Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 22 November 1895 — Page 10
J. J. Darter
107 North Green St.
Money To Loan, Good Notes Cashed. City Property For Sale.
300 acre farm 2 miles west of New Richmond. 170 1 mile from New Richmond. 1 80 2 miles from NVlngate. 65 2 06 Ou Potato Creole. 80 2 miles from Elmdale. 147 2 96 7 miles north of Crawf'dsvllle. 195 3 108 2 miles from Smartsburg. 96 Joining Smartsburg. 60 2 miles from Smartsburg. 4 8 2 68 8 miles oast of the city. 40 3J4 miles north of Darlington. 118 3V4 miles 140 2mileseastof ICirkpatrick. 120 Near Garfield. 160 1 mile west of the city. 68 2Yt miles east of Yountsville. 80 2 miles from Yountsville. 80 3 miles from Yountsville, 40 3 miles north of the city.
80
220 4
260 2
14 41 14
86 1 mile west of tho city. 80 3 miles from Brown's Valley.
110 15 miles north of Indianapolis. 86 2^ miles from the city. 86 6 miles south of the city. 23 2W miles from the city. 1G0 Near Linden. 100 mile north of Waynetown. 55 3 miles N.W.ef Brown'sV alley. 198 3 miles east of Linden. gY 3 it 210 3^6 miles south of the cit 80 Near Linden. 120 5 miles from Thorntown. 140 miles south of Yountsville.
The, Fastest Race Horse
Or the slowest one, or any kind a horse can look pretty in 1 Horse Clothes purchased of
Richmond & Ross.
a be in re at be Nevfaiid tian^iome. oaii and see them.
Richmond & -Ross.
g£i26jNorth Washington St.
Our Special.
Holiday Offer
One dozen Cabinets and a life-size CRAYON for
$3.00.
This is a genuine offer come and see for yourself.
Nicholson & Sons
118 )4 E. Main St. Crawfordsville, Ind.
Wall Paper
AT COST
FOR THE NEXT TEN DAYS.
Ross Bros.
Albert W. Perkins AUCTIONEER. Stock Sales a Specialty.
All inquiries by mail or telegraph will receive prompt attention., Office with
A. S. CLEMENTS,
107 N. Green St.. Cra%vfordsqille, Ind. P. S.—Mr. Clements will receive orders and arrange for sales.
J. BERRY, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon.
Chronic diseases a specialty. Cancer removed without the knife or caustics, no pain, by tho only certain remedy on earth, in from six to eighteen days. 13 cases cured in Montgomery county. For reference, Jas. Hull. Wesley Lem Williams, city, who had hard cancer for three years, and are well.
Office, over K. C. Smith's drug store. Hours, rora 8 to 11 a. m.. and from 1 to 5 p. m.
Abstracts of Title!
For correot Abstracts of Title call at the Uocorder'6 offioe, court house, where the original county records are, and where, also, a complete set of Abstracts may be found in charge of Wm. H. Webster, showinir correct title to all lands in Montgomery county, Jnd.
Deeds and mortgages carefully executed. Charges Reasonable.
Thos, T, Munhall, Abstracter.
A Miracle in Vermont.
THE WONDERFUL EXPERIENCE
WELL-KNOWN CHELSEA
OF A
MAW.
Stricken irlth Incurmbl* rimn and yet Cnrvd. {From tht Argtu and Patriot, MmtpiUir, PM
Eight years ago Geo. Hutchinson moved from Bradford to Chelsea, Yt, and bought the sawmill at the latter plaoe. He was known as one of the strongest men In thai section. On Deo. 20, '02 while atnorkiD the mill, he was struck In the back by a flying board, which seriously injured him and incapacitated him for work of any kind. As a result of this, Locomotor Ataxia set in, (this is a form of paralysis which deprives the patient of all use of his lower limbs.) The Argtu & Patriot interviewed Mr. Hutchinson to-day, and his story is her* given in his own words.
My back ached continually and my legs began to grow numb and to be less and less usable. By the 15th of April I oould do absolutely nothing and was scarcely able to stand. My physicians advised me to go to the Mary Fletcher Hospital at Burlington, to be treated, and I took their advice, when 1 left home 'my friends bade me good-bye, never expecting to sea me alive again. The physicians at the hospital told me that my case was a serious one and I was completely discouraged. I remained at the hospital seven weeks and took the medicine!) which the doctors gave me. I felt better at the hospital and thought that I waa recovering, ana went home to continue their treatment, which 1 did for two months, and also had an electric battery under their advice. The improvement, however, did not continue and I began to give np hope. August
1st,
1893, 1 oould not get out of my chair without assistance, and if I got down upon the floor, 1 could not get up alone. About this time chanoed to read an account of the wonderful curative powers of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People in oases similar to ni* own. I did not have any faith in the Pills but thought a trial oould do no harm, so 1 bought some without telling anyone what 1 was going to do. After I nad been taking them some time I found that, for the first time in months I was able to walk down to the post office, and my neighbors began to discuss the marked improvement in my health. As I continued the medioine I oontinued to improve, and soon recommenced work in the mill, at first Tory lightly, and inc- easing as I was able and as I gained in health and spirits, and now for the past three months 1 have been working ten hours per day almost as steadily as I ever did. I feel well, eat well and sleep well as I ever did and I nave no pain anywhere."
The reporter talked with several other gentlemen in regard to the case of Mr. Hutchinson, who stated that any statement he. might make would be entitled to entire credence.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain all the elements necessary to give new life ami richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are for sale by all druggists, or may be had by mail from Dr. Williams' Medioine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., for 50o. per box, or six boxes for $2.50.
WEEKLY
JOUENAI.
ESTABLISHED IN 1845.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22. 1895.
THE PEOPLE.
-v ..
Persona] GoRftlp liolnttve to Crawfordpville Pooplo and Their Friend* Ftoijci Klauwhere.
—Born to Wilrnnt McCormick and wife, an eight ponnd girl, last Frdiay. —John K. McMillin, of Portland, Ore., and Rev. Wm. McMillin, of Fair Haven, Wash., are in the city. John K. McMillin was one of the pioneers of Indiana, amassing a modest fortune in Tippecanoe county by farming. Rev. Wm. McMillin has been in the ministry many years, filling many of the prominent Methodist churches of the extreme Northwest.
Property Sold.
Alf. Lookabill & Co. have sold the house and lot of Sarah McKinsey in Russellville to Dr. J. W. Bilbo for Sl500.
Married.
Jacob Stonebrakev and Alice Pickett, both of Yountsville. were married by 'Squire Stilwell at his office on Thursday, Nov. 14.
Murrlrd.
Wm. Hendricks, of Waynetown, and Miss Minnie Sperry, of Crawfordsville, were married Saturday afternoon by 'Squire Stilwell, at his office.
G. A. It. Notice.
Comrades are requested to call on the Quartermaster and pay their dues before next meeting and save being reported delinquent. By order of
D&W COMMITTEE.
Thtt.lury Mere.
The petit jury convened Monday and for the first time in many years every one of the regular panel responded. This was a keen disappointment to the '•professionals" in search of a job.
Married.
Last Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock \V. S. Coyner and Sarah Irwin, of Colfax, were quietly married by ltev. S. U. Creighton at his room. The happy young couple returned home on the evening train.
Prize Winner*.
By far the best premiums offered the Chrysanthemum Society were given oy the Yaryan green house, and were won by Mrs. William Martin and Miss Sadie Brown, Mrs. Martin getting the five dollars in cash for the best collection and Miss Brown the three dollars for best cut blooms.
Oil! G. M. D. Oh! G. M. D. Thou wondrous healer,'tis to lliee Our vows we pay. oui tributes bring: Of thee wc tell, of thee vesing. Who dreads dyspepsia's dire attack. With constipation at its back. Assured should be: relief is nigh but to G. M. L). t.liey fly, Ry nervousness sore oppressed With life a burden, robbed of rest. There hundred are who fain would know Where they to get relief can go. We point to G. SI. and say Uo cured, be luippy, light ami gay. Kollow the path that thousand* tread. He cured In heart, be cured In heed. What else this mystic M. D. iiut Golden Medical Discovery. That's 'just it, Dr. l'ierce's Golden Medical Discovery. Sold everywhere.
FOB calling cards see TUB JOUUNAL CO.. PMNTEUS
HARRY MAXWELL'S EXPERIENCE.
He And His Wife kind a Baby Left on Their Door Step in Louisville.
Louisville Times:Mrs. A. H. Bowman conducts a fashionable boarding house at 1025 Fourth avenue. At present, among other boarders, are Messrs. Maxwell, Hiilis and Murray, of the Mills party of evangelists. Mr. Harry Maxwell, the sweet singer, had been out calling with his wife yesterday afternoon. They returned to the boarding house shortly before 0 o'clock.
The front door of the house is protected by a handsome vestibule, deep and with granite pillars on either side. Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell had just reached the entrance to this vestibule, when Mrs. Maxwell almost stepped on a small bundle. A strange sound came from the bundle, and Mrs. Maxwell jumped back badly frightened.
Mr. Maxwell struck a match and saw lying on the floor a three-weeks-old girl baby carefully wrapped in a coarse light-blue child's wrap. A woman's coat of poor quality was about the outside of the bundle. The child was carried inside the house.
Its garments were much too large for it. They had evidently been taken from an older child. It was a pretty baby, with big blue eyes that looked inquiringly at the surprised group which stood about the bed. Within five minutes the child was crowing and clenching its chubby little fists and laughing in high glee. The child was so pretty that it did not become the coarse black and red striped flannel.
Where the baby came from is a question which all in the boarding house are trying to solve. One thing has been settled, the baby will remain at Mrs. Bowman's until good hands are found to place it in. The boarders are delighted with it. Messrs. Mills, Ostrom and others of the evangelistic party have spoken for it, but this matter has not been definitely settled.
OUR STATE INSTITUTIONS.
What It Costs to Maintain Oar Various Penal, Charitable and Educational Institutions.
The Central Hospital for the Insane received from the State during the year 8287,000. The hospital earned $1,807.07, and received from counties 810,407.70. The Northern Hospital for the Insane got $105,000 it earned 8138.63, and received from counties 82,058.01. The Eastern Hospital for the Insane got 8109,973.96 it earned $53.21, and received $2,317.55 from counties. The Southern Hospital for the Insane got $99,984.80 it earned $69.39, and re-ceived-from counties $2,380.31. The State Soldiers' Home received $30,642.38. The Institution for the Education of the Deaf and Dumb received $70,337.30, and earned $2,892.01. The Institution for the Education of the Blind received $33,738.15, and earned $1,162.79 The School for the FeebleMinded received $99,048.76, and earned $209.12. The Soldiers and Sailors' Orphans' Home received $107,200. The Reform School for Girls and Women's Prison received $65,000, and earned $33,310.26. The State prison north received $105,4S4.45 and earned $97,731.12. The State prison south received $34,999.67, and earned $49,917.75.
The educational institutions received the following amounts: Indiana University, $72,200 Purdue University, $103,500 (earned $21,000) State Normal School, $20,222. The State Sailors' and Soldiers' Monument received $28,921.25, and earned $3,417.77. The printing and stationery for the year cost $44,997.51. Chattanooga Monument Commission received $0,001.38 during the year.
The totals show that the benevolent institutions cost the State $949,525.39 the penal and reformatory institutions $300,484.12, and the educational institutions $195,922. During the year the State paid $224,921.49 interest on the State debt. The State judiciary cost $263,428.19 State bonds, bureaus and departments, $170,407.65.
Ben Hur ut Ladoga.
Ladoga Lauicr-. Dr. Oaley, of Crawfordsville, has been ljere most of the past two weeks arranging to organize a Court of the Tribe of lien llur. This is one of the promising young orders, and is having a remarkable growlli.
I CARTERS
•PITTLE
IlVER
PILLS
SICK HEADACHE
Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per. feet remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsl ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Small Dose
Small Price.
THE BATTLE IS ON.
An Appeal From New Ross to the Citizens of Walnut Township—The Macedonian Call.
NEW Ross, Ind., Nov. 18, 1895.—For six long years we have accepted the conditions imposed upon us by the higher powers, and have driven a bargain with that enemy of morality, the saloon, and fixed a price that in six years has brought into our town treasury
§900
of blood money. Within six
months a single case in court—one day's work of whiskey—has wiped out this credit and left us naught but dust and ashes, sorrow and grief, shame and disgrace as the reward of our indulgence. We have furnished our full quota to the stone pile at Crawfordsville, to the county jail and the State penitentiary, all graduates from the saloon. The harvest is ever on, it ripens alike in the searching suns of summer and the bitter blasts of winter. Within the past twenty-five years we have seen the aged man taken cold and rigid from the winter snowdrift without having had a lucid moment to prepare for eternity between the time he left the saloon and the moment his soul went to God. We have seen the maudlin and senseless sot instantly sobered by the awful calamity of the loss of a limb under the wheels of a train. We have seen the dead body of a townsman in the prime of life laid out before the coroner, ghastly from the wounds received at the dead of night whilst sitting on the railroad track. He had been last seen at the saloon. We have seen an exsecretary of our former fair association fall from honor and competence, through drink, to such a state that he was arrested on the grounds in company with a low negro clandestinely peddling whiskey by the half pint. We have seen the owner of a saloon, who had formerly been a prosperous young farmer, but was now his own best customer, fall, on alighting from a train, and crawl on his hands and knees through the mud and slop of a filthy alley to the back door of his saloon and there lie like a beast. We have seen another young farmer, discontented, and allured by the glitter and glamour of the saloon, set up in New Ross and in less than two years leave the place on foot, deserting his wife. To-day he and his wife are both dead—whiskey killed them. We have seen a stout, able-bodied young man with a wife and two children, come to New Ross, begin the saloon business, run the gauntlet of minor offenses, commit forgery, flee the country and die an outcast among strangers. We seen the wife of a saloon keeper run screaming from the place she called home, crying for protection from the assaults of her drunken husband.
These things have occurred right here in our little country town of New Ross and all on account of that homedestroying, hell-recruiting place—the legalized saloon. This, my friends, is but a broken and incomplete sketch, but a tithe of the evergrowing account to be charged to the saloon in our little country village. We could go on with heart-rending and sickening details taken from twenty-five years happenings in the east side of Walnut township and covering1 that time we could add a fearful list of blighted manhood, lost virtue, disease and corruption that is a living death, broken and severed families, insanity, deformed and stunted children, imperfect mentally and physically. But enough we see that this blasting agency is no respecter of persons, of family ties or social relations—it damages Republicans and Democrats alike, it has slowly poisoned the morals of our whole community.
There is an option clause in the Nicholson temperance law which gives us the power to say by town ship, "will we have the saloon or no?" Our new law outside cities knows no lines, no limits smaller than the town ship. Of our thirty-six square miles of territory can it be possible that less than one square mile is blasted by this unholy inlluence, and is this all in the broad domain of our fair township that suffers any detriment from the New Ross saloon? Of the more than 2,!500 souls who vvill be held before God for the deeds done in the body, can it be possible that only the 450 of these souls who arc immediately under this blighting curse, alone feel the weight of its scourge?
Its deadly influence is far reaching and like the octopus of the sea its slimy tentacles are extended from a common center to all sides, rending the heart strings in many a fair country home, and through ties of kinship and common brotherhood reaching to the utmost limits of our township.
This Nicholson law comes to us of Walnut townshsp to-day, and seems to say to us as did Joshua of old to the assembled tribes of Israel, "And if it seem evil unto you to serve -the Lord, choose you this day whom ye will serve." If we say nothing, do nothing, the saloon keeper has our silent consent, clinched and riveted by the county commissioners for another year, because our law-makers have seen fit to put the burden of proof upon us, compelling us to show forth our case if we do not want the saloon in our township.
Citizens, brethren of Walnut township, now is the time to rise in the might of our power and each and every voter, like Joshua say, "As for me and my house we will serve the Lord." Like the man in the vision that appeared to Paul in the night, we of New Ross stand before you and cry, "Come over into Macedonia and help us." DK. HOMEK BOWKBS.
THE
FAIR.
Sewing,
=53®
Special Millinery Sale.
Our stock of Millinery Goods is entirely too large and we want to cut it down, and to do it we have inaugurated this sale. It will pay any one wanting a Hat or Bonnet to give us a call.
All our S10, §12, §15 and §18 Pattern Hats go at §5 for choice. All our §7, SS and §9 Pattern Hats go at §3.79. Felt Flats, both Ladies' and Misses' sizes, the §1 kind go at 43c. §3 00 Ostrich Plumes go at just one-half price—§1.00. §1.50 Ostrich Plumes go at just one-lialf price—75c. 81.00 Ostrich Plumes go at just one-half price—50c. And so on all through the department.
CLOAKS.
We are selling them regardless of profits, as we don't want to have any left on our hands when the season is over. Come quick if you want bargains.
1 ABE LEVINSON
The New Specialty
Is the cheapest Dry Goods Store in this State. Special Cut Sale
CLOAKS, CAPES, BLANKETS, UNDERWEAR,
DRESS GOODS, COMFORTABLES,
Wertheimer's Fine Kid Gloves C=B La SPIRITATA CORSETS HENDERSON CORSETS, Best Line of Wrappers in City
TAKE NOTICE:—On Friday we will sell all those Simpson-Garner reds, American blues, bribble cloths and all best prints, worth from 6}£to8jjc at 5c
TheNewSpecialty Dry Goods Store.
7 Doors east Elston Bank. WRAY & MAXWELL.
Hanging Lamps.
Hand, Hall and Kitchen Lamps, Lamp Shades of all kinds. Silk, Linen and Paper Shades, Lanterns, Lamp Burners, all at the very lowest prices.
As good Broom as anyone wants for io cents. Mint Glass Tumblers for 3c each. A good heavy Goblet for 5 cents er-ch.
If graphite bearing boxes are wanted add $5.00 to above prices. 3 ft. power mills for grinding feed prices on application.
Higher towers: prices quoted on application.
UZAN INBFIL
Chester J. Britton,
M. J). C.
VeterinarySurgeon And Dentist. Graduate of the Chicago Veterinary College. All diseases of domestic animals treated.
THE FAIR.
100 More Carving Sets
107 Sovth Washington Street, Crawfordsville.
JOHN W. FAUST.
WINDMILLS
8 ft. ceared gal. steel mill with babbitted boxes. 20 ft. gal. steel tower and gal. steel anchor posts complete $40.60 8 ft.
geared Kal.steel
mill with babbitted boxes,
25 ft. gal. steel tower and gal. steel anchor posts complete 43.00 8 ft. geared pal. steel mill with babbitted boxes, 30 ft. gal. steel tower and gal. steel anchor posts complete 45,60 8 ft. geared gaL steel mill with babbitted boxes, 40 ft. gal. steel tower and gal. steel anchor postscomplete 50.50 10 ft. direct, stroke gal. steel mill with babbitted boxes, 20 ft. gal. stool tower and gal. steel anchor posts complete 45.50 10 ft. direct stroke gal. steel mill with babbitted boxes, 25 ft. gal. steel tower and gal. steel anchor postscomplcte 48.00 10 ft. direct stroke gal. steel mill with babbitted boxes, 30 ft. gal. steel tower and gal. steel anchor posts complete 60.00 10 ft. direct stroke gal. steel mill with babbitted boxes, 40 ft. gal. steel tower and gal. steel anchor posts "complete 56.50
Pumps, Pipes and Taults and in fact everything pertaining to windmill trade at wholesale prices Diilling wells a specialty. Office, 125 south Washington St. Crawfordbville, Ind.
r*
Ofiice over Moffett & Morgan's drug store 23% East Main street.
Inlirmary at Riddle & Wilson's Rink Barn. Head of a horse that died through unattentionito his teeth.
25C For set of three
