Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 17 May 1890 — Page 7
BOOTS
OF INDIANA.
SPRING AND SUMMER SEASON 1890.
No. &, East Washington St., Indianapolis.
Our friends in Crawfordsville and vicinity who have purchased heretofore of our house, have universally been pleased with our goods and prices. The designs and colors, make and shape, are this year more beautiful than ever. It is beauty, grandure and worth combined. When you come to Indianapolis, call at our house and inspect the large lines of Moquetts, Velvets, Body Brussels, Tapestry Brussels, Ingrains, Oilcloths, Linoleums, Mattings, Shades, Rugs, etc., at Lowest Prices in the city. You will think the makers of these goods had assuredly exhausted their resources in producing fine goods, and you cannot go away without leaving an order for some of them.
EASTMAN, SCHLEICHER & LEE.
N
0T1CE TO NON-RESIDENTS.
State of Indiana, Montgomery county: In the Montgomery Circuit Court, Mar term, 1890. Isaac Davis vs. Bruce Carr. Complaint No 9,740.
Now comeB the plaintiff by Coppage & White Attorneys, and file compalaint herein, together with an affidavit that said defendant Brnca Carr, is not a resident of theState of Indiana.
Notice is therefore hereby given said defendant that unless he be and appear on the 43d day of the next term of the Montgomery Circuit Court, to be holden on the 5th day of May 1890 said day beingthe 53rd day of June A. D. 1890 at tho Court House in CrawfordBville, in said County and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will bo heard and determined in his absence.
Witness my name, and tho seal of said Court, affixed at CrawfordsriUe, this 1st day of May A. D. 1890. IIENRY B. HULETT.
MERITORIOUS SUCCESSFUL OPENING OF THEE
CHATTLE MORTGAGE SALE,
Clerk.
COLUMBUS Buggies at Tinsley i. Martin's.
OP
AND
AND RUBBER GOODS.
This sale started Saturday last and from the time the doors were opened in the morning till they were closed at night one uninterrupted rush of bargain seekers crowded the store,
Stone Front, East Main Street, First Door Just East of Court House,
To its utmost capacity, notwithstanding the preparations we had made to accommodate the expected rush our store room was not large enough to admit the larg® throng. Six salesmen were kept busy throughout the day dishing out quarters and dollars in shoes for nickels and dimes in cash. In short footwear was alm'osf given away. Just think, a nice kid button shoe for babies only 15c. worth 60. A lady's good house slipper 5c., worth 50. A lady's kid button shoe for 80c., worth $a.oo. A man's nice dress shoe for 90c., worth $2.50. These are but samples of how cheap footwear is slaughtered at this sale. We call attention to the fact that
THIS STOCK IS COMPLETE
Throughout in all its branches. Everything fresh and clean. In it you will find from the finest grade of a lady's hand turned French kid shoe down to a woman's cheap work boot, and by order of the court of Cook county, 111., the entire stock must be sold at once
For Less Than 50 cents on the Dollar.
To satisfy the claims of judgement creditors. Those wishing to profit by this, the greatest sacrifice sale of boots, shoes, slippers, rubber goods, etc., in the history of the city must not fail to pay us an early visit. Come early while the assortment is complete and sizes and widths unbroken.
Chattle Mortgage Sale.
M. McDonald, Receiver.
^SECOND
Grand pip Seeker's
EXCURSION
TO THE
West, North-west, SOUTH,
SOUTH-WEST
AND
SOUTH-EAST.
THE
BIG FOUR,
ROUTE
Will sell round trip excursion tickets to ail prominent points in the West, and North-west South, and South-west and South-east at half rates on
TUESDAY, MAY 20th.
All tickets goods returning thirty days from, date of sale. Stopovers allowed at all prinolpal points in the territory to which tickets are sold.
This is the opportunity of a lifetime to visit the territory named, and we would invite correspondents on tne subject. For full information, call on or address any agent C. C. C. & St L. R'y D. B. MARTIN, Qea'l Pass. Agent.
APPLICATION FOR LIQUOR LICENSE.
Notice Is hereby given to tho citizen* of Coal Creek township anu tho town of Pleasant Hill, iu Montgomery county, Indiana, that I, the undersigned will apply to the Board of Commissioners of said conuty at their regular Jun* term' 1890, for a liceuse to retail spirituous, vinous, malt and all kinis of intoxicating liquors ia a less quantity than a quart at a time and allow the same to be drank on the premises where sold. Said premises are described a* follows: Part of lot No. 47, as the same is known and designated on Hie original plat: of the town of Pleasant Iiiil, in said county and state: Beginning at the southeast corner of said lot, running thence north twenty (30) feet, thencs west fifty (SSI feet, thenee south twenty (SO) feet, thenea «ast fifty (W) feet to the place of beginning.
SHOES,
THE CRAWFORDSYILLE WEEKLY REVIEW.
Billy Colman,
THE
New Merchant Tailor,
NEXT DOOR TO P. O.
Buy when you get through corn planting. Oome in and see us and examine our goods. Our prices are the lowest.
SUITS
from $20 up. Pants from $4 up.
Dr. Wm. Clark,
Of the Indianapolis Medical Institute, Indianapolis, Ind. Sherman House on Wednesday,
Thursday Friday and Saturday, May 14, 15,16 and 17, Where all who aro suffering from chronic or other complicated diseases are invited to oall and consult him. He will tell the nature and cause of your ailment without the slightest inl?^SlionJrom
th0
Patient. CONSULTATION
The best scientific minds of tho world
havo discovered that all chronic diseases aro caused by parasitical germs and blood poison: We have remedies that will destroy these germs, antidote and remove all blood poison, and all other causes of disease, and euro diseases that cannot be cured by any other treatment. "We remove the cause—nature will then «ure.
Our treatment will cure tumors wherever located WCatarrh In its worst form. WDynpepsia and diseases of tho digestive organs.
Deafness and noises in tho head. rar-Qrao-ulated lids and other diseases of the eyes, pr Palpitation and other diseases of the heart. Weak and anhealty lungs, diseases of the Kidneys.
We cure dlseasosof WOMEN—if there are displacements, irregularities, luflamatlon or weakness. Wo have a POSITIVE cure for general and nervous debility, weakness of body and mind, and all other troubles orphyslcal derangements.
WHomo treatment and robust health fully restored. Will be at the Sherman Houso Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, May 14 15,18, and 17: I will tuako visits to Crawfontsville monthly (see d«e notices), and In my absonco address all letters to 88, Mass-av., Indianajiolis, Ind.
WK. CLARK, M. D.
JJOTICE OF APPOINTMENT.
Estate of Simoon Gretiard deceauod. Notico is heroby glv -u that the undersigned has been nppolated and duly qualified as oxocutorof the estate of Simeon Gronard lato of Jfoatgomory county, Indiana, deceased. Said
aatafa IB a 1 nnnn..l .. 1... A.
•state is supposed to'be solvent' I, 1890. April 80, SQUIRE RUSK
POLITENCSS IN THE HOME CIRCLB.
Points oa Etiquette Slut Young People of Today An Apt to Overlook. True politeness ia founded on consideration for others* yet it 1B BO much a matter o£ form or habit that politeness Is sometimes shown where there is no consideration it is sometimes neglected where there is affection and every reason for kind consideration. Thus, In tha IntetTofersa of near relatives, made familiar with each other by daily meetings, there is naturally less formality than between people who are only thrown together by chance for a few boors or days at long intervals. But along with the laying aside of formality some necessary features of politeness are sometimes sacrificed by relatives and very close friends. The youth who is careful to salute his lady friends and acquaintances according to the usages of good society sometimes forgets to pay the same respect to his sister, not because he is wanting in affectionate regard, but because he has grown so familiar with her that it seems awkward to him to treat her in any formal way. Yet when he meets her in company he should, out of his consideration for her, be markedly polite and attentive.
Although politeness necessarily follows to a great extent set forms, it should have have its origin in affection for the individual, or, in a general way, consideration for others. When the young man begins to behave at home with less politeness than he exhibits abroad, there is much danger that gradually he will lose that consideration for his immediate relatives which he should have and exhibit. He may begin by entering the family room without formal greeting absorbed in his own thoughts or pursuits, he will soon begin to leave his sister and his mother to look for themselves in the smaller affairs of life, and adually but surely he willjcultivate a selih disposition in home affairs that will make him a bad or indifferent son or brother.
It is a small matter in itself whether a young man finds & chair for his sister or mother when they would be seated, anticipates their desire for a glass of water, cheerfully helps them to their wraps, and offers them the thousand little attentions without which, and in his absence, they could get along very well by their own exertions, but it 1s not a small matter when neglect of such attentions lessens his consideration for them, develops his selfishness, and gradually undermines the affection that should unite the family. Politeness in society between acquaintances or friends is demanded by custom. There is no need to remind readers that it should be exhibited.
Politeness at home and between near relatives, even between husband and wife, though of much more importance in every way, is not so obviously necessary, and Is too often neglected. Gentlemen of what are known as the "old school" were and are scrupulous in the observance of the forms of polite society toward their wives and other female relatives, and in the home circle, but the later generation seems disposed to treat relatives with less formality and respect than is habitually shown stMngers and acquaintances. The tendency should be resisted, however, and every encouragement given in the home circle to an observance of the rules of polite society, modified only by a spontaneous exhibition of that greater affection which exists between the members of a family group.— Baltitnore Sun.
Happy Miners.
One would not think there could be anything very attractive about an occupation which keeps a person day after day shut away from the sunshine, deep down in the earth. But the miners in the quicksilver mines of New Almaden, Cal., manifest a Bpecial attachment for their work they are loth to leave it, even for better pay, and return most gladly to the pioturesque hamlet which overlooks the beautiful valley of Santa Clara. There are many Cornishmen among them, most faithful and persistent people but the Spanish-Ameri-cans are scarcely less attached to the place than the men from Cornwall.
One of these "Spaniards," as they are callcd, went away from New Almaden on a prospecting trip in the silver Sierras. He returned to the Santa Cruz mountains, full of joy that the superintendent of tha mines gave him his old place. There were tears in Jose's eyes as he thanked his employer. "Ah, sir," said he, "to dig for silver might make a man rich, but it is in quicksilver alone he can find happiness!"
To one of his Cornish follow workmen he said at the close of his first day's work: "It's like being in heaven to be down ia this blessed ground again."
And tho literal minded Cornishman was moved to reply with a touch of sentiment: "Well, there be bluer heavens above this ground tliau anywhere short of the blessed land, that's true for you, Jose."—Youth's Companion.
Tlie Food of a Lifetime.
Apropos of victuals, the statistics which a clever Frenchman has just published concerning the food we eat are interesting and perhaps suggestive. According to hia reckoning a human being of either sex, who is a moderate eater and who lives to be 70 years old, consumes during "the days of the'yearsof his life" ,a quantity of food which would fill twenty ordinary railway luggage vans. A "good eater," however, may require as many as thirty vans to carry the luggage for the inner man, but wtiart those people would require who are always hungry, and whose stomachs are, to all inteuts and purposes, bottomless pits, that the statistician is unable to indicate. Another investigator affirms that women eat much less than men, after making allowances for differences in weight and work. Where a man eats nineteen ounoes, a woman of the same weight and of active habits eats only fourteen oi*fiftec*'u ounce*.—Herald of Health.
Mr. Portar's Nipdeoolc Baud. There are some drawbacks to a man having a Napoleonic bead, and Robert P. Porter, the superintendent of census,, probably wished the other day that nature had made "him more like other mortals. It was in Mrs. Mortotrfs rreeptton parlor," and he was stamding busily Miking with a group of friends, whea a stalwart woman ao-
Are too buiy selling* cultivators this week to write an advertisemen 1,
oar, an tier mzo coiuinanaea respect. Approaching him, she said, in a voloe ouuia be heard from the rawing room to the conservatory: "Well, my dear Mr. Porter, I am so delighted to see you again, and I think you are looking more like Napoleon than ever. What do you do to make your face have that strong, noble firmness, so like the great Napoleon's?" And she would have gone on, had not the census taker's distressed and blushing face pleaded for mercy. Some one managed to interrupt the flow of laudation, and the woman passed blandly on, Mr. Porter asserting as she departed that he had never seen her before. Washington Cor. New York Tribune.
ODDS AND ENDS.
Andrew Carnegie's new hotel for worklngmen at Pittsburg will cost (800,000. The Holland society, of New York, is keeping the memory of the early Dutch settlers green by marking historic sites in New York city with appropriate tablets.
The papers are full of accounts of a silver center piece which is being manufactured for the queen, and which contains 8,000 ounces of silver. As there is already plate at Windsor castle valued at upwards of two millions, it is difficult to oonoelve what the queen can waRt with another center piece.
The important work of draining the Roman marshes, on which the Italian government has been engaged since 1884, is now well advanced toward completion. The work can only be carried on at certain seasons of the year, owing to the nnhealthIness of the district.
A lady went to une of the groceries in Wild wood, Fla., and bought two pounds of batter that had been bought in the country by the merchant. When the nice yellow lump was cut in two, there was found in the center of it a large Irish potato, nicely peeled and carefully covered over with batter.
The favorite flower for the buttonhole is, perhaps, the carnation. It is a cheerful little bLossam that lasts for days with tts stem rn a glass of water, and smiles frankly and contentedly all day long when thrust in a buttonhole and uncheered by a drop of moisture.
Howardsvillc, Colo., has a curiosity in the shape of an ice mine. The mine is owned by parties who in the earlier days ran a tunnel through the frozen ground and struck a spring beyond. As the water flows out of the tunnel it freezes, and the tannel is now filled nearly to the roof with pure ioe. It has long supplied ice for the town, and never thaws, winter or summer.
The London Zoological society possesses a white peacock. The bird preserves the markings which distinguish the species, particularly the large eyelike spots on the tail feathers. The effect of these spots is remarkable. They are exactly like the pattern on a damask tablecloth.
Last year the world raised 2,000,000,000 bushels of wheat. The United States grew 490,000,000 bushels France, 800,000,000 India, 267,000,000 Russia (with Poland), 800,000,000 Portugal, 9,000,000 Denmark, 8,000,000 Spain, 73,000,000 Switzerland, S,500,000 Germany, 84,000,000 Hungary, 96,000,900 Asia Minor, 37,000,000 Persia, 82,000,000.
Obstinate nose bleeding is frequently one of the most difficult things to check. Several aggravated cases have lately occurred at the hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. As a last resort Dr. D. Hayes Agnew tried ham fat with great result. Two large cylinders of b^con were forced well into the nostrils and the hemorrhage ceased at once.
A remarkable surgical operation was performed recently near Red Oak, Ia. A week ago a 14-year-old son of James Hall was shot by a hired man with a 38-caliber revolver, the ball passing into the abdomen and cutting the intestines in four places. He was placed under tha influence of ether, the intestines removed and the cuts sewed up. He may live.
In gratitude toe their deliverance from the perils of the voyage in the Inman liner City of Paris, the passengers, before landing, subscribed £600 as a thank offering and appointed a committee to decide upon its application. It is understood that the committee have decided to hand over £400 to the Seamen's hospital, Liverpool, for its general purposes, and to endow with the balance abed in the same institution for sick American sailors.
A considerable sum of the Russian revenue is annually spent in payment for the corpses of wolves. The official estimate is that no fewer than 170,000'of tho creatures aro roaming about at large. Last year the inhabitants of the province of Vologda killed 49,Q00 of the brutes, and in the Casan district 81,000 were killed. The wolves destroyed 213 human beings in the course of the last twelvemonth.
Habit clothes are made extremely plain, and are constructed as to dispense with all the weight possible. This matter of weight is something that women are striving to avoid. The fifteen and twenty pound skirts which women have been burdened with and which physicians have condemned are judiciously discarded now.
There seems to be good reason for fearing that the zebra is rapidly becoming extinct. Sportsmen and travelers concur in reporting that the zebra of South Africa is now more and mope difficult to find, and is, like ft* aboriginal races of primitive lands, disappearing before the march of civilization. And, unlike "the noble savage," the agile zebra has ever resolutely refused to be tamed.
In London alone there are upward of 170 piano factories. Over 1,800 shops and factories in the metropolis are devoted to the supplying, of music* goods of all sorts. Throughout the provinces there are about 8,000music establishments of various kinds. They possess in England no fewer than thirty-seven newspapers dealing exclusively with music. At the animal banquet of the ^pcisty of Musioal Instrument Manufacturers one of the speakers estimated that 90,000 pianofortes are manufactured every year in London.
Tfee beefsteak dinner given by Senator S.tadler to the senate and the senate correspondents in Albany, N. Y., has been the talk of ths town. No knives, forks, plates or spoons were used, the guest* using their flngeM. The.meat, selected fer Its tenderand juiciness, was out in delicate and
P1SHEE,
THttcn wew puscea
thinly cut slices of bread, which were saturated with gravy, seasoned with pepper, batter and salt.
bulmon from the Penobscot. The salmon are certainly here. A specimen weighing very nearly twenty pounds was hooked Thursday by Mr. F. W. Ayer. The fish was a gamey one and a foli fledged specimen of a sea salmon. The one taken by Mr. A. Buck a few days ago had been up river on a spawning expedition, but Mr. Buck got April 21 a twenty one and a half pounder, a genuine sea It seems to have been a gala day for flawing at the dam. Six salmon were taken, three by Mr. Fred Ayer, one weighing twentyone pounds, another twenty pounds one smaller Mr. Buck's twenty-one and a half pounder Mr. Lougee's and Mr. John Mahoney'a eight and one-fourth pounders. —Bangor (Me.) News.
It Takes Time.
There is a law suit now in progress in Oswego, because of a man 63 years old having refused to pay for twenty yards of] cloth which was put down as "ditto." Hw had no use for "ditto," never bought «"j,i and didn't propose to be bulldozed, ifi takes time to learn all there is to be learned' In this world.—Detroit Free Press.
Sunday School Union.
The annual meeting of the Montgomery county Sunday School Union will convene at the Method tat church on next Thursday evening. The meeting will also convene again and be held during Friday forenoon and afternoon. A nnmber of prominent Sunday school workers from neighboring cities will be present and address the people.
A Big Bone Found.
A few days since, John Downey, three miles southeast of Mansfield, found a large bone, evidently of the fore leg of a mammoth or mastodon. The shaft of the bone is well preserved, but the heads afe gone. It is nearly three feet in length and as much in circumference. It was found in Rocky Fork, near the place where the same gentleman a few years ago found two mammoth teeth, probably the remains of-the same animal.
Bioyele Bace.
The 100 mile bicycle race for the amateur championship of the country will take place on the New Riehmoud road to-day. The race is the result of a challenge issued by Mr. Van Wagner, of New Port, R. I. The other contestants who will participate are Campson and McDaniel, of Wilmington, Del,, Tom Hall, of Brooklyn, Anthony, of Taunton, Mass., and Sickliri, Thorne, Barrett and Spooner, of Chicago. The expect to finish the race in seven hosra if the roads are in any condition.
New iilvery Firm.
Having purchased one-half interest in the livery barn known as the Hiatt and Booher barn, opposite the Nntt Hotel on Market street, we will be glad to see onr customers at all times, night or day. Special care taken of feeders and boarders at the same price as heretofore. WM. HIATT,
WM. JOLLY,
lin Proprietors.
Hood Xelson, the Crestile King. Hood Nelson, the inventor and patentee of all inetalic crestings, is once more at the front with something new, and is satisfied that in his second invention he has reached the acme of perfection. This time all cannot help admitting that he has the best and most «showy thing for the combs of houses yet seen, It is neat, ornamentally, and absolutely rain proof. It cannot spring or twist, nor allow the roof to get wet. As an ornament it is not surpassed by anything In the market, even by the most costly. Mr. Nelson has put into his new cresting all his experience, and he now has a bonanza, for it will take the place of everything now in the market. Samples of the work, several different and unique styles can be seen at his office at W. B. Hardee's cigar store on south Green street, next the Elston bank. Every owner of a house should examine it aad eyeryone who is building should not fall to see it before purchasing anything else. Even putting the old saddle board on, he claims that he can follow the design of any architect tf
Peru has the only binder twine manufactory in the state.
Among the 60,000 Hebrews in New York there is not one a saloon keeper.
Carpentersville, Putnam county, visited by $5,000 tire.
Daily output of natural gas at Muncie is 20,000,000 feet.
Tlow of oil struck at Terre Haute at depth of 1,620 feet
The Whitechapel Free Art Exhibition which was held recently in London, was visited by over 66,000 people during the three weeks it was open to the public,
A little girl in the Sunday school at Quincy, Mass., when asked what a missionary was, replied: "A missionary Is a man who comes around to get onr money.
Muncie ladles are afraid (to venture out after dark, on account of the bums and vags.
The Brazil papersnnounce that a number of scandals will soon reach a boiling point.
Jasper county's farmer's mutual benefit association has placed full ticket in the field.
Laporte gamblers claim the southern lotteries are ruining their business.
Do Mot Be Deceived.
Caution.-Do not let any DrugglBt palm off any medicine on you in place of Johnson's English Bschu for there is nothing Tequal to it that can take its place. Ask for it and take no other.
