Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 13 December 1890 — Page 3

Vf.

stock early in the season.

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Ladies will be pelased to learn that notwithstanding the fact

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is ox is firm in the city that pr sitively refuses to advance the price on

awy of its garments. It is enabled to do this by buying a large

ROUXTREE'S BAZAR sympathizes with the public, there­

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J*

•*Hi A CANNING FAOTOET.

A Suggestion, Which it is Hoped Will Find Lodgement Iu the Ear of IdleUatjital-

The idea of a canning factory has been talked of somewhat aud a few of our capitalists have given Borious thoughts to the subject. For their benefit us well as others, THE JOURNAL publishes the following disputjh to the Chicago Herald:

The proprietors of the canning factory in this city and of die one iu Gibson Ciiy, 111., and the two ut Hoopston, 111., Iui\e uuiteil iu a scheme tomuuulacture tin cans l'or usa in their factories. The manufactory wi'l ba located in one of the three cities nieotiined. The product of the four factories for the past season aggregated nearly 500 ourloiuh. A meeting was held iu Chicago a few duya ago by tiie owners of tiieae factcrittP, and at a subsequent meeting held at G.bson Ci it was definitely deck ed to install a plant for the manufacture of tm cans. They believe they can manufacture cheaper than th can buy. Tm sa four factories put up more corn aud tomatoes last season tliau all other ffietoricti between the Alleghanies und tlia liocky Mountains, 'lhe new plant will turn out 50,000 tin cans a day.

Woman's Belief Uorps Elects Officers, The Woman's .Relief Corps held its regular monthly meeting Saturday and elected officers for tae ensuing y«.ar as follows: President, Mrs. C. Ambrose Senior Vice-President, Mrs. Geo. W. rower Mrs. J. C. Hutchinson, Second \ice Mrs. Israel, Chaplain Mrs. Travis, Treasurer iYirs. John McClamrock, Conductor and i\lrsTJoseph McDaniei, Sentinel.

j?,: McFlidison fost ElectionOn Saturday evening McPherson Poet elected officers as follows: J. D. Tracy, P. C. H. H. Talbot, S. V. C. H. Gifl'ord, J. V. C. L. A. Poote, Q. M. Dr. T. J. Griffith, Surgeon A. S. Holbrook, CliaiJ. J. W. Clemson, O. 1). Pat liallu,nl, O. G. The installation of officers will take place the lirst Saturday i:i-h( in Januaiy.

A Ohaming Story-

"Polly's Chrisimdb" is the title of a be mtiful story which occupies a promn3ut pi tee in the Thanksgiving number of "The Interior." The authoress *s Miss Lilly 13'air, of this city wl o*: name is the latest addition to our already select rollof litterateurs.

Fortunate atlicraiid Son. 'I am as certain a^I now live," sa.\ OE. Baithomew, of Kaskaska,Mien., "that Dr. David Kennedy'3 Favorite itemedy, of lioundout, N. Y., saved lnv life when I was a victim of that terrible venal disorder— Bright's disease. Jly son had a fever sote on his leg. ife, too, used Favorite liimiedy, and is now well. But for this medicine I ain sure both father and son would have been six feet under the sod." 4

A stitch in time. Take bimmoiu Liver Regular and prevent sickness.

Interesting to Farmers. No class of people should be so careful in providing themselves with reliable family medicines as those who live far iri physicians. Van Wert's Balsam if the lungs Is particularly recommended to the farming community, as it Is wonderfully effect all throat and lung troubles, and is especially adapted for children, being Hgrooable to take, perfectly Bafe and Harmless, and yet infallablo for croup and whooping cough. Trial size liee. For sale by Lew Fisher

Prince of Wales.

In 1800 the Prince of Wales', visiting Canada, stopped at Ottowa, and laid the corner stone of Canada's Parliament Building. Since that time thousands of people have been cured of consumption, nervous prostration, rheumatism and kindred troubles, by using a few Dottles Milton's Nerve and Lung Food. Samp

DotAle free* Nye & Co.

Probably on the Fifteenth.

Judge Davidson states to THE JOURNAL that the attorneys for Pettit will probably have their arguments for a new trial ready by the 15th inst. and will then present them to the court.

Death of Mary McNerney-

Mary McNerney, the 10 year old daughter of Daniel McNerney and wife, died at her home near the Junction on Nov. 5 at 4 o'clock of congestion of lungs. The funeral occurred Sunday at the Catiiolic church.

A Row on the Streets- tfH

Saturday evening ou J. A. Jool's corner three young men from south of Waynetown engaged in a drunken melee with six or eight local boys. The Waynetown people were full and went into the local gang with the intention of eating them whole, but were soon put to flight wiih aching ears and noses.

Got Their Pay.

Prosecutor George li. Haywood came down from Lafayette last Monday and A. li. Anderson al once appearing be fore Judge Snyder got an order on Tippecanoe county for $1,50'J, full pav for Haywood aud Wilson in the Pottit case. Mr. Anderson was given no allowance, but it is safe to infer that ho drew a goodJy portion of that §1,500.

Fair Association Election.

B?ard of fair du-ectors met Monday morning and elected the following officers: President, John L. Davis Senior Vice-PresideLt, M. B. Waugb Junior Vice-President, Wm. H. Durham Treasurer, Geo. W. Hadley Secre tary, \V. \Y. Morgan. Tue fair grounds .'.ommittee are Johu S. Brown, Jacob Huiton and Cal Barnhill.

Mrs Shields fieients. -1'

It will remembered that Mrs. Shields stated that upon leaving that now the correspondence between W. F. Pettit and his little daughter Dine would have to coase. She has evidently cliauged her mind, however, a3 Mr. Pettit still continues to receive his accustomed letters of love from Little Dine away off in New York.

Enlarging Their Store Room. Oa account of a growing trade Iiobinson fe Wallace have concluded to enlarge their store room and the partition between their room and the barber shop immediately iu the rear will taken out and the latter room occupied by the firm. The barbers will remove their business to a room north of their present location.

Suit tor Damages.

R. C. Walkup Las enterred suit against Bige lyless for $500 damages charging that he is breaking the contract made when the former bought the latter out. Bay less claims that lie agreed not to run ten cent hack line, but uotliing was said concerning any other priced line of conveyances. Walkup claims the opposite and will push the case to a finisn.

Eiood on the Moon.

The publication of the bistoiy of tho Pettit trial with all its giddy particulars is about to bo suppressed. Judge Davidson stated this morning that Mrs. Whitehead's attorneys, are going to enjoin the publijation. A light will be made against the injunction if filed and every endeavor made to get the book before the public. Tue book is as yet in the publisher's hands but will appear shortly unless tho court rules against it.

Corn Fair.

There was a monster crowd at WingateS turday to witness the great ccrn fuir. JF. J. Philips, of Wingate, had offered several premiums, ajd the entries were numerous. There were 33 entries for the best bushol of corn. The first prize, a line stove, was awarded to Je*se Palin. Second to Clint Otter. The prize forth best two ears of corn was given to Campbell Schemi:rhorn. The judges were Wm. Kerr, Brazil KifV aud David Flacher. The display is said to pe the finest ever sjen in Indiana.

The Taylor Fracas.

The Taylor boys who became involved iu some trouble at Linden latt week were in the city Monday and say that the reports concerning that affair were greatly exaggiratad. The man Allen, with whom they had the frucos was drunk and seized the reins of tho horses that one of the Taylors was driving and persisted in refusing to let go. Young Taylor jumped out of his wagon after the third tima Allen seized the reins, knocked him down and drove off". This was all there was of the great battle alleged to have been fought between the belligerente.

d^'BLACK.DRAUGHT tea cares Constipation

OVER TEE

BLUrF.

Anson Albee, Late of the Junction House* Meets a Tragic Death at Gosport.

A telegram received at tho Junction Ileuso Sunday morning anuouuoed that Anson Albee, of this city, had been killed by falling over the steep bluffs at Gosport about 5 o'clock P. m. Mrs. Albee took the first train for (hat plaoe and his sons aud relatives were telegraphed iYirs. Albeo reached home at night with tho body and it was taken to the home of Pacrick McManis on Franklin street to await burial. It seems that Mr. Albee left for Martinsville last Thursday to seek a locatiou for a hotel and arrived at Gosport early Sunday morning on his way home. Iu walking from the I. ifc V. station to the Monon station he is supposed to have walked off tho bluffs in the dark. It was a terrible fall or 40 feet onto the rookB and Mr. Albee's neck was broken, death resulting immediately. When tho body was found at 7:30 a. m,, the gold watch and about .$30 iu money were still in the clothes, showing that no robbery had token place.

4

Mr. Albee was 73 years old and has resided in this city for three years, having had possession of the Junction House until within a month, then soiling out to Col. Anderson. Mr. Albee was born in llutland, Vermont, but passed most of his life iu Leigh, Mass. He was an old railroad man and known all over tho State as a thorough going, honest man.

The New A- M. E. ChurchThe now A. M. J3. ciiuroli will bo completed this week. Tho building consists of an auditorium 39x40 feet with a seating capacity of 500 aud a chapel capable of Eeatiug 150. The vestibule is in the northeast corner aud a belfrey above. It has a hardwood fiuish aud the church is botticosy and comfortable. It Las been built under great financial difficulties ond at a great sacriiice on the part of the devoted membership of that ohurcli. The total cost will be about $2,000 a little more than half of which has been paid. The pastor, Rev. W. Coleman, who lias been untiring in his efforts toward securing this beautiful new structure uropoaes to have a grand opening ou Sunday, Doc. 28. The programme will consist of asormon by Rev. Jason Bundv, at 10:30 a. a platform servioe in the afternoon at '2 o'clock in which all the ministeis of tho city churches will participate, and a sermon in the evening at 7 o'clock by Rev.

M. L. Murray, of Greencastle. A public collection will bo t^keu at the close of each service to bo applied on the debt. Mr. Coleman hops to reduce the indobtness to about 8700 by tho services of the day. It is a most worthy object and THE JOURNAL bespeak1 large and liberal audiences on the occ •ions,

Home Dailies.

Greencastle Banner: Remark1 ••g ou tho success of Crawfordsville bu-duess houses and Crawfordsvilla daily papers, a Crawford&villian said, "We all patronize home merchants and home papers. There ure not half a dozen people who do their shoppiug in Indianapolis. Our people bike their home dailies in preterence to such papers as the Indianapolis News, the bane of so many otner places. The Daily Journal now has a circulation of more than a thousand regular subscribers, and the Argus News as many."

Io lliere not some meat in these statements for Greencastle people.' if everybody would patronize home merchants and home papers and institute a rigorous system of home protection, this town would prosper as it never did in the past. Let us try it lor on'iyear and note tho result.

Ben Hur and International Uopyright. "One of the first things the new law will do," said Henry Harper, of Harper & Brothers, in an interview in the New York Tribune, "will be to check ov absolutely stop the importation of cheap reprints, a business started aud largely carried on by foreign houses with establishments iu this country. Canada, for instance, has been ovoi-running the country with paper editions of standard works. A day or two ago I saw a copy of 'Ben Hur' that had been published in Canada selling for twenty-live cents. Now, we do not publish any cheap copies of Gt iriral Wallace's book, and the effect of the foreign reprint is easily apparent, yet under the exifctiug law we are helpless."

When we reflect that so many human beings die of consumption we must come to the conclusion that every body should be provided with Dr. Bull a Cough Syrup ^he poor consumptive's friend,

RESULT IN THIS DISTRI0T-

The Votes of the M-E- Olmrctes of tlie Urawfordsville District on the Admission of Women-

The appended list oi the churches of the Crawfordsville distriot shows that this district of the M. E. ohuroli favors tho admission of women to tho privologes of the general oonforenoo. A majority of the churches in tho country have expressed themselves favorable to the project but it still liao to pass the ooufereuoo and thou tho general oonforenoo. As tho vote has been so light (the vote iu this distriot buiug a fair average) tho question is not settled yet by any ineaus, and the higher bodies will not feol that tliLy aro called upon by a largo per cent, of the churches to admit the ladies. In tho Lafayette distriot out of 1,549 member, 500 voted for ad mission and 184 against it, and the same can be remarked of tho several districts of the conference. In tho East tho vote was more evenly divided. The vote in this district resulted:

Total Votlnjf Voting Total Members For Against, 11

Catllu 2:1:1, 7

Voting

Against, 11 21

Clermont.... 2KI1 N.-i 1 Kti Covln^Um... I.'l.'l .... :i 28 C-ville 570 ::i •l SI C-vllleCt.... 12 I

1

14

Danville H-0 re is lis Darlington :iT7 52 10 Ii2 b'lnekville... 4'J 4 111 Haughvllle. i:i:J iti fi 21 Hllluboro. ~."0 14 1 7 :it Jamestown. J-10

4.1

Ladoga :i"ii :i2 12

7

44

Maee 2ti4 it) -1 2.'i Mm shall H.'l ti

S

Now llleh.. !2:i'.2 li.'i Newtown.., 10 Iti

I'errysvllle. 17:.' 10 12 Fiitfiboro ... ~:t(i :is

:IR.

S

iti

ltookville ... ~H0 12 :s •l.-» Kus.sellvllie ~1! 11 7 1 Shawnee M. 1 !»"i 20 l) :i."i Veeder'burtf 1KH 2H

1

Waveland ... :M0

1 27

.... IS

f» "-2.1

Vountsvlll" ins ti is 24

Total..nii.'M ti:H 280 !M 4 Majority for I

A N E W E O

The Gossips Whisper that John Acheson Disapointed In Love Shot HimselfThe Lafayette Call in commenting on the Aclieson shooting has the following: "Young Acheson says that when he regained consciousness a' o'clock, an hour later, he was lying in his bed with the covers tuoked about him. Ho felt a twinge of pain in his nock, and threw back tho covers, when ho discovered that his shirt front was covered wnh blood. Mr. Acheson says that when he went to bed, about 11 o'clock lhe night before, he placed a wallet contuining $51 under the mattress, and, a little nearer the head of the bed, placed, two registered letters, $15 in bills, several dollars in coin and a gold and silver watch. A search in the morning revealed the empty wallet lying ou the floor, with his own pistol lying near it. The other money and the watches were not molested. His revolver hud four empty chambers and one with a cartridge in it. The statement that Mr. Acheson should have been thus assailed, and then become unconscious until ho discovered himself lying nicely tucked iu hi own bed, and have thou himself given the first ularm, seemed a very strange one, as a desperate thief intaut upon robbery and gettiug mvay would be unlikely to behave

111

such a kindly

ni de jorous manner. Tue fact that the ball which cauued tho wound was apparently of tho sumo calibre ns Acheson's own revolver, and that the course of tho ball was such as would result from a pistol held iu tho hand iu front and self- lirectod, served to somewhat weiiiu-n confidonc in the entire ro'iubility of the first uocouuts of tho affair.

Gossip iu tho neighborhood favors the theory that business troubles and a love iiHair had preyed upc bin mind, aud that possibly, in a lit ot temporary desperation, he had turned his own revolver upon himse.'l'. Perhaps tbo

will nover bo known.

fact

ANew Society'

A number of our prominent young attorneys met at the ollico of H. II. Wilkinson last week and orgon'zod themselves into a society to b^ known as the I. B. society. The object of the organization is tho discussiou of literary, historical, aud scioutilic topicp. The puper read last evening was prepared by H. D. VunCleave and its subject, "The Philosophy of liecoifnizmg Superior Forces." After tho pu per was read an auimuted debate was indulged in by the members. The object of this society is a worthy ona aud THE JOUH.NAL, dorses it most heartily.

We May Hear a Bishop.

Tho Bishops of the Methodist church hoid a business meeting in Indianapolis this week, and liov. G. W. Switzer has written to engage one of them to preach on the church extension cause here noxt Sunday. If a Bishop caunot come, some eminent divine will bo sent to lill the Methodist pulpit in this city.

ax

'^-7

Working

rKoruc

can tako Simirons Liver Jlejru at

without loss of time orih:'-3 ger froin exposure. !fc takes tho place of si doctor* and costly prescript and is then jib re the eino to lto kept in th". household lo he ui von upon any indication ol'approaehing sickness. ]t contains no dangerous ingredients hut is purely ve^et ili!e, gentle yet thorough in ii-• action, and can 1M iriwn with safety :m 1 t:.' tsatissfact'ii-y r'-'.uir., person re:rardU-.--ij al' .1 It, has ro equal.

Guilty of Pigicide-

The jury iu tho case of Wasson vs. Wasson for feloniously killing a pig returned a verdict of guilty last evening, fining the dofendmit $3 aud costs. As this i« tho third trial tho total costs for Jos. Wassou to pay will be about $150.

Tho line of the del'onso was that the hog died of a disease (presumably traumatic tetanuti) superinduced by reoeiving a knile wound at tlio hand of a pig doctor iu Browu's Valley in the warm July weather, and not from broken jaw caused by contact with an oak rail in the hands of Jos. Wusson. 'Squire Warbrittou was p.t on tho standby the defense as a medical expert to testify that the hog might have died from the knife wound.TWS

A

|0ug hypothetical

qutstiou covering tho period of the pig's visit to Jos. Wassou's farm, its return home, sickness ami death was put and tho 'Squiro asked what in his medical opinion was the cause of ita death. The 'Squire did not know nor did he express himself us to whether there would have been 111 appearance of outhanabia.

"Idle Hours.''

'IIIE JOUICNAL has received a copy of "Idle Hours" with the compliments of the author, Cupt. W. DeWitt Wallace. Tho book is a collection of tho Captain's fugitive poems written from time during the course of a busy lile. They all possoss tru? poetic merit and the reader is elevated by their inspiring thoughts. Amoag the number the volume contains is ouo "To the Sohlior Boj," written in memory of Hubert iiina, a corporal in tho author company, and who volunteered from this county. The volume is handsomely bound and would make a beautiful holiday present.

A Brute In Limbo.

Enoch Miller, residing in the Valley, was IIHH been bofoie tho tyor for wifebeating aud fined und costed $31.33. He will work it out ou tho stone pile, llis wife appeared against him and stated that it was impossible for lior to uudergo his drunkeu brutality. Her face WHS marked with bloody scars which spoke even stronger than her words, and tho littlo live ynr old girl Mie led ly tho hand nodded approvingly lo nil that wus said. —. 4

*?jnaumptlon surely Cured. To TUB KDITOH:— Ploaso Inform your ruaderi that I havo a punitive remedy for tho nbovo-uatucd dlseuHo. lly ltn timely uso thousaudB of hopeless awes havo been permanently cured. I shall bo glad io noiid two bottles of my remedy FREE to any of Jour roadcra who havo consumption If they will »end mo their Express and P. O. addross. RespocttalIS. T.

A.

HLOCOil. M. 0.. 181 Poarl St.. N. *.

Tho ladles of Montgomery county ar deriving a ^ioat deal of aid from Ladies Comfort. Kee ad.

Every Symptom (lone.

i't'olmbly no inflicts so much contnniojis p«iln us t'luMiiniitlsm, Over no slujrlo complaint Itus Or. David KUIIIKHIV'K Favorite' tcnio.lv, of Kouwloiit N. V., wou tuore cure* Mian ulicumatisni ity ii, n^(. aifonlzlnv patient, can once more u*o his limbs ami bV In-eil from past years of pain. r. ['rank Slrult, a well known nien-himt ot

N

Sciatic Rheumatism

My fiis( wus a very bad one, iiuil none ot' the menus tuKen K"ve me relief. I uso l)r. DnvUl Kennedy KuvoHte Itemedy, of ilounilout. N. and uni entii-ely rid of my trouble. Onlv three bottles biou«lit about this wonderful result..It has built me up and been or great

mondlUoothe^sun,1:^^^

1

Dr. Kennedy's Favorite Remedy.

Made at HOUND OUT, N. v. #1 0 for