Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 16 August 1895 — Page 2
WEEKLY JOURNAL
CTT ESTABLISnKD IN 184S. Successor to The Record, the first paper in Crawfordsville, established in 18:31, and to The People'» Prc.ts, established 1844.
PRINTED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING.
•THE JOURNAL COMPANY-
j. A. GKKKNE. Sncretary. A. A. McCAIN,Treasurer
TKIiMS OF Sl'HSCKlPTIOX:
One year in advance.... Six months Three months
Payable in advance. Sample copies tree.
1.00 .50 .25
THE DATLV JOUHNAI,. EST A Itl.l Sll I IN l^h7. TKIIMS OF SUHSCRJPTIOJI:
One year in advance $5.00 Six months 2.50 Three months 1-25 Per week, delivered or by mall 10
Kntered at the Postoflice at Crawfordnvllle, Indiana, as second-class matter.
FRIDAY, AI "(JUST 10, 1895.
THK deficit in the Treasury for the first thirty-seven clays of the present fiscal year is 813,313,730.03.
TIJK Atchinson Globe wants to know what a woman will shoo the chichens with when she wears bloomers.
THE stock of ex-Presidents is very low, and Mr. Cleveland should see that it is replenished at the end of his pres ent term.
HOKE SMITH has UNDERGONE a change of sentiment on the silver question, but he still holds to his original views on the pension question.
Tur. open markets of the world seem to be checking the sales of American cattle, as we sold l,,*70,000 head less last May than in May, IS'.U.
OK course Mr. Clevelaand would not accept a third term. He would decline it with the shrinking modesty with which a bull pup would decline a saucer of new milk.
GENEHAJ. HAKKISON has grown so rapidly in the estimation of the people by keeping quiet, that the other aspirants with Presidential bees have concluded to follow his example and watch results.
A COKKESI'OXDKXT of the Minneapolis Tribune says: lloke Smith has made more sound Republicans out of lifelong Democrats than any one man who has ever held an office.'' Republicans may conclude to pension Hoke yet.
TEKKE HAUTE E.rjtren.s: They may talk about "Silver Dick" liland and "Silver Speech Dick'' Thompson, but the ratio between the two, much more •than Hi to 1, shows that the latter should be amended to read the "Golden Tonsrued."
"WILLIAM CULLKX" may consider himself flattered when such shrewd business men as Attorney-General lvetcham, ex-Attorney-GeneVal Green Smith, Thomas Taggart, Frank Holliday and Albert .1. lieveridge can be caught with the salted gold mine trick.
EX-COXGHESSMAN BLAXD evidently believes in the free coinage of apples as well as the free coinage of silver. On his farm at Lebanon, Mo., he has 5,000 lien Davis apple trees in good growth. Their fruit sells at Hi cents a bushel, and the trees each bear about five bushels in good seasons.
Si'EAKixu of the proposed organization of a new secret order in the interest of free silver, the Chicago Tribune says: "Strange and paradoxical as it may seem, initiation fees and dues will have to be paid in sound money. Mexican dollars, if tendered, will not be taken on the basis of the 10 to 1 ratio."
THE new law requiring a township rustee to publish a report of receipts and expenditures and an exhibit of the financial condition of his oilice has already worked good to the tax-payeis of Jackson township, Bartholomew county, where an embezzler of 82.500 of public funds has been uncovered by the publication.
CHICAGO Inter-Oceim: China shoots down American missionaries, Japan insists on the right of search. France imprisons an American in violation of law, Spain shoots at the stars and stripes and refuses to pay a debt long ago adjudicated, and what are we»going to do about it'.' Well, what'.' \obody seems to be 'afraid of I 'ncle Sam.
THE Art Department promises to be one of the best features of the Cotton States and International Exposition. Mr. Horace Bradley, chief of the department, returned from Europe, reaching New York on the 31st of July, with along list of applications from artists of distinction in England, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and Portugal. On the same steamer came shipments of valuable paintings from France. Mr. Bradley found at his New York office, a large accumulation of mail, containing applications from many of the best artists of Boston, New York, Washington, Cincinnati, Chicago, and other places. He is now organizing a force of expert picturehangers, and will reach Atlanta about the 10th of August, and begin the work of hanging pictures.
LABOR AXD WAGES.
Discussing the question of labor and wages and the lesson that the peo pie have learned from misfortune, the New York Tribune is of the opinion that they have acquired more wisdom from two years of disaster than they would have learned in twenty years of prosperity. Best and most fruitful all the lesson they have learned is thithat the prosperity of all business te pends upon liberal but not excessive wages of labor. It then says:
Tlie top line of wagesis that which leaves the cost of production low enough to withstand competition, domestic or foreign, and also leaves suili cient returns for capital to invite other capital into the same business. But below that top line higher wages benefit the whole country, and anything which tends to depress wages injures the whole country. This is the lesson which the people have been learning since .1 fs'.2. One might suppose it so simple and obvious that it must have been understood long ago without the strain and suffering of National disaster. but the fact is that millions of voters and many employes had entirely lost sight of it, if they had ever perceived the truth and its importance. Disaster compelled everybody to see that a people earning §0,000,000,000 yearly cannot buy as much as the same people can buy when earning SS.000,000,000 yearly. When general red tic tion of wages was forced in 1SS)3, the actual earnings of labor in the United States were cut down fully a quarter, and there may have been some employers who thought it would be to their advantage, until they found that their sales were cut down at least as much. The Nation does its buying with the wages of labor. Reduction of wages means always and inevitably reduction of demand for everything that labor wants, reduction in the volume of business, and since the expenses in any business cannot ordinarily be curtailed in proportion to the amount of business done, it means a relatively greater reduction in profits than in wages.
Tin:'reason that Theodore Roosevelt is talked about from one end of the country to the other is because he is doing that which is so unusual among municipal officers simply enforcing the laws as he finds them on the statute books. 'Mayors and police commissioners as a rule act with arbitrary power, selecting certain laws which in their opinion the people did not mean when they placed them on the statute books. The current number of the Review of Review* devotes several pages to Mr. Roosevelt, saying among other things:
Mr. Roosevelt is accused ot bravado in his policy, but the charge is meaningless and foolish. He is simply doing his sworn duty as an executive officer, and thereby giving the whole people of the United States an object lesson which they need above all others. Such a lesson is not necessary in other countries, because the enforcement of law in England or France or Germany is taken as a matter of course. Mr. Roosevelt comes to his New York position after six years of hard and somewhat thankless work in the national Civil Service Commission at Washington: but it was the kind of work that is making history. For the real political history of our own times in the United States is centering about the reform of our administrative methods, and no man has been closer to the heart of the struggle than Mr. Theodore Roosevelt.
"IN the matter of street building the city should embrace the latest idea, which is tending to narrow streets," said a traveling man the other day who noticed the east Main street improvement, and who has been in scores of towns where such work is going on. "Most places have put this idea into operation because it is sensible and economical. A twenty-four foot street is wide enough after you get away from the business portion of the city. If you pave that much and put the rest into sidewalk and lawn it would add a great deal to the beauty of our thoroughfares and reduce their cost onefifth without any inconvenience to anyone. This plan is being carried out in many other places with general success and its adoption would not be an experiment, but, on the contrary, would be the adoption of a well-tried and economical plan that is a success beyond peradventure."
Ir the system of call bells to summon pages in the House and Senate is successful, it is quite likely that the voting of members of both bodies may be done by electricity. The idea is to have buttons placed in each member's desk, so that by the pressure of a finger he can indicate whether he favors, opposes or declines to vote on any measure. The registering board could be in full view of the House, and votes would be counted by the machine which registers them. This would do avvaj' with the tedious roll-calls and save much time, but it would not be pleasing to those who desire to filibuster against an}' obnoxious measure.
THE Boston ministers have sensibly given up the fight against Sunday newspapers and now propose to use these same Sunday papers as a means of disseminating religious truth amoDg the people. They have incorporated under the name of the Newspaper Sermon Association and will have nondoctrinal and non-sectarian sermons published in the Sunday editions of the big Boston papers. In this way they will reach thousands of people who never see the inside of a church and at the same time cease to butt their heads against a stonewall, which at best is an exercise of doubtful benefit. -f.
Dr. Root's greatest war song, in til sense of inspiration and success, was "The Battle Cry of Freedom,"' although "Tramp, tramp, tramp, the boys are marching" wa-j, and still is, regarded with great favor by those whote blood continues to thrill with the enthusiasm of Written early in lSiil. at a time when patriotism was at fever heat, ••The Battle Cry of Freedom'' struck a popular and inspiring chord, and from the time that it became known to the end of the war was a veritable battle cry, sung bv soldiers on a thousand fields and played by every northern military band between the two oceans. The inspiration of such a song at such a time was electric, and no man will ever know how many battles were won through the influence of this patriotic war cry.
The song was first publicly uttered by the then celebrated Hutchinson family at a meeting held in Union Square, New York, and the testimony of the time is that it struck fire instantly, and soon excited a demand for copies only equaled at a later day by Henry C. Work's famous composition, "Marching Through Georgia.'' It is said that during the terrible battle of the Wilderness, May 0, .1S(»4, a brigade of the Ninth corps, having broken the enemy's line by an assault, became exposed to a flank attack and was driven back in disorder with heavy loss. They retreated but a few hundred yards, however, re-formed, and again confronted the enemy. Just then, the historian says, some gallant fellow in the ranks of £he For-ty-fifth Pennsylvania began to sing—
We'll rally round the Hay, boys, Rally once ayain. SIiout insr the bat tie cry of freedom. The refrain was caught up by the entire regiment and by other troops in "ine. and, inspired by its patriotic ardor. the soldiers but lately in retreat stood firm and met the crash of battle undaunted.
To have written two such songs, together with the "Vacant Chair" and Just Before the Battle, Mother," would be credit enough for any lifetime. All these songs are embalmed history as classics of the war. and so long as a veteran remains to fight over his old battles by the calm fireside, these tender anil inspiring melodies will not be forgotten.
AccoitDi.\ to the annual report of the Commissioner of Patents which was submitted to the Secretary of the nterior this week, there were during fiscal year ending June 30 last 3ti.'.i7^ applications for patents received. 1.453 applications for designs. 77 applications for reissues. U.3H caveats, 2.1S3 applications for trade marks, and 3 18 applications for labels. There were 0,745 patents granted, including reissues and designs, 1.S04 trade marks egistered and six prints registered. The number of patents which expired was lri.HOii. The number of a'lowed applications which were, by operation of law, forfeited for non-payment of
the final fees was 3,20s. The total ex-
penditures for the year were S1,1»o.."7. the receipts over expenditures S157.3H0, and the total receipts over expenditures to date to the credit of the Patent Office in the Treasury of the United States 84.500.757.
THE Sunday School Times will publish in an early issue an article on the' Value of an Educated Motherhood, by Elizabeth Harrison, principal of the Chicago gKindergarten College. Miss Harrison has had large experience among children and mothers of all classes. She makes a strong appeal for the cultivation of the spiritual aspect of motherhood, strikingly illustrating hsr theme by incidents taken from her work among the children of the kindergarten and among the mothers of the Mothers' Meeting. This article will be suggestive and inspiring, not only to the mother, but to any woman who would wish to be a wise helper of the little ones.
THE luminous Henry Watterson was in Detroit Saturday and in an interview on general political topics he said: "I have no idea President Cleveland considers the idea of another nomination, but if, by any concatenation of miracles, Mr. Cleveland should be the nominee, he would not carry a county in the I nited States. 'There never was a braver, more gallant little band than the immortal 30 who stood for Grant in that historic convention in Chicago, and when they failed of success it was written, never to be erased, that a third term is repugnant to the people of the United States. Cleveland, I repeat, would not carry a single precinct of the country."
THE Cincinnati Em/iurer has at last evolved this chunk of wisdom: "The foolish measure ground nut of the Committee on Way and Mean-, would have wrecked the revenues and destroyed the Democratic party. The dread of the Wilson bill paralyzed manufacturers and importers, and the country had to wait a year before the tariff question was settled. All this stopped imports, and thus. of course, dimished the revenues from duties. The present gradual revival of trade is the slow recovery from the business paralysis so occasioned."
That is the exact truth and the strange thing about it is that it is found in a Democratic newspaper.
C. A. PJLLSHUKY, the Minneapolis miller, is of the opinion that the price of wheat will advance considerably, owing to light crops of winter wheat and low stocks of wheat and Hour both at home and abroad.
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gg^jpp
LYMAN B. GLOVEH, in an article in the Chicago Times-Herald, on the "Singer and the Song," referring of course to the late Dr. George F. Root says that during the war period he wrote more than thirty songs that belong to the literature of that, stormy period. Mr. Glover says
mm mtimmm
THE nine o'clock curfew ordinance, so popular in other Minnesota towns, will soon be adopted in Duluth. The proposed ordinance prohibits all persons under sixteen years old from appearing on the street after nine o'clock without their parents or guardian and provides a penalty of SI 00 fine, or ninety days in jail, for violation of the law. We know of no reason why a similar ordinance should not be passed by the Crawfordsville Council and we are sure that if or were passed it would be distinctly better for the community and for the morals of the coming generation.
THE Indianapolis Journal quotes a well-known iron manufacturer as saying: "I have been surprised that Republican papers have not long ago pointed out the fact which the Journal called attention to yesterday, to the effect that the revival of the iron trade is due to the protective duties in the metal schedules of the present tariff laws. True, most of its duties are lower than those of the McKinley law, but some of them are said to be higher. There is no Wilson bill in the iron schedule, but the duties are based upon the McKinley law."
THE total number of building associations in Ohio, according to the recent report of the inspetcor, is 717 (exclusive of those organized during the year), with an authorized capital stock of .^757,731,500. The total amount paid in during the last year was 5?71,212.fiS7. The total losses reported and charged for during the year amounted to only 105,1 n. Considering the stress of hard times during the year it is a remarkable showing. The Ohiolaw governing such institutions is well-nigh perfect and good results speak for themselves.
TIIIHTY thousand Indians are now engaged in farming, stock-raising and other civilized pursuits. During the year they raised over 1.373,.JO() bushels of corn and other grain, and vegetables in proportion. They own 200,000 head of cattle and 1,284,000 sheep. About 22,000 Indians voted at the last election. It is estimated that 30.000 out of the total Indian population of 247.000 are church members. Out of the 247,000, 189.000 are self-supporting and 15 000 pay taxes.
THE Treasury is again in peril. The bond syndidate has withdrawn its support having completed its obligations on July 5, by paying all gold due on account for the bonds sold to it so advantageously. It finds it unprofitable to maintain the reserve now, and the Treasury is left to shift for itself, and gold is now flowing abroad. The Treasury deficit continues to grow and it aggregates .S13.'.t34,(.i04.3S for the first thirty-nine days of this fiscal year.
THE Greencastle lianner-Timea makes
fTle queer complaint lhat the
township
trustees' annual reports are too long ami for this very odd reason: "The present wording of the law makes it the duty of a trustee to publish his report in full, and the average country newspaper publisher finds himself 'out of sorts' after he has placed about two of them in type."' Brer Beckett should sort up his oflice and not grumble over a fat take.
IxniANwrOi.is News: The government of Kansas is taking a hand in the de struction of noxious weeds on farming la/nds. It has a plan by which it fines farmers in proportion to the amount of such weeds which they permit to grow on their farms or in the roadways touching their lands. This is a kind of governmental interference in agriculture that seems to work.
THE eleventh census has cost up to date 310,531,142 and will probably be completed before Jan. 1, lS'.MJ. Seven volumes of the report, giving the names of the veterans of the war. their rank, service and present address, have been turned over to the Pension Office. These returns are of great value to soldiers wishing to complete their claims.
SOUTH BEXD Tribune: Has ex-Con-gressman By mi in dropped out of .sight'.' Very little is heard of him and his sound money campaign. Perhaps the free silverites have bought hi in off with those 50-cent dollars.
THE Treasury shortage for the present month is about a million dollars a day, and the days are not so long as they were last month either.
NEW YOI city spends §5,000,000 on churches, SO.000,000 for amusements, and §100,000,000 for whisky and beer.
Doctors Will occupy It.
The brick are now on the ground for the new building to be erected by C. M. Crawford on Green street just north of the Western Union Telepraph Company's office. The new building will contain just two elegant offices. The grond floor will be occupied by Dr. Ristine and the uppper floor by Dr. Barcus.
Death of an Infant.
The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. GeorgeVance died Monday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock at the family residence on east Jefferson street. The funeral took place Tuesday morning at half past 10 o'clock at the house.
MMjijjTO
BITTEN BY A RATTLESNAKE.
Will Stephenson, Son of John Stephenson the A ictim of a Snake Monday Morning While l'lowlng.
Last Monday Will Stephenson, aged about 22 years, the son of John Stephenson, of this city, started o\it to plow on the farm of Ed Coleman, several miles north of here. As the weather was warm and the land to be worked was soft loam Will concluded to go barefooted. He did this to his sorrow, lie had hardly begun work- before he plowed up an enormous rattlesnake and had stepped on it before aware of its presence. The angry reptile fastened its venomous fangs in his foot about the ankle and did not loose its hold until beaten off.
Greatly terrified young Stephenson quickly unhitched his horse from the plow and mounting it went on the gallop for the nearest doctor at Linden, three miles away. He made the trip very quickly as was natural under the circumstances and arrived to find both doctors White and Laughlin out of town visiting patients. His leg was beginning to swell greatly and he was suffering pain. Mr. Coleman was in Linden and he- and William Dunkle procured a quart of whisky from John Vyse and poured it down young Stephenson's throat. They acted on the principle that poison counteracts the effect of poison and they acted well. Stephenson's leg continued to swell and he passed into a drowsy stupor. 'The doctors arrived in time and began to work on him For some time it was feared that he would die but at noon, when last heard from, his condition was considered more favorable..
Kindergarten*.
A year ago the Crawfordsville school board thought rather seriously of introducing a system of free kindergartens. The ladies of the W. C. T. U.. we believe, undertook to take a necessary census and for awhile the prospects for kindergartens looked bright. But for some reason, probably a financial one, the matter was dropped. It should be taken up again and pushed to completion. On the topic of "Child Life and the Kindergarten," in the Arena, Mr. Frank Bufiington Vrooman thus sums up the argument for the foundation of kindergartens as a part of the public school system: "The usefulness of the kindergarten having been demonstrated wiierd' -i- it has been introduced, the primary importance of its thorough and immediate extension in connection with the common schools is the phase of the question which concerns us as citizens. The right and duty of State interference in the direction of public instruction has never been questioned since once it was fairly tried. There is no enlargement of State activity which will excite less criticism and cause less friction than that one proposed in offering a free kindergarten system. It is by no means an innovation to suggest that a State which was the first in history to place within the reach of every child free instruction meeting the requirements for admission to college should also give free instruction to every child at as early an age as.that child may be taken from his mother. In other words,, free intermediate schools should be supplemented by free kindergartens. Surely it is stupid to elaborately and carefully devote the whole attention to the superstructure without giving a thought to the foundation! If indeed, as all the great educators from Plato to Froebel teach us, the child's first instruction is the most vitally important, and the formation of his whole character is dependent upon it. so that no subsequent care can make amends for wrong beginnings, how can the State afford to discount itsown work by failure to prepare the way for it? It leaves it to a chance hand, or to no hand at all, or to one that will play havoc, to form the mold into which it will pour its fine gold."
Funeral of II. 1*. Krisminger. The funeral of the late Horace P. Ensminger occurred Sunday afternoon from the family residence on east Main street. A large concourse of the friends of the deceased assembled at the home and a large number followed the remains to the Masonic cemetery. The bell of the city building was tolled as the procession passed through the streets.
A Hig li'iginesH Ahead.
The Dovetail Body Company expects to complete 500 vehicles next season^ so great has been its success this year One day last week twelve vehicles of its make were sold in Danville, 111.
FOR letter heads see THK JOURNAL CO. PRINTERS
Bngwiiir.
1WSiSS8BSfi
The Popular Through Car Line
EAST AND WEST.
without change. Also through sleepers between St. Louis and Chicago, St. Paul, Omaha, Kansas Citv, Denver and Salt Lake City.
Peerless Dining Cars and Ine Rerllnluj,' Chair Cars 011 all through trains. Connections with other roads made In Union, Depots. Baggage cheeked through to all: points.
When you buy your ticket see that, it, reads-' via the "Wabash." cor time tables, maps of other .information apply lo »nv railroad ticket, agent or to .1. M, McCONN EI.L. lass. and Ticket Agt., Lafayette, Ind.: .JOHN SHUTTS, •BH! Ticket Agent, Danville, Ills.
C. S. CIIANE,
ELV'S
CREAM BALM!
la quickly absorbed. Clonuses the Nasal PftSBiifres, Allays Pain and
Intlain niatlon. Heals the Bores, I'roteets the
Membrane from AcMitlouul Cold. Restores t.lic Senses of Tuste
And Smell.
A E
Ci. P. it T. A.. St. Louis, Mo.
This is Important!
To Everybody in Montgomery and Adjoining Counties.
Those having deadstock to know" that Joseph (loldberg will send his wagon and haul them off their places, which will save them burying them. It will be beneficial to people's health and to the health of the rest of thestock. Notify him by telephone, telegraph, postal or otherwise and they will be removed on short notice. Also bear in mind that Joseph C.oldberg is the man you want to sell all kinds of Hides, Tallow and Furs and all other articles in his line. He will pav you the market price at all times and he will give you every pound that it weighs.
LAND OF PROMISE
Willi good Iivii: the year round. If tlioso Intim!inp farm,and CIIIHTH, WIL* write to Hio S-: it.\vrs
I Coon-' I/ND at /, rAKW»e57 AND 1/
A.:.r
co.,
C'lilcuK", Jliinois. who h:.ve excellent
niiiiiiig land in Vntrn 1 Wism-in, ('"i'liA roiVrVv' :rom to$!Gpor acro.thoy will learn sciiR-thim:thai. VjU intf rost .wm. Terms o:i*v, only TMT:trrocu«li it you haven littlomonoy tho Onnipanv willfuri-M' JUMvxt, and you mit/lit as \vo!l own :i fJrm as to pay iLif.'h oay.li rent eaeh year »r work on«Mn f-h:tro«.
Companies oi practical jarmors now heimr farmednnnt7,aC ^VCr 3,000 UCTC3 fiuld 1U lOUJ* nonths. \c)dro**H: beC. S. GRAIL'S LAND CO., R. 311,56 Fifth ATe., Chicaro, I1L
Morgan & Lee
ABSTRACTORS. LOAN A NO
INSURANCE AGENTS
.Money to Loan at percent Interest.
Farms and City »Jrop«*rty or Sale
Life, ITlre and Accident Insurance. Office North Washington st., Ornbano Block, Crawfonlsville, Ind.
CATARRH
COLD HEAD
IT WILL Cli KK. A particle Is applied Into eaehuostril and Is H£r»euble. Price ."11 cents at drinrjrlsts or by mail. RLY HKOTHEKS, 50 Warro stree New York.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautifies the hair4 Promotes a luxuriant prowth. Never Fails to Bestorc Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color. Cures scalp di^easfn & hair falling.
CONSUMPTIVE
Use Parker's Ginger Tonic. It euros the wor«t Cough, Weak Lungs, Debility, Indigestion, Pain, Take n» time.50ct#. HINDERCORNS. The onlrmre euro for Corns. Stop* all pain. ISc. at JJruggiste, or IlISCOX CO., N. Y.
Thetealfirig Conservatory of America^
CARL FABLVEN, Director. Founded in 1S33 by E-Tou^!^^nC0^ T0N
So
Send for Prospectus
giving full information.
FRANK W. HAI.B, General Manager.
W.K.WALLACE
Agent, for the Connect leu t. I'M re Insurance Co.,' ot, Hartford. American Kire lnsurimec Co.. of New York, Gfrard Fire ln«urance Company, of Philadelphia, Londwi Assurance Corp- ration' of London, Grand Kupicis klre Insurance Co., of Mictilpin. Office in Joel Block with R. I£. ltrvant,
South Wash. St.. Crawfordsville.
BJD juits. MAC S'J'I LW ELL,
Voris & Stilwell.
(Kslalilisliod Ih'iT)
Representing of the Olc!f«t. mid Largest Kire, Lite anil Aeelilent Insurance Companies. ..j-: Farm Loansa Specialty. Prompt and Kquittible Settlement of Losses. Ollice—-'id door north ot Court House, Crawfordsville. Ind.
C. C. RICE, Solicitor.
GEORGE W. FULLER,
per 16 or 2
"I h&<e a dear little babe, and am well. I thank, Mrs. Pinkham for this, and so could other motherless women, iras a victim of Fem«le troubles.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cured me."
JARS. GEO. C. KIRCHNER, 361 Snediker
Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Crawtordsville, Ind. Hreeder and Shipper ol thoroughbred POLAND
CHINA hogSiB.P.Hocks, White Guineas and Fan Tail Pigeons. Stock and E(JTKS 1'or pale. Egg6$1.25 Write your want".
O.U. PERRIN.
Ij -A- "W "Y 33 DR.
Practices in Federal and State Courts. PATENTS A SPECIALTY. @f"Law Offices, Crawford Building. Opp, Music Hall, Crawfordsville.
M.D.WHITE, W. M. REEVES, CHAS.D.OREAR
White, Reeves & Orear,
Attorneys-at-Law.
Also a Large Amount of Money|to Loan at Six per cent, per annum on farms or cit. property in sums of 300 up to $10,000 Call and see us. Office 103Hi east Main street.
