Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 26 December 1891 — Page 2
WEEKLY JOURNAL.
PRINTED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING By T. H. B. McCAIN.
Entered nt tlio Postoftiee at Crn-n fordsville 1 milium, us second-class matter,
WEEKLY—
One year In advance Blx months Three months One month
DAILY-
The annual Christinas
11.25
One year In advauce ••J-"" Blx months 2-5? Three months Per week, delivered or by mall
10
SATURDAY, DEC. 2G. 1891.
Special Announcement.
fireside papers in the country. It has lf large pages, is issued twice a month, and is devoted exclusively to agrieul-
ture and literary matters. The price of the Weekly JovunaIj including the Farmers' Friend. is All subscribers are entitled to receive '•JontNATi the remainder of the year free.
lotterv. The lottery faction seems to be in the lead.
Tut: tin-plate works of the British trust, in Wales, are to run on half time this whiter, for the reason that the demand from this country has been so greatly reduced through the manufact
ure of tin here.
The man best suited for the presidency of Wabash College should bo chosen, even if ho be a minister. His clerical predilections should have nothing whatever to do with his selection. By all means let the best man be obtained.
The latest fool idea is the eating of dog ilesh as a consumption cure. In absurdity it rivals the disgusting custom of drinking "sheep tea" for the measles. This latter custom was prevalent fifty years ago, but it is fully abreast of tho dog eating custom.
2-oultrv
train
from Canada to Boston was smaller than in previous years. It consisted of twelve cars. The value of the poultry at the frontier was 825,000. Tho duty amounted to $8,750. This is due to the wage earners' tariff. Our farmers should not forget it.
The best commendation that can be given President Harrison for his appointment of Judge Woods and S. B. Elkins to positions of honor, is the wild
howl of the Democratic papers. I» 'proves that both gentlemen are Bepublicans in whom there is no guile, and men who will perform their duties fearlessly.
Ouh exports continue to be very large. For the month of November the increase in exports of breadstuffs over the corresponding month of last year was nearly S17,000,000. During the eleven months ending November 30 there has been an increase of more than $67,000,000 in these exports, and the total
reaches the enormous stun of $194,077,007.
Thk silk industry of the United Htatec
has had a
t,remarkable
U5.UU0 American silk operatives of 1N7-1 Circuit have grown to 50,000. In that year1 bounds we made §30,000,000 worth of silk and imported about S'23,000,000. hi 1890
the corresponding figures were S(i(5,000,000 to $3-1,000,000 less the duty. Silk factories have sprung up from New England to Kansas. That the quality and patterns of Ainericin silks aro constantly improving need hardly be added, for our inventors have been active in this branch as in all others.
Rkpkesentatiyi: Doan, of Ohio, is preparing a bill which he will soon introduce in Congress, that will revolutionize the whole matter of adjudicating pension clainiB. He has taken the com-mon-sense ground that when a soldier enlisted, he was examined by a board of army surgeons, and his being accepted isj)rima facie evidence of his soundness of body. This, he thinks, should do away with the present requirement of proof of a pension applicant's good health at the time of enlistment, which iB absolutely impossible to furnish in many cases, because those who could give the required testimony are all dead. The affidavit of the claimant that he is suffering from disease contracted in the line of duty, supported by the evidence of a physician that he is in such condition, is to be considered sufficient to make out a case. If the government disputes the claim the burden of proof ... "wi.1 rest upon it and not the soldier.
YOU DO J'T SAY SO.
The Lafayette Courier commenting on the decision of Judge McBride, which is said to bear upon Pettit case, says:
As an inducement to increase the circulation of the Weekly Jouknal we will send during the coming year to each subscriber who renews his subscription and to all new subscribers the Farmers' Friend, one of the best agricultural and have lost none of their hopes of si cur ing a new trial. The brief for 1 lie Hp-
The attorneys for Pettit state that the above decision has no bearing whatever on the Pettit case. There is no question raised as to Judge Langdon's right to send the case on change of venue to any county he saw fit. The point made by Pettit's attorneys on which they I ase one of the grounds for a new trial, and the one which relates to the change of venue is, that the court struck out of
Pottit's affidavit asking for a change of jor
venue, all that portion Btating that a bias and prejudice existed againBt the prisoner in Montgomery county, and after thie had bi en stricken out he did not have Pettit again 6ign the affidavit. That the affidavit on which the case was was sent to Montgomery county was not Pettit's, inasmuch hb portions of it had been expunged after he had signed it, and he did not sign it after the change had been made. Pettit's attornoys feel
confident that this is a strong point,and
peal is now in the hands of the printer, and as soon as it is completed the case will be pushed to the supr me court.
new published the followin The
nowa
columns:
The Democratic party of Louisiana is 1'"* shipped |U to an amount of tin-plate
split into two factions, lottery and anti- 1° -)"u' P"'1118,
professional beggars and has a good poor farm with a brand new superintendent for all who are mendaciously inclined.
The sudden death of Senator Plumb, of Kansas, removes one of the conspicuous and prominent figures in the United States Senate. He was one of the leading Republicans of the country, and left his impress upon its legislation. He began life as a printer and arose from the case to one of the most exalted
positions in the Republic through the force of his talent and his Btrorg in
dividuality. Not only his State but his country will miss his services. Kansas, hower, is rich in material and his successor, whoever he may be, will doubtless worthily fill the dead Senator's
place.
growth. Wo are
Gecond only to France in our manufactures of silk, the value of which last year was §(0,U0U,000, three-fifths tho value of French silk production. The
Mlrcon
mers
of Monday
'he Indianapolis Xeirs
The Anderson tin-plate factory lias been running month l.o-inorrow, and
carload going to
(,m
Indianapolis. On Saturday eveningthe company received an order lor (i.l)OO boxes, and this morning began work turning them out. The tin will be shipped first to New Orleans, and from there I it will be distributed to Mexico, Culm and Central America.
And yet the J\Vr.s persists in claiming that no tin plate was ever made in America and that none ever will lie made here. Could Dot some one take the editor ol the Setvs down to tho "car load" that
went to Indianapolis and rub his nose against it "r But, if such an ocular demonstration was made to him, he would go back to his office, and in the next issue, deny that any tin-plate is made in
the United States.
The signing of the paper of a pro
fessional dead beat and beggar by city and county officials who solicit charity from others for tho old vampire, is certainly deserving of criticism. For the past two or three years a ridiculous old scalawag has gone about with bundled up limbs plying industriously the trade of a mendicant. He always carries the recommendation of some public man and springs it on the unsuspecting with telling tfTeet until it becomes an old story. Crawfordsville is not a large enough place to enjoy the luxury of
for has first
Evek since the defeat of Mills
Speaker tlio Indianapolis Sentinel bad a bad taste in its mouth. It denounced Crisp as being the representative of everything disreputable, and now sineo the nomination Sy the I'resident of Judge Woods as one of the new
Judges its wrath is without To have tho ill will of the
Seuiinel is a "decoration of honor," to use the language of grasslmrner Bynuin. and Judge Woods should feel compli
mented.
Death of Mrs. W. 0. Lockhart. Word was received here Monday of the death of Mrs. W. G. Lockhart, wjich occurred at her home in Kendallville ISundav after a long illness.
.-1 Lcadvv
Since its first introduction, Elcctnc Bitters has gained rapidly in popular favor, until now it is clearly in the lead among pure medicinal tonics and alteratives—containing nothing which permits its use as a beverago or intoxicant, it is recognized as the best and purest medicine for all ailments of stomach, liver or kidneys.—It will cure sick headache, indigestion, coustipation, and drive malaria from the system. Satisfaction guaranteed with each bottle or the money will be refunded. Price only 50 cents per bottle. Sold by Nye & Co.
K" Guaranteed Cure,
We authorize our advertised druggist to sell Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, upon this condition. If you are afflicted with a cough, oold or any lung, throat or chest trouble, and will use this remedy as directed, giving it a fair trial, and experience no benefit, you may return the bottle and have your money refunded. We could not make this offer did we not know that Dr. King's new discovery could be relied on. It never disappoints. Trial bottle free at Nye & Co.'b drug Btore. Large size 50 cents and 81.
OLUB,
.Ail Address by Hon. P. S. Kennedy—Remarks by J. M. Waugh and W. A. Rice.
A goodly number was in attendance at the
dispateh in its hear. pa"ty to put a tariff on such articles o.uy, as would develop the production this country, to such an extent as to measurably supply our wants.
The tariff on sugar for a hundred years lias fail (1 to do this and hence sugar was [nit o:i tl.e free list. At the same time we seemed to boon the eve of a new development in tho sugar industry, and it was thought prudent to give entourage mo it by the sugar bounty, and by tLiis this policy we have saved to the people 8-10.COO 000. Wo have released them fr the payment of over 8fi0.00l),000 of tariff' and encouraged the beet sugar industry by the bounty paid, which this year was only 1,000,000. Putting tin-plate on the free list would simply prolong tho English monopoly and keep 1 lie farmer paying exorbitant prices to a foreign country for our tin plate. Tho The McKinley law has absolutely devel oped the tin business to an extent, tho most sanguine friends of the new law had not dreamed of. The New York Tribune, nas recently published letters from more than twenty factories that •were preparing to make American tinplate, all of which would be in operation by the rst of February, 1SS32. Such development of the tin-plate industry in this country would break down the English inoiioly and would soon give us cheaper and better tin than that received from abroad, as has been the case with scores of other articles whose manufacture we have succeeded by aid of protection, in establishing iu this country. The new price lists issued by our carpet manufacturers sho» thsit the price of carpets has come down instead of going up since the new law went into effect.
So far, not a manufactured product has gone up but most have come down. The reason that sugar has become so cheap tho world over, is because of the immense sugar beet business which supplies seven-tenths of all the sugar consumed in the world. When the tariff on sugar was reduced by the Walker tariff of IMG, no such result followed because no one had then commenced to make sugar from beets and the sugar beet industry has been wholly developed by the French and German tariff. This, of course, is the merest outline of Mr. Kennedy's speech. He was followed by J. M. Waugh and W. A. Rice in some pointed remarks, which were well received. The club is growing in numbers and influence and bids'air to acco nplish much during the coming campaign. The club will be addressed in two weeks by F. P. Mount.
Has Renounced Democraoy.
Mat Goben, who hap just been relieved of his position of county poor farm superintendent by a Democratic Board of Commissioners, has stated that he has had enough of Democracy, and will henceforth devote liis energies to a belter cause. It ill be remembered that Mr. Goben went into 1h^ oHiee under protest and that he succeeded there l:e yond the general expectations, the grand jury and commissioners iihvin letuinlng very flattenrg reports as to his management. Wry naturally then Mr. Goben felt that he had justly earned a re-election and also felt confident o" getting it, especially as Mr the Republican on the board, who had opposed the ousting tiger to give first place,
management was eminently satisfactory and as a Democrat was to have the place he should lend his support to tho present administration. Mr. livers, so Mr. Goben says, also co npliniented him on his management and also pledged him his support. Imagine his chagrin and indignation then when he found that both of the Democrats on the board from whom he might naturally expect support had given the position to another gentleman. In view of this rough treatment at the hands of. an ungrateful party, Mr. Goben considers himself to have had enough ot it and expects to be heard more materially on this issue in the next campaign.
Strong Witnesses.
Among the thousands of testimonials of cures by Dr. MileB's New Heart Cure, iB that of Nathan Allisons, a wt I', known citizen at Glen Rock, Pa., who for years had shortness of breath, sleeplessness, pain in left side, shoulders, Bmothering spells, stc. one bottle of Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure and one box of Nerve and Liver Pills, cured him. Peter Jaquet, Salem. N. J., is another witness. For twenty years suffered with Heart Disease, was turned away by physicians as incurable, death stared him in the face, could not lay down for fear of smothering to death. Immediately after using New Cure he felt better and could lay down and sleep all night, and is now well man. The New Cure is sold, also free book, by Nye fc Co.
MORTON Uniterm Comforting
Eepulican Club Monday even
ing. Seven new members were enrolled and after some other preliminary business Hon. P. S. Kennedy was introduced ns the principal speaker of the evening. Mr. Kenneky said that as he mu ed to speak very briefly, he would go at once to a discussion of the subject assigned him, that was, "Why Did the
of the McKinley Bill Put Sugar
tun Free List and Put a Higher Tariff on Tin-plate? Tf putting sugar on the fre) list made sugar cheaper, why would 11 not make tin-plate cheaper to put that article on the free list also?'' The lteui•• sin platform of 1888 laid down the doitrine that we favor such revision of tue i.n iiT laws as will tend to check importations of such articles as we make or could make in this country, and to from the tarilf such articles as
Ciln lt)
produce at home. The Mo-
Kinlo/ bill was frame iu s'.ricl co ilonnity to this doctrine. Sugar was put on the free list, because after a hundred years o!' high tariff on sugar, we were not yet making enough sugar to furnish 0 ir ople one-tenth of what they consum. d. It was the policy of the He] ub-
EPPS' COCOA
Breakfast.
"Hv si thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operation of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the tine properties of well-selected Cocoa. Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast.tables with a delicately llavored beversijre wliic!» may save us inany heavydoctors' bills. Itisbj the judicious use of such articles ot diet that a constitution may b^ gradually built up strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are tloatingaround us ready to attack wherever there Is a weak point. We may escape manv a fatal shaft by -oping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished frame."- C'feff Scrvicr Gazette Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only in half-pound tins. lv Grocers, labelled thus: JAMES Kl'PS & CO.,Homepliuthlc Chemists. London Kuirlatid.
For Nervous Prostration, JsVrv. jousand Physical Debility, Vital Kxhitustion, Insomnia Pain in I tho Hack, ('old Ha nils or Keo? 1 H.kI Circulation. Itluc Lim under tin* Kv« s, Piiuph ami all otherNt-rvous
Illuoii Diseases iu eit :r sex. They mal new healthy'Mood store the'N jund rYn'^V^ 1
!h«J rOSSfjlt flush
1-IIK IN CRAWL-OKDSyiLLL, Mottuit Oc Morgan, Druggists.
it
Iiriiar-
Jr a via!. For •ale liy 7 K«t!s cri'or:! mail. SAFE, CERTAIN, SPEEDY. ilOBES'S MKKilt'BXIS «'., KAJ KitXrjSK'O«r (,'fIICAOO.
NiJ.
QUiCKLY, THOROUGHLY, FOREVER CURES uy a new nurfected scientific method thut cannot, fall unless tlio enso is beyond human aid. You l'eel improved tho tlrsi day.feel a honelit every day: soon know yourself a. kinc aiuonn men in body, mind and heart. Drains and losse3 ended. Every obstacles to happy married life removed. Nerve foreo.
Y7ill,energy, brainpower, when failing or lost aro restored by this treatment. Allsmnllnndweak portions of the body enlarged and strengthened. Victims of abuses and excesses reclaim your manhood! Sufferersfrom folly,overwork,ill health, regain your vigor! Don't, despair, even if in the last stages. Don'tbedlslieartened if quacks have robbed you. Let us show you that medical science
and business honor still exist here go band in hand. Write for our books with explanations and proofs. 2,000 references to cured patients. ERIE MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO, TSt. Y.
TAKE API LL
Hobb's Are the Best on Earth. ^L^-
Act gently vet promptly on tho uyi:it, KIDNEYS and DOWELS, dispelling Hcadachcs, Fevcrs and Colds, thoroughly elcansing tho system of disease, and cures habitual constipation. They are sugar coated, do not gripe, very small, easy to take, and purely vegetable. 45 pills in each vial. Perfect digestion follows their use. They alisolutoly cure Kick liciu!nclie, and are rccommcnd-
0(1 by leading physicians. For sale by leading druggists or sent by mail Suets, a vial. Address
HOBP S MEDICINE CO,, Props., San Francisco or Chicago. FOR SALE IN CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND., BY Mollcti .V Morgan, Druggists.
Scientific American Agency for
CAVEATS,
TRADE MARKS, DESIGN PATENTS COPYRIGHTS, etc.
For information and free Handbook write to MUNN & CO., 361 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Oldest bureau for securing patents In America. Every patent taken out by us is brought before the public by a notice given free of charge in the
Jtfentifw Jtmeraaw
Largest circulation of any scientific paper in the -world. Splendidly Illustrated. No intelligent man should be without it. Weeklv, S3.00 a year $1.50 six months. Address MUNN & CO., VUULISUEUS, 3G1 Broadway, New York.
Unpublished Reminiscences and painters.
Ii®
•m
OTICE TO STOCKIIOI.DE US.
The annual meeting of the Stockholders of The Indiana Wire Fence Company will be held upon the second Thursday of January, 1802, The meeting is for the purpose of electing seven directors to serve the ensuing year, to hear reports from the Company's officers, and for the transaction of such other bust ness may come before the Stockholders. The meeting will be held at the Company's office 115 south Green street, at 7 o'clock p. in., January 14th, 1802.
C. M. CRAWFORD, President.
O. M. GIIEO.G, Secretary. Dec. 5th.
IDoxi't.
Farmers
to he KAI)KI)I
cheek. Suf-s ferers from I Derangement 3 the Nerves
Impure Wood 01 Kri ors. should
N.rv
Don't be deceived by one-horse dealers and street Jay Hawkers when you bring grain to to.vn. They will tell you that they are paying the highest market price when nine times out of ten we will give you from three to five cents per bushel more than they bid.
Don't
Exchange your wheat for an infprior Flour, when we wil' give .vou 8ti pounds of the celebrated Gold Leaf Flour md 10 pounds of bran for a bashel of wheat,
Don't
iI .- ]!!!. IKIItll'S Tonie I'IIIh, ihe oOcentf.
Take your feed grinding to old. wornout one-horse feed mills, when we do your grinding at same prices anil oil the best •roller feed mill in Indiana.
Don't. Don't, Don't forget that it will always pay you to traitc with a responsible lirm that has a reputation at staice.
•»CHABBS & REYNOLDS.®"
1). W II ITU,
EANCV FLORIDA for 5cts, S for 10 cts,
SCRIBNER'S-MAGAZINE.
An Exceptional Year!
The. y'oar ha.s been inarlced hi/ a (jrc tter nilrmtce, than (tni/ similar peirod since the. Maijaztne wa established. Not on In has the litcriirij and artistic, e.ece'lenee been maintained and inereased but a eorrespondinij hasbeeii made, in. the sale and inflnenee of the Maja~:)ie.. At the end oj Is')I the' etre illation Peterson, has risen, to n.or than I 'KlJiOO. It may juslli/ be promised that the. furthur imjirorements fur the rontim/ year wilt ba projxirtionate to tin se lanjely increased of a splendid man-1 ull"'i tunitio. Goben the position in the had told Goben that his|* /,
For Next Year.
is not possible to give, in a brief space, an account of all the features in
preparation, but the material is deficient in neither importance nor range of subject. Among the subjects treated:t
The Poor in the World's Great CJities.
It is proposed to publish a series of articles, upon a scale not before attempted, giving the results of special study aud work among the poor of the great cities. The ulan will include an account of the conditions of life in those cities (in many lands) where the results of research will be helpful for purpose of conparison as well as for their own intrinsic interst. While, from a scient fic point of view, the articles will be a contribution of great importance, the treatment will be thoroughly popular, and the elaborate llustrations will serve to make the presentation of the subject vivid as well as pictur sque.
Washington Allston.
Notice
••V. M. KKEVKS
AV,K. Ilr.Mi'iuu'.v,
White, Humphrey & Reeves.
ATTOKXKYS-AT-LAW,
Crawfordsville, Iik
Olllci'lO.'!
1
Main street.
The Only Seed Stoie
Seeds direct from Reliable Grocers.
Six 5 cent papers— 25 ets. Hve 5 cent papers—25 cts. and a Tube Hose bulb.
Seeds by the pound or quart, for every 50c worth, 1 Tube ltose. All these at catalogue prices.
POULTRY SUPPLIES, OYSTER SHELL, GRANULATED BONE.
OKANGKP— 1U cts. p'jr d.:z.
Sun Flower seed for Parrot?
N.
JOE TAYLOR.
Photographs.
Mrs. Willis will charge less for first-class work than any one in this county.
Tne oest cabinets for $1.50 that heretofore have been sold for $4 per doz.
Speoialty made of family groups antl children pictures.
South of Court House.
Letters of this foremost among early American
A number ot illustrations will leQd additional interest to the articles.
Important Momenta.
The aim of this series of very short articles is to discribe the signal occasions when tome decisive event took place, or when some great experiment WHS flr^t shown to be success-fill—such us the Atlantic cable, the first use of the telegraph and telephone, the first successful experiment with either, the night of the Chicago lire, tho scene at the moment of the first vote on the impeachment of Andrew Johnson, etc., etc.
Out ot Door Papers.
In the early spring will be begun anumber of seasonable articles, among them being Small Country Places, how to lay out and beautify them, by Snmuel Parsons, jrFishing Lore from an Angler's Note-book, by Dr. Leroy M. Yale. Mountain Station Life in New Zealand, by Sidney Dickens. Racing la Australia, bj Sidney Dickens with illustrations by Birge Harrison. The illustrations are made from original material.
.1 full prospectus appears in the Holiday Xumber, now icady.
P&XCB 25C. !3ATBAE.
Charles Striker's Sons Publisher's, 743 aid 745 Broadway,
New York..
ok administuatok'Sjsale of HEAL ESTATE. Notice is hereby given that as administrator of the estate of Peter Lewis Fisher, deceased and by order of the Circuit Court of Montgom, ery county, Indiana, I will sell at public auction at the south lront door of the court house in said county on the 4th day of Juuuary.lH!)2, between the hours of 10 u. in and 4 p. m., of said aay, the following- described real estate in said county and State, to-wit:
The north half of lot. number eighteen (18) in James Thomson's addition of out lots to the city of Crawfordsville.
Also, the undivided one-half of parts of lots one hundred and thirty-one (131) and one hundred and thirty-two (l.'W) in the original plat of the city of Crawfordsville, described as follows: Beginning at the nortnwest corner ol" said lot KIT and running thence south twentytwo C~'') feet and five (5) inches thence eastone hundred and nine (108) feet to an alley thence north twenty.-two (22) feet and five inches thence west one hundred and nine (100) fcet|to the place of beginning.
Also, part of thesoutheast quarter of section •'11, township 11) nort.n, range 4 west. Beginning at a point on the north mat gin of Market street 108 feet east of the southeast corner of lot No 10 in McClelland SConnards addition to I the City of Crawford vilie, and running thence cast forty-nine (4!)) feet thence north one hundred and forty-live (145) l'ev west forty-nine u'4!) feet thence su, hundred and forty-tive (145) feet toplu^eof beginning—beintr tiiedweiliDg formerly ocon]tied by the decedent,
TKHMS ()K SALE:—One-third cash, onethird In six months and |one-third in twelve months from date ol' sale, the purchaser executing notes Cor tho deferred payments bearing six per cent, from date "and secured by mortgage on the real estate sold. ll'a satisfactory bids are not received on that, day'.lie sale will lie continued from day today until all ol'said property is sold
A LliKKT C. .11-:.\N1S"X,
Administrator estate ol I'eter l„ rislier, deceased \V. Urunci-, attorney for Administrator. I)cc.5, lS!ll.
To 'on.vu in pti res
The undersigned having ben restored to healthily simple means, alter sullering tor several years with a severe lung atlectioii. and that dread disease 'iiiisiini)tiiii, is anxious to ni'iUe known to his fellow sillVereieis the means of cure. To those who desire it. he will, cheerfully send (five of charge) a copy of the prescription used which they will liu.i a sure euro for t'unsuiniitiim, A*lhti'ui, t'aturi-h, llnm-chit-is and till throat, and lung Muhuliis. lie hopes all snife-ei-.s will try his remedy, as it is invaluable. Those desiring the prescription, which will cost ilicm nothing, tin.) may prove a Messinir. will please address Ki:v. Kliw.uso A. Wii.sOn, ltio'iklyn. New York
G. w. PAUL
-ATTORNEY AT LAW
Will do all kinds of Probate Business, make Administrator's. Guardians and Trustee's Reports, and Deeds and Morttrajres at onehalf the price usually charged for the same, and will collect notes and accounts ami other debts at greatly reduced rates, and will make a specialty of compromising law suits and disputed claims. And will practice law iu all the jnstice courts at less than the usual charges and will buy a.,d sell'' real estate ou commission, and loan money' at the lowest rates obtainable on real estato security.
Oilice with White, Ilnniphrey-.t Reeves
P. S. KEN.VKDY, U. S. Commissioner.
O. KENNEDY Notary Public.:
Kennedy & Kennedy,
ATTUKNEYS-AT-LAW CRAWFOltDSYlLLK, INDIANA. Otlleein Orubauu block North Washington St-i
THEO. McMECHAJN, DKiSTTIST. CHAWFOKDSVILLE, INDIANA. Tenders his service to the public. Motto (rood work and moderate nriees."
JOHN L. SHRUM, Admit ted to bur Montgomery Circuit Court Feb. ••, 1 NHS. yiit rul prauiiec us attorney--ut-luw. Hoom No. 'i, ovc .loci's elothinK*: store, northwest corner Washington iiiiiu streets.
Money to Loan.
Houses and Lots for Sale Dwellings to Rent.
also
Abstracts ot Title and Deeds and Mortgages Carefully Prepared.
ALBERT C. JENN1S0N
Loan and Insurance a^ent, and abstractor a Conveyancer.
122 East Main St., Crawfordsville
Morgan & Lee
ABSTRACTORS, LOAN AND
INSURANCE AGENTS
V/ S-
.Money to I-oan at percent. I uteres
Farms and City Property For Sale.
Ijit'e, Fire HIKI Accident Insiinuicc.
Oilice North Washington st., Ornbaim Block, Crawfordsville, I nil.
FIRST MORTGAGE LOAN,
AT 4 PER CENT Interest payable Annually APPLY TO
C. W.WRIGHT
Fisher Block, Room 8, Crawfordsville, Inc*
$2. to $10.
HEROES & 00.
MP
CHEAPEST ON EARTH
Seals for Bank
\oK cieties, Corpoj ^oV*sLodge8,akc. al{ cils,
Steel Stan
fje ber Stamps Traveling Agt\ on Salary for \ly Trade. Circ
Muket 8t. Lou
IBQLDIEFFENBACH]
PROTAGON CAPSULI
Sure Care for Weak Men proved by reports of leading \slclans. State age in order
Price. 81. Catalogue Fr A safe and spee cure for Olei
rrict3» Qii
G&G
Stricture and
unnatural discharges. Prioofl iCuresal) Bloo«
unnatural dl
HREEK SPECIFIC Wand Shin SImuc'.SeroF.
ttlona lorti andSyphtlltle Affection*, without mercury. Price, Order from IDE PERU DRU6 & CHEMICAL CO. £&
W BtiMU HltWATm^ wa.
