Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 22 March 1890 — Page 5
A DOZEN DEAD.
TOarhtfui Calamity at Indianapolis.
1
Vfi
-3M£
mmmM
Mm
a Fire In
ME BURNING BUILDING COLLAPSES.
A. $raat Many Firemen Are Hurled in the tlalns—Twelre of Them Taken Out Dead, and Nearly a Score
Are Injured.
I.T8T OF TIIK UNFORTUNATES. IWDIAKAPOLIS, Ind., March 18.—What ftt first seemed an insignificant fire in tke Bowen-Merrill book store Monday aXtarnoon resulted in a catastrophe in
Which at least twelve men were killed a»da dozen wounded, some of whom will Ae. The building occupied by the hook company was a four-story and basement marble front facing Washington street just west of Meridian. I The fire started shortly before 8 o'clock •fear the furnace in the sub-basement, •Sad the department, when it arrived, (teamed at a loss to locate the flames
S4
began pouring water into the front I the building. For two hours the fight htd continued in this way until a ma•jbrityof the spectators had left, under
M* impression that the lire was out. About 5:30 o'clock, however, there was a terrible orash and the entire building, With the exuoption of the front wall, foil inward. At the time a number of tremen were on the roof and were I Mcried in tho debris, which was piled fcrty foot high within the walls of the kurned building. The work of rescuing I liie living and extricating tho dead was I Snmediately begun by at least SOO volunteers. At a late hour the following tartlve mon, alljlretnen, had bein taken
ries Richard ICelly, internal injuries WillTallentyre, arms broken and body bruised, tfili die Porter, Bkull crushed, will die THOIBM black, limbs broken and internal idles, fatal Qeorge Dlllard, unconscious from pternal lnjurios Sam Neal, internal injuries ony Vatz, leg broken and body badly bruised
FtlHam
Jones, internal injuries William esner, arm broken and skull fractured larles Jenkins, skull fractured and injured in»n»«llyi Thomas Barrett, injured internally
5cGlnnis,
'UUam Robinson, Internal injuries William legs both brokon, badly hurt EdWard Leaoh, injured Internally, unconscious John Keating, body badly bruised and burned .. .... Villlam Long, slightly Injured about head.
The Bowen-Merrill Company carried ft stock valued at 8125,000, on which tiiere was an insurance of 970,000. The building was owned by Silas T. Bowen, ftUd the loss on the structure will be $80,000. H. P. Wasson, dealer in dry poods, suffered aloss of$10,000by smoke and water, and Byram & Sullivan lost half that amount. Sevoral smaller stocks are badly damaged. Bowen & Herrill have scoured a new location Ud will reopen in a few days. Colonel Spin Merrill, of the firm, is the newly«
Appointed Consul-General at Caloutta, mjl was to have left for his post to-day. When the fire seemed to be under lontrol Chief Engineer Daugherty
{rdered
one company to tho roof of the
uilding, another to tho third floor, and ft third to the alley in the rear. These companies, comprising about thirty fitaU)en, were to use their advanced positions in stopping the fire that was still burning in the orevices and out of the Way places. It was 5:30 o'clock when these three advances on tho fire were toad©. It was.then the awful oalamity •ocurred.
The building'with its load of human feeing* caved in. No warning wag jlven. The roof seemed sound and the walls substantial. Suddenly the walls yielded. A man threw up his arms and Bank into the seething ruins below. The jrulf widened. Another man dropped, and the whole rear roof with the men oa it fell on to the top floor, where the fire was raging. Four men were on the top floor under the roof. These were orushed beneath the grinding Umbers and all were hurlod through the falling floor beneath, which gave way Beneath the weight of tho mass.
The surrounding buildings in the rear were covered with spectators, and these wore all witnesses to tho awful death. Some of tho firemen standing 9a the walls of the building jumped and were saved. Spectators on the adJoining roof ran for their lives. The £reat throng in front did not realize ^•hat had happened. The front of the building did not fall, and the ruins in the rear were not visible from the front. Gradually the news spread.
Ambulances were telephoned for and presently the crowd bolow moaned under the portentous developments. In the alley wore 100or more citizens, many Of them assisting the firemen. The north wall as it oame down filled the thoroughfare with debris and it it believed that quite a number of private citizens are buried there.
The scene on the heap of debris immediately after the collapse was pitiabl« and dreadful beyond all power of de ecrlptlon. The limbs of men here and there were seen writhing, while th« s^a|5» trunks to which they belonged wera '*$0^ burled from sight. A ladder lay across three men and was weighted down by fill tons of brick and timber. Anothei MWSB poor fellow who WHS beyond all MSs pain lay close beside his fellows a shape1099 and mangled mass. The laddei stew® I,ay across the stomach of one man who
Was screaming with agony. Anothei man with a broken and twisted bod] lay next to him. As fast as willing fcands could hurl away the bricks th« weight was removed, but the laddei was too firmly hold to yield. The man Vrith a broken arm was dragged free and carried away. Undor him, but breathing, appeared the upturned face of a poor fellow not seen before. The mortar and dust were cleaned from hi Upi, but he was buried so deeply that Ko Immediate help could come to him.
On all sides blaokened and bleeding laces distorted with agony or dreadful in death nrged the crowd wuo had sealed tho heap to assist them to redouble their efforts. All the work of calief was oacried 9» with gjfat
mm
m'
oulty. One by one the nn.n Kvjifpni the surface were extricated, but :is the workers went down further titey 'HHCOTered new victims and the horror meadi ly grow.
The forward part of th® building still Stood high and burning fierooly and threatened every moment to fall down and bury the brave rescuers, but they gave no lieed to the periL On either side the walls towered and seemed ready to fall, but there was no time to think of them. As fast as tho men at work became exhausted others stood ready and anxious to fill their pi,-ices, so there was sot a moment of dflay in the labor of relief. The debris caught fire from the red-hot bricks and blazed up threateningly right above where the men had been buried. Tho cool-headed firemen who had not gone down to death, however, worked heroically, and soon had the flames under control. Thus the pinioned men were saved from a death more horriblo than that which stared them in tho face. Within an hour twenty-nine bodies had been removed from tho debris, and of this number twelve wore dead.
The physicians say that half ot those injured will die. All are moro or less burned. It \v is almost a red-hot furnacn wliere they fell into, and it seeme remarkable that a single man who went down came out alivo. Tho fall itself I iixty feet) was enough to kill all those who wero on the roof of the ill-fated building. Tho injured are receiving all tho attention possible at tho various city hospitals, more than half a hundred physicians having volunteered their servfees.
The calamity is by far the greatest that has evor befallen any firo departnient in tho West. The unfortunate men, too, are the oldest and best men in the department, some of them having been in the service for twenty years. I The killed are all mon of families, and I already steps for the relief of the bereft I are being taken.
1
sat dead: j| George Faulkner, Ulysses Glazt»r, George (SIMK William Hinsley, A1 Huffman, Esp»y Btormer, Richard Lowery, William Huffman, Honry Woodruff. Thomas Blaok, Andrew O. (feerry, Poter DauRhfrty.
The injured, all firemen, are as follows: Joseph Burkhardt, leg broken and internal in-
Cin
A fund which has beon started for the I relief of injured firemen and tho families of those who aro dead has reached the sum of S'2,000. Mayor Sullivan has issued a proclamation calling for subscriptions. The coroner has been inI vestigaling the causo of the disaster and will hold an inquest to-day.
First Chief Daugherty is being very severely critioised for ordering hi* firemen on to the building when it was in such an unsafe condition. Five minutes before the orash came the firemen were warned by citisens to leave the building, but the warning was unheeded.
FOR LOCAL OPTION.
A New lilll Introduced in the Iowa Sea* Ate Consideration of the Dent Bill Postponed by the House.
DES MOINES, la., March 20.—In the Senate yesterday tho bill was passed authorizing cities of the second class I to build water works also the bill authorizing incorporated towns having an indebtedness exceeding 81,000, 09, vote of two thirds of tho town council, to bond tho same also the bill making tho first Monday in
September labor day and a legal holiday also providing for tho calling of constitutional convention.
Tho Senate took initiatory steps toward providing for the proper representation of the Stato at tho world's fair in Chicago. Senator Bailey introduced a bill which provides for making a suitable appropriation for an Iowa exhibit at the fair. Senator Schmidt introduced the Democratic caucus bill to provide for licensing the 6ale of intoxicating liquors. A synopsis is as follows:
It provides that when two-fifth* of the quail' fled electors of a city or town or of territory outside of a city or town petition for the submission of tho question of liquor Eelling an election shall be called for that purpose, and no other question can be volod upon during the lame day. If tho result is negative similar election can not be held within two years if aOlrmative, licenses may b« granted in any sum not less than 1600 to persons of good moral character, and druggists may be permitted to sell liquors for medicinal, mechanical, sacramental or out lnary purposes without license, but subject to the penalties of the bill, which are a line of not less than 1100 nor more than KS00 or imprison ment in the county jail for not less than thirty days, or both line and imprisonment, at the court's discretion.
The bill was referred to the committee on cities and towns and will bo introduced in the House to-day. The Democrats will all support it, and to that end tho discussion of Mr. Dent's Dill for local option, which was mado a spocial order in tho Houso Wednesday morning, was postponed until Thursday of next week.
In tho House a joint resolution was offered by Mr. Roe instructing our Representatives in Congress to do all in their power to so revise our tariff laws that the farmers will not bo compelled to bear the whole burden of protection of all our other industries, anil to favor a law for the free coinage of silver without restriction in quantity on the same footing as gold is now coined, and for the issuing of Treasury notes which shall bo legal tender for all debts.
Mr. Dobson's bill providing that verdicts may bo returned by tho concurrence of nino out of twelve jurors was indefinitely postponed by a vote of 63 to 26.
Mr. Leads, chairman of the committee on appropriations, reported that the bills before that committee ask for appropriations for the various State institutions amounting in all to $1,323,802.
In addition to theso bills thero are eleven bills for tho establishment of normal schools, each of which asks an appropriation of from $75,000 to S3 00,000. It is not oxpected, howevor, that more than threo additional normal schools will be established under thf most favorable legislation.
Tho proper committees of botl branches have reported against an appropriation for Chester Turney's benefit, A House committee has reported favorably the bill prohibiting the formation of pools and combinations by insurance companies.
Two Boys Drowned While Skating. ST. PAUL, Minn,, March 17.—Two boys, whoso identity has not boon established. wnile skating on tho rivei Sunday wont undor tho ico ana wers drowiicu.
iiiii CRAWFOKUSVILLE WEEKL Lov'iiiW,
WILD TELLS HIS STORY.
Uaatanant Kt«i«l«'« Trial Ilegim—Testimony of the 1'roseantlntr Witness and Corporal Scott.
CHICAGO, March 19.—Promptly at noon Tuesday the members of the court-martial appointed by General Crook for the trial of Second Lieutenant M. F. Steele, of the Eighth Cavalry, on the charge of conduct tending to destroy military order and discipline, assembled In one of the spacious guard-rooms of Battery D. Colonel James F. Wade presided, Captain Arthur Murray acting Judge Advocate of the Department of the Missouri, ofB•iated as Judge Advocate, while Sergeant B. F. Paulinn acted as orderly for General Crook. The members of the eourt were in full regimentals, while the accused appeared in fatigue uniform. He was accompanied by his coun«el, Lieutenant E. H. Crowder, of the Eighth Cavalry, who was in civilian attire. The charges presented were very brief. Specification one sot forth that the accused without justification therefor struck Private Dell Wild in the face with his clenched fist. The second specification was to tho effect that on the occasion of this assault Steele made use of unbecoming language in applying epithets to
Private Wild. To both specifications 8teele pleaded not guilty. The courtmartial was held with open doors and the space reserved for the general public was packed by some 00 people whose sympathies in favor of the private were manifested by reported applause when his testimony bore against the accused.
Private Wild was the first witness. In response to questions from the Judge Advocate he repeated the story whioh has already been q|ade public regardin* his refusal, on October 24 last, to assist in placing some canvas on the roof of Steele's headquarters and which resulted in the assault and the applying to him by Steele of vile epithets.
An effort was made ty prove that Wild bad served in another arm of the service under tho name of E. P. Ward, and was a deserter, was ruled out by the court on the ground that the private was not on trial.
The next witness, Corporal R. Scott, merely tostifled to the fact that Steele had ordered him to arrest Wild. He said that tho Lieutenant seemed very angry, while Wild was nervous. No questions wero asked, and it was announced that this closed the case for the prosecution. Time for preparation was asked by tho defense and court adjurned until morning.
AT AN END.
The North Dakota Legislature Adjourns Bine Die—A Member's i'eculiar Method of Defeating Legislation.
BISMAHCK, N. D., March 19.—The Legislature adjourned Tuesday night situ die. All of Governor Miller's appointments were returned to him without prejudice to the appointees. The Senate in open session, by a vote of 19 to 10, took that method of disposing of the appointments. The atology for this action was the fact that the Governor had not consulted the Senators in making up his slate.
A short time before the adjournment it was discovered that It. N. Stevens, chairman of the House railroad committee, had disappeared with the bill providing for taxation of the railroads of the State. The bill had passed the Senate and by common consent it was to pass the House. It was too late to pass another bill, and officers wore dispatched .in every direction to capture the missing Stevens, but all efforts were futile. As the next best thing a certified copy of tho original bill in possession of Stevens passed the House and was sent to tho Governor for his approval. This is a doubtful law. A motion to expel Stevens for his unprecedented action was defeated. With no sound law taxing railroads the revenues of the State will bo in fax worse shape than has ever been predicted.
THE BIBLE IN SCHOOLS. Judgo Lyon, of the Wisconsin Suprem* Court, Holds That the Heading of the
New Testament in Public Schools is Unconstitutional. MADISON, Wis., March 19. Judge Bennett, of the Rock County circuit court, some time ago decided a case brought at Edgerton that the reading of the Biblo in tho public schools was sectarian and consequently unconstitutional. Judge Lyon, of the Supreme Court, on Tuesday delivered an opinion sustaining Judgo Bennett. no holds that merely reading tho Biblo in schools is instruction within tho limitn of the constitution and consequently unconstitutional that part of tho Bible which implied a belief in a Divino being was not sectarian, but that part teaohing of the divinity of Jesus Christ, the Trinity and Sacrament was not universally believed and consequently sectarian.
TO STRIKE FOR EIGHT HOURS.
The Carpenters and Joiners Selected to Open the Buttle May 1. Nicw YORK, March 19.—The American Federation of Liibor has decided upon a definite stroke of policy regarding tho eight-hour movement. The executive council was in session Tuesday. Tho subject under consideration was to docido which trado should be selected to demand tho adoption of the eight-hour rulo on May 1. It resulted in the selection of the organization known as tho Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners, whoso members at present nearly all work nino hours a day.
A Dry-Goods House Burned. PEOUIA, 111., March 19.—By the fire of Tuesday morninjr tho dry-goods store of Pardee. Mills «L Co., was destroyed with its contents. The loss is estimated at SL25,UU0
10
£150,000 in. urance, 8100,000.
This is tho tnird time ihis firm has suffered a similar loss sinco last May.
More Boodlers Arrested.
NEW YORK, March 19.—As the result of the Senate investigation of tho sheriff's office two moro Tammanyites, Deputy Sheriffs Charles Lindemann and Joseph Young, wero arretted Tueiday, *]Mrgtd with oorruyttejfc
issllsir^
1 I 1V
HELP THE BOYS ALONG.
IX-PRES1DENT VALUE OF
M'COSH ON TH* AN EDUCATION.
A Chance for All Tnn| Hn—WllbMri Much Money They May Secure to
cation and Make Themselves UiefaA.
Words of Wisdom.
There is at this moment a vaet number of young men all over the country who have deep and burning desire to have a college education, but who from straitened eirctunItances know not how to obtain it I am to try to help them.
First let the youth settle witk Mr—If whether he has such a taste and talent for learning and such a strength of character and purpose as will carry him through the difficulties which he will have to encounter aa he passes through school and college. If he has not, let him betake himself to some kind ot labor or business, rather than enter upon a struggle in which he will probably faltarand fail But if he has, let him follow hia inclinations, and in the end, God sparing him, he will be sure to succeed and find many means of enjoyment and usefulness provided for him.
EDUCATING) HIXBKLF.
Be will first have to look out tar.- a school where tho branches leading
t/j
a collage en
trance are taught. It is necessary that he should have some teacher, profecsional or non-professional, to start him. If Us can continue with his teaoher he should do so. But if he cannot he may to a large extent educate himself. In Princeton college some of our brightest and most solid students have been, to a large extent, self educated, getting occasional aid from their minister, or from college alumnus, or astray teacher. A youth thus trained may acquire a robustness of mind never acquired by those who have been depending all along on others.
While he is pursuing this course, with a teacher, if possible, without a regular instructor if he cannot have one, let him send for a college catalogue, which he will get for nothing or for a trifle, and let him examine it carefully in order to direct his studies. In order fuily to comprehend it he should consult with his teacher or miuister, or a oollege graduate. Meanwhile he may have to engage in some work bringing a small remuneration the best office he can get is that of an assistant teacher. Whatever he does, he should reserve his evenings for study.
In nearly all American colleges there are scholarships which may not fully sustain him, but will help him and at least pay his tuition. Let him apply for one of these, and by perseverance he is 6ure to get it. By means of the catalogue, or by private inquiry, he will find what the expenses of the college are for the year. There are good colleges in whioh he can struggle through for $300, or even $200 a year in addition to his scholarship. In the summer vacation of three months he may be able to get remunerative work in some house of business, say as a clerk or temporary assistant in tbe harvest field, which will give him health in hawking books, which will show him the country as waiter in a hotel, or in some chance job, any one of which will give him a knowledge of the world and business habits to make his scholarship money available for good. All such employments are respectable and actually respected when the character is
Rood
Give us a young man with fair talents with good moral character and with perseverance, and under the good providence of God, which he should always seek to watch over him, and he is sure to succeed in spite of all discouragements and difficulties.
I can claim that when I was a college professor or president I bad always great pleasure in encouraging such struggling young men. Now in my retirement I have no greater enjoyment than in following the careers of those who have studied under me, many of them having attained high and honorable positions in the church, at the bar, in medicine, or in business. I can count eighty-seven professors or presidents of colleges—seven in Ireland and eighty in America—who studied under me. I get occasional letters from old pupils in South America, in India, in China and Japan, occupying useful positions as mis lionaries and in dozens of other fields.
A SAMPLE CASE.
One case inav be a sample of others. When was professor in Queen's college, Belfast, Robert Hart, who had been the first student of his year and the first in my classes of philosophy, came to me after graduating and laid: "You have given me a high education but I do not know what to make of it."
I asked to what deuomination he belonged, and he told me that he was a Methodist, and I suggested that he might become a Methodist minister. But he replied that he had no call, I inquired whether he would go on to law, and he said: "I am the son of a working miller. The training for law is very expenlive and my father has no more money to ipend for me." I told him I would keep his ease before me. Shortly after tho distinguished statesman, Earl Clarendon, asked our president to soud up a student to compete for a position in tbe consular service in China. I got bim appointod our candidate and ho itood first in a competition open to every college in tbe British dominions. He went to China, rose to be a high mandarin, became collector for the whole external revenue of China, was appointed by tbe British government ambassador to China, was made a baronet by Queen Victoria (Sir Robert Hart) sstablished himself a university to give western learning to the Chinese, and is now acknowledged to be about the ablest and most infiuential man in that ^reat empire.
But this is not tho best part of my story, A few years ago ho wrote me, saying owe much to you. I believe you have a son In Princeton college let him graduate and than Bend him out to China, and I will provide tor him for life." We did not accept the oiler. But I was greatly touched by tho incident. 1 mention theso tiling not to gratify any personal vnuity I may l.ave, but simply to encourage young men to cultivate their minds. I have spent thirty-six years of my life in teaching students. Now When I have to cease from this work I have great satisfaction in writing this paper to stimulate young men to devote themselves to study and thereby seek to rise to positions of usefulness.— James McCosh, ex-President of Princeton College, in New York Mail and Express.
THE LADIES
"GOD BLESS 'EM."
For their especial Wants and wishes we arrange our goods,, and the display of them—each particular kind to sun its season. The thing of the greatest importance now for the next ''season1' or event, which is close at hand, is
THE EASTER BONNET.
We are particularly proud of the display, aud rightfully, we think, for it excells any thing of the kind tnat has been done here. We are also proud of the delt-handed ty, p«rts, Miss Palmer and Miss Walfran, whom we have secured from New York, and whose dainty work will mak# all the women feel like asking. "Where did you get that bonnet?"
From Now Till Easter.
L. S. Ayres & Co.,
Indianapolis, Ind.
W Agents for Buttar'.cks Pa tarns.
Big 4
Peoria & Eastern R'y,
Formerly I., B. & W. Route, SLLOKT LIME.
Route
EAST AND WEST.
•mm
WAGNER SLEEPING
mm
... and—
'mOHAIR OARS
On night tralaB connecting with Tostlfoule Trains at Uloomlaglon and Pooria to and from Mia asp sourl Klver, Denver and Pacific Coast
Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Springfield and Columbus to and from Eastern and Seaboard Cltios.
TRAINS AT CRAWFCXDSVILLB.
OOIKQ WB8T. No 1—Mail, d....9:25am No3—Mail (d).12:38am No 5—Mail. 1:50pm No 7—Express...6:47pm
more so, and will raise
him moro in the esteem of his friends and the public, than a constant dependence on eleemosynary aid.
GOOD CONDUCT AND DILIGENCE. But he may get friends to aid him who will not interfere with his independence. It may be that the congregation of which he is a member, more especially if ho is going forward to tho ministry, may help one who is helping himself or some lady or gentleman noticing his perseverance may encourage one who is evidently so anxious to improve himself. If his means fail him, he may retire from college for a year or two and engage in some useful employment, to return with perhaps a more mature mind. Let him all the while be securing the friendship of his professor and his fellow students, not by cringing or fawning, but by good conduct and diligence in study, and they inay tall of oflices which he can fill, and help bim to secure them.
Correspondence sollcltod.
GOING EAST-
NO 2—Mail, d...5:18pm No 4—Mali (d)...2:06am No 6—Mail 1:03 pm No 8—Exprcsfl...8:85 am G. B. ROBINSON, Agent.
Vandalia Line—T. & NOBTH. i.alayette & Toledo Exp'se.d'y ex. Snn'v :15 a Accommodation, daily exce ii Sunday.. 12:00 in b.venine express, "i ,.b:l5pn
SOUTH.
ivane&fi & Texas Ex., d'y ex. Sunuav 1:47 a Accommodation, dally except 1 am Mulf HixproBB, 5.-J0 in Cull or write to (_. Edgeworth, agent. Main street depot. K.A.FORD,
St. Lonie,M,o. Uen. Pasp. Agt.
TO Admirers of the Beautiful.
Possibly one of tbe most beautiful displays in skillful workmanship is o» exhibition at the store room of Richmond & ROBS, on Market St. During the winter moiths, when trade was slight, all their attention was given to the manufacture of beautiful harness, some of their designs being original and unique, a combination of durability. In connection with this, they have added for the Spring trade quite a lot of factory harness to meet all demands. Harness was never so cheap as now. When in the city it will pay you to see their display.
NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS,—1 has heretofore been a mystery to us why strangers are generally charged B« extravagantly by hotels in large cities. Happening a short time since at the Gait House, corner Sixth and Main streets, Cincinnati, Ohio, managed by W. E. Marsh, Jr., son of the proprietor who established the Gait House fifty years ago, the mystery was solved. The accommodations at the Gait House are equal in every respect to the best two-dollar per day hotel and yet the charges are only $1.50 per day for meals and room single meals thirty-live cents. The Gait is headquartars for the most c«m plete meals, which, together with free use of the parlor, office, check-room, etc., constitute the greatest bargain obtainable in the city. The solution is easy when the facts are known. The Gait is run exclusively in the interest of strangers, the same rate being charged per day, at all tunes, to everyone. Whatever will produce a reasonable rent for the property is the extent of its charges, thus doing away with the usual lessee's profits. Its management is constantly under tbe immediate and personal control of the owner, W. E. Marsh, Jr. Its employes being paid according to the volume of business, are efficient and reasonable in cost. The above peculiarities, a low uniform price, a reasonable rent-charge only, a rigorous and practical supervision of its internal affairs, and co-operative salary payment, have secured for the Gait a fair transient trade, and the experiment is a success, producing rent for the real estate. To this benefactor, who lias made it possible to stay two day's in the city at the expense of one, we heartily reccomniond our friends.
Now, Give Attention
To the purification of your blood, for at no season is the body so susceptible to the benefits to bo derived from a good medicine, as in March, April and May. Hood's sarsaparilla is the people's favorite spring medicine. It stand unpqualled for purifying the blood, curing scrofula, salt rhetuu. etc., regnlatlng tbe kitJnoysy and liver, Jrepuiring nerve tissues, strengthening? and invigorating the whole body, as well as checking the progress of acute and chronic disease, and restoring the afflicted parts to the natural healthy condition. If you have never tried Hood's Sarsaparilla for your "spring medicine," do so this season.
Tbe number of laborers out of work in Rome this winter is unusually large, owing to tbe dullness in trade and lask of tonrists, -A
5
WSM
r:$:
KIDNEYS
FOR DISEASES OF THE
JOHNSTON'S
EOYAL ENGLISH
BUCHU
Will care all dluaiei of the Kidney*,Bladder, Irrlutlonof theNect of the Blatdtr,Burning Urine,Gleet. Gonorrhoa In alllu lUfei, Mucooe Dlichare-i, Congestion of the Kidney*, Brick Duit Ixpoalt, DUbetef, Inflammation of the KldneTi ana Bladder, Dropnr of KldntVi ami Add Urine. Bloody Urine, PA11C 1NTHB BACK, Retention of Urine. Frequent UrUatlon, Gravel la all lta forma, Inability to Ketala tha Water, particularly In peraont advanced In life. IT 18 A KIDNEY INVESTIGATOR and reitorei tb* Urine to lta natural color, remoTee the add and burning, and the effect of the excetslrease of intoxicating drink.
PRICE SI Three Bottles for
S2.QO
__ Dellrered free of any chargei. tr Bead for Circular. Bold by all Druggist*.
W.JOHNSTON A CO., Detroit, Mich.
I CURE
FITS!
When I «»T CUM I do not moan merely to etop them for a time, and then have them ro turn again. I MEAN RADICAL CUIUS.
I have made the disease of
FITS, EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS,
A 1U«-long study. I WAKRAXT my remedy to CCU tho worst cases. Because others hav® failed is no reason for not now receiving a cure. Send at once for a treatise and a FRMBOTTLB of my IKFALLIBLB RBMBDT. Give Express and Pott Office. It eo«t» you nothing lor trial, and It will core you. Address HQ. ROOT, M.C., I S3 PURL ST., NEW YOU
LOOK HEREI
WHAT lOo. WILL BUY,
Roiled gold ring, warranted one year, 1 quart dish pans, 10 quart milk pans, 12 quart buckets, all size coffee pots, very large meat platters, horse brushes and curry combs, ladies hose all styles, all kinds embroidery and laces, ladies vests, breast pins, side combs in every style. Everything you can think of in jewelery, a full line of sheet music. When you have time call and see what 5 and 10 cents will buy.
-REMF.MBER
NOTHING OVER 10c. Apiece For Any Article.
122 W. Main St. opposite Y. M. C. A
C. 0. CARLSON.
•BESTS WiKTEDX" N opportunity. Seo. A. Scot
NOTICE
eld rtllihl* lta Inn profits. tales. SAMPLE FREE. Ann Scott, 848 Braivir, N. V.
OF PETITION TO SELL REAL ESTATE.
UaBll T. Morroll, administrator of the ostato of Amanda J. Glaze vs. Goorgo Phillips ot. al., in tho circuit court of Montgomery county, Indiana, in tho May torm, 1890.
To Goorgo Phillips, Sarah SnolTord, -Josoph Phillips, C'liristona Phillips, Josoph Vincent, Edward Vineont, Eva Vincent and Lola Vincent.
You aro sevorally horoby notldod that th* abovo named petitioner as administrator of the estate aforesaid, has filed in tho circuit court of Montgomery county, Indiana, a potitlon making you defendants thoreto, and praying thoreln for an ordor and docroo of said court authorizing tho salo of certain real estate belonging to th« ostate of said decodent, and in said potitlon described, to mako assets for tho payment of tba dobts and liabilities of said ostate and that said )otition, so filed and pending, Is set for hearing said circuit court at the court house in Crawfordsville, Indiana, on tho 4tU Judicial day of tho May term, l)-90, of said court, tho saino boine tho 8th day of May, 1890.
Witnoss, tho clork and Boal of Bald court, this ISth day of March, 1890. 1IENKY B. HULETT,
Clerk.
Jonc«—" What are you talking about!" Smith—"What everybody talks about thoy nay tbut for IlrlKlil'a DI»«a»c, Kidney, Liver oi llludder Complaints thie i-uinoily hfiR no equal." It got-* iflglit to the Spat tjBTl'rcpared at Dr. Kllmer'i
lrffl«-nKiry.lMi!i:liantoiilN.'Yii'ouiryaiiMvercd,0t I*tt-r8
(iuidi to Health bent I'KEE.
Persons wishing to breed their mares to a first class draft horse, one that is a grand breeder and a sure foal getter, or to a Jack, that is first class in every respect, should not fail an examine my stock before breeding elsewhere. Barn five miles sothwest of Crawfordsvllle on the Terre Hauteroad. Post office at New Market, Ind.
GEORGE E, DAVIS.
McCLURE & SOOTT.
[Formerly Lolland & Scott.]
Undertakers and Embalmers Calls Answered Night or Day.
North Washington St., Crawfordsvllle, Ind.
I'm Sliow Case Don't Ljun on Me. So many people owe me, The kind who never pay,
So dear they are to me, I cannot pay my way. To you I must appeal
To pay me what you owe Art thou a friend and real, Is what I wish to know. You work me by the head,
And churn me up and down, Until I'm nearly dead, The poorest man in town. Use Dr. Smail's Vegetable Lirer Pills.
F15-6F
