Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 9 February 1894 — Page 10
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WEEKLY JOURNAL
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1894.
THE CITY IN BRIEF.
What People Are Doing, AVhat Tliey Are Saying, and Where They Are Going.
—Rial Benjamin has sued Music Ilall /A ssociation for §400 damages. —Lebanon has organized an electric light and artificial ice company with a capital stock of $30,000. —T. L. Mitchell has sold his grocery store on East Main street to Frank
Fisher and James Martin. —J. J. Mills has returned from Kalamazoo, Mich., where lie has been in the interest of Louis l'aquet. of bank fame. —Terre Ilaute Express: Walter Sies, the artist, is now at work on a fine painting "The lunt of the Cross" in Nevada. —E. II. Eshelman has purchased a half interest in the Star laundry and will be identified with that establishment in future. —The Supreme Court will this month decide whether or not township trustees will have to turn their surplus funds into the State treasury. —Colfax Standard: Michael Ryan will move to Crawfordsville and some time in April will move to Illinois, on the line of the Peoria divison of the Vandal ia. —The friends of Mrs. David L. Trout will be grieved to learn that her mind recently failed her at her home in Chicago. She is now in the insane asylum at Kankakee. —FluerO'Neil has been arrested for brutally beating his wife. He is in jail being unable to furnish the
$200
bond placed on his carcass. His trial occurs Saturday. —Dr. Duncan lias received word of the very serious illess of his brother-in-law, A. .T. Cunningham, of Bowling Kansas. Mr. Cunningham formerly lived near Wingate. —Lebanon RciKrter: Elder Lane will begin a series of meetings tomorrow. Miss Nellie Nicholson, of Crawfordsville. has been secured to assist in the singing. —Old Shawnee Mound church is enjoying the greatest revival since Rev. S. P. Colvin was there in 1872. Rev.
W. K. McKeuzie is ably assisted by a lady evangelist. Miss Frazee. from -Frankfort. —Marion Mctiuftin was again taken into the camp by the police Sunday while luxuriating at the Mack Hills.
Marion was fined Sir. and costs this morning and committed to the pleasures of the city stone pile.
The Hainan Electrical Forces!
How They Control the Organs of the Body.
The eloctrical force of tbe human body, aa the nerve fluid may be termed. Is an especially attractive department of science, as it exerts so marked an influence on the health of the organs of the body. Nerve force is produced oy the brain and conveyed by means of the nerves to the various organs of the body, thus supplying the latter with the vitality necessary to insure their health. The pneumogastric nerve, as shown here, may bo said to be the most important of the entire nerve system, as it supplies the heart, lungs, stomach, bowels, cte., with the nerve force necessary to keep them active and healthy. As will be seen by the cut the long nerve in base of tne brain and terminating in the bowels is the pneumogastric, while the numerous lit-i tie branches supply thef heart, lungs and stomach with necessary
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A
THE COLEMAN CASE.
CORDELIA SIMERS ON THE GRIDIRON.
A Sensational Law Suit Full of ltacv Incident and Spicy Scandal—Tlie Plaintiff Gets a Judgment,
The suit of Wm. Coleman, of Sugar Creek township, against his divorced wife, Cordelia Coleman. attracted great attention in the circuit court. William was divorced from Cordelia in 1SH0 and it appears that both of them have some money. After the divorce for two or three cyears William had bad luck. His house was -burned, and then his barn, his stock died and his chickens were killed. In the light of recent events he accused Cordelia as being the authoress of his misfortunes and sued her for 82,500 damages. He is represented by Crane & Anderson and she by Thomas & Wliittington.
The evidence began Thursday afternoon with the plaintiff on the stand. His house was burned November 15. 18H0, and was started just outside his room as if to attempt to burn him with it. He saved but a few goods. Ed Rider and his wife Ellen, the illegitimate daughter of Coleman, were in the house at the time.
On the night of August 6, '91, his big barn with all its contents was burned by an incendiary. It held 20 tons of hay, 80 bushels of wheat, two fine horses, two wagons, one buggy, two wheat drills, four sets of harness and other property.
A few days after 85 head of hogs died in a suspicious manner, acting as though they had been poisoned.
In March,
r92,
some one cut his bug
gy to pieces with a knife. The following June some one entered his hen house and pulled the heads from fifty chickens tossing the heads and bodies in separate piles.
On cross-examination Coleman testified that he had importuned his daughter to leave Iowa and come and live with him. This made her husband almost crazy. It was evidently the object of the defense in this cross-ex-amination to insinuate that Rider was the incendiary. Coleman admitted that the hogs might have died of disease. He had suspected the Stookeys, the Pursees and others of being responsible for his misfortunes.
The second witness was a hot detective from Manson, above Colfax, and as he mounted the stand he squinted one eye knowingly and swore to the name of Wm. Morrison. This Morrison is a corker. He is a timder dealer, and as a sort of a side line deals in the detective business. He testified that in July, '92, he had visited Mrs. Coleman, who was then living alone and stated that he heard she had been "whitecapped" and if so he would like to be employed to hunt the rascals down. She smiled benignly and employed him on the spot for
$25.
She stated
that a night or so before some men had come to her house, broken open the door with a fence rail, dragged her out, tore her clothes about off and attempted to assault her. At this point the knowing witness squinted his eye and remarked: "She allowed as how she could tell one of the men by poking her finger in his mouth. If he couldn't bite he was guilty. She poked her finger tin the mouth of one of them assaulters and as two teeth was gone he couldn't bite her when he tried to. She said Colman had two teeth gone."
The witness testified that lie suspected from the first that she was lying as the door had no dents in it so he went home and wrote to Lafayette for a certain Mr. Robinson, a fellow detective, (who by the way was not produced in court) to go out and pump the old lady. Robinson did so, and returning he reported that Cordelia had acknowledged to burning Coleman's house, and killing his stock. The witness then waited on her and told her what Robinson had reported. She smilingly acknowledged the same things to him and stated that she had but two regrets, one was that she hadn't burned Coleman and the •second was that she could not tell Coleman she had fired the house. She stated that she had filled a pants leg with rags, saturated it with oil and used this as the incendiary torch. She said she had killed the chickens but they couldn't do •anything to her for that as she hadn't removed the bodies.
The cross examination of Morrison was rich and he became very evasive at times. Finally .Judge Thomas fired this question at him: ''Were you ever in the penitentiary?" "Yes. sir, for nine months." •.*?."What for'?'1 "Well, for telling the truth.'" "You'll never go there for that in this case." snapped the .Judge as the great truth teller shambled off the stand.
Mrs. Kate Stookey is the mother of Wesl'ursee. She has known Cordelia for I I years and until her trouble with Wes they were quite intimate. She sided with Cordelia in her divorce suit and Cordelia had told her that she would like to destroy Coleman's property. She threatened to burn the
buildings and poison the stock. Cordelia never acknowledged outright to doing this but one day after the barn was burned the witness said to the defendant that it must have required a hard heart to burn those poor horses. Cordelia said that they had better burn than be killed by overwork and starvation. The witness advised her to leave the communitj' but Cordelia said she would stay and "hector" Coleman. The defendant had requested her to keep the secrets quiet. On cross examination she stated that she had not told Coleman these things until after Cordelia had trouble with her son, Wes.
Elmer Stuckey is the son of Kate and he heard Cordelia make threats against Colman to his mother. The righteous Elmer was upstairs at the time and by applying his ear to the ventilator was able to listen to conversation below.
Mrs. Sarah Cosby is half sister of Elmer and sister of Wes Pursee. When Wes and Mrs. Coleman had a row Mrs. Coleman got her to try and adjust the difficulties. She failed to do so and when asked by the defendant stated that she believed that Mrs. Kate Stookey would take sides with Wes. \1
W. M. Sheets and wife testified that when the barn was burned that they lived on Mrs. Coleman's farm two miles from Coleman's place. She lived in a room built onto the house they occupied. She was in their room at 8 o'clock the evening of the fire and might have gone over to Coleman's afterwards without their knowing the fact. The next noon Mrs. Sheets went into Cordelia's room and found her reading a Sunday school lesson. She told of the fire but Cordelia said never a word. She afterwards spoke of it to her but Cordelia would never discuss the affair.
Dan White is a fiddler fine and acts as orchestra at the country dances. On the night that the buggy was cut he met Cordelia coming down the road from Coleman's at midnight. The dance had been at Jake Hinton's place.
Tom Flannigan, Jesse Coyner, Wm. Mclntyre and I. M. Ryan testified that Cordelia had declared she would get even with her ex-husband and that he should never prosper.
Frank Ryker repaired the buggy and thought the damage had been done with shears.
Orville Coleman is the son of the plaintiff and defendant and is about fourteen years old. Orville is a happy young calf and swore as stoutly as the redoubtable Wes Pursee. Orville had seen his mother prowling around a few nights before the barn was burned and had seen tracks that looked like hers about the buggy shed the day before the buggy was cut. Coleman's stepdaughter Laura Cory, testified also to seeing the tracks.
Marion Fry testified that he lived near Mrs. Coleman and that on the night of the demise of the poultry that she came prancing over to his house about midnight and said a lot of men had dragged her out of her house and assaulted her. She was wet above the knees and had evidently crossed the dew covered clover field.
Wes Pursee, the man who is with Coleman behind the prosecution and who is very sore at the fair Cordelia because she beat him in a law suit, then clambered upon the witness stand with his bald head shining like the dome of a Chinese temple. Wes was a vicious witness and threw the darts thick and fast into the defendant's case. He swore that she had told him that she fed Coleman's hogs pulverized glass to kill them and had frequently begged the witness to buy her some arsenic to poison the rest of his stock.
On cross examination the virtuous Wes identified as his own some very sappy letters he had written the winsome Cordelia to cone and live with him. The defense drew a rather ugly inference from these as to the motive of the gentleman with the bald head. Iu one of the letters he had said, "people will talk anyhow, so let them roar. Let the people howl." .Julia Colman. the present wife of illiam, or as he is better known, "Uent" Coleman, came upon the stand like a dream of Paradise. She was divorced from a former husband about the time Coleman was divorced and when she married Coleman she ljroug-ht with her a very comfortable covey of Corey kids. .Julia testified to seeing the tracks about the ouggy house and other minor matters and was then dished up on cross examination. .Julia denied having been fond of Coleman before her divorce. "Didn't you like him before you were divorced'.1" asked Judge Thomas. "No, I didn't!"' retorted the lady.. "Well, when did you get so you liked him?" "I reckon I never have liked him!" was the surprising rejoinder which caused her happy husband to gasp for breath and the audience to laugh. Mrs.
Coleman testified to a reluctance to allowing her daughter Lucy to go around with Coleman's son Orville. The rather plain manner in which she stated her objections were exceedingly rich.
The plaintiff rested and Jake Hinton came to the front for the defense. Jake is fond of dancing and gives a hop to his admiring friends every
change of the moon. He was dead certain, however, that he did not liave a dance the night the. buggy was cut and that Dan White was not at his house then and hence could not have seen Cordelia in the road that niglit.
Bruce Moore, an oily tong-ued insurance agent, swore that Coleman told him that he suspected Elmer Stookey and Wes Pursee of burning his barn.
Howard Riley and wife testified that Cordelia spent the night on which the house burned at their house. She might have got up and gone over to Coleman's, however, without their knowing it.
Marion I'ry was recalled and swore to accompanying Cordelia home the morning after she was assaulted. He saw there men's tracks and found on the ground a man's cuff holder.
Joe Parsons testified that he saw Coleman beating Cordelia in the woods one day and that he was acting most savagely.
The defendant took the stand and stated that she did not know how old she was but thought she was about fifty. She had been married to Coleman twenty years lacking three days when they were divorced. Mrs. Coleman then denied flatly every charge made against her by the prosecution. She testified that she was at Howard Riley's the night the house burned and that her son Orville slept with her that night. Dora White was with her the night the barn burned. She explained the false face incident by stating that she had found it on the streets of Colfax and had picked it up "for fear it might skeer the hosses." She knew nothing about the death of the liogs but heard that they died as a result of eating the burnt horses. She denied having confessed anything to •detective" Morrison and in fact entered an almost general denial to this good man's story. vp
She detailed the white capping episode at length. She was aroused one night by a noise outside and going out was brutally assaulted by two men. She thought one was Coleman and th°! other his present wife's son She denied having told Kate Stookey anything or ever having made any threats against Coleman before her. Mrs. Stookey she said had frequently urged her to take revenge on Coleman but the witness had replied that she wasn't the "fightin' kind." To this Mrs. Stookey said, "Naw. you caint do nuthin' but cry." The witness was never on the road at night and hence never met Dan White, the fiddler. Ellen Rider, the illegitimate child of Coleman had frequently beaten her after she came to live with them and on one occasion Coleman coming into the room offered Ellen $10 to give his wife a "good one."
On cross examination the witness was mixed as to dates but nothing startling was developed.
In rebuttal the plaintiff put on Sherin Tyson, A1 Wetheril, Warner Haworth, Everett and John Morrison, Wm. Sheets and wife, and Emanuel Jacoby to prove the defendant as possessed with a bad reputation for veracity. Coleman denied the charges made against him by Cordelia.
The defense then put on Simeon Bryant and others who swore they had never heard ill of Cordelia.
The jury in the Coleman case after listening to thrilling arguments all Saturday morning retired and after spending the afternoon in sage discussion. returned a verdict for the plaintiff, assessing his damages at §350. A special finding of facts would have been highly entertaining as it is hard to see how the jury could figure a loss of $350. It was really a compromise verdict, the vote standing for quite a while seven to five in favor of the plaintiff. Part of the jury believed Cordelia guilty of one thing and part of another. Some believed her guilty of nothing and some of nearly everything. It was horribly mixed up in the jury room but the two eases most generally believed were those relating to the cutting up of the buggy and the murder of the chickens. Quite a number believed her guilty of barn burning. too.
Cordelia's attorneys will ask for a new trial. Cordelia is worth the judgment as she has a forty acre farm and other property.
Joined the Church.
Sunday morning at the conclusion of the services at the M. J3. church the usual invitation was extended to all who wished to avail themselves of the opportunity to unite with the church. Among those going forward was Gen. M. D. Manson. Gen. Manson, while he has always been an exemplary citizen and a moral man, a friend to the Christian religion, has never been a church member or a regular church goer. He had the matter of uniting with the church under consideration for several years during which time he was a great Itible student. J. 15. Jennison and Mr. and Mrs. Murphy and son and daughter also united with the church.
Lafayette Journal: John A. Lalir expects next year to participate in the management of the Lahr House, the lease held by Messrs. Weakly and Mertz expiring at the end of this year. Extensive improvements are contemplated and additions to the building are to be made.
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Superintendents Appointed. The Montgomery County Fair Association met Saturday afternoon and elected Col. D. N. Heath as an honorary member of the board. The following- superintendents have been appointed over the several departments for the ensuing- year:
Floral Hall—J. II. Wasson. Speed—J. J. Insley, \V. W. Morgan. Horses—M. B. Waugh, F. M. Dice, Fred Gardner.
Jacks and Mules—Isaac Davis. Beef Cattle—G. S. Durham, W. H. Montgomery.
Dairy Cattle—J. N. Fullenwider. Sheep—Hannibal Trout, Swine—Jas. H. Servies, W. W. Halstead.
Poultry—Ben Myers. Agriculture—Lemuel McClamrock. Grain and Seeds—D. II. Davidson. Domestic Skill—Mrs. E. Armentrout. FruitPreparations,Etc.—ArchBailey, F. B. McClamropk. -j"
Horticulture—John L. Goben. Mechanical—Arch Martin. Carriages and Buggies, Musical Instruments, Work of Artisans, Leather and Cloth, Wood and Iron—A. J. McCormack.
An Imperative Dnty.
What greater duty is possible than the care of our health? Until recently it has been impossible for persons living at a distance from large cities to obtain the best medical advice without great expense. This is now obviated so that the poorest persons, in any part of the land, may consult the great medical authority on nervous and chronic diseases, free of charge and without leaving their homes. Dr. Greene, of 35 West 14th street, New York, the most successful specialist in curing all nervous and chronic diseases has lately adopted the plan of giving the sick everywhere consultation and advice by letter correspondence, free of charge.
Write him a description of your complaint and he will return you an exact explanation of your disease, with advice as to its cure, entirely free of charge. He gives most careful and explicit attention to all letters and will make your case so plain to you that you cannot fail to understand exactly what ails you. Dr. Greene is the discoverer of that wonderful cure, Dr. Greene's Nervnra blood and nerve remedy. He uses nothing but harmless vegetable remedies in his treatment. What sufferer can resist such an opportunity as this to regain health and strength? Write him about your complaint and you will never regret it.
Why Hood's Wins.
President Lincoln said, "You cannot fool the people a second time." They are too quick to recognize real merit or lack of it,and cling only to those things which they find to be what is claimed for them.
It is especially gratifying, the sale of Hood's Sarsaparilla increases most rapidly in those sections where it is best known.
The inference is plain. Hood's Sarsaparilla has proven that it possesses genuine merit. It maintains a high standard, which others cannot even approach. It is the people's favorite blood-purifying and building up medicine, and is more popular this year then ever before. All this because Hood's cures.
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^OMMISSIONEK'S SALE HEAL ESTATE.
Slate of Indiana, Montgomery County, Montgomery Circuit Court, January term, 188+ Isaac Davis et al, vs. Jemima HcKlnley et ai
No. 10976. Partition. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Commissioner, appointed by the Circuit Co«rt of said county, at tbe January term, 1894 la the above entitled cause to make sale of certain real eta ordered to be sold by saM court, will at 10 o'clock a. m., on Saturday. th« 24th day of February, 1894, sell at public sato on the premises, the following described real estate, situated ia Montgomery county an4 State of Indiana, to-wit:
Eighty-one (81) l'eet off of the west ends mC lota numbered one(l) arnd two (2) in Henrj- W. Connard's second addition to tho city of C*awfordBville, Ind., being 605 east Jeffereas street.
The terms of said sale will be cash. la nine and the balance in eighteen months froai date of pale, with notes drawing 6ii pvr oeux. interest from date and secured by good freehold surlties.
Feb. 1, 1804. FRANCIS M. DICK. CommlsaioDei.
^DMINISTRATOK'8 SALE.
Twill sell at public sale at the late residenM Benjamin E. Mlsner at Smartsburg, foor miles ea_st of Crawfordsville, on the Shannondale road, on Monday, February 19, 1894, Um following personal property, to-wit: Two bead of good horses, three head of milch
OOWB.
twelve head of shoats, two brood sows, seventeen bead of good sheep, one 2-horse carriage, one corn planter, one mowing machine, hay ia the mow, one set of wagon harness, plows, and otner farming implements too tedious to mention.
Terms:—A credit of nine months will b« given on all sums of 85 and over, the purchaser giving note with approved freehold seourity, waiving valuation and appraisement laws. Sums under $5 cash In hand.
JOSEPH FOUST,
JaD. 26, 1894. Administrate*,
N
OTICE OF INSOLVENCY.
In tho matter of the estate or Albert Allen, deceased, in the Montgomery Circuit Court, No. 805.
Notice is hereby given that upon petfttea filed in said court by th ." Administrator of said estate, setting up the insufficiency of the estate of said decedent to pay tho debts and liabilities thereof, the judge of said court did. on the 26th day of January, 1*94. find said estate to be probably insolvent, and order the same to be settled accordingly. The creditors of said estate are therefore hereby notified of such insolvency and required to file their claims against said estate lor allowance.
Witness the filerk and tl»e seal of said Court at Crawfordsville, Indiana, this 26th day of January, 1894. WALLACE SPAHKS,
Feb. 2. 1894.-w2t «lert
Estate ot Marlon Dunbar, deceased. J^OTlCK OF APPOINTMENT.
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed and duly qualified as Administrator of the estate of Marion Dunbar, late of Montgomery oouuty. Indiana, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solveut.
JAMES E. CAVE.
Jan. 31. 1894. Administrator.
Estate of Benjamin E. Mlsner, deceased.*^: OTICE OF APPOINTMENT.
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned h«s been appointed and duly qualified as Administrator of the estate of Benjamin E. Mlsner. la-eof Montgomery county, Indiana, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent.
JOSEPH FOnST,
Jan, 26, 1804.-wHt Administrator.
In the matter of the assignment of Louis W. Otto. OTICJS OF APPOINTMENT.
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed and duly qualitled us atslgneeol' the property of Louis W. Otto, of Montgomery county. Indiana.
DUMONT KENNEDY,
Jan. 26, 1894.-w3
Estate of George W, Tapp, deceased. OTICE OF APPOINTMENT.
Notice is hereby given that the undersiffDed has been appointed and duly qualified a.« mlnistrator of the estate of George W. Tapp, late of Montgomery County, Indiana,deceasedSaid estate is supposed to be solvent.
FINLEY P. MOUNT, Administrator.
Dated Jan. 22, 1894-3w
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