Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 1 June 1889 — Page 4

HOmvs SARSAPARirJiA.

The Chief Reason lor the great sue cess ol Hood's Sarsaparilla is found in tho article itsell. It is merit that wins, and the lact that Hood's Sarsaparilla actually accomplishes what is claimed tor it, is what has given to this medicine a popularity and sale greater than that of any other sarsapa-

M^rit Wine:

riUa or bl00d

purI"

IVIC111 V111© fler before the public. Hood's Sarsaparilla cures Scrofula, Salt Rheum and all Humors, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Biliousness, overcomes That Tired Feeling, creates an Appetite, strengthens the Nerves, builds up the Whole System.

Hood's Sarsaparilla Is sold by all druggists. 81 six for $5. Prepared by C. I. Hood 6 Co., Apothecaries, Lowell, Maaa.

NOTIONS, MILLINERY, ETC.

Sullivan- Grohs Go.,

The greatest place in Indianapolis to do your shopping. Our line of

No on s4

Is not to be beaten anywhere. While visiting here don't fail to see our line of new

Dress Goods

MILLINERY

For Easter. Big cuts in

KID GLOVES, Hosiery, Underwear,

Etc., Etc. See our new

LACE CURTAINS,

At 6oc per pair. For the next two weeks we will make big cuts in prices on all of our

Spring Wraps

As it is getting late in the season and we don't want to carry any over. Do not fail to visit the

Philadelphia Store,

6 and 8, TV. Washington-st.,

INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA.

tp-

GROCERIES.

siifii

and get the top prices, or receive goods instead. Remember the location,

J. M. Brown,

In Miller Block, Washington St.

China Silks, 5 Colored Surahs, Striped Surahs, Colored Bhadamas, ^Persian Novelties, Colored Failles.

•THifi

loiliflieif County News.

WAYNKTOWN.

Mrs. Mary Ann Ellis is very sick. The Wayne Guards held a drill Saturday. Than Blackford was in Crawfordsville, Tuesday.

The marshal, W. E. Zuck, is working the streets. Dr. Culver's father, of Arkansas, visited him last week.

Fred McClure went to Indianapolis, Monday, with a car load of stock. Geo. Runyau shipped two cars of hogs to eastern markets last week.

J. M. Birdcell and Rev. Kerr were courting in the county seat, Monday. Uncle Derrick Wert is visiting his daughter, Mrs. Oscar Thomas, at Brazil.

Morris Herzog is buying large quantities of wool and is doing a good business. The teachers for the coining year have been employed by the town school trustees.

R. E. Ray has a much neater room for his drug store than when he was in the post office building.

The Baptist church Sunday School will hold a straw berry and ice cream supper in the church to-night

MACE.

Cut worms are now getting in their work. Be sure to attend the 6upper to-night at Shiloh.

Working the roads is now tho order of the day. Decoration day services were duly observed here.

John Lockridge is converting his old house into a new one. Harvey Coulter, from Boone Co., was here the first of the week.

Leave your orders for slat fencing with F. B. Armstrong, Haycock's saw mill. The ice cream festival at Walnut Chapei will occur the 2nd Saturday night in June.

Quite a number were witnesses in the TaylorHampton case, some of them from this town. Mr. Sam Freeman has been appointed p. m. here. One by one the plums are dropping in atfd out.

In the wild rush for schools, why does not some one apply for our school? Come let us have our school meeting.

Last Sunday night was memorable here for accidents to young men while out buggy riding. Several vehicles were smashed.

The frisky, cunning, little squirrel will now have to drop. Many hunters here, of Boone and Carson fame, are preparing to make the woods reverberate with death knells,

YOCNTSVILLE,

Cut worms are still on the rampage. There is some talk of organizing a base ball club here,

Supervisor WMkel is through with spripg road work. The post office will not be removed to its new quarters until July 1.

MisB Allie Parker visited her parents at Melott, over Sunday. Wheat that was sown in the corn last fall is very thin on the ground.

The straw balers have about cleaned up all the straw in this neighborhood. J. Stout Zuck and C. H. Pease, of Waynetown, was in the vllliage on Monday.

Wi §8$

We Never Get Leftl

Our goods are all new and first-class —remember this. "We are also "knockers on high prices. Bring us your

if

The Kid B. B. club are practicing. They will give some other club a black eye ere long. Frank Rosebaum and wife, of New Market, visited A. C. Yount and wife over Saturday night.

H. W. Darnall, of Waynetown, was in the village on Tuesday in the interest of the New Home sewing machine. "Ours was a case of democratic incompetency."—Last week's correspondent Journal.

The above appeared in last week's Journal, from here, besides a number of other dirty flings which were out of place and uncalled for. When Carelton Snyder was removed and A. C. Yount appointed post master here it created quite a little flurry and in fact some were considerably excited over it—republicans as well as democrats. The greatest objections were that the present location was the best In the place, and another was the way and manner in which the change of post mapters was made without consulting the people and giving any others a chance for the office. But since the change and as time moved along the people were becoming reconciled and very little was said about it until the Journal correspondent i-oin here(who always puta his foot in it) came out in his flings.

A little over two years ago the dally messenger route between this place and Troutman's station was discontinued. Tho people united and after hard work succeeded in its reestablishment. Since that time everything connected with

thiB

route and office has run along

very nicely. The people one and all have taken great interest in their mail facilities and since the change of post masters had come to view the change as a matter of fact, and were ready to abide by it, but when such flings as came out in the Saturday Journal are thrown in their faces then the old feeling comes back and people take sides. We should be very

are

iiiiiiii*

\y

11 ,/

14

CRa WF(i rti8V1.LI.!• \Vi5KM

careful what we say as we do not know what may happen and how soon we may all be called upon to assist in a reestablishment of our daily mail again, and if we were not united what could be accomplished. Our (advice to the Journal correspondent is to keep his dirty little charge to himself hereafter or quit writing for the paper. The books as kept by the late p. m. and his assistant will compare with the books of any office in the state, and the charge of incompetency is a malicious charge and rests on the p. m. and his assistant alike. There is many a person who can set a mouse trap to perfection, but not satisfied with such small game, they undertake to trap for bears and gets caught by the bears. Moral: Study your genus and stick to mice.

ROUND HI LI..

The growing crops look fine since the late rain. Miss Dora Mitchel is stopping at James Wilson's.' ,'T

Wm. Alston visited home folks near Elmdale Sunday. Albert Wilson and family Sundayed at Wm. Pierce's.

Tom Lynch has planted his sod corn the second time, Hrs. Henderson spent last Friday with Sugar Grove friends.

Lizzie Eshleman sp«3nt Sunday with her sister at Balhinch. Miss Mary Hanna has been sick this week with a bilious attack.

James Pierce and wife visited Mrs. Steele, of Crawfordsville, Friday. John Utterback and family sold their wool at Yountsville last Friday.

The frost on last Thursday night killed the corn on the low grouud. The baptising at the Center church was conducted in the old Newlight faith.

The festival at New Richmond was a grand success in every way, shape and form. Tommie Quillen and family, of Crawfordsville, visited in this vicinity last Sunday. 0. H. Taylor, of Lafayette, returned home on Saturday last, looking hale and hearty.

Rachel Crow, of Crawfordsville, spent last Saturday and Sunday with home folks west of here.

There was a man through here last week fix ing up old stoves and making them as good as new.

William Mason, of Sugar Grove, passed through here on Sunday last enroute to Crawfordsville.

Arrangements for children's day at this place are being made, in which it will take place the fourth Sunday in June.

Manoah Brown had the misfortune to lose a valuable mare last Friday, caused by jumping on the fonce and killing herself.

The young man of New Richmond who talks so nice to the girls and trieB to feed them tally finds out for himself that they are not so easily blarnied.

Mrs. Syinins, of this vicinity, died last Friday morning and was buriee on Sunday at the Mt. Pleasant cemetery. She leaves a husband and seven children to mourn her loss.

Enos Shields, formerly a Round Hill boy, who has been on a tour of inspection in almost every State in the Union during the past six years, is now In Denver, Col., visiting friends and relatives.

ki

1 4

1 Qi'llr Woim' Alnioc

Silk Warp Almas Henrietta Cloths,

Q^ Aldins Suitings, Vienna Stripes, Tamese Cloths,

French Novelties.

The folks of

review

WONDERFUL!

How cheap we are selling-

Dry Goods, Millinery Goods,

And Notions of Every Description.

5,000 Yards White Goods at 5c per yard. 5,000 Yards Good Calico at 5c per yard. 5,000 Yards Satine (French Patterns) only 10c a yard. 2,000 Yards Colored Dress Goods at 3c per yard. 5,000 Yards Mosquito Nets at 5c ner yard, all colors. 40 Dozen Jersey Ribbed Vests, only 17c, worth 35c.

We also have a full stock of Dress Geods.lGinghams, Satines, White Goods, Embroidery White Dresses Surah and China Silks at 50c per yard, Silk Umbrellas, Silk Embroidery, Fichus, Summer Shawls Hosiery, Underwear Corsets, Gloves and Mitts, and everything else usualiy found in dry goods and notion stores We 'want to call your especial attention to

OUR MILL1NEBY DEPARTMENT.

We sell as many hats as arty three stores in the city. And why? ask for the same goods.<p></p>LEVINSON

ABE

-Successorto Phil Joseph.

thiB

neighborhood are very much

interested in talking about things that do not concern them a particle. If they would attend to their own business and quit talking about an innocent person that does not deserve their slanderous talk they would be better off and hare plenty to do.

Of late there have been more tramps coming this way than ever before kuown. Scarcely a day passes but one may see half a dozen of these filth venders in the neighborhood, They are too lazy to work, preferring the life of a vagabond, and go about the country begging a living and committing depredations under cover of darkness. These worthless characters are a nuisance to any communiiy and deserve more vigorous treatment than the statutes of Indiana provide.

NEW RICHMOND.

The prospects for wheat iu this vicinity are very good. Mrs. Mattie Wallace, who has been quite ill, is improving.

Mr. Smock has bought a new traction engine that

iB.a

dai«y.

The Christian church ladies are to form a society for church enterprise. Frank Perkins went to Lafayette last Monday and purchased goods for his store.

These good Harrison times make republicans here sick when you mention it to them. A great many from bore will go to Lafayette on the 4th of July to see the natural gas blowout.

Ira Stout has his bowling alley in good shape and the balls are ready for those who like the game.

Rumors of a postoffice change are afloat and we would not be at all surprised to see another change.

L. W. King, who went from this county to Missouri a few years ago, has returned and will stay in Indiana.

Fishermen that used to fish in Coal Creek are disappointed this year, as the dry weather has spoiled the fishing. IfS

The ice cream and strawberry festival at the M. E. church, last Saturday was not a9 well attended as was expected.

The railroad is working night and day, graveliug the road bed and it will soon have one of the best tracks in the west.

E. C. Campbell has a fine lot of sweet potato plants, and gardening in New Richmond is a new, but doubtless successful, experiment.

The railroad men say they are going to bring 200 dagoes or Italians to camp here. Look out for fun if they do, for the working man waxeth hot.

Beu Swank and son passed through here last Suuday, Ben stopped long enough to tell an excellent tale on the Wingate scribe. All had to laugh.

The faith cure denomination is in possession of the church at last accounts, and it looks as if Ben Swank had secured for them what he ttarted to do.

Our town contains a man so lazy that it is said he scares the little birds from the trees for fear they might wake him up too early In the morning.

The tailoring firm Is getting tnore'work than it can do and gilt edged orders are refused daily on account of it. People know a good thing when they see it.

The fine display of stable horses here on last Saturday was quite a sight and there was quit.

We are showing the largest stock of Dry Goods, Carpets, Millinery and Men's Suitings in tlie city.

,,

1

V"

*.

-wSEsigf Mi

Because we save you one-third the prices others Yours,

I.

a crowd to see them, and each owner thought he had the best horse. The new boxes for the postoffice have come and you can carry a key and look for mail every hour if you like. Only 25c per quarter is what Uncle Sam asks for the privilege.

Some young chaps that wore diapers not very long since should be looked after by their parents. They are beginning to think themselves men and trouble only will

Btop

them.

The parties who christened the tile kiln, a part of whom hailed from Corwin, had better look a little out, or their names may appear in the REVIEW. Our village is no dumping place.

Jack Gerrat, Dr. Detchon, John Detchon and Chas. Smith went to Black Rock fishing last week and after buying 40 lbs. of fish returned home. Jack says the Dr. can swim like a turtle on the bottom.

Ensmlnger and Brothers went through here on their way to Wingate Inst Sunday. They did not tarry long, as our place is one that needB no officers to preserve quiet, or tfce home authorities are sufficient.

Dad Smock is putting in time on the public roads and working hands under the old 10-hour system. Some are kicking qnd say they will not work but 8 hours, as the late law specifies and will stand a law suit first.

A knock down Detween Jo Beal and Irvey BL ble was one of the features last Sunday. After each of them -had klsBed mother earth twice they concluded to withdraw for repairs. Blue eyes and black eyes are what they aie now exhibiting.

A Mr. Taylor, from Lafayette, will start a lumber and coal yard here if he can get some other parties to stop business. New Richmond needs a lumber yard and is bound to have one, come what will, the sooner the better for all concerned.

Some of the people who by their actions last winter said to the world that they were tired of sin had better go a little slow, as some people might take them for escaped convicts. It is hard to tell by their actions which crowd they belong to.

The bird law is a farce so far as it concerns the little birds. Men will openly shoot them and boys gather their eggs by the bushel and kill the young ones, and yet no one has been made to pay for the violation. A poor law poor, ly executed.

It people don't want little birds to disturb them they should not plant trees to entice them, and if the people who destroy the nests had half sense they could see the advantage of keeping them. But that is where the needful comes in they have no brains.

John Stevens, north of here, killed a mad dog last Wednesday. It was a narrow escape for John, as the dog made several attempts to bite him, but he finally succeeded in killing the an. imal, which looked terrific. People had better look out for perhaps the dog has bitten some others.

Thomas Smith has accepted an agency for the National building association, Indianapolis, and those who want to build should take hold of it, as it would be an easy matter to build a house and get easy payments on it. It is just the thing for the poor people that have no homes and many will accept the benefits which it offers.

To the Linden scribe we will say that when you reckon the New Richmond scribe wants to sell fire water you are entirely off of your base. Now, scribe, these people that make such a fuss concerning fire water, one half of them take it behind the door. The greater part of the other half do things that area great deal worse than selling or drinking fire water. One thing is in making themselves too fresh with other men's affairs, and the less said the better for some we know of.

a' &

wmmm

ffnmn PnimAi-V'A^m 'nn P-J TCo oV.<p></p>Fashionable

Hemp Carpets* from 10c up, "£3* Millinery, Cotton Ingrain 20c Stylish Hats, trimmed to —4 All Wool Ingrain" 50c order by the most experi-

Tapestries 55c enced trimmer in the city. Body Brussells 85c p-d] Men's Clothing made to orRugs & Curtains 50c der, cheap, warranted to fit

S.

India Silks.

The maiden who is all for lawn and yet likes silk—and who of them does not ?—can be doubly satisfled at once by selecting some of our

INDIA SILKS.

As light as lawn, as soft as silk, clinging with graceful folds in beautiful effects of drapery, beyond doubt tho most comfortable and elegant of summer wear is

ISDIA SILKS.

They retain that popular reputation, and in view of it we have secured, in a multitude of beautiful designs, the largest line that this market ever saw of

INDIA SILKS.

L.S.

INDIANAPOLIS.

C1EPETS,

aSSt:'- V.-,v \jfESsSI

The largest and finest lot of all new goods shown by us. Our prices always the lowest for the best goods.

Wall Paper,

All the grades made in this and foreign countries to be found in our establishment. Special attention is paid to all new artistic effects in cheap paper.

DRAPERIES.

One cannot buy draperies and do himself justice before seeing our splendid assortment of

LACE CURTAINS, Porterries, Plushes,

China Silks and Trimmings that we offer at very reasonable prices. Don't fail to call.

icier Lee.

5, 7 & l), 12. Waslilngton-st..

INDIANAPOLIS, IND.

^G-ZEIsTTS.

SOCIAL MIRROR, Or Social and Mural Culture.

Introduced by ROSE ELIZABETH CLEVELAND, is having the largest sale of any strictly subscription book published.

Terms and circulars free if you mean business and want to commence work at once send $ 1 for outfit. Exclusive territory guaranteed. Hoping to secure your services for 1889 we are

Yours truly,

Sun Publishing Co.,

104 & 106 Lysander St., Detroit, Mich.

Farmers,

See Case & Co., at the Trade Palace, before selling your wool. We are prepared to pay the highest market price.

For Buckwheat, Hungarian and Millet Seed go to Darter's. 25 2x

IATIOKin

A

r,

fe

AKlli'n/^TT