Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 15 January 1897 — Page 6

Keep

our

Eve on This.

Don't let transeieut people

spoil your SewinglMachines.,

Bring them to the old reliable

and pet pood work. Sewing1

Machines and Musical Instru--

inent.s sold and repaired. Bald-

win Music Room i""

Q. W. Anderson.

Albert W. Perkins AUCTIONEER.

Stock Sales a Specialty.

All inquiries by mail or telephone 257 will receive prompt attention. Office with

A. S. CLEMENTS,

107 N. Green St. Crawfordsqille, Ind. P. S.—Mr. Clements will receive orders and arrange for sales.

MONEY TO LOAN_^

At (I |)cr cent. Interest, on long time. Ab strnct.s furnished. 1,1 fe, Klre and Accident Insurance.

MORGAN & LEE,

Office Ornbaun Mock.

LOUIS M'MAINS,

Attorney at Law

GENERAL INSURANCE. Successor to C. W. Wright.

OfSce wiih Kistine & ltistlne, Kooms and 4 Fisher Building.

C. W. BURTON

ATTORNEY-AT-LAW

Will do ii. ireneral law business in Montgomery ami adjoining counties. Special attention nven in corivoynneuiir and the settlement of decedents. (Ulii-e over Mat Kline's Jewelry stole.

PARKER'S CIMCER TONIC rti&tce Lung Troubles, IMnlity, distressing ptomach anil female ills, Rnd is noted tor making uiros vhen all oUi«w» treatment 'falls. T!vcrv mothi-r

tiim!

invalid nhniild haw it. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Clctnw® and beautifies the h&lr* I'rotiiotei a luxuriMit growth. Never Pailo to ftentoro Gray

Hair to its Youthful Color. Cures scalp diseased & huir lalling 6()c,anft$1.0Q at Druggists

HINDERCORNS The only fcure Curofot Corns.Stops all pain. Makes walking cut *, 1 jc. atDru^utf

Yor tfgfCofcMfo.

KtTfS CREAM BALM lf» positive enre. Apply into the nostrils. It. is qnickly alworlied. CO cents at. Drneeists or by mail enmplcB 1

Or. ly mall.

2X7 BltOTHKRS, 66 Warren St., New York City.

The White Plume

of Henry of Navarre guided his army iu buttle and Ih'j Red Cross on 'Johnson's BI:i.i,AjrNNA Plasters means that they are excellent above others they lead the way. For all weakness, pain, and every ailment capable of external treatment, they are standard. Try them and learn what perfect plaster is. jYon-e genuine without the Red Cross. •tOIINSON ft JOHNSON,

Manufacturing Ctieminta, New York. II ij IIJ« mi iH

STIMULATING and REFRESHING After Exercise

Liebig COMPANY'S Extract of Beef

Tin: genuine tin* signature* «if •••••. B:non LH'bl^r id hlne. on every .^r

c. H. & D. Rv.

—To

Cincinnati,^^

Dayton, •Toledo.

^""""Detroit.

MO ISO IN HOUTE.

BOBTB

'BOCTB

2:10 a. in Nljrlit Kxpress 1:4i' a. 1:15 p. in ..Fust Mail

1:1&

ni

p. iu I.ocal Freight .8:415 a.

Big 4 Peoria Division.

KA ST

COUTH

\V KST

8:42 a. in...Dully, except Sunday... p. iii :15 p. in.. Daily, except Sunday... 8:60 a. 4 :59 p. m. -Daily 1:15 p. 3:47 u. in.... .Daily l'J::i7 a.

VANDALIA.

1

MOUTH

9:21 a. in fi :17 a. rri 4:4 1 p. in 6:19 p. in 12:10 p. 12:16 p.m

Weekiy journal.

ESTABLISHED IN 1845.

1'RIDAY, JANUARY. 15, 1897.

or Divoree.

Vandeline 10. Mish has filed a petition for divorce from Joseph Mish. The petition is based on alleged incompatibility of temperament of the parties.

"Will Hi- l'nst polled.

The Lotus Club minstrel show will not be given this month as planned. The necessary preparation has caused a delay of some days and a d&te is to be set for the performance.

Ouarterly Meeting-.

Quarterly meeting at M. JO. church at New Ross next Saturday and Sunday, Jan. 10 and 17. Dr. J. H. Cissel, the presiding elder, will preach Saturday afternoon at 2:50 and also in the evening at 7 o'clock, and Sunday morning.

A Fine Monument.

Sidney Speed is in Indianapolis erecting a monument to the memory of the late John M. Butler. The monument will be thirty feet high and will have a ten foot bottom base. It will be one of the finest pieces of work in Crown IIill cemetery.

.Letter J.ist.

Following is a list of the letters remaining uncalled for in the poatoflice at Crawfordsville for the week ending Jan. 13, 1897: Bradley Miss Ola Johnson George lirown James Pulliatn Jesse Heek Miss June Robans John 1! Bennett Hannary Thomas Mrs H.

Doesn't Want It.

A Washington dispatch says: "When I'rof. David Starr Jordon, of Leland Stanford I'niyersitv, was in Washington recently, an oiler was made to him of the place held by the late Dr. George Brown Good, secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, and head of the National Museum, and declined. The regents will meet to elect January 17, and it is certain that Dr. Jordan will be chosen had he signified his willingness to accept."

I'rompt Piiyment.

St

sTtfcwer

-riiKMK hibk ok kn-H ur.—Gen­

tlemen:—1 desire to thank you for the very prompt settlement of the certificate heid by my late husband, Fred C. Handel, in your order, and the payment of 83,000, being the full face of the certificate. 1 assure you that 1 ap predate the kindness, and unhesitatingly recommend your order to all persons desiring to secure protection for their family. Yours Respct., its.

ion a

.lan. 12, 1SD7.'*

anii-

i.

A Kill#* for Itloorlel Horses, Among the rules of a New York livery stable where the animals of many wealthy men are kept, are the following: "No man will be employed who drinks intoxicating liquors. No man shall speak loud to any of the horses, or in the stable where they are. Horses of good blood are nervous, and loud, excited conversation is felt by every horse who hears it, and keepsthein all nervous and uneasy. No man shall use profane language in the hearing of horses."

Serious Aeehlent.

Mrs. 1 hos. Ransdall, of Kiskvilie, met with accident Tuesday which proved exceedingly serious and painful. In the arrangement of the house the cellar door forms part of the floor of the pantry, and while preparing supper that evening Mrs. Ransdall had occasion to enter the pantrj'. Someone having left the cellar door open she fell headlong to the cellar floor, several feet below. Distressing injuries resulted which, together with the nervous shock, leaves Mrs. Ransdall in a serious condition.

A llox Soeinl.

Tuesday evening at Mt. Tabor school house the pupils of that school gave a box social for the benefit of the school ibrary. A number of attractive featires were on the programme and the attendance was consequently very large and a snug sum for the purpose iu view was the result. In the eontest as to the most beautiful and accomplished lady present Miss Myrtle Wray, of this city, received the highest number of votes. For the ugliest man, J. C. Wampler and Frank Guntle tied, each receiving 301 votes.

Few late the Dangers

to which the expectant mother is exposed ere she presses to her heart her babe, and the dread with which she look* forward to the hoar of approaching mother hood. the use of

"Mother's Friend"

the body is made to yield

pleasantly and without i&ternul protest to the change it is undergoing. Headache and nausea arc dispelled, the depressed and nervous feeling yields to one of pleasurable expectation. Danger to life of both mother and child is avoided, and she pusses through the ordeal quickly and her recovery iB rapidj "I know one lady, the mother of three children who Buffered greatly in the birtii of each, who obtained a bottle of "Mother's Friend" of me before her fourth confinement, and was relieved quickly. All agree that their labor w:is shorter and leas painful." .Ioun G. I'oi.miL, Macon, Ga.

Sent by Mail, on receipt of price. $1.00 PER UOTT1.E. Book "TO KXPECTANT MOTHERS" mailed free. TH E BRADFIELD REGULATOR O A A N A G*

SOLO BY ALL DRUGGISTS.

NORTHERN TREASON.

(ieni-i-itl (ul'liii^tnn's K.vperieiic.i *'K nights of I lie Golden 'irele —A Iar1c Spot oil liuliiina's II istorv.

At the recent annual meeting of the American Historical Society, held at the rooms of Columbia University, New York City, a paper was read upon "The Northern Frontier in the Civil War," showing the sympathies of Canada with the Confederates, and the correspondence" between our Government and that of Great Britain as to movements which, at one time, threatened disturbance of relations between the two countries. The President requested General Carrington, one of the Life Members of the Society, and Commanding General of the District bordering the Lakes, where the treasonable elements were most active, to follow the paper with recollections of the period and of the exposures made of the secret order of the "Knights of the Golden Circle" and of the "Sons of Liberty," under his direction. A few salient facts of the discussion are noted: The secret orders had nearly 87,000 men enrolled in Indiana alone, having as their sworn purpose to release prisoners in the prison camps of "Douglass," near Chicago: "Morton," near Indianapolis: "Chase," near Columbus, and "Johnson Island." near Sandusky.- Vallandigham, once a General of the Ohio Militia, had headquarters at Windsor, West Canada, where he carried on his correspondence in favor of-a Northwestern Confederacy, to act iu connection with the South, as against the Eastern States. Systematic opposition to enlistments and promotion of desertion was so rife that during 1S«2 and 1863 more than fortycases occurred where Federal troops were called out to suppress disorder. Four military executions occurred at Indianapolis, the only ones north of the Ohio. The Chief Justice of Kentucky was sent

lo

the Dry Tortugas,

and live of the Generals of the Order were condemmed to be hung at Indianapolis, the sentences being commuted to imprisonment for life, by President Lincoln, the night preceeding the day fixed for their execution.

Even the Supreme Court of Indiana went so far as to order the arrest, by the Lligh Sheriff, of Captain Newman, of General Carrington's staff, for not surrendering a deserter upon a writ of habeas corpus issued by said court. The climax came, when on the last day of December, 1802, the Chief Justice announced from the bench in the State House that if, on the day following, President Lincoln should issue his Proclamation of Emancipation, he should regard Indiana as free from any further relation to the Union. General Carrington

web

in the court

room, and intimation was made that he might be arrested if Captain Newman were sustained in resisting the writ of the court. A staff officer immediately left the State House and the sound of music soon showed that two regiments were about the State House and that, as stated to the court, "the authority of the United States will be maintained at all hazards, regardless of persons or combinations, whatever their claim to office, and there will be no letting down of the flag here any more than in the open field where open battle rages." In one county in Illinois a judge had to be taken from the court room, and the court adjourned sine die because of the action of the judge in treating the capture of deserters as kidnpping. Two gangs of bounty jumpers were sent in arms to help Geneial Sherman build breastworks, and at one time the whole State was under the closest military observation to prevent outbreaks, the release of rebel prisoners and cutting of communication with the front.

General Carrington Btated bifore the Society that one United States Senator franked a letter, which was still in his possession, providing twenty-five thousand Garibaldi rifles for use of the domestic traitors, but declined to give names. The papers had been preserved, although at times tempted to burn them, still feeling that if de stroyed their existence inight.be denied or questioned.

Sunday School l/iiioii.

The following is the programme of the Franklin and Sugar Creek townships Sunday school union to be held at Potato Creek. Thursday. .Jan. 28:

MOH.MNC.

!):30— Devotional Itev. Kay I ]0:()li—Dues the Sunday School I'ny, if

ho.

Why? Mrs. itayln

10 U(— How to Ho a Suwi'ssful Sunday School Teai'.lier Chas. Mou11:00— How Can the llome Class Be

Made. Successful Walter Peebles

11 :li0—Adjournment. AKTBHNOON. 1 :l.-— Devotional Uy the President 1 :HO Wliut is the I test Method of lucreasing the AtteudauceofOur

Sunday Schools Joshua Suidla

":0o-Should Parents Send Their Children to Sunday School Kev. 1?. O. Kelle.y :.!»—What Will He the Fruits of Primary and Intermediate Teachers MissJennle Kersey r,00—Questions. :i:-15-(Jlostng.

All Sunday schools invited. Dinner .served at church.

1

Another New Industry.

Win. McCoy has started a sign writing emporium in the brick building on Hie corner of Green and Pike streets.

WINE AT THE WHITE HOUSE.

With Tlie Majority of the Electors Heard Favor the llosv.

The New York Wo rid in order to guage correctly the sentiment of the different sections of the United States on the propriety of the President offering wine in the White House at Washington, directed letters containing postal cards to each of the 447 members of the electoral college. There were three sentences on each postal card as follows: "I see no objection to the use of wine in the White House whenever the President and his household desire it." "1 favor the use of wine in the White House only on state occasions." "I am against the use of wine in the White House under any circumstances."

The postal card was to be returned tc the World after the elector receiving it bad indicated his ideas by scratching off the sentences which did not express his opinion. Replies were received from lull of the electors. They were divided as follows:

Opposed to the use of wine, 53: had no objections, 137: declined to express ?n opinion, .». 1 the prohibition States of Kansas and Iowa, out of l.'l responses, but two were opposed to wine in the White House. Maine and Vermont, two more prohibition States, produced no objections at all, while Kentucky returned live objections from the eight electors heard from. Notjone objection was heard from New York, and Ohio shows but two out of a total of sixteen. Arkansas, Colorado, Nebraska, Indiana and New Hampshire are the only States besides Kentucky where a majority of the electors object to the use of wine in the White House.

Kentuckians who oppose the use of wine are: J. S. R. Wedding, Hartford: S. II. Kask. Manchester: 11. G. Trimble, Somerset: O. S. Dealing. Mt. Olivet: J. F. Taylor, Glasgow. T:ose who favor the use of the red stufl' arc: J. L. Bosley, Paris N. D. Miles, Nicho.asville: W. li. Smith, Richmond. lndianians who object are: H. G. Thayer, Plymouth: J. '/. Powell, Logunsport: B. (5. Shinn, Hartford City: A. M. Ward, Marion .while Dr. McA. Williams, Fowler: J. R. Christian, Noblesville, and .S. W. Gould, Argos, are Hoosier State members of the electoral college who see no objection to wine being offered by the President.

Ministerial IVi'mil*.

The annual half fare permits over the different railroads to the ministers have been discontinued andj in their place a permit that is good for half fare over any of 18 railroads in tne Central States has been (issued.gfeThis list includes nearly all the roads in these States and makes the arrangement much handier for the cminister for, if he is called to another ^State, over a road that he does not often travel, he does not have to apply for a new permit or pay full fare, but his regular permit will pass him. Din order to get these permits the ministers have to answer a large number of very particular identity questions and pay a nominal fee of 50 cents. All of them are perfectly willing to go to ,the extra trouble each year, because of the additional courtesy extended, and they are all glad to see the railroads taking precautions to head off impostors. These are the only permits that will be recognized after January 27.

The Farmer Governor,

South Bend Times: Indiana's future Governor. Hon. Jas. A. Mount, has as much of a practical business way of conducting his farm as the successful merchant or manufacturers have of conducting their enterprises. Prof. Arville Hitting, of Purdue University, was brought up on a farm in Marshall county. He is now a specialist in bacteriology with special reference to diseases of hnimals. He is also a friend of Governor Mount and is frequently at the Governor's farm in Montgomery county to examine stock. On«.one of these visits a little over a year ago the subject of hog cholera was»thoroughly discussed and Governor Mount decided from the prevalence of the disease in different sections of the State it would not be safe tc invest in hogs to feed for the fall market of 1S96, though the profits on hie "hog crop" for 1890 amounted to the snug sum of $3,500

His farm was put to corn and he novr has 8,000 bushels of that cereal,

l.uIViirl's Now Car.

Terre Haute Tribune: .1. 11. La Pearl the Danville circus man, was in Terre Haute Wednesday and let the contract to the Terre Haute Car and Manufac luring Company for a flat car which will be made on purpose for his busi ness. The car will be sixty-five feet long and will be used for the animal wagons and cages.

Where Our Senators Will Serve. Lieutenant-governor Haggard has appointed the committees of the State Senate and Senators (Jill and Camp bell, representing Montgomery, Clin ton and Hoone, received appointments as follows:

Gill—Agriculture. Public Health Natural Gas, Congressional Appor tionment and Labor.

1

Campbell—Swamp Lands and Drains Temperance, Fees and Salaries, Leg islative Apportionment and Executive Appointments.

Down. Way Down*. Terribly Down

rescript,Jon Druggists. The li In ford Corner.

The

We furnish

Are our prces on school tablets and supplies. We have a large assortment and lowest prices in town.

AS FINE AS IX IS FAST.

California

Limited.

hk ouknai,

sAddrcsH nil ortlci'N to

$i.oo

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