New Richmond Record, Volume 5, Number 31, New Richmond, Montgomery County, 7 February 1901 — Page 6
NEW RICHMOND RECORD.
not get anything either. This is about the way the matter stands at present. I restored the cases to the docket and in a Crawfordsville justice's office; then failed to convict on test case, so had to dismiss all the other cases filed, though I am satisfied there ought to be about forty convictions for gambling at Linden.
PUBLIC SALE.
$1.00 per Year, in Advance,
Notice is hereby given that I will sell at public, auction at my residence, 1 mile east of Wingate, on the Buxton farm, on THURSDAY, FEB. 14, 1901
Thursday, Feb. 7, 1901.
Great White Sale.
THE MORTGAGE.
Sale to commence at 10 o’clock, the following personal property, to-wit:—4 head of horses; consisting of 1 black mare 8 yrs old, weight 1400 pounds; 1 bay mare 9 years old, weight 1400 pounds, in foal by jack; 1 dun mare coming 4 yrs old; 1 Guy C. gelding coming 5 yrs old. 4 head milch cows —1 with calf by side; 1 Jersey, be fresh soon; 11 spring calves; 1 Shorthorn bull, long yearling; 8 coming 2 year old steers; 28 head of hogs, consisting of 8 brood sows due to pig in April; 20 head of fall shoats weight about 80 pounds; 14 ewes with lamb; 2 set harness, breaking plow, Sulkey riding plow, corn plow, spike tooth harrow, seed separator, 1 polar creamery, good as new.
We worked through spring and winter—through summer and through fall— But the mortgage worked the hardest and the steadiest of us all: It worked on nights and Sundays—it worked each holiday— It settled down among us, and it never went away. Whatever we kept from it seemed a’most as bad as theft; It watched us every minute, and it ruled us right and left. The rust and the blight were with us sometimes, and sometimes not; The dark browed, scowling mortgage was forever on the spot. The weevil and the cutworm, they went as well as came; The mortgage stayed forever, eating hearty all the same; It nailed up every window—stood guard at every door
For a short time we will make a special effort on White material, and will name low prices on staple articles of white merchandise such as Muslins, Sheetings, readymade Sheets and Pillow Cases, Laces, Embroideries, White Goods, Bed Spreads, Muslin Underwear, etc., etc. Come and see the beautiful assortment prepared for this occasion.
GLORIOUS NEWS.
Comes from Dr. D. B. Cargile, of Washita, I. T. He writes: “Four bottles of Electric Bitters has cured Mrs. Brewer of scrofula, which had caused her great sufferings for many years. Terrible sores would break out on her head and face, and the best doctors could give no help: but her cure is complete and her health is excellent.” This shows what thousands have proved,—that Electric Bitters is the best blood purifier known. It’s the supreme remedy for eczema, totter, sr.lt rheum, ulcers, boils and running sores. It stimulates liver, kidneys end bowels, expels poisons.helps digestion builds up the strength. Order 50 cents. Sold by F. M. Johnson Druggist, guaranteed.
Muslin Underwear.
Our reputation as sellers of Muslin Underwear is too well known to need any special attention at this time. Yon are only interested in what we have prepared for you and know the quality and workmanship are all right as they always are in onr Muslin Underwear. Here are a few of the items, not selected as leaders; but to give yon an idea of others:
And happiness and sunshine made their home with us no more.
Terms— All sums of $5.00 and under, cash in hand. On all sums over $5 a credit of 9 months will be given, purchaser giving note with approved freehold security, notes to bear 8 per cent interest from date if not paid at maturity, waving valuation and appraisement laws. No property to be removed till terms of sale are complied with. 5 per cent. off for cash where entitled to credit. JOSEPH L. DUNKIN. Col. A. W. Perkins, Auct. Frank Cotterall, Clerk.
Till with failing crops and sickness we got stalled upon the grade, And there came a dark day on us when the interest wasn’t paid, And there came a sharp foreclosure, and I kind o' lost my hold. And grew weary and discouraged, and the farm was cheaply sold. The children left and scattered when they hardly yet were grown'; My wife she pined an’ perished, an’ I found myself alone. What she died of was “a mystery’’ an’ the doctors never knew; But I knew she died of mortgage—just as well’s I wanted to. If to trace a hidden sorrow were within the doctor’s art, They’d ha’ found a mortgage lying on that woman’s broken heart. Worm or beetle—drouth or tempest, on a farmer’s land may fall; But for first-class ruination, trust a mortgage ’gainst them all.
Ladies’ muslin gowns with four rows insertion, six groups of tucks in yoke, full size and length at 8 .50 Ladies’ cambric gowns, square or V shaped necks, trimmed with insertion and ruffles of embroidery, or hemstiched yoke with ruffles at 75 Cambric or muslin gown, all over embroidery yoke, hemstitched and embroidery ruffles at 1.00 Uatrimmed muslin corset covers, high or low neck, at .10 Fitted or full corset covers, lace trimmed, at .25 Chemise corset covers, lace yoke and trimming, at -39 Chemise of good muslin, lace trimmed, wide hem at bottom, at .25 , Chemise, embroidery yoke, cambric ruffles, at 39 Muslin skirts, cambric flounce edged with lace or embroidery, full length, perfectly made 50 Cambric skirts, wide flounce with two rows insertion, one row lace, or flounce with one row embroidery insertion and group of tucks at. 1.00 Muslin drawers made with cluster of lucks and deep hem or hemstitched ruffle, good quality, at 25 Children’s muslin drapers made with cluster of tucks at 12}£c and 13c Children’s cambric drawers, lace trimmed, 3 sizes at. 20, 25 and 35e.
COFFIN HANDLES FELL OFF.
Last Tuesday at their home in Elkhart county, the funeral sevices over the remains of the youngest child of Mr. and Mrs Benjamin Miller, former residents of Liberty township, this county, and prominent members of the Amish Mennonito denomination, was had. After the services, as the body of the child was being carried from the house to the place of the burial, the four handles of the coffin dropped off. Mr. Miller remarked to the people present that this was an omen that presaged something terrible to his family. Last Friday night Mr. Miller’s country home was destroyed by fire with all its contents, and in an upstairs room where four of the oldest children were sleeping, the eldest being a daughter fourteen years of age, were burned to death. Their charred bodies were gathered together and buried in one grave. In their terrible affliction of losing five children, and four of them in such a horrible manner, in less than a week’s time,surely presents one of the most horrowing pictures of human life. -Kokomo Despatch.
HOW TO CURE THE GRIP.
Remain quietly at home and take Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy as directed and a quick recovery is sure to follow. The remedy counteracts any tendency of the grip to result in pneumonia, which is really the only serious danger. Among the tens of thousands who have used it for the grip not one case has ever' been reported that did not recover. For sale by J. W. Hollin & Co., druggists.
LACES AMD EMBROIDERlES.
Laces that Were 2, 3, and 4c yd are 1c yd Laces that were 4, 5, and Ohjc yd are 3c yd Valeneiencs, Oriental and German torchon laces that were fl’A 7}^', and SL'c yd are :. 5c yd Assorted lot of laces that were 12 1-2, 15, and 20c yd at 10c yd Splendid assortment of applique, point’d Venice and Arabian laces that were 75c to $2 yd at 50c yd Excellent values in Cambric, Hamburg and Nainsook embroideries at 3, 5, 6}i, 7!4, 8%, 10, 1215, 20, 25c per yd and upward. Eemnants of embroideries, all widths, very cheap.
HANDKERCHIEFS.
Will M. Carleton.
An Indianapolis paper makes the sweeping statement that the school fund of the state of Indiana has been mulcted out of more than throe.quarters of a million dollars during the last two years, owing to
inadequate statutory provisions. This paper charges that in 1899 there were 4,100 places in the state where liquor was retailed without a license, and in 1900 there were 3,435 such places. Could the regular license of $100 have been collected from each of these places the school fund would have been greatly enlarged. How they evaded the law the paper does not state, but the presumption is that many of them operated under a goverment license, but did a retail business just the same.—Ex.
This is the time of year when we clear our stock of all mussed and soiled Handkerchiefs. They are never hurt except in looks, and a little washing makes them ns new for use, and better, for thiy are softer. 125 soiled handkerchiefs worth 5c at •. 4c 250 soiled handkerchiefs worth 10c aD 8c 180 soiled worth at 9c 210 soiled handkerchiefs worth 15c at 10c 190 soiled handkerchiefs/worth 20c at 13c 600 soiled handkerchiefs Worth 25c at 19c 192 soiled handkerchiefs worth 50c at 35c
Crawfordsvilie is looking to the location of a heating plant among other things along with the numerous electric railways seeking ingress into the county capital.
A little boy who saw a train go through a tunnel for the first time in his life ran home to his mother and said, ‘"Mamma, I have just seen a row of houses going down a rat hole!”
BED SPREADS.
THE APPETITE OF A GOAT.
Is on vied by nil poor dyspeptics whoso Stomach and Liver are out of order. All such should know that Br. Kind’s Now Life Pills, t 10 wonderful Stomach and Liver Remedy, gives a splendid appetite, sound digestion and a regular bodily habit that insures perfect health and great energy. Only 23c. at F. M. Johnson’s drug store.
Consumption
Imported bed spreads 39c Pull size crochet spreads worth Toe at 60c Bates crochet quilts worth 81.00 at 75c Extra heavy and large spreads handsome patterns worth 81.50 at 81 20 Extra fine satin quilts, four beautiful designs, worth $3.50 at 2 50
SHEETS and PILLOW CASES-9-1 unbleached sheets 81x90 inches 40c 9-4 unbleached sheets 81x90 inehes, 45c 9- Atlantic unbleached sheets 81x90 inches."... ? 55c 10- Atlantic unbleached sheets 90x90 inches 60c 9- Boston unbleached sheets 81x90 inches 60c 10- Peppered unbleached sheets 90x90 inches 55c 10-4 Lockwood unbleached sheets 90x90 incheq 60c 9 4 beached sheets 81x90 inches ‘ , 50c 9- Atlantic bleached sheets 81x93 l T inches 65c 10- Atlantic bleeched sheets 90x93J£ inches. 72c 9-4 Fruit of the Loom bleached sheets 81x90 inches 65c 9- Dwight Anchor bleached sheets 81x93’.! inches. ." 65c 10- Dwight Anchor bleached sheets S0x93 ] o inches 75c 10-4 Fruit of the Loom bleached hemstitched 95c 9- Dwight Anchor bleached hemstitched 87J^c 10- Dwight Anchor bleached hemstitched 95c Bleached pillow cases 42x36 inches 8c Bleached pillow cases 45x36 inches 9c Fruit of Loom pillow cases 42x36 inches 14c Fruit of Loom pillow cases 45x36 inches 16c Dwight Anchor pillow cases 42x36 inches ", 13c Dwight Anchor pillow cases 45x36 inches 15c
Prosecutor Reeves says in the Sunday Star: I think that the next grand jury will look into the Linden case and see what was wrong in the affair where Justice Rickey and my deputy are said to have taken fees and fines and made no record of trial. There should be an examination to see into this thing. The cases against the Linden gamblers were never docketed by the Linden justice. Though warrants were issued they were never served and the boys who got a tip that affidavits were prepared for service called on the justice and each paid from $5 to $20, whatever they felt they could afford. Slavens, my deputy, only received money directly from two men and he promptly returned it upon demand, but the justice still insists that in cases where $5 was paid in he kept $2, gave the deputy $2 and the constable the other dollar. I got left with my fee of $5 and the state school fund did
is destruction of lung by a growing germ, precisely as moldy cheese is destruction of cheese by a growing germ. If you kill the germ, you stop the consumption. You can or can’t, according to when you begin.
WILL YOU DO IT?
Many of our subscribers each week after they have read the Record they mail it to some distant relative. That’s right! But it costs you fifty-two cents a year to do so, and for only forty-eight cents more we will send, the paper direct from this office every week for a year and save you the trouble. A few other of our subscribers who have paid for the paper complain that before they get a chance to hardly look at the week’s issue it is borrowed by a next door neighbor, and does duty in four or five families, but fails to find its way back to its owner.
Take Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil: take a little at first.
The geuuinc has this picture on it, take no other.
It acts as a food; it is the easiest food. Seems not to be food; makes you hungry; eating is comfortable.
You grow stronger. Take more:
MUSLIN and SHEETING. Yard wide unbleached muslin 4c yd Pine unbleached muslin worth 5c yd Extra quality. 7 unbleached muslin 6e yd Soft finish bleached muslin 6c yd bleached muslin 6c yd bleached muslin, 6 well known brands, Masonville and Lonsdale.... 6%c yd Soft finish cambric muslin 7c yd Lonsdale cambric 9c yd 9-4 unbleached sheetings 15c yd Extra heavy 9-4 unbleached sheeting 18c yd. Same 10-4 20c yd Extra fine 9-4 bleached sheeting 20c yd. Same 10-4 ■ 22'aC yd
SALE DATES.
New Richmond Lumber Company
The following sales and their dates have been booked by Auctioneer A. W. Perkins: Fob. 11—Thomas Foster, Linden. Fob. 12—John Faust, New Richmond. Feb, 13—Robert Cord, Hillsboro. Feb. 14—Joseph Duncan, Wingate.
not too much; enough is as much as you like and agrees with you. Satisfy hunger with usual food; whatever you like and agrees with you.
It Pays to Trade at
The Big Store
When you are strong again, have recovered you: strength—the germs are dead; you have killed them. If you have not tried it, send for free sample, its agreeable taste will surprise you. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, 409 Pearl St., New York. 50c. and $1.00; all druggists.
FOR
Feb. 15—J. O. Fowler, Wingate. Feb. 20—J.T. Rooney, Crawfordsville. Fob. 21—John Wilson, New Richmond. Feb. 22 Wm. Rumble, Crawfordsville. Feb. 25—Ellis Burk, New Richmond. Feb. 26—J. M. Shumaker, Romney. Feb, 27—Orrel Hitch, Darlington. Feb. 28 Wm. Price estate, Colfax; D. C. Campbell, administrator Mar. 2 Fletcher & Johnson, Crawfordsville.
LUMBER, COAL, LIME, SALT & CEMENT.
127--129 East Main St., Crawfordsville, Ind.
