Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 22 November 1890 — Page 6

D. F.

A New Consignment

—OF-

RAILWAY TIME-CARDS.

L., N. A. St C.—NORTH—Express (dally 2:05 a. m. mall, 1:48 p. m.dally freight,2:50 p. m. Lafavette express, 10:50 a.m.

SOUTH—Night Express (dally) 1:15 a. m. mull, 2 p. in. daily 'cal freight. 0:05 a.ui. Bedford express, 5:30 p.m.

I., II. & W.—EAST rfxpresB, daily, 1:55 ft. m. mail 1:25 p. m. express,(daily) 4:57 p. m. express 8:41 a.m.

WEST—Express, (daily) 12:35 a. m. mai dally, 9:25 a. m. mail, 1:45 p.m. ex press, 0 40 p.m.

Vmidalia Kuute—NORTH—Mall,8:15a.m. express. 0:15 p. m. S.iUTH—Express, 0:45 a. m. mail,5:20 p. m.

THE JGURNAli

Cloaks and Jackets

Has arrived at the

TRADE PALACE.

We have an Excellent Line of

PLUSH CLOAKS

AND

SATURDAY, NOV. 22, 1890.

SHORT ITEMS UF INTEREST. —Harry Snyder arrived from Joplin Saturday evening'. —Mrs. Mary Sowilers, of Ladoga, visited Mrs. ,1. YV. Ramsay last week. —Mrs. Tice, the mother of Mrs. Judge Davidson, died at Covington last Saturday.

Mrs. .Iulia Pair Farrer died on Sunday November. i. at her home near AukusUi, Ivans. —The Electric Fire Alarm apparatus lias all arnv. except the poles. They arc expected soou. —The pupils of Mrs. A. U. Anderson and Mrs. Jladley have formed a musical club which meets once a month. —A penant has been raised over the Indiana Wire Fence Company's buildiugs. It floats to the breezes all day and is hauled down each evening. —-James McLeod, of Bourbon county,Ivy., is visiting his brother, Oliver McLeod, of .Brown's

valley.

I-le has not seen Craw-

lordsville since 1S54, and, of course, would not know the place from sight. —John S. Foster and Carrie Patton wero married at the residence of Mrs. Cynthia Foster on north YYalnut street, Saturday .night by Squire J. YV. llamsey.

The right way to cure catarrh is to eradicate the poisonous taint which causes the disease, oy taking Hood's Sarsaparilla.

Funeral oi" the Late M. F. Dennis. The remains of tl.e late Milton P. Dennis were laid away to rest Sunday at Oak Hill Coinetery. The funeral services were conducted under the .joint auspices of the Masonic fraternity and the Grand Army of the Kepubllc, of .which orders he was a member. Religious services were conducted at his late r. sidenco by Re '. G. W. Switzer, of the Methodist church. The procession of the Masons, Grand Army men, neighbors and friends was imposing and long and was an evidence of tho esteem in which Mr. Dennis was hold as a citizen, brother and comrade. At the giave the beautiful and impressive ceremonies of both orders were pronounced and all that was mortal of tho good man •was "buried from our sight."

Silver Wedding.

Saturday evening I. N. VanSlckle and "w.'fe celel ited tneir silver wedding at their elejr..i.t h'Mne on South Grant avenue. A 'tout 100 persons were present and sat down to a sumptuous repast. The affair is said to have been one of tho most enjoyable of the kind ever given in the city.

The use of Ayers Sarsaparilla purifies the blood, stimulates the secretions, and imparts new life and vigor to every function of the body. For nearly half a centuryv it as remained uurivalod as she best blood Sk-dicine ever discovered. Be convinced by a trial.

For Sale.

A good farm of 1G0 acres in sotlnvest part of Minnesota. Will be sold cheap and on good term. For particulars call in W, S. Britton at Moilett & Morgan's Irug store.7- (50)

The ladles of Montgomery ccunty are deriving a great deal of aid from Ladies Comfort. See ad.

PLUSH JACKETS.

Don't buy until you see us.

THE PETTIT TRIAL ENDS

[Continued from pngfo 8.]

1 want to review the conduct of Pettit toward his wife and Mrs. Whitehead. I am going only on facts and I lioro defy the prosecution to show one unkind word of Pettit to his wife. They have dwelt at length upou the words of the telegrams, "tell the boyr," if we had not proved otherwise wo would have heard from the learned prosecutor that "the boys" were bums aud loafers. But we showed who Jlioy wero and every one of them is the peer aud superior ot tho State's attorney— good citizens all. They complain because he and it was "pretty tough" on him. Butlsaywheu a man gets up before a jury aud asks the conviction of a man on uo evidence it is worse than tough. They say Pettit laughed at the Lozier meeting aud that was very wrong. A Christian man should act liko a tomb stone. Again it was very wrong because he went in the buggy with Mrs. Whitehead aud several others. They say further that he rode in a buggy to Lafayette with Mrs. Whitehead in broad daylight over a public road and this ib conclusive proof that they committed adultery by tho way. I say that if I had no bettor opinion of womanhood than that I would go and hang myself. Do you think everybody is like you are (pointing at Haywood) that every time a mau takes a buggy ride with a lady he is going to commit adultry, or a rape, or something of that kind. Pettit sat at tho festival in Lafayette with Mesdam«s Vater and Whitehead listening to the musio in the presence of hundreds of eyes. Oh horrible crime Pettit! Pettit! Pettit! you miserable Fooundrel sitting there! (pointing to

Pettit, who laughed.) Ac Attica he held Mrs. Whitehead's head at the request of her sister while she had her teeth pulled, but of courso he oould not do this without committing adultery. (Just at this point an old drunken fool in the back part of the house woke up and began to call oat. While the bailiffs were firing him the genial Colonel hopped about the floor calling out "There goes one of Haywood's witnesses! while the audience roared with laughter.) We now come to the charge that Pettit and Mrs. Whitehead were co habiting during Mrs. Pettit's illness They say they were in the bedroom upstairs together Tuesday night. But they talked so loud they oould be heard down stairs. Now people who are about such things don't go about with a brass band. Think of it a wife dying down stairs and P.-ttit and Mrs. Vhitehead with murder in their hearts copulating like flies in July upstairs.

MONDAY MORNING. J-

Court convened at 10:15, Col. DeHart still before the jury, and still engaged in throwing a doubt over over the motive Pettit may have had for oommitting the crime he is accused of. From this he soon passed to the symptoms of Mrs. Pettit convulsions were never mentioned in the case, and nobody gave any importance to them until after Mrs. Pettit's death and this t:ial began Jiiaoli fact netessary to the state's conclusion must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt, and Dr. Cowan himself said he would doubt strychnine poisoning unless each symptom was known. Complete relaxation was not proven. It is one of the most difficult things to establish because it requires close observation by experienced people, and nobody testified to oomplete relaxation except inexperienced persona. Has it been proven when every expert says it requires the closest observation, and nobody noticed the muscles of Mrs. Pettit's body! This is most important because it is characteristic of stryohnine poisoning and does not occur in tetanus. The putting down of the hands, the raising up of the head, are not, according to all the testimony, symptoms of strychnine poisoning, but are common to tetanus. The risis sardouis, another

•w!f

symptom testified to, are not peculiar to strychnine poisoning but is common to tetanus. One of the symptoms testified to by all was soreness of the jaws, and this is one of the first, and a characteristic Bymptom of tetanus and if symptom was present first and all the time, it indicates tetanus bt yond all doubt. Again, it could not have been strychnine poisoning because the patient lived too long. People who die of strychnine do not live over two or three hours. One of tho indications of tetanus is that it lasts through days. Another thing that destroys the State's theory of the case is that fever is not preseut in such cases. In this case fever was present, and this within the knowledge of Dr. Taylor, an authority on this subject, is not an indication of strychnine poisoning. Dr. Yeiger, the attending physician and a witness for the State relied so much on this that he said if the patient had run a nail in her foot he would have known what to do. If Dr. Yeager had believed that Mrs. Pettit haa been poisoned ho would have watched tho case closer, he would have seen to it that the patient was not left in the hands of her poisoners. I say it whs not strychnine poisoning for these reasons. Dr. Black said she died from other .troubles than strychnine aud every time the Ste tried to show that Mrs. Pettit had died from poison they wero unsuccessful. Dr. Yeager says he knew it was poisoning at the time, but still treated the patient for other troubles. I say this is unreasonable. It was not poison because after Mrs.jPettit saidt-ho had been poisoned, she said it was uot poison because she had had such spells before. It was not stryohnine because there was no congestien of the brain. Doctors say this an almost invariable sign all tho symptoms are not peculiar to stryohnine, on the contrary they all tend to indicate other troubles. The State's attorneys defied us to produce an authority or cite a case where tetanus was pre^efled by uneasy sensations.

Produces Groce, whom he says stands at the top of his professio. ,as tr. authority. Groce says tetanus is preceded by nervousness and uneasiness. Mr. DeHart next took up the medicines given Mrs. Pettit. Digitalis was given digitalis will prodi.ee convulsions and is a dangerous medicine. Dr. Cowan says it is a dea'ly poison and if administered should be watched. Aconite was given, this is a poison. Gave bismuth and jallop and these aro poisons. Gave hydrate of chloral, which is a dangerous medicine. Gave atropia, the deadly night-shade, a poison of tremendous energy. Gave chloroform, another poison, all deadly in their character and given in big doses. The man who would give such medicines is a dangerous man to have at a bedside. If Pettit had wanted to kill his wife all he had to do was to administer the chloroform Dr. Yeager had lefr, until his victim was dead. The conduct of Yeager was not consistent with his opinion on tho subject of poisoning. Ii Yeager had believed this he would have told Mrs. Shields when she appealed to him to tell the truth. Here Col. DeHart read the correspondence between Mrs. Shields and Yeager on this point read to the jury. In this correspondence Yeager says Mrs. Pettit died from ma'ariul poison, and writes a letter vm dicatiay Pettit, also has report of Yeag er to the Health Board read, throe mouths after Mrs. Pettit's death in which he says Mrs. Pettit died from malarial poison. He cites these things us positive proof that Yeager thought all the time thct Mrs. Pettit died from malaria. Col. DeHart closed at 11:30, making an eloquent plea to tho jury in behalf of little Dine waiting back in New York to eat her Thanksgiving dinner with her father. udgo Snyder was also highly complimented for the fair and impartial manner in which he had acted throughout the trial.

MONDAY AFTEKNOON.

Court, was some late in getting under way owing to the absence of Pettit, bin when he finally came Judge Davidson aroe and congratulated tho jury on the nea-ing of the end of the most important trial occuring in this county in tho last 25 years. He said the responsibility of the attorneys was great but not beginning to compare to that of each individual jurcr. The prosecutor has said there was no half way g-ound in the c:ise. It is either liberty or death aud he is ri«ht. The State says there must be no reasonable doubt in your mind if you liud the defendant guilty. It is right, for who would be a juror if a mere preponderance of the evidenoe should determine the outcome of murder trials? Before 1 close I shall show you if you have no reasonable doubt,you will have to wholly disbelieve five of the most disinterested professional men who have appeared here. The proseoutor has told you that he has labored for a year to convict this man, not to give him a fair trial, but to convict him. Is that the action of a fair man? 1 want to tako a little time in discussing the fuirness of the proseoution as I have been challenged to do BO. It is the duty of the State to bring all the evidence and facts forward. Yet the State in the case would have submitted it to the jury on half the facts. Why, two-thirds of the defendant's witnesses were those which the State had allowed to go off the stand without bringing out the facts whioh they knew would favor the defendant. Wnat if Pittit's attorneys had been ignorant of these essential faotsf They may have been of others just as much so. For all he said you might think that Mrs. Whitehead was still a joint defendant in this case. Did he tell you he had been obliged to throw up her case. Many of the statements made by the prosecutor in his opening statement they have not attempted to prove even. He said he would prove that Pettit lied to Yeager about the symptoms. (Yeager's testimony to the effect that he found Mrs. Pettit's symptoms as Pettit described them.) Haywood said that when Pettit gave the oil he crowded between his wife and the ladies. Tue witnesses say otherwise. He told you that Pettit experimented with strychnine on the dog, Tiny, during his wife's visit, but many witnesses toll you that Tiny died before the visit. Ho also told you that Pettit did nothing to alleviate his wife's suffering during Sunday afternoon, but Mrs. Meharry one of the lirst persons there, said he was giving her mustard

People Wonder

WHEN

they find liow rapidly health is restored by taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla. The reason is that this preparation contains only the purest and most powerful alteratives and tonics. To thousands yearly it proves a veritable elixir of life.

Mrs. Jos. Lake, Brockway Centre, Mich., writes: "Liver complaint ami indigestion made my life a burden and came near ending my existence. For more than four years I suffered untold agony. I was reduced almost to a skeleton, and hardly had strength to drag myself about. All kinds of food distressed me, and only the most delicate could be digested at all. "Within the time mentioned several physicians treated me without giving relief. Nothing that I took seemed to do any permanent good until I began the use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla, which lias produced wonderful results. Soon after commencing to take the Sarsaparilla I could see an

Improvement

in my condition, my appetite began to return and with it came the ability to digest all the food taken, my strength improved each day, and after a few months of faithful attention to your directions, I found myself a well woman, able to attend to all household duties. The medicine has given me a new .'ease of life, aud I cannot thank you too much." "We, the undersigned, citizens of Brockway Centre, Mich., hereby certify that the above statement, made by Mrs. Lake, is true in every particular and entitled to full credence."—O. P. Chamberlain, G. W. Waring, C. A. Wells, Druggist. "My brother, in England, was, for a long time, unable to attend to liis occupation, by reason of sores on his foot. I sent him Ayer's Almanac and the testimonials it contained induced him to try Ayer's Sarsaparilla. After using it a little while, he was cured, and is now a well man, working in a sugar mill at Brisbane, Queensland, Australia." A. Attewell, Sharbot Lake, Ontario.

Ayer's Sarsaparilla,

FKEPARKO BY

Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Price $1 fix bottles, $6. Worth 45 a bottle.

N

OT1CETO STOCKHOLDEUs

Yon are hereby liotillod that the annual mcotliiK for the election of Directors of the Montgomery County Agricultural Association will ije held in the small court room in the Court House, in the City of Crawt'ordsville on Monday, December 1, 1800, at 10 o'clock a. m.

F. L. SNVDBll, JUflN L. DAVIS Secretary. President.

water. He said Mrs. Emma Hawthorn said Pettit's legs wero in Mrs. Whitehead's lap ou Sunday afternoon at Battle Ground but gentlemen you all re member that Mrs. Hawthorn siid she could not say that his tunes touched her. He also said in his argument Unit c. jugestives chills were never mentioned alter Sunday, but Mrs. Lettio Hawthorne mid tliey talked o' tieni Tues I y, aud Dr. Yeager in his letter also mentioned them. Tilt) i-xainiuation of all these wihuessfH shown that t'lvve was an uuder.stiiiuli.'ig between them 'is to where this testimony kIk u!d brenk off. He know that Arum M-jharry saw the window pane l-r.ken, yet fir i'ro:ii piaciug her on the stand he used other witnesses to etst a fals'3 inference on the inoi dent. The Sr!itohjs tried to persuade you that P.tt.t -iouled over I he suff.-i-ijgsof his wife, that he gave done after dese to prolong h'T agony and agree with hiui that if Pettit is gJiity he is deserving of thi higUest punishment. 11 ay wood told you that Geo. L''ord wus to bo particularly believed because he was good to his mother, but they ask you in the swue breath put 1/oUit/fc' kindness to his mother iu South nd down ou tho debit side of his account. They hi\o brought Ford aud ckmau Here to prove thut Mrj. .tt.t »vas in good health when she arrived homo. Fred said she looked well, he did not say she told him t.o. Geo. Ford is a

[Continuedon Third I'uge.l

Health Is Belter than GoidII you have bad breath,sluggish bowels pain in tho small of your buck, nei vousness or giddiness, your vital organs are sadly out of order. A mere dose of physic will not help you. Your onlv wise course is to take Dr David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy, cfli«undout, N. Y., and cleanse your system of the impurities. It regu ates tho Liver and Kidneys.

SHILOn'S COUGH and Consumption Cure Is sold by us on a guarantee. It cures consumption. For sale by Moflett Morgan & Co

IIlblmrd's Throat and Lung For throat and ..ung troubles this remedy has no equal. It Is guaranteed to euro consumption in Its first stages and even in advanced stages of that dlsoase it relieves coughing rnd induces sleep. You may have a cough or a cold at any time, therefore no household, especially with children, should bo without it. For all affections of the throat,lungs and chiftt, croup, whooping cough, hoarseness, spitting of blood and all pulmonary diseases It has no equal.

Prepared only by Rheumatic Syrup Co., Jackson, Mich. Ask your druggists for It.

No sounding phrases or ioolish boasting are needed to draw attention to Van Werts' Balsam for the lungs: A claim is made for it that it is the best cough medi cine on the market, every bottle is guaranteed to do all that it is claimed and everyone is invited to make a free test of its merits. Volumes of phrase could not do more to recommend it than this. Trial size free. For sale bv Lew B'isher.

•J,1'

N

1 1

c, Klectrlc Hitters, Wm. Timmons, postmaster or IdavllJe Ind., writes: "Electric Bitters have done more for me than all other medicines combined frr that feeling arising from kiduoy and liver tn.wbl ." John Leslie, farmer aud stockman of same place, says: "Find Electric Bitters to be the best kidney and liver medicine, made me feel like a new man." J. y?. Gardner, hardware merchant, same town, says: "Electric Bitters is just the thing for a man svho is all run down and don't care wether he li es or dies:he found new trength, good appefilo and felt, just like he had an new lease on life Only 50c. a bottle at Ney & Co. drug store. 2

for

Children Cry

Pitcher's Castorfej I

OTICE TO NON-ltESlDENTS.

State of Indiana, Montgomery countv. It the Montgomery circuit court, .Iiinuury term, 18!)0.

Ella Hcuson vs. George lienson. Complaint No. !)!:!•:. Now comes tho plaintiff by Coppnpo & White her attorneys, and flies her complaint for divorce herein, together with an aflidavit that said defendant. George lienson, is not a resident of tho State of Indiana.

Notice is therefore hereby given snid defendant, that unlcBH ho bo and uppear on the 8th day of the next term of the Montgomery Circuit Court, to be holden ou the 13tli day of January, A. D. 1890, at the court house in Crawfordsvllle.in said county and State.aud answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in his absence,

Witness my name, and the seal of said court, affixed at Crawl'ordsville, this 13th day of November, A. D. 18SI0.

HENItY B. HULETT, Clork.

November 15,1890.

HEIUFF'S SALE.

Bv virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from the Clerk of the Montgomery Circuit Court, in cause wherein Foster Fletcher Is plaintiff, and Elizabeth A. Cheuault aud Robert YV. .'henault are defendants. requiring me to make tho sum of two hundred and sixteen dollars and eighty-five cents, with Interest on said decree and costs, I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder on

SATURDAY, DEC. 6th, 1890,

between tho hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'elockp. m. of said day, at the door of the Court House in Crawl'ordsville, Montgomery County, Indiana, tho rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, the following described real estate in Montgomery county, Indiana, to-wit:

Part of the west half of the souMiwest o.uar ter of section thirty-one (31). in township eighteen (IK) north, range four (4) west, described as follows: Beginning sixtv feet cast of tho southeast corner of lot number six (0) in that portion of the town of New Market originally laid out by Carson Wruy, senior lience uortii one

'.lUiii'.rc,'.

and fifty-nine

(15!H

feet thence east one hundred and thirty-two (132) feet thence south ono hundred and flft.ynine (159) feet thcnce west one hundred arid thirty-two (132) feet to the place of beginning, situated in the county of Montgomery, State of Indiana.

If'such rents and profits will not sell for a ufJicient sum to satisfy said decree. Interest and costs, I will, at the samo time and place, xposeto public sale the loo simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be suflloientto discharge said decree. Interest and costs. fai(* salo will be made without any relict whatever from valuation or appraisement h'.w s.

JERENKZERP. McCLASKEY Sheriff of Montgomery County.

By H. H. Cox, Deputy. M. W. Hruner attorney for plaintiff. Nov. 15, A. D. 189#.—Pf $13

OTICE TO NON-KESIDENTS. IN State of Indiana, Montgomery County. In the Montgomery Circuit Court, November term, 1H90.

Kosanna M, Piatt vs Thomas Piatt, Complaint No. 0,920. Now comes the plaintiff by Humphrey and Reeves her attorneys, and tiles herJcomplaint herein for divorce, together with an allidnvit that said defendant, Thomas Piatt,is not a resident of the State of Indiana.

Notice is hereby given said defendant that unless he be and appear on the 3rd day of the next term of tl.e Montgomery Circuit Court,to bo holden on tho 5th day of January A.D.I 891, at the court, house In Crawfonlsvllle, in said county and State, ai:d answer or demur to said complaint, tho same will be heard and determined in his absence.

Witness my name, ami the seal or said court, atlixed at CrawrordsyjUe, this (i th day of November, A. D. 1890.

HENRY B. HULETT, Clerk.

Nov. 13 1890.

N

OTICE OF INSOLVENCY.

In the matter of the estate of Francis T. Parker. deceased. In the Montgomery Circuit Court. No. 545.

Notice is hereby given that, upon petition tiled ill said Court, by the Administrator of said t.state. setting it" he insufficiency of the estati'of said decode't 'opav tli» debts and liabilities thereof, tin Ju tire of said Court did. on the 10th day of TO uber. 1N90, llnd said estate to he probably in lvcnt. an:l order the same to be settled ac or lintrly. The creditors of said estate arc th of ire herebv notitled of such insolvency am! •ipiired to tile their claims against said e-'afc for allowance.

Witness. theClerk nd seal of said court at Crawlordsvilie, lniiiiu a, this lOl.h day of November, I89J.

HENRY !i. HUIJETT.

Nov. l.r. Clerk.

S«,LUFF'S SAI.K

By virtue of a ccrtitied copy of a decree to me directed trom the Clerk of the Montgomeiy Circuit Court,iu ti cause wherein thebafavette Saving Bank is plaintiff, and Thomas Slaftory en til, are defendants, bring me to make the sum of twenty-four hundred and eleven dollars and fifteen cents, with interest on said decree and costs. 1 will expose at public sale lo the highest bidder, on MONDAY. NOVEMBER 24, A. D. 1890, between the hours ot 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the court house In the city of Crawfordsvillo.Montgomery county, Indiana, the rents aud profits for a term not exceeding seven years, the following described ,real estate, in Montgomery County, Indiana, to-wlt:

Hegiuning at a point 22 rods east of the northwest corner of the eu.st half of the southeast quarter of section thirty (30* Iu the gravel road thence east one hundred and thirtyfour (134) rods and seven (7) Unks thenco south fifty-nine(59) rods and thirteen (13) links to Sugar Creek thence down the center of the creek south 70% degrees west seventeen (17) rods and twenty-one (21) links thcnce south 30 degrees west thirty-two (32) rods to the mouth of a hollow thence upsaid hollow north 21 degrees west twelve(12) rods and twenty-one (21) links thence north sixty two (02) rods: thence west ninety-one(01) rods to the gravel roud tlience north 15 degrees west to the nluce of beginning, containing 30 acres and being part of the southeast quarter of section thirty (30), in township nineteen (19) north, of range four (4» west.

Also a partof the northwest quarter of section twenty-nine (29). In township nineteen (19) north.of range four (4) west, described as follows: Beginning at the half milo stake on the west line of said section twenty-nine (29,) thence north seventy (70) rods tlienec east to the center of Sugar Creek thence down the center of Sugar Creek to a point due east from the center of said section thence west to tho place of beginning, excepting and reserving therefrom one aero heretofore sold to the railroad company, leaving in said last described tract 82 acres, and iu ail the above described real estate 112 acres.

If such rents and profits will not sell Tor .mfllcient sum to satisfy said decree, Interest and costs, 1 will, at the same time and place expose to public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, Interest and costs. Said sale will be inude without any relief from valuation or appraisement laws.

EBENEZER I', McCLASKEY, Sheriff Montgomery County, Ind

ByE. II. Cox, Deputy. Frank W. Chase, Attorney for Plaintiff. Oct. 25, 1890. pf $17.

McKeen Mills.

McKeen & £on would respectfully announce to

THE FAEMERS

Of this prosperous county that they have purchased the old Brown & Watkins mill, and expect to do business

LARRR

cOALE.

on a

-V 'J

CASH FOE WHEAT.

Tell your neighbors about the McKeen Mills, and bring us a load of wheat.

McKeen & Son Were" formerly of the celebrated Pillsbury Mills, of Minneapolis.

The Pullman Car Line

Cincinnati, Indianapolis, ,Chicago, St. Louis, Hamilton, Dayton,

Toledo, Detroit, The Lake Regions, North and West,

And the Northwest

Pullman Sleepers on all Night Trains. Fine Cliair Cars on Day Trains. The Year Round Between Cities Enumeraed

M. D. Woodford, E. O. McCoralck, Vlco-Presldent. Gr gt.

A PnSITIVF For LOST or FAILING MANHOOD ruai live General and NERVOUS DEBILITY) fj I 13 E.1 "Weakness of Body and Mind: Effecti of Errors or Excesses in Old or Young.

Dobnit, Noble MANHOOD full. Ilestnri'it. How t» Knlnnrc and Strengthen WUAK,UNDKVKIjOI'Kn OttllAN'S & PARTS of BOUT. Absolutely unfailing IIOMK TIIKATHKM'-llrnellM In dlj.

Hen

testify from

47

StatPK, TrrrlIrjrk'h, and

Ion

»nwrlt(

OMaledj free.

Arc now on sale ut

J. S Kelley's

124 East Main Street, Cntwfoi-dsville. Ind

Dv.. HcsiriiitEvs'SrnciFicsarescicntllicrdlyand carcf ully prepared piescijptloiis used for many jvarsiu private practice with success, audforover thirty years '.used by tho people. Krcrv single Specific 1aaspccial cine for the disease mimed.

These Spcnillcs euro without drugging, rurgluf? or reducing-t-bo svstem, and are in fact and deed tlic sovereign remedies of the World*

UST

OP enlNCIFAL NOS. Fevers, Congestion. Inflammation... .25 WoriMd) Worm Fever, Worm Colic.. .25 (.'ryinir Colic,orTecthiDgof Infuuts .45 ISinrrlicn, of Children or Adults 25 Dysentery* Griping, Bilious Colic 25 Cholera. iUorbuH, Vomiting 23 Cenurhs, Cold, Bronclfltis 25 Nenralffin, Tootliach-j.Faeeache— ..IS ]lea(iaches Sick Headache, Vertigo .25 Dyspepsia, Bilious Stomach ,25 Suppressed or Painful Periods. ,~~ Whiten, too Profuse Periods... '.l ji 25 Fever and Acne, Chills, Maluria S'i J'ilCH, llllnd or Bleeding .fttt Catarrh, Influenza, Coldlnthellead .50 Whooping Coueh, Violent Coughs. .30 «'iicrnl Debility .Physical Weakness .5Q Kidney DiHenwe .50 Nervous Debility 1.00 Urinary Weakness, Wetting Bed. .50 Diseases of thellenrt.Palpltatlonl.OA

'2

3 5 !i rj

10 is

13

Crimp, Cough, DifficultUreatlilnf--Snlt IMieiiin, Erysipelas,Eruptions. .2.1 li emtio tiwm, Kheuniatic Pains 25

13 Hi 17 J»

83

27

as KO

ii'i

Sold by Druggists, or sent postpaid on receipt of price. Du. HUMPHREYS' MANUAL, (144 pages richly bound In clotli and gold, mailed free. Iluiuphreys'SIedicineCo.lOOFuttonSt. N Y.

S E I I S

CALIFORNIA.

An exeeptlonably favornble offer Is being mada by the John Brown Colony of Madera, California Opportunity for the fullest investigation furnished and you cannot fall to find It the safest and mosl profitable plan ever proposed. Lands cultivated on the most reasonable terms for non-resldents.Wrlta thehomeofflceoraddress II VY A: WAI.UIClt.

JE. aurkemt., Iudlumulolla, Ind.

COMMISSIONEli'STATE.

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SALE OF HEAL ES­

Notice Is hereby f^lveu that, by virtue ofnu order of the Montgomery Circuit Court, on petition for niirtltion, of Theodore H. lilstlno vs. Mary F. Sloan et al., the undersigned commissioner, will sell at public sale, on the premises herein described, on Saturday, November 2Ci, 1800. between the hours of two uud four o'clock m., the following real estate iu Montgomery county, Intdittiii, to-wlt:

Partof the northwest quarter of section six (6), township elg-hteen (18) north, range four (4) west., bounded as follows: Beginning at point one and 62-100 {l.r2) chains westot' the northeast corner of said quarter section and running thence west six hundred aud uinetysix (000) tect to the beginning point thence south Ove hundred aud forty-tlve (545) loot thence east three hundred and forty (340) feet, thence south four hundred and fifty (450) feet, thence 'south 74 degrees west six and 25-100 (0-25) chains to the farthest point south of said land thence north 50 degrees west fifteen and 7-100 (15.07) chains thence north flvo and 00-100 (5.00)chains ton polntlllne and 3:1-100 (11.33) chains east of the northwest corner of said quarter section thence east eleven hundred and forty-flve (1145) feet to said beginning point. aud said tract is also described us lots number nine (9) to forty-two (42) inclusive, and llfty-nine (50) to seventy-two (72) inclusive as the same are known and designated ou tho record plat of John Sloan's heirs' addition of out-lots ta the city of Crawl'ordsville.

Teums—One third cash. The residue in two eotial payments at twelve and eighteen months, with notes at six per cent, interest, without relief lrom valuation or appraisements laws.

KOHEKTS. THOMSON

Nov. 8 1890. 3w. Commissioner.

J^OTICE TO HEIHS, CHEDlTOliS, ETC.

In the mutter of the estate of Wilxon Lnnu, (uxeascfl. hi the Montgomery Circuit Court, Aovcmber term, 1SDO.

Notice is hereby given that George A. Enoch, as Executor of t.lio estate of Wilson Long, deceased, has presented and tiled his accounts and vouchers in llnal settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for V? the examination and action of said Circuit Court oil the 20th day of Nov., 1800, ul which time all heirs, creditors or legatees of said esstate are required to appear ill said court and show cause, If any there be, why said accounts and vouchers should not be approved and tho heirs or distributees of said estate are also notitled to he in said Court at tho time aforesaid iaud make proof of heirship.

Dated this 28th day ol October, 1890. GEO 1U 12 A. ENOCH, Nov. 1. Administrator.