Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 15 July 1893 — Page 8

IB

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EAST LIVERPOOL. OHIO-

Weekly

joumal

SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1893.

£JiOM KHEB AND TEEEL.

—R. W. Caldwell is studying law with Brush & Snyder. —A round trip fare of $5.00 to Chicago is Dot so bad.

Dr. Barnes will be at the Nutt Hotue Thursday, July 27. —Mrs. Nancy Hall haa returned to Wesley after a visit here. —New wheat is bringing 55 cents and Cleveland is President. —Herman McClner has resigned the position of assistant city engineer. —Prof. W. R. Alford, of Atlanta, Ga.. la the guest of his sister-in-law, Mrs. Clara Cfivin. —Bert Garner, who graduated in June, will be Prof. Smith's assistant in chemistry nest year. —Bob Snyder, nn old Crawfordsville boy, was married July 6 to Mies Mayme Baker, of Gerard, 111. —A. F. Ramsey is building an immense veranda to his residence. Large verandas are the style. —Dr. O. H. Jones did not go to the Shades aa announced, but still is in the city attending to his patients. —Mrs. Alma Kincaid and family, of Vevay, Ind., are visiting the family of Rev. J. M. Stafford for a few days. —George Graham is building a house nest to Horace Ensminger, on east Main street. —Lucky Baldwin, who has been visiting relatives here, left Thurrday for Chicago, whence he proceeds to California. —The old board of pension examiners is still holding the foit, the new boaad not yet having received the essential papers. —E. H. Anderson and wife and J. F. Corrlgon and wife, who have been the guests of A. B. Anderson, have gone to Chicago. —The funeral of Mike Davern, aged 22, occurred from St. Bernards church Thursday morning. The deceased died of consumption. —Surveyor Hunt hii6 completed the plans for the constructure of the bridge

on the Attica road. The contract will be let next Monday. —There has not been a marriage license issued in Montgomery county for an entire week, and the last one was issued to Illino .c people. —The Tenth and Seventy-second Indiana Regiments will have their headquarters at the criminal court room in Indianapolis on Wednesday and Thursday of 'encampment. d&w —The county commissioners will let the contract for the abutments of the new iron bridge on the Covington road next Monday. There will be a number of bidders and an exciting contest is expected. —Lyman Spohr, the three year old son of Matthias Spohr, died Wednesday at the family residence two miles and a half southeast of the city. The funeral occurred Friday morning from the Mt. Tabor church, conducted by Rev. Stephens. —Geo. W. Scott and daughters Jennie and May, and Sam Claiborne, of Eureka, 111., are visiting friends in the city. George is an old Crawfordsville boy and a eucceBsful railroader, at present being a passenger conductor on the Jacksonville & Southeastern Railroad. —The following delicious item of news is going the rounds of the State press: "The M. E. church at Crawfordsville has been newly painted, and the other evening services were held before the paint was dry. Scores cf dresses were ruined, and there is authority for saying that a madder crowd of women were never seen in Indiana."

Rival Pension Boards.

The appointment papers for the new pension board have not yet arrived from Washington although they have been expected on every mail for three weeks. The old board, consequently, still holds on and has in its possession the books, papers, nnd official seal appertaining to the examiner of Montgomery county. Wednesday the new board rose in rebellion and hiring a hall began to operate on its own hook. Every old soldier who pasRed was interrogated and the rivalry of the old and the new board ran high. The old board got the best of the deal, however, for when night let her sable curtain down and pinned it with a star it was made manifest that the old board had examined four applicants to the new board's one.

Will Sue the Vandalia.

Mrs. Wm. Hipes, whose husband and daughter were recently killed at the Danville road crossing of the Vandalia road, is demanding indemnity from the company. The limit allowed by the law for damage by death incurred through fault or negligence of a railroad is $10,000. Mrs. Hipes will accordingly ask for $20,000. She and her friends believe that it will be easy to establish negligence on the part of the company and due diligence on the part of those killed It is said that the road refused to mnke any settlement and that the suit will be filed in the September term of court. Mrs. Hipes is represented by Ristine Ristine.

JDwenger's Successor.

An authoritative source in the East, states that Bishop Rademacher, now of the diocese of Tennessee, with hie episcopal residence at Nashville, will in a few days be appointed to succeed the late Bishop Dwenger, of this diocese, who died some tim« ago. The dispatch states that Bishop Rademacher will enter upon his duties August 1. Mgr. Satolli will be present in Ft. Wayne at the installation services.

At Turkey Run,

The "jolly dozen" consisting of A. H. Hernley and family, Misses Gertrude Wheeler, Laura VHnCleave, Adelia hnd Ida Cox, of this city, Misses Charlotte Messier and Lela Robinson and C. A. Boyle, of Indianapolis, Rev. J. Campbell, of Jerseyville, 111., and Rev. J. V. Carter, of Upper Alton, 111., went to Turkey Run Tuesday morning for a week's outing.

An Easy Time.

The County Board of Review is having a pionic and its ohief labor seems to be in swinging palm leaf fane, swearing at the hot weather and swapping yarns. The kick on the assessment of personal property ip as feeble as a new b"rn calf. In '96 when real estate is assessed there will probably be a good old fashioned howl go up, however.

A Ham Sandwich Challenge. I. the undersigned, challenge any one person in the State of Indiana to a ham sandwich eating contest. I will wager $50 that I can eat more ham sandwiches than any person in the State in any specified time. Forfeit at the Opera Exchange. Leo Deming,

Terre Haute, Ind., July 11, 1893.

Invoicing.

Major L. A. Foote, as assignee of Robinpon & Wallace, is invoicing the stock and is being assisted by W. K. Wallace, Stanley Simpson and H. B. Hulett. It is slow and tedious work, the stock being comprised of so many small articles usually found in such a store.

We?ley and Waynetown.

Rev. Frank West vill lecture at the above mentioned places next Sabbath, July 16, at the hours of 10:30 a. m., and 7:30 p. m. respectively. Theme, "My Work as Missionary."

He Ought to Have the Medal, so He Ought. On July 28, Wicklyffe Smith will go to Bloomington. There on the bloody sands of debate he will struggle for a silver medal offered by a temperance society.

WrxEEOor & Kixgert are prepared to do surveying iu Crawfordsville and county. Accuracy guaranteed. At Sharpe & Hoffman's. a It

We print eale bills on short notice. The Jouhnal Co Pbintehs.

MODEL HOG HOUSE.

It Can Re Built for a Trifle Over Two Hundred Dollars.

The accompanying1illustration shows the floor plan of a hog house which I have used two years. The building is entirely of pine lumber. The sills are 0x0 inches: llnnr joist. 2xS inches floor, 134-inch board. Two extra sills are laid nearly under the alley partitions and enteinl the whole length of the building'. These are not mortised into the end sills, but are laid under them, supporting the floor joist in the center, and the whole rests on blocks of stone.

9

STORAGE

"Y

A -MODKI. IIOG HOUSE. i!

The sides and ends are boarded upright and battened with 3-inch battens. The roof is made of grooved rooflng and 0inch battens. The walls inside are lined up feet for warmth. The building is 50 feet long and ^0 feet wide. A is steam generator. li 15 barrels for •water and cooked feed, pens SxlO feet. yards. The 5 pens on the south side are divided by partly movable partitions and are used for fattening hogs. The troughs are placed directly under the partition between the pens and the alley, and a door 20 inches high and the same length as the trough hangs to this partition, the door having a sliding latch with which it maybe fastened to either side, excluding hogs until the feed is in place. From to the right hand end of the house (H2 feet) the whole floor slopes 0 inches, and this I consider the fine point in my plan, since by using hose or eave spouting iconnection with the water supply at C, the floor can be easily washed, and the manure with the liquid be pushed through the shute at W, and caught in a tight box placed on a sled or stone boat and removed to the field. The alley is 0 feet wide, are doors four feet wide, are grain bins. With this house I am ready for my sows to farrow any time after the 15th of February. The cost of the building was about $225 with lumber at $18 to $22 per thousand.—l Orange Judd Farmer.

TO KILL PARASITES.

IIow One Farmer Kids Ilis Stock ol Lice ami Disease. To kill ticks on sheep I buy a ball of snuff or enough to go over all the sheep at once. I cut the snuff and pulverize it on a newspaper and put it in a glass jar. take the jar, a large pepper box and a tablespoon and dip the snuff from the jar into the pepper box half or two-thirds full, then I take the sheep gently, lay heron her side, put my knee on her head, open the wool and shake snuff on the skin in places three or four inches apart, and close the wool. I put more of the snuff around the neck because the nits hatch tinder the neck, and in about three days the ticks and nits will be a sorry looking family.

To cure the colic or stretches in sheep I dissolve two tablespoonfuls of Epsom salts in about a half pint of warm water aud add one teaspoonful of essence of peppermint. I give it through a small funnel and in about two hours the sheep will be all right. 1 she doesn't get well in two hours I repeat the dose.

To kill lice on cattle 1 take about a pint of kerosene and rub it all over the cow with a woolen cloth, then card against the grain and with grain. It is a sure cure.

To cure warts on cows I wash the teats before milking and rub on castor oil. It limbers the teats. For gapes in chickens, prevention is better than cure. When we set the hens we put air-slacked lime and sulphur in the nests and keep clean water before them.—Thomas Smith, in Our Grange Homes.

LIVE STOCK NOTES.

If you wash the sheep at all, do it thoroughly. It is best to do this some days before shearing sc as to let the oil back into the fleece. After washing put the sheep where they will keep clean until after the shearing.

Do XOT make the mistake of pampering your breeding animals with fatproducing foods. Too many of our colts, calves, lambs and pigs are weak ard diseased because the tins were not fed so as to develop bone and mussle.

IT is often the case that the animals upon the farm which deserve the best care—we mean the work horses—have the least of it. They are usually well fed, but there their care stops. Grooming is of almost as much importance to them as their diet, but they too often get very little of it.

To Prevent Grub In Sheep.

The means of prevention of the grub in the head is to provide a shade for the flock of sheep during the visitation of the fly which deposits the eggs in the nostrils that hatch into the grub which, when it crawls to the upper recesses rl the inner parts of the nasal cavity, causes so much grief to the afflicted. The fly makes its appearance in the months of July and August, and if the sheep have a dark place in which to retreat during the day, when the fly is most active, they will escape the noses of sheep are sometimes tarred to repel the attacks of the fly. To dislodge the grub, syringe into the nostrils a mixture of equal parts of turpentine and linseed oil, injecting about a tablespoonful of the mixture at one time.—Colman'e Rural World. ««,.»

CURRENT EVENTS.

Paid admissions to the world's fair on Wednesday, 94,394 total to date. 4,990,533.

M. Loze. ex-prefect of police at Paris, Is to be appointed as the Austrian ambassador.

Five men were hurt and two horses killed by the fall of a rotten bridge at Cleveland, O.

Baptist young people are gathering in Indianapolis for the annual meeting of the organization.

Choristers and siTigers left a Sunday school meeting near C-elina, O., because of objections to a fiddle.

Robert Larkin, colored, was lynched at Ocala. Fla., for criminally assaulting Fannie Alexander, white.

II. Q. Evans, of Ottumwa. la., has been appointed chief of division in the second treasury auditor's office.

Princeton, Ind., was nearly destroyed by fire Wednesday. One life was lost. The loss will reach fully $250,000.

Bishop McQuaid celebrated the twen-ty-fifth anniversary of his consecration at St. Patrick's cathedral in Rochester, N. Y.

F. Green, a prominent business man of Oskaloosa, la., dropped dead while driving in his buggy there Wednesday morning.

John Smith, of Peoria, 111., who abducted Lila Lamkin, of Galesburg, has been bound over under bonds of 51,000. The girl is IS years of age.

South Dakota's building was dedicated at Jackson park Wednesday with simple and impressive ceremonies. Gov. Sheldon conducted the ceremony.

William Johnson, a five-year convict, sent up from Flint, Mich., escaped from the house of correction at Ionia while working outside the walls.

L. Foster, traveling salesman" for Foley & Co., of Chicago, committed suicide Wednesday at Winona, Minn. Financial embarrassment was the cause.

Misses Arwild and Florence Van Drubb were arrested at Alliance, O., charged with stealing Slui) from a house where they were employed as seamstresses.

Burglars stole the registered mail in the post office building at Escanaba. Mich., Tuesday night. They tried and failed to get $400 which was in the safe. No arrests have been made.

Mrs. James M. Boling committed suicide at Sullivan, 111., by taking strychnine in the presence of her family. She had had a quarrel with her mother-in-law, with whom she lived.

The subcommittee of the league of republican state clubs decided at Des Moines, la., to hold a state league convention in Dcs Moines August 15, the day preceding the regular state convention.

The board of trustees of the Illinois eastern hospital for the insane at Kankakee accepted the resignation of Dr. Clevinge:, medical superintendent, and appointed Dr. Clarke Gapen, of Chicago, to succeed him.

Isabella Quarters 011 Sale.

CHICAGO, -July 13.—The first installment of the Isabella quarters reached the city Wednesday. They were sent from the subtreasury at 2 p. m. to the Merchants' Loan & Trust company, Dearborn and Washington streets, and at once put on sale at one dollar each. Thev went like hot cakes.

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INKHAMS

YEOEIABIEPPOIIND

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It Trill entirely cure the worst forms of Female Complaints, all Ovarian troubles, InflamnLation and Ulceration,: Falling and Displacements, of the: Womb, and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the Change qfLiJe. Every time it will cure

Backache.

It has cured more cases of Leucorrhcoa than any remedy the world has ever known. It is almost infallible in such cases. It dissolves and expels Tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of development, and checks any tendency to cancerous humors. That

Bearing-down Feeling

causing pain, weight, and backache, is instantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstances it acts in harmony with the laws that govern the female .system, and is as harmless as water. It removes

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Suppressed or Painful Menstruations, Weakuess of the Stomach, Indigestion, Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostration, Headache, General Debility* Also

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Extreme Lassitude, "don't care "and: "want to be left alone" feeling, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness. flatulency, melancholy, or the "blues, and backache. These are sure indications of Female Weakness, some derangement of the Uterus, or

Womb Troubles.

The whole story, however, is told in an illustrated book entitled Guide to Health," by Mrs. P'nkham. It contains over 90 pages of most important information, which every woman, married or single, should know about herself. Send 2 two-cent stamps for it. For

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Correspondence freely answered.

You can address in strictest confidence, LYDU B. PIXKHAM BED. CO., Lynn, JUm.

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nniGHT'S DISEASE of tlie kidneys is tlie result of faulty nutrition, over-stimulations, or the use of Improper remedies to ineren.se the How of urine. \OUNG MAN, you ".xnulddo well to consult us at one». Tiiese habits are the result,of disease—not vice. We invite your fullest contidence and promise von relief.

MEN WHO OBSERVE certain iritations of bladder, uretliea. or water passages, with sediments in the urine, should ivnll themselves of our treatment Such symptoms are indication.* of seminal weakness, which aduiit of no delay.

CANCERS are cured without the use of the knife See the refercuces of hundreds that we have cured.

UHEL MATISM This painful disease,under

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Useful and Ornamental, Durable and Cheap.

An Absolute Protection Against Lightning,

FOR SALE BY

J. R. Bryant & Co.

MANUFACTURERS

East Pike St. Crawfordsville, Ind,

A HANDFUL OF DIRT MAY BE A HOUSEF'JL OF SHAME." CLEAN HOUSE WITH

SAPOLIO

Dr. D. E. BARNES

GRADUATEOF

Chicago Opthalmic College Cancer ana Pile Specialist, Eye and Ear Specialist.:

l'or the past 14 years pronrietor of the DA UN his' SURGICAL INSTITUTE, of Indianapolis and piofessor of Diseases of the Eve and Eur, Nose and Throat in the Indiana'E. Medical College. Has studied Medlciue as practice l,v the Indians. Will be at. the NUTT HOTEL, THURSDAY, JULY 27.

I.ONSL LTATION IS FREE. No money required to begin treatment of responsible parties. 'I i'E LADIES:—Dr. Ha nes' treatment •s the best known for all diseases peculiar to the sex. Thf.t tired fueling, headache, dizziness, weakness, pain iu the back, drngrgrinfr down, biickiiche, hot Hashing, culd hands aud feet, pain in the top of the head, sleepless nights. aud other conditions due to weakness, positively aud permanently cured. My method does away with ''local treatment," so much dreaded by the majority of ladies, and which is perfectly useless

THROAT AND LUNG DISEASESi-Patarrh ol the nose, throat and bronchial tubes, catarrhal deafness headache, dropping iu thn throat, indigestion, impure blood, resulting I rom catarrh, cured by a short course of treatment. Catarrh, if neglected, will produce consumption, which very soon becomes incurable. All throat and lung affections should receive prompt aud efficient treatment. !proper treatment, can be cured, and the blood It borough!) purilled will prevent a return. II ou don't need to elmnsre eliuiate, as this result can lie accomplished here as elsewhere.

Rheumatism produces heart, disease. All who may be afflicted with dyspepsia, inI digestion, liriirht's Disease, dropsy, constipation, epilepsy, nervous debility, headache. |catarrh. bronchitis, consumption, scrofula, or joriu any form of blood poisoning, rheumatism, asthmu, cancers or tumors, female weakness, miles, neuralgia, diseases of the eye and ear, (loss of strength and lossof manhood aie especially invited to call and consult the doctor.

Treatment to $15 per month, including Medicine.

MliliHil®

THE NEW

VIBMTOK SEPARATOR

The new Steel Boiler Traction Engine, made only by Nichols & Shepard Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Zack Mahorney & Sons, exclusive asents for Montgomery county and vicinity. Write us tor prices, terms and reading rfiatter. Sample machinery here to show you, including a swinging stacker if you prefer.

Also agents for, and have thsm in stock, the new steel Empire Harvester and Binder, the neatest, nicest and best machine on the market. BARLOW Corn Planter witu check rower, first class.

MOLINE ». FLYING DUTCHMAN Sulky Ridinsr Plow, ail sleel BUTLER Wind Engine and Pumps, POLARCREAMERY. Cultivators, tongue and tongueless, Walking Breaking Plow in /act, full line of the verv best implements and machinery. O'BRIEN farm wasrons.

Our stock of shelf hardware and building hardware including

Doors, Blinds, Glass and Sash at Lowest Prices!

Cook Stoves, heating stoves, tin, ass and queensware is full up, The Scv Process Gasoline Cook SJove stands at the head have sold in the last two years HNS. We have in our up stairs mamle room a full line of Iron, Slate and Wood Mantles, tile Pacings and Hearths.

Our stock of furniture is complete. Bed room surs. side boards, extention tables, secretaries, chairs, parlor suits, in fact a full and complete stock. Also

CARPETS, 200 PATTERNS,

Beautiful and at reasonable prices. Our store stives to the old housekeepers the best line to select from in the county. Young luarneu people, jusr, starting, can bAVE MONER by looking at our stock before buying. No trouble to show goods. Come in everybody and see us. cave sold goods in Crawfordsville for 35 years, and still at it Thanking you for past oatronage, we beg of you to come, look our store over and sec our uargaius. Yours

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