. Thoy were ridgid perhaps by chloroform but to all practi
cal purposes thoy wore identical with those of Suud-iy. Of course the twitohings followed for hours, but it was ixoro nervousness necessarily following tho raokiugand tearing of tho system by the convulsions. At 1 p. m. the convulsions come oil again and they were strychuine. Convulsions again as numerous witnesses given the symptoms as such. Thes.( continued to 11 p. 111., but constantly decreasing. From this time Wi3 find no convulsions until just efoie sho (lioJ. Dr. '1 aylor not tile man who testified but a better man, a man who wrote a bo ok, s-iys it could not havo been from Tuosd.iy's dose. On \Wdnenl.iy shortly tjoloro tho eouvuhion Pettit «ives a dose of oil. Previous to this Mr*. Pettit was conscious, evcu li'.'ssie Wallace acknowledges this. Stio was conscious when slu took the oil us she responded Iy taking several swallows us directed. Mrs. Kate Hradloy says in half un hour tha convulsions came on again, and she and Mrs. Francis describe the symptoms and thoy are identical with those of Suuuay and Tuesday. Mrs. Sophia Wilson also bears witness to the same elloet. Fifteen minutes after death tho body was so still' that the underclothes had to .be cut oil". Numerous witnesses testify that the face was ghastly and the bodv rigid at iieath. Tho eyes were olosod with difficulty and the teeth v/ero set. Dr. Black said there was a gaseous distension of the stomach, but it is not so. Ho didn't know what he was talking about as all tho organs aro sliown to bo heaitby. What killed Hattio Pettit* The court then called Mr. Haywood dowu as he had already gone on past the hour. And announced that the 001111 would couvouo in tho morning at 8:30 instead of 9. He also renewed his instructions to the jury warning them against calking with each other on the subjeot or even forming an opimou on tho case until the arguments had closed and the court's instructions given.
TRIE AY MON1NG.
Mr. Haywood began speaking this morning before a comparatively small audi .)(c. Bogining with the post morLv-a1, he stated thut Dr. Peters' liad found all the organs sound which could not have been, had the disease been malaria. Notice tho extreme cure which Dr. Peters used in the analysis. Nody is allowed to touch tho parts oxoout himseli. They say D:\ Peters made the analysis in secret, but wnut would you have thought of him if hehad ui t. Prof. Haines, who has anal /.,d at least KO bodio.-s, did the sanio. Dr. i'e.ersund Prof. Haiues found f. of gr.-.iu or suychnine in tho liver, intas-: tines, spleen and stomach mono. If there was ono man who Bhowed his manner that I10 was free from any taint of prejudice, that man wus Prof, flumes, lie says that strvolniiut is so netimes not found in aii tho organs. This makes worthless tho statement of Dr. Jameson that is always luund in all paits of tho body. Taere might have been strychnine 111 tho brain and Peters not find it because he only analyzed ounces of it, very small portion. Prof. Haines says that very small proportion goes to the brain and it is necessary to have a large portion of it to find any stry-.-huine. Dr. liistine described his case of traumatic tetanus and you havo heard idiopathic tetanus described. Now y»u are familiar with the symptoms of strychuine, more so than some of the doctors, and you know that sho did not havo tetanus. Dr. Hillis' case of ideopathic tetanus was not a pure one because tho patient was bilious. Nov conceding that Mrs. Pettit hud convulsions from 8 a. m. Tuesday to Wednesday at 2 a. in., this does not disprove strychnine poisoning because the chlorolorm and morphine atlministered freely hold the convulsions in abeyance us it has been proven by an expert they may be. The defense have tried to inako a point that Mrs. Pettit had but a scant passage of urine auel ignored the fact of the vomiting, but Dr. Yeager's testimony shows that the passage of urine occurred at three different times in sufficient quantities. Tnerefore the Sunday cfose could not have remained in the body until Wedneisduy according to Protessor Haiues auel other experte. Tho patient was not, strong physically, and sho ate but little. She had but little blood, and as congestion is caused by tho forcing of tho blood to the brain. Now it is very reasonable to suppose that congestion of the brain would not occur in this case, especially as Mrs. Pettit died in the first stages of a convulsion. Dr. O'Ferrul said that embalming fluid might kestroy the evidences of congestion of the brain. Dr. Jameson said such a thing wis impossible because the force rewu'red to send the fluid to every part of tho brain would coagulate the blood. Cut can blood be coagulateel ualess it is exuosed to tho air? It conn and Dr. imeoon thows himself to he wroDg on tuo faoo of matters. Wo havo endeavored to aot fairly in every respect and if a jy unfair moans havo been used by tho prosecution we don't ask a conviction. Our hypothetical question was admitted to our expert witness and told them to study over it so thoy could give an intelligent answer.
Now the delenso is composed of tho shrewdest members of tho Tippecanoe and Montgomery county bars, and why was it they put Dr. Taylor on the stand when he hud not read their hypothetical question through. Yot Dr. Taylor aus wered prompt and what is his answer worth under suah circumstances Our experts answered all questions on direct .iud cross examination honestly and squnrely. Only onco altera tedious day of severe cross examination did Dr. Peters become cofnused and then only 011 so slight a matter as the
Bucessiou of colors. Tho experts for the defense were led on little by little by
their hypothetical questions and theso hypothetical questions did not contain facts. Dr. Got! was «\sked if euthanasia might be pretont. Ho answered thi't it mi^ht or might not be, and in rosponso to tho next question said ho did not know what the ,voul meant. Now this sho\\s what Got.t'a evidence is worth. Dr. Jamison dodircd, and in a smooth way, but it was not straight forward or fair and Dr. ilodges unsworn! every question of every kind tquurely for I lie' uefeuse. Tnoy nil thought it could not 1)0 strychnine, because tho brain was not congested, but thought there wvro synip.* rnsol tetanus, yet, th. ail Ic-ti-lied
mI
congestion of the brain was a
symptom of tetanus. The hypothetical questions ol tho defense winds up with the query, •'Can you reasonably ascribe death to something else than strjehnuief1" or ''would say that strychnine was tho cause ot death beyond a reasonable itonbW" Yes, that is the defense! "a reasonable eloubt."
So Mrs. Pettit dioel cf strychuine. Now it was not suioielo as tho first eloso was given in a cup of tea. Nor wan it accidental. Sho could ot havo inhalod ifr-nor could it havo boon rubboel in. Poison for rats is not scattoroel broadcast us they would have you believe, in tho cupboards and dishes ami tho ovidonee shows that Mrs. Pettit wus an extremely careful houskeoper. Sho cleaned up things us soon as sho came home, and yot diel not get this "accidental" dose on Saturday. Thoy showed that sho sent for seivo to sift the ll jur as she feared strychnine in the llour, but that is nonse:ice. How could sho get strychnine out of flour by sifting it* Aud thoy tell you Beo saw a bull with a chain arounel his neck auel this put tho accidental dose of poison iu Mrs. Pettit's body. What llimscy mutter^ they put before you!
Pettit wrs, a miuistor iu 11 community of unusual intelligence W£s loved and respected r.3 no ever hutl been. Now theso people
cul
hore and test-
lied against their former pastor,although it nourly breaks their hearts to eio it. Never before iij inurilorcase has there been a better class of witnesses than in this. This man Pettit to-eluy a iniuist'T, to-morro in tho nasty business of telling "lUHtrim-eiifs to prevent ncept.'Oi*" as he ti.' urnou C. Todd. Three times has the '.ioienso lugged iu tho fact tiiat Pettit was a Mason, but Masonry teaches good citizenship and will not protect a criminal, it is not a Clannu gael. It does not leach any man to neglect his iumily as Pettit did when he wus gone for tlays and weeks -without his wife knowing where I10 wus, aud telling her .Masonry kept him away.
Iho ol'jeet in introducing tho will was to show that Pettit knew what Mrs. Whitehead's prospects were and Pettit aitoward boa.vteet to Mrs. Shields that I10 had lixed up Airs. Whitehead's property in good shape. At tho Lazier meeting Pettit and Mrs. Whitehead were together while Mrs. Pettit was iu New York. At the festi vul in February Mrs. Pot-tit and Dine walked while this minister drove to Wingato with a widow aud didn't omno to that festival uutil 11 o'clock. Thoy bring Daviil Meharry to prove that, they went oil" to/ether with Mrs. Pettit's knowledge but Uuolo David Meharry is in his second childhooel and besides is tho futner of Airs. Whitohoud and therefore interested. "Well you useel Uncle David in tho habeas corpus," iutorrupt ed Kumler. "Yes," rotorUul Haywood, "and fouuel out how unreliable tie was. That is the reason you used him." lie urges his wife to go ll" to South Bend iu spit of her protests saying that he will not bo at homo for some time. But ho does not go awuy from tho neighborhood aud stays there at Moharry's where Mrs. Whitehead was and shuts up his own house. Ho was seen with Mrs. Wuitehoad bv Norton Moharry on a moonlight ride und they attended tho land festival together. Having proven that thoy were together so many times can't you fairly iul'er that thoy were together grout mauy othor times He writes to his wife in South end tolling her not to hurry homo
Charley Hickman ca-juot sleep there, but his poor wife comes homo, works liurtl and sleeps iu the house. Ou Suuelay ho leaves for Newtown and fixes some cupsules for her to take, lim wife suffering only lrom slight indigestion. Ho aunouuccs to the congregation taut
(OrtKXNCr PEOPLE can tiike fcvuiiiivjiis Liver licjru 1 at r. without loss oi'tiinn o" gcr from exposing. 1 takes tlic place of ('ocror and costly priserini i.ma and is therefore the cino to ho kept in the household toheijiven mon "any indication of approachjng sickness. ]t contains*'-? #110 dangerous ingredients hut is purely vegetishHy gentlo yet thorough in its action, and he givoiv« it a a satisfactory results 1o so re a if
It has no equal.
Tr
his wife is Boriously ill and rushes off hoxe at'terpreaohiug a short sormou aud looking at tho clock frequently. He is oxoitod, nervous and fully expects to find his wifodead,butsho(iid uot take tho capsules auel wi*s alive*. Those oapsules have disappeared like tho tea. Mrs. Pettit wus bilious when sho took tho tea and uu innocent mau woulel huvo tubted it, to soo if it really was bitter, but lie* know toc well it was stryohniuo. lie makes no preparation for convulsions but very deliberately writes a note to Ethan Meharry to go for tho doctor alter the convulsions lnvo come ou. will road the letter Pettit wrote to Mrs. Shields explaining his wife's sicklies?. Remember that it was wiCtcu by an adulterer and murderer. (Tho letter was then read.) It pretends to give a detailed account of Airs. Pot,tit's illness but t-lio details uro confined to matters previous to tho liluess and very little is tohl of her oe tt,ul Mull'orings.
FRIDAY AFTERNOON. Mr. lluywooel contiuueel by stating that Pettit know tho rumors wore uiloat when ho wrote his letter to Mrs. Shields and was driven to it. This apparent candor acknowledging the udmiuiKtratioa e,f the tea, was uot candor at all as tho whole neighborhood know of it. Mrs. Pettit had spoken of it while she wu« sick and Pettit hud taken it and thrown the l-'tal, drop out, and oven tho vessels which contained it. Is that au act ot on innocent man? When Yoagor comes ho conceals tho facts und throws him oil'his guard by tolling Airs. Pettit had
Immti
uh
he is having ugood time. The fact that Mrs Whitohouel know Pettit was having trouble with liis urine indicates criminal intercourse. Mrs. Whitehead did not find that syringe iu David Aleharry's room but in h-r own room and you gentlemen know what it
WUH
there
for. Pettit is seen with his paramour numerous times while his wife is dying aud before tho corpse has boon placed in tho coffin he says ho soon will huvo new home. He meets Mrs. Whitehead at Lafayette ou his wuy home from West Monroe and few days later is found by Oliio Roooo with Mrs. Whitoheud iu her bedroom. Tho defense suy thut tho deor wus open und tho bed was not disturbed but there was plenty of time to fix tho led up and it wus very natural thut after crime show of openness shoulel bo made. At Battle Grouud Mrs. Lettio Hawthorne on Sunday night heurd the cot creuk md thus orimmul iutimuoy is established. If uu angel from Heaven hud come to Pettit heX'oulel not liuve given him better udvico thuu Switzer. But Pettit did not uot on tho advico. Tho throe motives, lust, uverico and ambition havo been shown, but lot us look ut the facts outside of the motives.Pettit wusu muu of some knowledge of mcdiciuoti und kuew the symptoms of strychnine, aud it was Pettit's mind that distributed the poison ttlthogh Airs. Pettit muy havo done it. He closes the house up and makes tho air so foul thut Huge to auel
visitingiu malarious country.
Goo 1 God! South. IJ-nel is tho most healthy place in Ineliauu. Yeager trusts his pubtor anil errs. Airs. Whitohetuel comes over, woman *10 years of ago, of ospectuble family, a church member auel intelligent,but the preof stows she been criminally intimate with her pastor uud know him to bo bad. A mau who is a minister of God and who will commit udultoiy with onoof his llock is nd man, is 11 vicious man and a moral lopar. He poisoned the character of Mrs. Whitehead. If Yoager and the refct could not Hese that Airs. Pettit was poisoned it was because thevy believed him a good mau. Elmu Whitehead know him and know that Mrs. Pettit was being poisoned toeleuth. Her conduct with him during the sickness shows sho know it unel that sho is guilty. Pettit did not want that highly moral and intelligent woman Emma Hawthorn then Suuday night beoauso he wus afraid she mignt see thiugs he lid not wish, auel had not yet made up his mind how to act. Pdttit is a shrewd man and his plans were laid carefully, and never before was a murder better planned. But as soon as tho life was out of his wife's boely he beguu to stumble auel continued to until he landeel behind tho burs in Columbus, Ohio,and tho stumbling of this monster murderer will causo him to meet liiB just roward. Put yourself iu Yeager's place ami you can account for this error. He trusted a muu ho belioveel to bo a Christian and a friend, auel you will do the same, and will do the same if you let this man escape us ho did. Ho fills Biack with the trulnriul theory as ho did Yoager. Black tries to dodge this issuo hero but acknowledged it before. Ho says her bowels were disteudod but this is not true. Ho wants to uppour leurued when he is not und trios to bolster up his theory. Black says he got there at 12 on Weelueseluy but this is act true.
Ethan Mebuiry lied when Lo said he carried a telegram calling him at that tiuio. When Mrs. Pettit dies Pettit throws himsolf on the* bed with loud aeolumations of grit 1". if it was genuine it wus God's uccusutiou singing through his soul. 'O Huttie, what havo I done
ICONTI.NlTKl) ON PACK U.l
The greatest blood purifier of tho age is Hood's Sursapurrilu, which does tho work speedily and effectively. It is tho sreatest known enemy of disease, and it only requires the chanco the chance to prove this assertion. Try it and see.
Sure to relieve. There Is no failure In Simmon's Liver Regulator.
