Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 27 April 1889 — Page 5

LAOEX

Has just received a large invoice of

WILL PAPER,

Of the very latest designs which he will sell cheaper than ever berore at the

CITY BOOK STORE.

Grand Opening. MOSSLERS'

ONEtPRICE

Clothiers, Hatters, Furnishers.

Watch and Wait for the Date. Stone Front, East of Court

House.

Tailoring

DEPARTMENT.

Every gentleman in the State who appreciates good clothes—clotlies made from the best materials that the markets of the world afford, and cut and fitted by an expert in his profession clothes made by the best makers to be procured clothes guaranteed to be equal to those turned out by any tailoring establishment in the country, should come to our Tailoring Department, for all this they can secure there, and at prices the lowest in the State for quality of work done.

L.S.

NCI

INDIANAPOLIS.

P. S.—We have the moat complete line of Shirtings and Tennis Flannels ever offered in this market—it comprises everything. Prices ranging from 10c to 75c a yard.

LUMBER YARD.

Farniers Heeling.

Carpenters Meeting.

YOG, thoy are all meeting daily at TJiiifgrdJs 3.umber i'linl, because they cau buy better

The Markets.

CRAWFOBDSVILLK.

Wheat 76 Corn .....27 Hay Oats 22 Chickens Butter 15 Eggs 10 Potatoes 35 Apples 50

INDIANAPOLIS.

Cattle—We quote: Good to choice shipping steers of 1,500 to 1,600 pounds $4 25@4 40 Fair to good shipping steers oi 1,800 to 1,450 pounds 4 00@4 25 Fair to good shipping steers of 1,100 to 1,800 pounds 8 75@4 00

Hogs—We quote: Good to choice heavy $4 65(554 75 Fair to good mixed 4 60@4 70 Good to choice light 4 11)4' Roughs 4

Wheat—Firm—We quote: No. 2 red ivi. i. $ 87£ No. 8 red 77 @82 Rejected

Corn—Steady—We quote: No. 1 white 88J^ No. 8 white $ 82 No. 8 mixed 81}£

Misfortune rarely comes alone. If you have caught cold be careful to quickly relieve that pain, be it external or internal. Warner's Log Cabin Extract is the best, safest, most reliable remedy for internal and external use. Two sizes. Price $1.

Half Faro Excursion, April 29th and 30th. The Toledo, St. Louis & Kansas City R. R. will sell excursion tickets between all stations April 29 and 80, on accountof George Washington's centennial inauguration. Tickets good to return May 1st.

Excursion tickets to New York via Toledo at low rates, nearly one fare.

Thomas Kane is working in this country, soliciting work for the reliable Lafayette Steam Dye House, which has justly won an excellant reputation for good work. Mr. Emil Mueller, the proprietor, is up to the times, and can produce any fast color and make an old suit as good as new. They will clean and press a suit for $2. Dye it in any color and guarantee work for $3. Ladies dresses dyed made up, $2 ripped up, $1,50. All work guaranteed to give satisfaction. Goods sent to Mr, Mueller by express will receive prompt attention and the express charges paid one way.

Spring- Medicine.

ufoid's

Lime, Cement, Sewer Pipe,

Kor the same money than at any other place in the city. Don'r. forget the time aud place,

BFQ. 213 S Washington St. HHs

Just South of .X. W. Stroll's lumber yard.

S.LF.

SEtJ'p roncincuCAfra

Grand Opening! Mosslers'

Clothiers, j| Hatters,aJf§j| Furnishers,

Watch and Wait for the Date. Stone Front East ot Court

House.

The neccessity of a spring medicine is almost universally admitted. And the superiority of Hood's Sarsaparilla for this purpose (becomes more and more widely known every year. That power to purify the blood, and those elements of strength and health which the system craves, and to which it is so susceptible at this season, are possessed by this peeuliar medicine in a pre-eminent degree. Scrofula, pimples, boils, or any humor, biliousness, dyspepsia, sick headache, catarrh, rheumatism, or any diseases or affliction caused or promoted by impure blood or low state of the system are cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla. Try the peculiar medicine. A-134t

Loose's Red Clover Pill Remedy is a positive specific for all forms of the disease Blind, bleeding, itching ulcerated, and portruding plies.—Price 50c, For sale by Lew Fisher. F-23-ly

Con Cunningham for children's suits. al3

For hats stop at Cunningham, the Crawfordsvllle hatter. A13 2

-VTOTICE OF PRIVATE SALK OF REAL E8•LN TATE BY COMMISSIONER. In circuit court, Montgomery county. Indiana. Thomas J.

Sentinel.

Griffith et. »1. vs. Mahlon 'Dawson ot.

al. No. 9039. Partition. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned commissioner appointed by the circuit court of tbc county of Montgomery, state of Indiana, at the November term, 1S8S, in the above cause, to make sale of the real estate described in the complaint therein, will sell at private sale the following real estate situate in eaid county ami state t»-wit: Lot Lumber two (3) in block number thirteen (13) In Wm. Cox's addition to the town of Darlington, Montgomery county, Indiana. Applications of purchasers will be received at tho ofllceol Johnston A Johnston, on north Washlngton-st., Crawfordsvllle, Indiana, nntll 2 o'clock p. m. oil Monday, May 0,1889, at which time said sale will take place.

TBIIMS: One-third cash in hand, one-third in six months and ono-third In twelve months from date of tale. The purchaser will be required to execute notes lor the deferred payments, drawing li per cent, interest from date and secured by good and sufficient security. A deed will he executed to said purchaser when the last installment of purchnac money 1b paid.

CHARLES JOHNSTON,

Dated April 19,1889. Commissioner.

TSTANTKD—Agents for our new and beautiful Tidy Holder made of tight difTureut colored styles in silk plush. Very beautiful. Also for our popular Paper and Magazine Rack hold.s a hundred newspapers and dozers of magazines Made of antique oak and asli with nic.kle Iiolders Elegant for any room or oillco. Agents of either sex are mnkiug from $3 to al5 a day Send for sample of Tidy Holder, only »5c, mict for sample of Paper rack, 50r.., ana receive Illustrated catalogue with best terinB to aceiits. Address the

GRNTLKMUN—Allow me to state that I have used your medicine, S. I. F. T., and I know it has saved iny life beyond a doubt. Before using it I could not attend to my household duties. But since using I feel like a girl of eighteen. Can cheerfully recommend it to anybody. MRS. P. BROOKS, 875 George St,

CHE CRAWFO VILLE WEEKLY REVIEW

Are Allium)* KiiperiititioiisY Do an inials see ghosts? Of course there ai-e no ghosts, but that makes no difference. Science and philosophy agree that it is not at all improbable that nothing really exists and that nothing is, except perturbations of brain cells. Anything that we may think we see may not, after all, have any existence—at any rate, it does not exist as we see it. Do animals know about ghosts and do they think they see them? In his latest book Sir Joiin Lubbock undertakes to tell how the world appears to animals, but he doesn't enter into the possibilities of superstitions among dogs and horses, for instance. Certainly, the world does not appear the. same to the ant that it does to man and not quite the same to the dog or the horse, since the dog and the horse do not laugh.

If we take the conclusions of science respecting the development of the intelligence, we ought to be able to believe that the more intelligent of the lower animals have superstitions that correspond in some measure to those of the least intelligent human beings.

That many animals reason, draw logical inferences beyond the operation of instinct, is pretty well settled. When a dog or a horse has exhausted all its experience in attempting to account for certain phenomena, does it conclude that the thing is supernatural or out of the order of explicable phenomena? Novelists tell us about the amazing fear of dogB and horses ordinarily fearless, when placed under conditions that excite the fear of superstitious persons. Are there facta to warrant this? If dogs and horses 6ee ghosts they must be capable of the simplest form of religious emotion that is to say, the fear of the inexplicable, whioli in the savage is regarded by science as the beginning of religion. Dogs have what in science passes for moral sense. They are conscious of wrong doing and practice self restraint. Of course it all grows out of the experience that the doing of certain things is attended with more pain than the momentary pleasure, but this, science tells us, is the basis of the moral sense. At all events, science is bound to admit the potentiality of superstitions in animals. Milwaukee

Tile Congregation Smiled

A story that goes back to the meetin' house in Wrentham is one of a worthy man named Habbakuk P., a resident of the town and a faithful attendant upon worship, who had been blessed with four wives, one after another. Habbakuk was rigidly orthodox, as his name seemed to demand, and was always in his pew on the Sabbath. He sat there in his conspicuous pew with No. 4 by his side on the first Sunday after their marriage. It was a balmy June day, and the zephyrs from the open window toyed playfully with the bride's white Batin bonnet ribbons and the groom's silken locks. There was a stranger in the pulpit who had exchanged for the day with the venerable Mr. F., the pastor of the church. After reading a few Scripture passages the stranger proceeded to read a notice which he had fouDd in the Bible, and which was as follows: "Mr. Habbakuk desires the prayers of the congregation that the death of his wife may be sanctified to him for his spiritual good."

Then, when the congregation was between stupefaction and explosion, the clergyman went on with the services at a rapid rate. He was at a loss to know why the congregation seemed to be throughout the remainder of the service on the point of laughter, but at dinner Mrs. the pastor's wife, explained to him that Habbakuk sat three rows from the front in the broad aisle with his brand new wife, and he had read an old notice that Mr. had probably been using for a book mark ever since the death of wife No. 3.—Boston Transcript.

lie Never Struck His Children. I have never struck my two children," said a young American father the other day, "though I have often been tempted strongly to it, and sometimes would not have blamed any parent for doing so. But I was thrashed so much by my own father, a good enough man, too, that I always stood in fear of him, seldom told him the truth if I could help it, and never confided in him. Often I was whipped for errors I had committed with good intentions, and I remember tho wild spirit of hatred that used to come over me at such times, when, smarting under the blows I felt I did not deserve, I would get away by myself and swear silent but bitter oaths that would have opened the old gentleman's eyes to his folly, perhaps, if ho could have heard them from so young a child. So I made a vow that I would never beat my own children. And now I feel sure that they do not stand in physical fear of me, I am pretty certain they tell me the truth, and I know they confide in mo as a friend. And though they do not obey mo nearly as implicity as I did my father, and make themselves much moro of a nuisanco to me than I was to him, yet they don't regard mo as a bully, and that is something."—New York

Tribu^

NEW NOVBLTV CO., Wauseon, O.

CINCINNATI, O., Jan. 21,1889,

.wmssss/sp 3ErtP

roncinpuLMg)

Con Cunningham Is selling overcoats at a

Sharp Hotel Clerks.

A hotel room clerk must not only know every room in the house, even to the kind of furniture, lights, air, etc., but he must be a quick, keen judge of human nature to know just where to assign a guest who has never visited the house before. Tho skilled clerk rarely makes a mistake, and in time becomes such an adept that ho knows when a guest is going to complain about tho first apartment to which he is assigned and acts accordingly, givmg him one of tho worst rooms in the house, and tho second time one of the best. The contrast is so great that the objector feels flattered and always comes a second time. There are few veteran hotel clerks who have not run against the greatest objector in the world, the opera singer Campanini, who was never known to take the first, second or third room to which ho was shown. That man invariably wound up in the worst room of the lot

Grand Opening! Mosslers',

-ONE PRICE

Clothiers, Hatters, Furnishers.

Watch and Wait For The Date. Stone Front, East of the

Court House.

ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE OF REAL K8-

Notice Is hereby given that on or after the *3tb day of May, 1889, will tell at private silo at the law office or Ristine A RIstlne, in Crawfordsvllle, Indiana, the following described real estate sitnste In Montgomery county, Indiana, towlt: The south half of the northwest qnarterol section eight (8) in township twenty (20) north orranre three (3) west Terms, cash, Kin six and in 12 months, with interest ate per cent on deferred payments. SILAS PETERSON,

Administrator Huih JBranigan estate. April 28tb, 1889.

Grand Opening! MOSSLERS'

-ONE PRICE.

Clothiers, Hatters, Furnishers.

Watch and Wait for tfye Date. Stone Front, East of the

Court House.

TIME TABLES.

ClSt,L.&C,

The Popnlar Rome Between

CINCINNATI INDIANAPOLIS, LAFAYETTE, ——AND

CHICAGO.

The Entire Trains run Through Without change. Pullman Sleeping and Elegant Reclining Chair

Cars on Night Trains. Magnificent Parlor Oars on Day Trains. .Trains each way dally except Sunday and J-"" one train euch way on Sunday between CINCINNATI,

INDIANAPOLIS, LAFA1ETTE and CHICAGO.

Short line between Indianapolis and Cincinnati.

l?nnvTralnB

eac'1 way

daily except Sunday,

J- villi and two tra'ns each way on Sunday between

INDIANAPOLIS ani CINCINNATI.

Take the Yandalia Line Trains to Colfax, whore close connections are made with the C. I. St. L. & C. Ey. for Chicago.

Tho only line which makes Cincinnati its great objective point for the distribution of Southern and Eastern traffic. The fact that it connects in the Central Union Depot in Cincinnati with the trains ol the & O R'y, CW4B R'y. (B & O), N P. & O. R. R.. (Erie,) and the C. C. C. & I. R'y, (Bee Line) for the Bast, as well as with the trains of the C. N. O. & T. P. R'y (Cmcinmati Sonthern) and Kentucky Central for the sonth, southeast and southwest, gives It an advantage over all competitors, for no route from Chicago, Lafayette or Indianapolis 'an make these connections witbont compelling passengers to submit to a disagreeable omnibus transfer for both passenger and baggage.

Through Tickets and Baggage Checks to all Principal points can be obtained at any Ticket Office, C. I. St. L. & C. R'y., also via this line at all Coupon Offices throughout the country.

JOHN EGAN,

Gen. PBSB. & Tkt. Agt.

J. H. MARTIN, Cincinnati, O. Dist. Pass. Agt. S* £. Cor. Washington & Meridian Sts., Indianapolis, Ind-

Grand Opening! MOSSLERS'

-ONE PRICE-

Clothiers, Hatters, Furnishers.

Watch and Wait for the

•Date-

Stone Front, East of the Court House.

g, Jonc*—"\\ hat are you talk mgabout-!" Kn»lth-,,Wbat everybody talks about tliey »ay that for Ili-lgbtV Din. cnnc, Ktducy, Liver or llluddcr Complaints ilib o, remedy has no equal." 7n It COCA Jtlght to tllC Spot

Elf*Prepared at I)r. Kilmer'* Dispen8arytBim?hamton,N.'V Litters of inquiry answered, Guide to Health Kent FKEE.

REAL ESTATE AND MOHET BROKERS

MONEY TO LOAN,:-:

In any sum. Good notes cashed. Farms and eity property bought, sold and exchanged.

Cumberland

Miller,

HHJWest Maln{Stroet,

Crawfordsvllle, Ind.

BARB WIBK.—The beet made sold only by

diseount »j. •'hown him.-^St. Loiuia Globe-Democrat. Tinsley & Martin. notice. |yWork warranted one year.

FARMERS' WIVES, SHOP-GIRLS, CLERKS,

TEACHERS,

Breaking down from being too much on their feet, and the strain of daily cares,

CAN RENEW THEIR STRENCTH

by using, ZOA-PHORA, (Woman's Friend,) a prevention' and a euro for all diseases peculiar to women. Women know what these diseases are, but do not al* ways give proper attention to their symptoms, viz:

PAINS, PERMANENT AND SHIFTING, NERVOUS HEADACHE, PALPITATION, PALE OR MOTHY COMPLEXION,

SLEEPLESSNESS, WEAK BACK*

MENSTRUAL DERANGEMENTS, PERIODICAL NEURALGIA, TREMULOUSNESS, HOT FLUSHES,

That terrible dragging down, all gone sensation, thess indicate that some form of weakness is coming on. A reliable remedy should be promptly used. ZOAPHOBA is that remedy, proved so to be by long actual use. Its great popularity is not due to big advertising, but to

Reports ol Ladles Who Have Used It.

A pamphlet of these Reports, and also the BOOK ON DISEASES OF WOMEN, which the Zoa-Phora Medicine Company publish, (a book which every woman, or girl above 15 years old, should read,) may DO obtained gratis al the drug store of Lew Fisher

THE SPRING MEDICINE YOU WANT

Raine Celery Compound

Purifies the Blood »X Strengthens the Nerves, Stimulates the Liver, Regulates the Kidneys* and7 Bowels, Gives Life and Vigor to every organ. There's nothing like it.

Last spring, being very much run down and debilitated, I procured some ot Palne's Celery Compound. The use ot two bottles made me feel like a new man. Aa a general tonic and spring medicine, I do not Know its equal."

W. L. GKEENLKAF,

Brigadier General V. N. G., Burlington, Vfc (l.oo. Six tor $5.00. At Druggists. MMMft if/1 ft YPO Color feather* and Hibboni. ummvau urco Xaty! St»smtl Xconcmleal)

F. HALLOW ELL &

Use It Now!,

Harlng: used your Palne'sCelery Compound this spring, I can safely recommend it as the most powerful and at the same time most gentle regulator. It is a splendid nerve tonic, and since taking It I have felt like anew man."

B. ET KNORH,

Waynetown Mills.

They arerunninit on full time »nd give Irom 3U to 36 pounds of flour per bushel and the bran. We pay the highest mnrket price for Old anil New Wheat Corn ground at any time. Mill Feed nlwiiys i.n hand. The latest improved machinery Hnd nil the modern improveme nt* uud nc better llour -rie in tho xtnle.

WAYNETOWN, INDIANA.

Smarts burg Mrs. Elmer Pitcher, Wliitesville Charles l'etro, Peter Townsley, John -T. Kirkpatrick. Darlington John II. Freeman, New Ross: Jeremiah Blades, Ronchdale Mrs. Frank Wade, Iliilsboro: \V. Bennett, Whitlwk John Henderson, Wnynet.uwn.

At hi» office daily except Thursday. Opposite Citizens' Sank, south Waehington-st.

PERCHERON HORSES!

Watertown, Dakota.

WELLS, RICHARDSON& Co. Props. Burlington, Vt.

LACTATED FOOD

Wayne. Ripley, Coal Creek

Tee, and nil the other townships thiit want good llour. honest weights ai.'d the best in the market don't forget ihe

it 9Utp w«l Laughing.

Co.

Dr. Barnes'

New System of Rectal Treatment anil Medication does away with ail the old methods of cutting, slashing, burning aud clamping.

Cures Piles In a Few Painless Treatments.

$1,000 for failnre to euro. The euro of Piles guaranteed.

Cancer and Pile Specialist,

EYE AND EAR SPECIALIST,

FOR THE PAST TEN YEARS.

It is certain, safe, and as harmless as water RECTAL VLCBliS, often taken for LUNG and NERVOUS A-FFECTIOXB, ^aro cured If taken in time. Over 30,000 CURES made by tins treatment and so LIFE KNDAMOERED.

EYE and EAR, Granula'ed Lids, Cataract: Kar, lieafnees, Discharges, Catarrh, etc. Glasses fitted. AH Disease# or tho Nose aud Throat. Cures Catarrh in its worst forms. Private Diseases. Do not wiite time and money on worthless medicines, bnt consult Dr. Barnes at once. Diseases Peculiar to Women. Deformities, Wens, \Varts, Tumors, Milk Leg, Moles, etc., removed without the knife. Mipcraclal Uair removed. Cure «ertain. RUPTURE, Positively cured by new process, no knife, see reference. IJig Neck, Enlarged Glands and Goiter permanently ci.recl. Absolutely cnrr« every rase of Piles in a lew painless treatments. The Knife and Hivh Bill* must go. Rectal Ulcers, Fistula and Fis-nre Mind Piles. Itching Piles, Bleeding Piles, I'rotrudini Piles, Strictnre and Polypus positive'y cured and no interruption of business necessitated. Bladder. Irritable and Ulcerated neck of Bladder, Urethra and Enlargement of Prostrate Glands is largely due to Rectal Ulccrs and Kissure. Remove the can sc. Charges reasonable. Kidneys, Diahetls and Bright's Disease. A cure guaranteed.

References of PartieB Cured of Fistula, Piles and Rupture: Jefferson Scott, Alex (J. Mahorney, Silas I.one. Stephen Stilweli and Robert K. Bryant, CrawforilHVillu John E. Bsyless. Alamo John llarpell, YountsYille Nathan Freeman, Thos. ICverson, Frank Gill, J. W.Kent, Masias Frantz, Ladoirn: J. Lockridge, Raccoon: Jonas

A.

ISLAND HOIE STOCK FAUH, Grosse Islo, IV&yne County, Hlch!ga&t About 200 pure-bred animals on band. Prices reasonable terms ensy. Hones guaranteed breeders. Large catalogue with history of ib« breed free by mail

Jones.

Address 8AV AGE & CAUKliJi, XJetioii, Alkh.

FRENCH COACH HORSES.

Beautifully formed high-stepping stallions and Mares, superb action, bred under the patronage of the French Government For catalogue and history of the breed address'

Detroit. HIch

CARRIAGE SHOP.

J. 8. MILLER & CO.,

MANUFACrOBBRS OF

Carriages, Buggies and Spring Wagons.

Aagenls lor all esatern standard mattes of baggies, etc. Repairing done on short Factory north of court home.