Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 20 June 1891 — Page 4
L:
-sPSi
Is more especially than any other a hereditary disease, and for this simple reason: Arising Irom impure and insufficient blood, the disease locates itself in the lymphatics, which axe composed of white tissues there is a period of foetal life when the whole body con-
Hood's
sIsta of whlte
tlssues'
9
aml
therefore the unborn child is
Sarsapa-
especially susceptible to this dreadful disease. But there
rilla
is a potent remedy for scrof
ula, whether hereditary or acquired. It is Hood's Sarsaparilla, which expels every trace of the disease and gives to the blood the quality and color of health. Get Hood's.
When my boy was two years |?n*jre|v old he "was attacked and suftered along time with scrofula Cli rod sores. The physician at length told us to give him Hood's Sar- ""Y Boy saparilla, which we did. Two bottles cured him. He is now 10 years old and has not had any sign of scrofula since. We recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla to all our friends." MRS. E. C. CLIPPER, 8 Kidder St., Cleveland, O.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Sold fcy all druggists. SI six for SS. Prepared only fcy C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
WEEKLY JOURNAL.
PRINTED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING By T. H. B. McCAIN.
Entered at the Postolhce at Craw fordsville Indiana, as second-class matter,
WEEKLY-
One year in udvance Six months Three months -10 One month 15
DAILY—
One year in advance 85.00 Six months 'i.50 Three months 1.25 Per week, delivered or bv mail 10
FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1891.
This Date in History—June 20.
1485—Richard. Duke of Gloucester. proclaimed king under title of Richard III. 1743—Anna LetitiaAikeu (Mrs.
Barbauld) born.
1753—The Hindoos crowded the Black Hole of Calcutta with English captives, of whom 123 died in one ni^ht. 2832—Anna Maria Porter, novelist, died. 1637—William IV.kingof Great,
Britain, died.
MRS. llARUAULD.
18C4—Last attempt of the Federals to storm the defenses of Peteisburg, Va. in five days they had lost 10,(100 men. 1867—Formal cession of Alaska completed by
Russian government date from which United States ownership is calculated. 1876 —Antonio Lope/, do Santa Anna (generally called SantA Anna) died in the City of Mex- •••.. ico born Feb. 21,1705, in Jalapa.
THF Cincinnati Commercial Gazette remarks that there were too many unsuccessful office-seekers in the Indianapolis conference to make the list of attendants seem formidable theie.
The
Stftte Department, through Gen
eral Foster, special agent to bring about ^'reciprocity" between various countries,
hope! feooti to Announce further eueceee in that direction. Mr. Foster has largely had the entire conduct of negotiations to insure reciprocity, and can be warmly congratulated upon the success which has thus far attended his efforts.
THAT Indianapolis conference grows small by degrees and beautifully less. The Michigan City Notes and Marion Chronicle say they were not represented and have no sympathy with any such movement. HepreEDntative Lindersmith, of Wayne county, says he was not in it, and doesn't expect to be. When all are
""heard from it will turn out that the conference was a very small affair.
SECRETARY Foster is considering the advisability of issuing an order directing that American tin be used in the construction of all public buildings. The law now requires American iron and steel to be used in these structures and also in all ships built for the navy. As soon as the manufacture of the Ameri can product reaches a point where the great supply needed can be readily furnished in this country the order will probably be issued.
As THE barometer measures the weight or pressure of the atmosphere, so the postoilice measures the business of a city. The increase of $100 of the salary of Postmaster Bunnell indicates that the business of Crawfordsville during the past year has had a steady and substantial growth. The city has had no boom like Kokomo, Marion, Anderson or Muncie or any of the natural gas towns, but it has kept right abreast of them in its business. In point of solidity Crawfordsville is one of the best towns in the State, gas or no gas.
THE Rev. Dr. Atticus G. Haygood, of Georgia, is manager of the fund established by the late John F. Slater, of Norwich, Conn., for the benefit of the negroes of the South and the development of education among them. At the late meeting of the trustees in New York Dr. Haygood said "The negro's right in the public schools of the South was in mortal jeopardy while the last Congress was in session. The passage and enforcement of what the Southern press called 'the force bill' would have wrecked the negro's chances of public education. The Tightness and wrongness of this result I am now considering I speak of hard, cold facts of actual not ideal relations of conditions, not theories. The Southern white people,
whose money maintains the public schools, would have abolished the whole system before they would have paid for the education of the negroes under the conditions which they believed to be involved in that measure."
WABASH COLLEGE AND CO-EDUCATION Every true and enlightened friend of Wabash College will rejoice to know that a committee has been appointed to consider and report on the proposition to admit young lady students into that institution. The banishment of females from our higher institutions of learning, was never anything but a, species of barbarism that had its origin in the
An
cient idea that woman was unworthy of any consideration whatever in the scheme of civilization—that she was doomed to be a mere toy or plaything for some and a beast of burden for others. Everybody on earth except those who have controlled Wabash College, seem to be outgrowing this narrow and illiberal notion as to the sphere of women. Conservatism is well enough at times, and in proper place but all must recognize the fact that the world is advancing, and that knowledge, humanity, charity and good will are beating down the barriers that ignorance, superstition and inherited notions, have heretofore placed in the pathway of woman's advancement. The trustees of Wabash College must recognize this fact, or prepare the great institution which they control, to become a mere straggler in the grand campaign for the elevation of the human race. The college is wealthy. Benevolent men have endowed till it now has the means of doing good. Will God forgive those who control it if they shut their eyes to the light of this glorious age of advancement, and suffer the possibilities of such an institution to go forever unrealized? The voice of Crawfordsville, the voice of Indiana, the voice of all who plead for a higher and better civilization, are crying out for the new step to be taken that will recognize women as worthy of the highest education, the liberty to engage in whatever calling her talents will enable her to pursue with success, and make her what she is 6o well fitted to be, the highest type of humanity. Old Wabash, open your doors and 6ay to ail the young ladies of the country, you are welcome here, and the grand old institution will have a new birth she will start in a new race with good prospect of winning the proudest laurels and ac lomplishing results commensurate with her great endowment. X.
A BRITISH C0NSPL ON TIN PLATE, The tin plate wallers are respectfully referred to the statement of Mr. J. Hayes Sadler, the British Consul at Chicago, sending to Lord Salisbury, under date of April 17, 1291, his annual consular report, in which he writes as follows:
Tin plate manufacturing will soon be fairly started in Chicago. Messrs. Norton & Sons, one of the largest manufactures of cans, and importers of tin plate, have now nearly completed a steel furnace and rolling mills at Marwood, Chicago, which will soon be in operation, when they expect to turn out sufficient for their own use the steel sheets being manufactured at the works. In tim^ it is not doubted that the country will be independent of importing the metal which completes the operation. It is also expected that the substitution of machinery for hand labor, with which tinning is now done, will materially reduce the cost, and within three or four years plates will be made greatly cheaper than those now imported from England, and entirely of American material and with American labor. The St. Louis' Stamping Company are already making tin plates on a small scale for the market, and are proceeding to extend their works, while other factories are starting or proposed elsewhere. The Illinois Steel Company of Chicago are also said to be projecting the erection of mills for the manufacture of tin plates to supply the large demand of the local packing business, and the house and car roofing manufactories. It is confidently believed that the appliance of new process invented, everything being done by machinery, will lower the cost of production to a point which will in a few years remove any fear of competition, and entirely exclude imported plate.
The pains he takes to tell anything looks very much as if they had discovered that the tin plate liars of the Democratic and Mugwump un-American press could not be depended upon to give them the facts, and had asked to have British consuls instructed to report on the situation.
THE Jeffersonian creed stands the test with the common people. It is their creed of political faith. In all the mutations of parties and the clash of issues, the party of and for the people stands. It will stand so long as free government exists.—Frankfort Crescent,
The Jeffersonian creed, though, is quite different from the present Democratic creed, especially on the tariff and commerce. In his second annual message President Jefferson said: To cultivate peace and maintain commerce and navigation in all their lawful enterprises, to foster our fisheries and nurseries of navigation, and for the nurture of man, and protect the manufactures adapted to our circitinstances. The remaining revenue on the consumption of for
eign articles is paid cheerfully by those who can afford to add foreign luxuries to domestic comforts, being collected on our seaboards and frontiers only, and incorporated with the transactions of our mercantile citizens. It may be the pride of an American to ask, wLat farmer, what mechanic, what laborer, ever sees a tax-gatherer of theUnitedStates':"' jf such sentiments were uttered now the Credent would brand them as political heresies. Jefferson was as ultra in his protection views as is McKinley now. How the Crescent or any Democratic newspaper can reconcile the views of Mr. Jefferson on the tariff with those of Mr. Cleveland is past comprehension.
ii.i yseto ir.v.
William Combs went to Hoopston, 111., last Tuesday to make it his future home.
Rev. Azbill, of Indianapolis, preached at the Christian church last Sunday to a crowded house. His theme was missionary work.
William Rider will go South again next week, not for health this time but for the purpose of making an investment in real estate.
Children's Dav was observed and well attended at both the Methodist aud Christian churches last Sunday. The collections amounted to about twenty dollars.
John Henderson was made the proud father of a pair twin6 last Tuesday evening, one a girl the other a boy. Together weighed 18 pounds.
Harvest will be here in full blast by next week, and it is said there never was a better prospect in Wayne township for a good crop than now. Corn looks splendid.
Uncle Dick Carney, of Dayton, Ohio, came back to his old stamping ground Tuesday to spend a month with his friends. He has broken down, physically, very much since his last visit.
Last Friday a little girl of John Hightower was thrown from her horse and had her arm dislocated at the elbow besides receiving internal injuries. Hute Young, a son of Thomas Young, the contractor, also while playing fell off the fence and received the same injury. Both are supposed to be doing well at this writing.
John S. Munns has sent Alpine, the famous little trotter to the Crawfordsville track for training. He hopes to make for him a record of 2:30 before the season is over. Dr. Hamilton will also send his fine Kentucky horse to the same track next week. He has a warrant saying that his horse if properly handled will go a mile in 2:20 before the season is over.
HA VELL UN.
Miss Ratie Johnson is on the sick list. There will be no Children's Day at the Friends church.
I. H. Butler, of Darlington, was in our midet last week selling farming implements.
Will Townsend and wife, of Plainfield, were the guests of Joseph Johnson last week.
Mahlon Butler and wife have returned from a visit with relatives in Parke county.
The ice cream and strawberry festival at Garfield Saturday night drew largely from this place.
Rev. Painter and a Mr. Armstrong from Morgan county, were at Friends monthly meeting Sunday.
Miss Lucinda Johnson is at present with Miss Kate Royer, of Darlington, Assisting in her dress,making establishn»„t.
The cottage prayer meeting which is held in Flat Creek vicinity still continue to grow in number and also in interest. The next one will be held at J. H. Stewart's Friday.
Pleasant Butler and wife, Clarence Peterson, L. M. Miller and Misses Lizzie Brown, Ethel Lynch, Maude Johnson and Icy Hamilton attended Children's Day at Potato Creek Sunda y.
OAK GROVE.
Childrens' Day exercises at Center Grove, Sunday, June 21. A. J. Henderson is having a barn built, Young's brothers doing the work.
The social prayer meetings which are being held in the Flat Creek neighborhood and which have accomplished such good results will be held at J. H. Stewart's on Friday evening this week.
Miss Helen Mount arrived homo from Coates' College Tuesday for the summer vacation.
Some of us are wondering what kind of a joke the editor was playing on his readers when he published a part of the great composite novel and quit off before he got to Bill Nye. We are nearly dying for the rest of it.
Everybody is invited to attend the ice ice cream supper at the Shannondale church the 20th. The ice cream suppers of the paBt held at that place have been noted for their generous dishes of cream, excellent cakes, good order, large crowds and everything that makes a pleasant evening. This affair is under the auspices of the Ladies' Missionary Society, who will see to it that the reputation of the past is not injured.
OFF 1 EL.
Miss Lulu Milner has four more weeks of school Miss Josie McCoy who has been quite sick ID ter now.
Next Sunday week i6 Children's Day and a good time is expected. Everybody invited.
The ice cream and strawberry festival given by the band boys at Uncle Fred Imel's Saturday night was a grand success. A large crowd was in attendance and a good time enjoyed by all and we congratulate the boys on their good music. I'ry BLACK-DRAUGH iea for Ey6pepsta.
.v/ ir
iioss.
Mrs. Loop was at Crawfordsville Tuesday. O. B. Hultz of Jamestown, was here Wednesday.
The Big Four pay car passed through Wednesday. P. M. Brown was at Indianapolis Wednesday.
A feed barn has been erected on the fair grounds. The foundation for Dr. King's new house is being laid.
J. B. Evans and family, of Waveland, have been visiting relatives at this place Poea Eagle and Pocahontas have been brought home from Lebanon for train ing.
The Big Four will put in nearly 2,000 new crossties on section six this summer.
The Midland will run an excursion to the Shades Sunday. Due here 9:20. SI round trip.
Miss Ada Hatcher, who has been in Montana for several years, has returned to this place.
It is reported that two section men at Advance have tied up a handcar on the Midland for debt.
GAltFJELJt.
Our Sunday School is progressing finely with Calver Long, superintendent and Byron Cox, secretary.
The Garfield brass band will furnish music for the ice cream supper at Jackman's school house next Saturday, June 20.
Miss Ella Thornburg, one of our enterprising young ladies, has returned home from Chicago where she has been en gaged as book keeper and short-hand reporter.
Childrens' Day at this place on the fourth Sunday in June. Everybody is invited to come and bring their dinner and spend the day with us and have a general good time.
The ice cream supper given by the band boys at this place last Saturday evening was a grand success. The boys desire to say through the columns of your paper that they are thankful to those in the neighborhood for their liberal donations and to the community at large for their patronage. The receipts of the evening were something over S37. net receipts 824.17.
WAVELAW.
Arthur Canine is working for George Dillman. Miss Anna Cuppy returned from Indianapolis Tuesday.
Ambrose Dillman is visiting home folks at Columbus, Ind. Mrs. A. F. Ramsey, of Crawfordsville, spent Sunday with Frank Belton and wife.
The receipts of the supper and lectmo at the Christian church Tuesday night were about $20.
Tuesday about 20 feet of the mill dam at Bluff Mills concluded to get a move on itself and accordingly moved off down the creek. The break in the dam was not discovered until the machinery stopped in the mill. The break will be repaired by Friday.
ALAMO.
W. E. White is home from college to spend vacation. Singing at Texas school house every Thursday night.
Mrs. N. W. Myers, of your city, is visiting friends here. Miss Nettie McSpadden died last Monday morning at 7:45, from dropsy.
Miss Caroline Etter has returned from Indianapolis where she has been attending school.
Lou White has been making some fast time on his bicycle. He is getting to be quite an expert and will make a trip through the west after harvest.
Next week a party of expert fishermen will sport with the finny tribe near the Narrows of Sugar Creek. The party consists of J. P. Wirt, George Animerman, Mark Truax, O. D. Humphrey, E. A. McSpadden and W. E. White. They will be gone a week and expect a good time
WIXGATE.
Corn looks well. Clarence Long has a new bicycle and is very proud of it.
Several from Wingate went to the river fishing Tuesday. "y*'J Children's day was a success at the M. E. church Sunday night.
J. W. Utterback was in Wingate Tuesday and traded buggies with Henry Ivrug.
The ladies of the M. E. church will give a necktie festival on Saturday night, June 27.
Mr. and Mrs. Potter, Mrs. Clark and Mrs. Caldwallader gave a birthday supper for John Potter Monday evening. The supper was served with ice cream and strawberries.
—Fifteen of the members of the P. O. S. A., lodge visited the New Richmond lodge on Thursday evening, and report that they had a fine time. The order there seems to be on the verge of anew boom, and it is to be hoped that their numbers can be doubled this year and each member is going to keep "kiching" around until that number is reached.
BLACK-DRAUGHT tea cures Constipation.
RAILWAY 1IMECARDS.
MOHON ROUTE.
1:00a.m Night Mail (daily) 1:51a.m 1 -.UOp.ui Day Mail (dally) 1:3fip.m [Above trains only stop at county seats.] 5:o:tp.m.Greencius. and Laf. Aecom... 8:21a.m 0:10a.m Way Freight 2:40p.m
i7T BIG 4—Peoria Division.
9:i oa.m Express—Mall 0:15a.m 1 Mail (dally) 12::i9a.n) 5:l'Jp.m Mail—Express 1:38p.n l:U8p.m Mail—Express 0:45p.in
VANDALIA.
0 44a.m Express 5:lh|).ui Mail S::$lpm .Fast Line Kxpr fcs(daily) 11:50 am.. Freight #t -v,
"A/, S *5
D.
h.
a:
NORTH
0:18pm. 8:ltia.m pin ..11:50 am
Is At It Again.
He is Selling Of All Kinds
At the Old Stand in Harter Block
216 East Main Street.
Tbe Stock is Entirely New.
I^T
We are Making a Big Drive in Hats, and offer nobby thatches for the dome of thought at rices that Paralyze Competition and Popularize Our Hats.
Tannenbaum Brothers.
A.
"V E3
*J®M|t0
-A-l 11lie XjeaciirLs:
A MgE S
1
-r
-$t
Are buying Deering Binder and Deering
Mowers because they run lighter, do bet-
ter work and last longer thanany other
kind.- Tile Deere Lwath Hay-loader
saves raking and pitching. Sold only by
Buggies and Hardware at Lowest Prices.
