Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 15 March 1901 — Page 8
12
No Cure-No Pay,
Wliile|it is not professional for a doc-t-orjto promise a cure, yet why should he not be willing to say, "I will not charge you anything »unless .! help you?" In chronic diseases at least, this should'be done. Well. Dr. Tilney says it. You can have his examination free. He will not take your case unless satisfied he can help yon. He lias had 40 years experience. He does not write prescriptions, but furnishes medicines himself and uses also manipulations, one or both, as the case needs. He does not need to osee'patients Softener than once a week or two weeks. His office is at. his residence, 100? Darlington avenue. Crowfordsvillc. Hours fron to 5 daily, except Sunday.
Dr. Tilney treats successfully the following diseases: Big Neck, Bladder Diseases, Kidney Diseases. Bowel Complaints. Debility, Dropsy, Stomach Troub)es.Catarrh. Fits. Heart Diseases, Liver Diseases. Piles, Nerve Diseases Private Diseases, Loss of Manly Vigor, all Female Disease*. Blood Taints, Skin Diseases. Rheumatism, Scrofula. Sore Legs, all Bye and Ear Diseases, all Throat and Lung diseases, and all kinds of .Chronic Diseases. Piles. Fistula, Small Cancers, and (Joitre cured without pain, or cutting. Charges within t.he reach of all. fjctters from all parts visited by him are daily received testifying to the many and varied cures made by him since adopting these new and improved methods. A few extracts (by permission) are given.: •fames Cooper, of Bloomingtwn. Tnd,. told me to come to you for sciatica, as you cured him of it four years ago so he could jump and walk immediately.
Wilt,jam W. Mad/\ius.
Winslow. Indiana.—You have helped me so much with your treatment for catarrh. W. T. Nelson.
Lebanon, Mo.-iMr. Charles Sack tells me of the wonders you have done on him, so he could dross and feed himself, after treating him once only lasting Dwenty minutes, and having been helpless for years. He went to work the following week and is stil! working after two years. Please let me know what you can do for me, etc.
W. H. Adams.
Helena. Arkansas.—Dr. Tilney.— Everything you told me was true. I have talked about you and your great cure on me and am willing to tell anyone. Benj. Prvok."
Note.—This man was in bed two months, but got up the next day after Dr. Tilney began treating him, said to be ailing- from malaria.
Belgian Hare Buck,
Sir Edinboro,
Lord Urit.ion, Champions Service *5. At I0^ Darlington avenue, Crawfordsville. Fnd.
Dclivcied Dircct to the People who
use then:. Wholesale Prices.
mn
This Beautiful Iron Bed...
1H ri's. •LI veil
11
1
I.I St I.
in- i'
1
.iii-t like cut, size n4 iurfcu* hitfh. complete 1 t.m loji matress and with rnii support in She made her
iv iiu r. ere sit •your neares station
$ 9 7 5
Is Vjircain. I' no*, as rpureseiiteii. return t*'C eOods iind your m.inev will be refunded. Kni.it lv t..Molli.'.e order or New York Kxch'-n .'t. It -fi-renei—Capit al N at ionink. c.f li city.
JAS. H. MAHORNEY. t-.s. Ave. 1 (1 Unapoli*, Imi,
CLOVER TIMOTHY
We hnve a full stock all kinds of Olovere, Al-ulse, A falfa, Timothy, Blue Grass, Iled Top,
Orchard Grass. Etc.
We carry a complete line and quality considered our prices are always the oheape6t.
Crabbs & Reynolds,
At Their Old Stand.
Money To Loan.
1 am now prepared to make loans in sums of H0 to ?10,000, and on the most favorable terms. Chattle end personal security accented ou small amounts. All inquiries cheerfully answered.
C. W. BURTON. Attornev-at-Ijiiw, Crawfordsville, Ind
OiHoc—Over Mut Kline's Jewelry Store, Muln St
Will Banquet.
The P. O. S. of A. will banquet at the Crawford house Tuesday evening, March 19.
Goes to Darlington.
The rubber tire fitting machinery of the Dovetail company has been sold to Booher. of Darlington, and was moved to that place Monday.
Will Reside Here.
Rev. J. W. McKee and family, of Waveland, arrived in the city last week to make Crawfordsville their future home. They will reside at 309 east Jefferson street.
Died.
Mrs. Malli.ssie Lane, aged 27 years, wife of John P. Lane, died last Friday at 4 o'clock. She had been sick two years. The funeral occurred Sunday at St. Bernard's Catholic church
Wants Freedom. .»
John A. Fruits hao asked the circui court for a divorce from his once beloved wife, Mary Fruits. He tells hard stories on her in his complaint, but does not ask for the custody of their three children.
In Falling Health.
Miss Fannie Edwards, the famous evangelist, has been obliged to enter a hospital for treatment, she not having rallied from her prostration at Darlington. Her friends are much concerned at the outcome of her illness:
Sites Under Consideration. The hospital committoe has a number of sites for the hospital building under consideration. Among other places are the Bromley and Darter properties on the corner of Wabash and (Iraniavenues.
Bought Land.
.J. F. Malonev has returned from the1 wilds of Arkansaw where with Frank Ader and other Greencastle parties he purchased 7,000 acres of line bottom land heavily covered with oak. Mr. Maloney thinks that withing twentyfive years Arkansaw will be one of_the best states in the union.
Denth ot Amanda Spohr.
Mrs. Amanda Spohr, aged eightythree years, died last week at=the home of her son. George Myers, near Mace. The funeral took place at the Mt. Tabor rhurch Saturday morning at eleven o'clock, Rev. Mater officiating. Mrs. Spohr was a consistent member of the Fnited Brethren church.
In Whltlock Place.
O. J. Shaver has purchased a building lot in Whitlock Place across the street from where Dr. Muriett will build this season. Walter Breaks has purchased the C. E. Davis lot east of F. P. Mount's property, and the little blue birds are twittering from the adjacent standpipe that Walter is also preparing to build.
A Contemplated Improvcincnt. 11 is said that the Big Four railroad company is finally to make an improvement at the old tresle just westof town, jit. is said that the entire gap is to be (iled with stone and that -a stone arch-
way will be constructed for the road passing beneath the present trestle. The old structure has long been in bad condition and it is hoped that the rumor is true.
Death of Mrs. Catherine Evans. Mrs. Catherine Evans, mother of Walter N. Evans, of Washington, D. C.. died Wednesday morning. March ti, at the home of her son. She had been in fi-eble health for over a year, but passed away suddenly while trying to get dressed. She will be remembered by her many friends in Center church. home in Crawfordsville
from the. fall of
CLOVER
Ndw
Season is
on for Buying Your
Field Seeds.
J8f»
until the spring of
'90. She was buried at Delphi beside her husband and daughter.
The Commissioners.
The county commissioners adjourned last Thursday after transacting the following business:
John Ward and Samuel Paddock were appointed as appraisers of school fund loans for the tirst district and William Miles and Thomas for the third district.
A. McClelland was appointed drainage commissioner. Thomas Boraker was re-elected janitor and engineer of the court house.
The sprinkling contract was awarded to the water and light company vice A. S. Reed resigned.
Cyrus E. Fink and others were granted the privilege of maintaining a telephone exchange in Ripley township. It is likely that they will be put to some trouble, however, for previous to the granting of their franchise they had erected their poles along the high ways and their is complaint thai some of the pole9 are placed in the ditches so as to interfere with the drainageThese may have to be removed.
Uood Advice.
The most miserable beings in the world are those suffering from dyspepsia and liver complaint. More than seventy-five per cent,
ai
the people in
the United Statjs are afflicted with these two diseases and their effects: such as sour stomach, sick headache, habitual eostiveness, palpitation of the heart, heartburn, water-brash, gnawing ard burning pains at the pit of the stomach, yellow skin, coated tongue and disagreeable taste in the mouth, coming up of food after eating, low spirits, etc. Go to your druggist and get a bottle of August Flower for 75 cents. Two doses will relieve you. Try it. Get Green's prize almanac. For sale by Moffett & Morgan
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Comment
'•See that new three dollar hat with the hole in the crown of it? Well, that shows how anxious 1 was to get some money without having to climb a couple of flights of stairs.'' said Fred Doherty.
-'I
Fred Hoffman: "The Poston brick plant will bore for water for use in their boilers because there is a vein up around the junction that had magnesia in it. The water they say contains no lime and will in fact keep the boilers clean and for this reason is much more satisfactory than water like that which comes from our water mains. We will have to go about one hundred and eighty feet to get it. The Big Four railway and the match factory both have wells supplied with this water."
Trustee Brown, of Walnut township: "1 have been visiting my schools lately and I have stumbled on some good things. Tho other day I was out at the Mace school and the teacher had her class in geography up. She finally asked why it was that the people in the frigid zone ate so much meat. This seemed to stump the class for a while but at last a young lad held up his hand and replied: 'Because they like lots of gravy.'
Jimmle Watson: "Do I buy any of these Clint Kiff colts about here? Well, I guess noil They are ail of them cold bloods and never yet did one of them
THE CRAWFORDSVILLEWEEKLY JOURNAL.
And®Sto*y.
4.
Said H. M. Wright last Saturday: "My father did most of the decorating of Windsor Palace, in England, and worked for several years in the building, and some of the finest work is from his brush. InJJthe palace at the time of the Queen's death an oil painting of her majesty executed by my father occupied a prominent place. He has also painted several other members of the royal family and my mother has several of the portraits now at her home.'-
was collecting, water bills
and one of our patrons told me to hold my hat and he would drop two dollars down from a third story window into it. I did so, but the hat didn't seem to stop the dollars, as they went right on through and a punctured lid is the result.''
A bicycle dealer: "The bicycle business is going to be good this year. Better. in fact, than for several years, and this is the result of the low prices at which really serviceable and reliable wheels can be bought. Why, you can buy a splendid wheel for from twentyfive to fifty dollars, and when they sell at that price they are lots cheaper than walking. Then there is a fascination about wheeling that a person does not forget in a year. Oftentimes a fellow will do a season without a wheel, but the next spring he begins to think about the pleasure of a ride out into the country along in the gloaming, and the first thing he knows he has the bicycle fever worse than ever. am anxious myself to get out and take a long spin and can hardly wait for pretty weather."
V-
Frank Maxwell is probably the only citizen of Crawfordsville who has living water flowing in a constant stream through his kitchen. In the deep gulch west of Mr. Maxwell's residence there is a! fine spring which hefchas walled and by the use of a hydraulic ram forces the water to his he use. The stream gushes there in his kitchen night and day winter and summer. .- N/--
Walter Scott tells it on Sidney Warner and Sidney tells it, on Walter, so to do no violence to truth and imoartial justice to all we shall call the hero of this sketch Walter Sidney. Walter Sidney one day while in a peculiarly susceptible state of mind read in a rather saffron periodical the following advertisement: "For old sports—Sond ten 'cents to the Blank Publishing Company and receive 'The Old Sport's Book' full of racy anecdotes and chock ttil 1 of up-to-date advice for ^av boys. No one should do without it. 250 pace's of hut meat."
Now this sounded, or rather read, very nice and Walter Sidney licked his chops and a little later the envelope in which he sealed ten oents. A few days afterward he received by mail a copy of the New Testament.
Citizen: ''If there is one thing that will arouse my ire it is to drop into a barber shop on Saturday afternoon or evening when the place is full of waiting men and see some fellow from here in town crawl into a chair and call for a hair cut. A man from the country can be excused for getting his hair cut on Saturday because he probably isn't in town except on that day, but what induces a town man to wait for that day is more than I'can see. He knows that Saturday is the busy day and that the chairs are full of waiting men anxious to get away. He could have had his hair cut any other-day in the week just as well and by so doing would have inconvenienced no one. If the town man who gets a hair cut on Saturday knew how the average man curses and hates him I believe there would be considerably less of it."'
THE DUTY OF MOTHERS,
What suffering frequently result# from a mother's ignorance or more frequently from a mother's neglect to properly instruct her daughter 1
Tradition says "woman must suffer," and young women are so taught. There is a little truth and a great deal of exaggeration in this. If a young woman suffers severely she needs treatment, and her mother should see that she gets it.
Many mothers hesitate to take their daughters to a physician for examination but no mother need hesitate to write freely about her daughter or herself to Mrs. Pinltham and secure the most efficient advice without charge. Mrs. Pinkham's address is Lynn, Mass.
MISS PrALZGRAF
Mrs. August Pfalzgraf, of South Byron, Wis., mother of the young lady whose portrait we here publish, wrote Mrs. Pinkham in January, 1899, saying her daughter had suffered for two years with irregular menstruation had headache all the time, and pain in her side, feet swell, and was generallymiserable. Mrs. Pinkham promptly replied with advice, and under date of March, 1899, the mother writes again that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cured her daughter of all pains and irregularity.
Nothing in the world equals Mr a Pinkham's great medicine for regulating woman's peculiar monthly troubles.
show any speed. 1 wouldn't give a glass of milk for the whole bunch of white-eyed plugs.
Obituary.
Benjamin Faust was horn April I. Is12. in I'iqua county. Ohio, he being the youngest of a family of six children. On March
'21,
Measles.
"The prevailing disease in the county now," said health officer, Dr. Barcus Saturday "is the measles." Not a neighborhood hardly is free from it. Not for years has its prevalence been so marked.
To the Sale.
Doc Enoch Monday shipped to Cambridge City for tho horse sale his two fine colts, Lottie Kiff and Champion. They will be sold at auction to-day.
Real Estate Transfers.
List of deeds recorded in Montgomery county and ready for delivery. Furnished by Webster i'c Sergent: Thos M. Foster to (,. \'. Foster, 9 ami 00-1' O acres Coal Creek tp 056.00
Desire B. Phillips et al. to O. W. son, tract in Coal Creek tp ,Tas. Kiiiciiid. jr., to 1{. .1. Davidson, 14 acres Coal Creek tp Annie I... Hubbard to .1. W. Smith, tract in Scott township 1.100.00 J. \V. Stnitli to J. D. Smith. DO acres
Alamo
Sarah C. Smock to .1. G. Miller, .18 and (57-100 acres Wayne tp Ruth K. Charters to It. M. Howers, 40 acres Sugar Creek tp Minnie.I. Wtdener to C. H. & A. liurshb,truer, tract in Coal Creek J. T. liyrd to liulh Charters, SO acres'Union tp C. J. Newkirk to H. .1. & E. St-one-braker, lot in Alamo Robert llolman to W. 13. Moore, lot in Wavtietown Robert Robbing to W. L. & T. H.
Uoodbur, 2 lots Waveland I. N. Henry to J. S. Henry, half interest lot in Pleasant Hill R. Li. llartman to K. 11. & M. H. Cotton. int. 2 lots city J. II. Kobbinslo Sarah Young, pt 3 out lots to city H. W. Zook to P. G. Cowan, 20 ucres
J.
Union tp
J. H. Compton to
Ho acres Union tp C. C. Paddack to J. Harridan, HO acres Madison tp H. M. Ilarter to J. N. & L. Talbot, lot in city A. C. Jennisou to G. S. McCluer, 3 lots city Catherine Hunt to Emily J. Schweitzer. tract, in Union tp Susan M. Harter to T. J. A E. Ford, lot in city J. W. Croy to J. li. & L. 11. Howard, lot in city Rachel S. Cook to Grant Rice, 43 and oo-iGu acres irraukiin tp
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18U4, he was married to
Ann Francis, who preceded him to the holy land in 1870. This union was blessed with live children, of whom three are still living. Joseph, Abraham and Mrs. Katherine Greene. Rebecca Jane died in her infancy, and Phoebe Jane, her twin, and wife of A. P. Enoch, died in February, ISSS. He had seventeen grandchildren, eleven great-grandchildren, and four great-great-grandchildren. At the age cf 21 he had learned the trade of cabinet maker and house joiner, which he followed as long as li is health permitted. He came to Indiana in PS.'lti and settled near Smartsburg, where he spent the remainder of his life, lie was confined to his bed for several months and towards the last he suffered untold agonies until our Savior called him hom« at 0 o'clock Sunday morning, March 10. 1901, making him 88 years, 11 months and 0 days old. Rev. 'lunket preached the funeral. XX
Out
To Farmers.!
All kinds of Seeds, Stock Food and Flout.
Cold in tho Chest
2.500.00
1.200.00
SCOtt, tp 1 500.00 M. Nicholas to l)r. .1. W. Stmughan, 22 acres Urown tp 1.050.00
M. Work to Cyrus Little, 100 acres Ripley tp 0,000.00 Thos. M. l'axton to \V. L. 10. 11.
I'axton, lu acres Union tp Thos, M. Paxtou to W. L. A E. U. l'axton, 20 acres Union tp T. H. Kistine to Louis Mi-Mains, pt lot city M. Mathes to T.Il.Krout et al. pt 2 lots
2.600.00
Now, see here a minute, my friend. You ought to know that you can't cure a cold in the chest, or sore throat, or shooting pains in
400.00
500.00
000.00
30.00
2,000.00
70.00
5.000.00
75.00
050.0
050.00
500.00
lOi'.OO
1.00
800.00
Y. Bean, 40 acres
Wayne tp l,70f\00 Angellnc Davis to Francis M. Wingert 40 acres Union tp 1,400.00 GranlMtlesto Francis M. Wiugcrt,
2,200.00
3,400.00
1,8! 0.00
900.00
1,800.0(1
150.00
500.00
J,CJUU ui
92 transfers. Consideration $43,982.00
C£uiA~Jvijr do jvu
Prices
ON
PRIZE
ft
lower bee.-.use we pay cash for our material and do a strictly cash business. Every picture made by us is finished by expert workmen, and every negative is retouched by one who has been awarded 1st prize of Indiana.
See the samples of the elegant Carbonate photographs we make for
50c Per Do^en.§
The
Willis Gallery.
Main Street, Opp. Court House. Crawfordsville, Iod
Spring is near ami should you want any seeds, remember we have ,i full tock of iww seeds, sueli «s Clover, Timothy* Blue ii-as», Orchard Grass, li.ipe Seed. Millet, Cow Pea# and Seed Oats.
We bundle Capitol Stock l'ood for horses, cows, hogs, sheep and poultrv. Also Oil Meal, Cotton Seed Meal. Mica Crystal (Jritsand Oyster Shells.
We sell at wholesale or retail. Golden I.ink. Queen and Osprey Flour- Also all kinds of feed in stock, and grinding done to er.-W. The highest market prices paid for grain, hay and seeds.
The best yrndu of Hard and Soft Coal in ftook.
The Big Four Elevator, Store 118 South Washington St.,
swallowing medicines. The stuff you swallow goes into your stomach, and your trouble is not there at all. What you want to do is to rub your throat and chest with Omega Oil, and do itquick, too. Nature made this oil for exactly this purpose. It subdues and overcomes the inflammation and is at least a hundred times better thana sticky, itching, nasty porous plaster. Don't lose time fooling with such things, but start using Omega Oil as
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6c
Crawfordsville Coal
Grain Co.
Tell your druggist you want Omega Oil and nothing else. If he refuses to supply you, tho Omega Chemical Co., 357 Broadway, New York, will mall you a bottle prepaid for
50c.
money order or stamps.
ia cash,
