Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 15 July 1891 — Page 4
ARE YOU SICK? It Is well to remember that three-fourths all diseases ire traceable to bad blood -ALSOS. S. S. never falls to remove all impurities and enable nature to restore lost health.
on U« blood maUai tn* Rrmng Oft*
What is the proper thing for a
birthday present?
If your sweet-heart, sister or
mother or friend was born
in July, here is the answer:
The glowing WH&W should adorn Ths In «%rm July arc born Then will tliev be exempt and free ••FrouCloveV&loubt and.anxlety.
0
207 East Main Street
OfCourse It's Hot
But you can keep cool while having your picture taken by:
Over Uon Cunningham's.
MRS. WATTS—How becoming your new bonnet is. Did you get it in Crawfordsville?
MRS. POTTS—Do you really like itr Well, Mrs. Wilson, at 127 south Washington street made it. She has such excellent taste. Besides she is very accommodating and seems anxious to make each bonnet as artistic as it were for a Queen.
If There is Any Pleas
ure in having a
Tooth Pulled or Filled
You can find- it in the olllcc of
Gonzales Galey,
Dentistu.
A Quiet Puff.
The little fellow is hardly to be blamed for taking a pull at the dozing parent's cigar, after hearing his enthusiastic praises of the Sport 5 cent brand, which is hav ing such a remarkable run at Laymon's.
DAILY: JOURNAL
WEDNESDAY, JULY 15, 1891.
WEATHER KEPOUT: Indiana—fair warm.
A. D. Kellison Seriously 111. \. 1 Kellison is seriously ill nt Lis liomo nt Glasgow, Montana. Samuel D. Kellison to-ilnv received telegram stating that he is dying. His disease is congestion of the stomach and bowels.
A Reunion of the Montgomery Guards. There is talk of a grand reunion of the old Montgomery Guards to be held some time in the near future. Such a reunion is eminently proper and the promoters of it should receive every encouragement.
A Church for Longview.
The Baptists ro going to sell their church building and the probabilities are that the Methodists of Gray's chapej three miles west, of the city will buy it. If they do they will move it to Longview and sell their old church forabarn. llev. John M. Stafford is the pastor at Grays chapel.
Married and Said Nothing.
Ed Brower has been married nearly two weeks and yet no one knew anything about it until to-day -when his friends received neat announcement to the effect that Edwin A. Brower and Miss Mary L. Lewis, of Anderson, were married at the bride's home on June 30. Th?y are now keeping house nt G04 east Franklin street.
Another Business Oominsr. Thompson .t Brand, importers 01 nne horses and jacks, from Canada and Spain, will remove their headquarters from Indianapolis to this city in a few weeks. They will occupy the old cream ery building. Crawfordsville is one of the best horse markets in the West and Montgomery county farmers arebecom ing famous for their line stock.
Wabash College Will Use Printers'Ink. The executive committee of Wabash College met last evening at 5 o'clock and confirmed the report that Prof. Kingery had been engaged to teach Latin by deciding to offer him the position. They further decided to expend some money in advertising in all the local papers. The Interior, of Chicago, the Herald and Presbyter, of Cincinnati, the Journal, Sentinel and Xeir.% of Indianapolis, and a few other papers.
A Knight Errant.
Mrs. Sarah Stmthers has filed a suit for divorce in the circuit court from George Strothers. Sarah says, through her attorneys, Hurley Ar Clodfelter, that she lived with George for a numlxjr of years as peacefully as along summer afternoon, but that some time ago he disappeared from Crawfordsville taking with him the wampum belt. Since that said day Mrs. Strothers has had to hustle for herself and wants to be released from her alliance with the frail and frisky George.
Battle Ground Bates.
Rev. G. W. Switzer was in Chicago yesterday arranging with the Monou road in regard to obtaining rates during the coming camp meeting at Battle Grourd. The company was ]erfectly fair and granted all requests. All trains will stop nt the piriform in Battle Ground and spocial trains run from Lafayette every evening. From July 20th on until after the camp meeting the fnre to Battle Ground from all points on the rond will be one and a third rate and during the Battle Ground meeting, one fare.
An Encouragine .Report.
About a year ago the city of Columbus purchased and electric light plant o' the Weetinghouse system of 68 lights of 2,000 candle-power. It is managed by ".Mnmittee of the city council and is run on "moon schedule," including all time that the moon is obscured by clouds. The city treasurer's report of the cost to run the plant one year is S2,4C2.37 or S37.09 per light. Dnder the contract with the Citizens' electric company before the plant was bought the cost was S73.33J per year per light for forty-eight lights, making the yearly cost nlxmt $3,533 full moon schedule and no light on cloudy nights. Dnder the contract with the old company the lights now in use would cost the taxpayers nearly 55,000.
Compliments Prom Crawfordsville. The County Board of Review did more work this morning thnn at any time during its session. The books of Crawfordsville were opened and all the property holders in town who are grieved and sore distressed on account of the increased assessment were 011 the ground haggard and red-eyed waiting for their turn to lisp their tales of woe. The board look haggard, too, and Will White's hair could be seen to whiten as he furiously wrote down the burning words which poured forth from the lips of the over assessed. Thc-re were some who kicked from cause, some without canse nnd some on general principles, belong, ing to a class who religiously grasp every opportunity presented to kick as a gift from the gods. The board will honor some of the complainants but others they will, relegate to the outer darkness and there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth.
—The Ladies Dress-cutting school has removed to two doors west of Y. M. C. A. building.
—Satines at 5c, worth 10 and 12Jc in Bischofs July sale.
PERSONALS.
—J. M. Smith is visiting in Lebanon. -Doug Griffith went to Pine Hills to-day. —John M. Sehultz was in Lafayette to-day. —C. W. Burton went to Veedersburg to-day. —F. T. Luse has returned from Lafayette. —Miss Maggie Houser left to-day for Chicago. —Frank Ktiper, of Lafayetre, is in the city, —Sol Tannenbnum is home from Lafayette. —J. H. Burford went to Garfield this morning. —John Larsh wont to Zionsville this morning. —Norman Wood wont to Chicago this afternoon, —Stephen Lee is transacting business in Chicago. —Newt Wray is entertaining sister from Chicago.
J. J. Insley and wife have returned from Chicago. —Mrs. Wm. Reeves is visiting friends in Covington. —Rev. G. W. SwiCzer returned from Chicago last night. —Claude Hamilton, of Huntington, is visiting friends in this city. —Wm. R. Hornbaker, of the Chicago Press Association, is in the city. —Miss Carrie Fairchild, of Marinette, Wis., is the guest of N. J. Clodfelter. —Misses Emma Davidson and Nellie Bowser returned to Indianapolis to-day, —Mrs. W. A. Bodel, of Lafayette, is visiting her mother, Mrs. Geo. W. Robinson. —Mrs. Dr. D. N. Morgan and the Misses Morgan nnd Beck, left for Tine Hills to-day. —A. D. Kellison, formerly of this place, is very sick at his home in Glasgow, Montana. —Miss Lizzie Southard has gone to Cincinnati nnd Covington, Ky., on a hree weeks' visit. —James Galey, sr., and -wife, Mrs. Jnmee Galey, jr., and Mrs. Mart Simp son went to Frankfort this morning. —Wm. Daggett has moved back to Crawfordsville from Lafayette and is now collecting milk for the creamery. —H. M. Harter has sufficiently recovered from his recent accident so as to be on the road again. He went to Benton county to-day.' —George Oliver and Miss Lizzie left Monday night for Bloomington where they represent the Second Bapiist church Sunday School Convention there. —Miss Lois Peirce nnd Miss Nellie Whitcome have returned from a thre months' visit to Mr. George Whitcome, in Denver, Col., and to Manitou.—IndiaiutpoluH Journal.
CHIPS.
—Special P.O.S.A. meeting to-night. —The funeral of John Albright this afternoon was largely attended, especially by members of the G. A. R. —John Broker and family have not moved back to Crawfordsville. They will return to Chicago jliortly. —There will be :i called meeting of Montgomery lodge, No. 38, I. O. O. F. this evening for work in the degrees. —Johnny Binford has GO far recovered that he was able to be out in the yard yesterday. Ho will lie taken to Indianapolis next week to hnve Dr. Thompson examine his eyes. —The Water and Light Company iF taking the initial steps toward extending the water mains on we6t Wabash avenue. The length of the extension will be 07G feet to the corporation line taking in Alilligan's new addition to the city. —Lafayette Journal:—Dr. J. A. Comingore, of Indianapolis, mot Dr. Beasley in consultation at the residence of Dr. Frost Craft yesterday. Mrs. Craft was comfortable last evening, ami that is about all that can le said favorable to her condition.
U. B. K.ofP.
The Uniform Rank will meet this evening nt 7:30 o'clock. Tho members are earnestly requested to be present and especinlly those who desire to attend the Warsaw encampment.
T. N. Ross Captain.
What is Home Without The Journal. CAINSVILI.E, Mo., July 12, 1891.— Please send mo the CKAWTOIIDSVILLE WEDKI.V JONIXAL to tho amount of the inclosed subscription. Cninsville is built on the east bank of Grand River, in Harrison county, eleven miles south of the Iowa line. It is a beautiful little town of about 2,000 inhabitants, has one railroad, the DesMoines & Kansas City, and is surrounded with a good farming and fruit country. Wheat is good and copi looks well considering the weather. It has been very wet here this season. I left Now Ross last September, the 18th, and linve been here ever since. I like the country very well. It is good rich soil. The greatest objection is tho water. The water is not as good ns the water is in old Indiana. If I had THE JOURNAL I would be all right, for what is home without THE JOURNAL?
WM. M. LYTLF_
Dry Weather
Cut tho raspberry crop short and many families got left. Blackberries are plenty this week nnd I advise those who wnnt any to place iheir orders this week. JOE TAYLOK.
•—Elegant Swiss embroidered caps for infants worth 50c, 75c, 81 and 81.25, choice 39o at Bischofs.
The Soap that Cleans
Most
is Lenox.
Mrs. Hattie James and Mrs. Wm. Davis visited at Mrs. David M. Hicks' t'10 other day.
Tho rains of Tuesdny was worth thousands of dollars to' the farmers. However, corn looks well nnd meadows are excellent. Oats are short.
Smith & Davis started their threshing machine on Monday morning. That they have threshed the yield is most excellent, nnd will average 25 bushels per acre.
The other day while J. M. Carter and A. T. Hicks were unloading hay into a barn the fork caught hny, rack and all. lifting it about ten feet from the wagon. Mr. Carter jumped for his life.
"KISSED BY THE SUN
Fit to Ila
Tha Bid.nlred Maiden I* Qaeen or Devil. Did you ever stop to think how few red-haired people there are in the world? Take any town, for Instance, "l three thousand or four thousand population, and out of that number there will be only between one hundred and two hundred whose heads are red, and by "red heads" I mean those of a tint varying1 from sandy to dark auburn. So you see that a red head is really a rora avis, and should be appreciated ass leh, says a writer In the Cincinnati Commercial Gazette.
All Indian tribes pay homage to ruddy locks, and never venture to lay vandal hands on them, regarding the possessors of such as "children of the sun," hence objects of veneration, not to be rudely violated or suddenly scalped. The members of some savage tribes, found in heathen countries, where tho sun, moon and stars are worshiped, have been known to fail down in awesome homage at the feet of a belated traveler, mumbling them and kissing them, while the traveler trembled in his boots, expecting every moment to be slaughtered. The frightened traveler could, with difficulty, be made to understand that his head, the bane of his childhood, the never-ending butt of ridicule in maturer years, had not only saved his life, but made him worthy to be a god.
In many countries red hair in itself entitles a woman to the claim of beauty. In Italy the most beautiful women and the depraved have possessed locks "sun-liissed by the sun." Lucretia Borgia, whose name is the synonym of horror, was red-haired. Cleopatra, Antony's conqueror, had hair which gleamed like burnished copper in the sun, "and skin, which shone like pearl, so white, so white." In other words, she was a seductive, pas-sion-enthralling, auburn-haired woman, of such a type as could only have bewitched and turned poor Antony from the path of virtue and duty. None of your commonplace—brown-haired, dark-eyed lassies, nor your insipid languid, blue-eyed, blonde-locked maidens, nor the black ones, with their swarthy skins anS jet-like eyes, would have had the power.
The devil, when he wished to tempt the pious hermit in his lonely desert, when all his other arts and wiles had failed, took the form of a woman "clothed only with a vail of darkest red hair," which "twined and twisted," wo are told, "like snakes of copper," curling themselves about the poor man's neck and breast like "tilings alive," while her erstwhile cheeks got passion-flushed against his own.
Curiously enough, although the archtype of intense passion is red hair, it is also the type of the highest purity. We have it from Josephus, as well as from sacred narrative, that the Saviour had curling auburn locks, a singularly clear White skin and tender, soulful eyes of gray. II is virgin mother was, also, auburn-haired. So the two extremes meet.
A NATION OF LIARS.
9«rTUni Beatlf with Prevarication am with Ktiymp*. A talk with King Milan is rich mental pabulum for the traveler who is aweary and athirst in the dreary conversational wastes of the Iialkans, says Harper's Weekly. It is an unmixed delight, but should be partaken of with the admixture of much salt- It is a delightful causerie set going by conserves after the Servian fashion, and concluded with Turkish coffee and cigarettes, and a moro than Persian etiquette prevails throughout. On crossing over Into these countries one is immediately forced to the conclusion that Oscar Wilde's lament "over the decay In the art of lying" is at least premature, and in conversation with the ex-king you, if you never have before, are immediately caught, and participate in tho eccentric poet's admiration and enthusiasm for the able and unblushing storyteller who never gives way to philosophic doubt and who is' aware that the criterion of truth is fluctuating. King Milan falls quite naturally into bombastic blank verse, and when warming to his work even soars to rhythmic rhyme. Your Servian cannot help this. It is inherent in his language and innate in his blood. The minister of flnancc, whoso name I would not venture to spell, made his budget report to the Rkuptscliina three years ago in well arranged quatrains. But the budget did not balance as well as the quatrains, and, while his report was received as a remarkable production in literary circles, in tho world of finance it excited distrust and suspicion, and Servian bonds would have taken a tumble had they not been already deep* ly embedded in the bottom rock of bourse quotations.
My son has been affi icted with nasa catarrh since quite young. I was indnced to try Ely's Cream Balm, and before he had used one bottle, that disagreable catarrhal smell had all left aim. He appears as well as any one. It in the best catarrh remedy in tho market^ -J. C. Olnistead, Areola, El.
Follow the Crowd
To the Fulton Market
For the Best Ice Cream
In the City.
Our Candies and Fruits Are the Finest in the City.
J. C. Warn pier.
Auditorium Tailoring Institute. Tho Ladies' Dress-cutting school, No. 119 north Washington street, or old Opera House block. The new school where ladies can bo taught designing, cutting, draping nnd putting on of nrtistic garments. A seamless bodice cut free. S100 given the person we do not tit the first trinl. No guess work. Every dressmaker should learn this system. Don't guess, think or talk, but come and satisfy yourself that whnt we say wo- can demonstrate nnd prove. Mothers do your duty and tench your daughter at least how to cut her own garments. Everybody come nnd seo us.
PBOF. BAKF.H, Munnger.
—I am squaring up my books for the first six months of this year. All in debt to mo please call and settle. Louis Bischof.
Buckleti's Arntca Salve. The best salve in the world for cuts, braises, sores, uloers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilapinbs corns and all skin eruptions, and losstively cures piles, or no pay requreri. It is guaranteed to give perfect satiid f-.?tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Nye & Co
WHY WILL YOU COUGH when Shiloh'a 3ure will give you ammodiate relief. Price 10 cents, 50 cents and 81 Moffett Morgan & Co.
Happy IIoosierH.
Wm. Timmons, Postmaster of Idaville, Ind., writes: Electric Bitters has done more for me than all other medicines combined, for that bad feeling arising from Kidney nud Liver trouble." John Leslie, fnrmer and Btockman, of same place, says: "Find Electric Bitters to lie the best Kidnoy and Liver medicine, made ine feci like a new man." J. W. Gardner, hardware merchant, same town says: Electric Bitters is just the thing for a man who is all run do ..n nnd don't care whether he lives or dies he found now strength, good appetite and felt just liko ho had a now lease on life. Only 50c. lxjttle, at Nye & Co's. Drug Store.
Baking Powder
A Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. Superior to every other known. Used in Millions of Homers— 40 Years the Standard.
Delicious Cake and Pastry, Light Flak* Biscuit) Griddle Cakes, Palatable and Wholesome. xAcr baking nowdcr doei web wadb^
The Fourth is Over
And in the quiet that follows is the Best Season to Trade.
You Can Take Plenty of Time to It
We do not let our Stock Run down during the not months.
W. MfGUte.
TRADE3 PALACES
7 CENTS A POUND.
For a Three Crown loose Muscatelle
Raisins is a bargain ENSMINGER is Offering "this week."
You
10 to 121-2 cents for this same stock at other stores. So
will pay
don't
the number over the front door—
113 EAST MAIN STREET SOOTH OF COORT BOUSE.
Cut Price Sale
Wall Paper at Half Price
Good Paper at 4 1-2 cents per roll. Gilt Paper aa low as 7 1-2 cents per roll.
twill pay you to buy now for Fall and Winter Work. No pattern* to be reserve!. Come and see our bargains and be con
vinced. We will save you money.
Robinson & Wallace.
Six Feet of Earth Makes us All of One Size.
But in this life a Nobby Suit of Clothos takes one a long way toward success. Try
Colman & Murphy.
Advertising is a Tax
On h*m who so regards it. Only when he has learned to look upon it as
AN INVESTMENT
Giving it his time and thought will it develop iuto a thing that pays.
ADVERTISERS
forget
