Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 7 June 1890 — Page 4

&:

OOMNOND EXTRACT

The importance of purifying the blood can. not be overestimated, for without pure blood you cannot enjoy good health.

At this season nearly every one needs a good medicine to purify, vitalize, and enrich the blood, and we ask you to try Hood's na«.ili-a Sarsaparilla. It strengthens rCl/Ullal and builds up the system, creates an appetite, and tones the digestion, while it eradicates disease. The peculiar combination, proportion, and preparation of the vegetable remedies used give to Hood's Sarsaparilla pecul- T. If coif iar curative powers. No LoCI I other medicine has such a record of wonderful cures. If you have made up your mind to buy Hood's Sarsaparilla do not be induced to take any other instead. It is a Peculiar Medicine, and is worthy your confidence.

Hood's Sarsaparilla is sold by all '.I ruggists. Prepared by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.

IOO Doses One Dollar

Under n. muuh moro successful treatment that Dr. Huntsingfr has boeu using fqr the past seven months his practice has greatly increased. The Doctor now treats more Eye. i'.nr, Nose and Chronic Catarrh path-nts with Milder remedies aud better iind quicker cures than "ver before. This treatment is especially suited to Children and peculiarly sensitive persons.

Special attention to the Longest Standing and most Difficult oases to Oure. Also all Surgical cases os Cataracts, Crass-

Eyes, Deformities, etc.

Operations on the Bye liti 1 p.-rformed without pain. A neglcctod or badly treated Chronic Catarrh is the great cause of so much deafness in the middle-uged and elderly people, also of consumption. A chronic discharge from the ear is very dangerous to 1-fe, as it is liable to cause blood poison or brain disease. Consultation free.

Spectacles!

People are so delightfti with the Quality,

Price aud Elegmnt Sight giving properties of the Doctor's Perfect Fitting Spectacles and Eye (TIRSSCH that ttiuir I!« is constantly Increasing. Still solium at factory prices and fitting litem Fre» of ClianjH. Special paius taken to rest the face and eyes, thus giviog the greatest wise and ciinfort, as well as greatly improving the personal appearance of the wearer. !lasses successfully fitted where others fail. This ail. will appear every other week.

REKBltKXCE?. Cioo. I). Hurloy, attorney at law, sou Franls. discharge from oars and deafnoss John 11. Courtney, lawyer, son, bad eye and ears U. L. Mills, deafness etc., twentyyears standing Gus Mayer, daughter confined nine months in dark room with violent oyo disease, causing totp.I blindness Israel i'atton, total bllndue." from cataract Miss Clara Alston, violent ilceration of eye ball H. B. Smith, wifey/iye disease A. It. Baylrss. mother, oye disease Dr. James Thompson, deafness, all of Criivftonlsvillo. lion. Siliis^ I'etorson, wife, deafness, bad ca'se, Potato Creek Frank Powers, chronic catarrh, banker, Colfax Congressman rf. D. Owens. Logansport, discharge from oars and deafness Judge Waugh, Tipton, surgical operation on eye that restored sight Judge Torhune, Lebanon, Ind., deafness Ex-Senator Kent, Frankfort. ImL. catarrh and doafuesH.v J. Linn,

Mace, catarrhal doafnoss, and numer­

ous others in this vicinity equally bad. Dr. Himtsiuger will boat Dr. C. E. Rankin's office in Crawfordsville on THURSDAY. .Il'NE 12, and every two weeks thereafter.

Will be at Dr. Kleiser's office at Wavoland on Friday. June 12, and regularly every four weeks thereafter on Friday.

SURE CURE FOR CATARRH

THE REVIEW.

MY

F. T.IX.U8E.

|s

ATA Hfl 11

FOR OVEE FIFTY YEAES

James Hanna Sees Colorado. PUEBLO, COL., June 1,1890.

ED. REVIEW: Since you seem- to think your readers cau stand the torture of rending a letter written by tne, I will endeavor to give you iny iuipreesious of the west as it has been presented to me in the last few days. The train bearing us from St. Louis was loaded down to the top with a howling, screaming conglomeration of Irish, Dutch, Italians, Mexicans and some natives taking advantage of the ridiculous low rates to the West and starve to death. The uiost beautiful scenery on the Missouri Pacific, lies in the western portion of Missouri, and eastern part of Kansas. Missouri is blessed with bi'ls covered with a full beard of trees, and valleys laughing with sparkling streams. The sight is refreshing. Eastern Kansas is slightly rolling and has some right respectable forests. The people farm there on a grand scale. Some of the fields are two hundred acres ones and more, and the farmers evidently expect their soil to yield abundantly, as I saw In one place, the owner had juBt finished up plowing with a half dozen plows and had erected an immense corn crib by the side of the field to put the corn in, and a Howe's scale to weigh it on. A large portion of the corn in Kansas is listed, plowed and planted at the same time. Ridges run on both sides of the row, aud, in cultivating, this dirt is thrown over the roots to protect them from the sun All the fences are wire aud hedge. They do not make much of a point in fencing, however, some times oilly fencing two and three sides to tell where the land lies. Cattle seem to be a big product in some parts of the state and the only thing that stands in the way of their healthy growth, is the water supply. Most of the big cattle ranches have several wind pumps, and some drain the water to the center of their farms into a pond as a water supply, i'ou can tell Kansas the moment you are in it. In Missouri you frequently see the word, ''saloon in Kansas they have no such expression, at least they do not paint it on their houses. Kansas has no suicide shops and is blessed in this way. The Kansas people are pretty sharp. They have eradicated their crime breeders and save their people for the cyclones to knock silly, and, in this way, they advertize the state to much better advantage. Ob! these western people are curious. I saw the genuine "kicker" on the train. He was filled with Missouri red-eye, and, at Kansas City, bad been pulled under the cars and only escaped being run ever by a miracle. His clothes wf-re torn nearly to pieces, and he looked like our people who sit on the court house corner. He said he didn't care so much about being run over, but when it came to getting on the train and having to stand up, he wusn't going to stand it, and would rip the rail road up the back in his home paper, "The Wayliack Stormer."

The hotels in Kansas are real funny. Most of them sit back in a big yard. There iB a sign on the gate, "hotel," and after getting in the yard you see another sign on the house. They want you to feel sure that it is really the hotel after entering the gate. The people in these states do not know what a grave! road is, all their roads are mud. Western Kansas and Colorado are all the same. When you see one house you see them all. Yon trayel for hours and will never see a tree. The climate, however, is immense. It is as crisp as anew five dollar bill and as invigorating as the sight of a fifty-dollar William. You can always tell how far west you are by the price of a sandwich. Prices rise the farther west you go. In Pueblo they are nearly out of sight. I asked a Colorado man, not having anything else to talk about, it the people here had la grippe. He said they bad, and, in some cases, it assuming a peculiar phase. One man had it and it went to bis arm, audit was swolen up to an enormous size, and the doctors, not exactly understanding the case, cnt bis arm oil to avoid further discussion. The sunsets in these parts are pathetic sights, the sun just drops out of sight like a nickle disappearing in the slot. In Kansas they have something new

this old SovereignRemedy has stood the test, and stands to-day the best known remedy for Catarrh, Cold in the Head and Headache. Persist in its use, and under the suu. At the coaling station when the it will effect a cure, no matter of hoyt long standing the case may be.

For sale by druggists

English Spavia Liniment removes all Hard, Soft or Calloused Lumps and Blemishes from horses, Blood Spavius, Curbs, Splints, Sweeney, Ring-bone, Stifles, nil Swollen Throats, Coughs, etc. Save 350 by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever knowu. Sold by Dr. E. Detchnn, drug store Crawfordsville, lud.

COLUMBUS tin's.

Buggies at Tinfley «V Mar

Xfathliix in tli« Wide World no Good. I was afflicted with' kidney disease. Br, Kennedy's favorite Remedy, of Rondout, N. Y.,—I say it with a perfect recollection of all that was done fer me besides, is the only thing that gave ine permanent relief. I have reo•nmended this medicine to many people for kidney disease and they all agree in saying that it has not its equal in the wide world for ttits oomplaint.—Lyinan Crawford, Druggist, Springfield, Mass.

train stopped the passengers made a wild rush for something to eat. Along side the track will be a half dozen hucksters selling good cheer, among which are celluloid pies, quite a novelty. Rattle Snake Bill was on the train. He wore unbleached cowhide clothes, and a clothes line belt, suitable for lynching purposes. The people who came west to farm you can tell at every ^station. I saw one man who came west to get rich and to the question "how's crops?" he said: Iv'e get no first crop to raise yet, nothin' but grass-hoppers seem to thrive here." He was out at knees and elbows aud looked like the last rose of summer in the last stage of consumption. People are going east lu as great numbers as they are coming west I saw one fellow who had been working in Kansas. He said he would hear of the great boom some town was having, go there to get rich and find nothing but boom. My friends of Indiana, to whom it may ooncern, stay where you are, if you must starve to death do so in a decent, civilized country, sorrounded by friends who will close your eyes in peaceful slumber, and give you a ceol drink of water to refresh you when the high fever 1B on. Pueblo is a typical west1 ern town. It spreads over so much territory

a

nd has so many hills in it that yom can no

THE CRAvvFOSDSVILLE WEEKLY REVIEW.

see the town unless you travel several days. Upon arriving here the town looks to be about the size of Rockville, but it really contains thirty thousand people. The smelting works are located here and a large portion of Colorado ore is Bhlpped here to be worked. That is the only salvation the town has, as there is nothing growing around it but cactus. An immense irrigating canal runs through the town and runs into the plaius for a distance of about eighty miles to help the cactus along. The aristocratic portion of this place is all bunehed together on a hill, and that part of the place is called the "mesa." I do not board at the "mesa" myself. It costs fifty dollars a minute to live there. There isn't a pretty girl in the town. They are all heavy like an Indian elephant and have canal boats in lieu of feet. The mountains can be seen from here a distance of 100 miles. They look like white clouds. Some small ones are closer and the white streaks of water and snow can be seen on them, running oil the top like the perspiration on the top of the bald head of Bill Nye. Tell my many thousands of friends Crawfordsville I am pretty well and believe me. Yours very truly, J, R. HANNA.

MACE.

Attend the exercises at the M. E. church tomorrow. Continued high and equal temperature marks this months.

A wedding in high life scon. Perhaps two or three weddings. W. G. McClure started last Monday in the work of the regular census.

Were it not for the hucksters and doctors this would be a dead town. Ezekiel Armstrong visited the capitol last Tuesday as representative of the Mace lodge.

Rev. Jacks, of Jimtown delivered a good Bernion at the Christian church in Mace Sunday.

A large number of young folks enjoyed muBlcat 0. G. Galloway's one night last week.

Last Monday evening witnessed mauy sad disappointed hunters returning from the purple heath. No game.

It is pleasing here to see beauty in ail its verdant attractiveness, passing In one continual train every Sunday eve up and down Main street.

It seems to be a positive fact and one not at all coucealed, that there is a very great rupture between the G. A. R. of the whole country and the President. Democrats are not our authority for this. Only last Saturday, and again this week, some of the most influential G. A. R. men, all republicans, said in our presence, statements most condemnatory of the administration, denouncing Pres. Harrison for not redeeming his promise to them to pension every honorably discharged soldier (he forgot to stipulate the age of 62 years) when he said he longed for the time when the power would be at his finger tips to grant a pension to every war veteran of the North, and if they would elect him, such a time would be wrought and such conditions would follow. The time has come in the way of the service pension bill. The President and his followers fight it. The pauper or stipulation bill receives their attention, and they are at war with the G. A. R. because of their earnest and just demands for consideration of promises made and not kept Soldiers helped largely to elect Harrison and soldiers now will help as a unit to defeat him, his schemes and his party. The tide has set in. It will increase in volume with its regularity.

Parke County Democrats.

The democratic county central committee met at Rockville last Saturday. Every township was represented. The members were enthusiastic in the belief that they will carry the county this fall. Only a few short years ago one could hardly be persuaded to make a race, but now, to show the change in the political situation, it is only necessary to say that, at this writing, "the woods are full of candidates." Dr. W. H. Gillum, who has been constantly allied to, and Identified with the party politics for the past fifteen years, was compelled, on account of business, to resign the chairmanship of the committee. R. C. McWilliams, a genuine democrat and a man of experience and sound judgment, was unan imously selected to succeed him.

Visit to Purdue-

The farmers' council of Montgomery county through its officers has been invited to visit Purdue on Taesday, Jnne 10, at which time there will be an immensestraw berry shorn Visitors will have tinfe to see everything about the grounds of the university. The experimental farming, and other objects of interest The train will leave Crawfordsville cn the Vandalia at 8:15 a. m. and return at 6:20 p. m, Let all who wish to go send a card to P. S. Kennedy, secretary of the council. The visit will be one of great interest and all who ean ought to go.

The Alumni Banquet.

The alumni banquet, Monday night, was one of the most enjoyable feature* of the commencement season. About 200 guests assembled at the Y. M. C. A. armory, and enjoyed a feast of reason, eta Toasts, short speeches and a general good time followed after which the party adjourned to the K, of P. armory, where all participated in the maqr danee. Music hall orchestra furnished the music and joy reigned supreme till a late hour.

Special Prices for this week. Do

YEAGrLEY &

A Family Jewel,

Dr. David Kennedy, of Rondout, N. Y., the famous surgeon and physician, has sent us a copy of his book, "How to Cure Kidney, Liver and Blood Disorders." It is a work which shonld be read in every home, for the value of the medical lessons alone. It contains also many life illustrations, and two facinating stories from the widely known author "Ned. Buntline." Anyone sending their address with name of thiB paper to Dr. Kennedy, will receive the bookfree by mail.

Excursion to Terre Haute. On account of the races the Vandalia will sell tickets to Terre Haute and return June 3, at one fare for the ronnd trip, good returning including June 4. An excursion will leave Terre Haute for Crawfordsville after the races June 3.

Tickets good returning including June 7th will be sold June 8 to 6, inclusive at onethird fare the round trip.

On June 5 tickets will be sold including admission to Barnum's show for 92.65, good returning Jnne 6. J. o. HUTCHISON,

Lace Curtains, Window Shade

Agent.

Barnum'M Vircus at Terre Haute. The Vandalia line will sell excursion tickets for the above occasion on June 5 at one and one-third fares with admission to the circu added. Tickets good to retnrn until Jnne 6. Call on Vandalia line agents for tickets.

"Tlred All the Time."

Say many poor men and women, who seem ever-worked, or are debilitated by change of season, climate or life. If you could read the hundreds of letters praising Hood's Sarsaparilla which comes from people whom it has restored to health, yon would be convinced of its merits. As this is impossible, why not try Hood's Sarsaparilla yourself and thus realize its benefit? It will tone and bnild up your system, give you a good appetite, overcome that tired feeling and make yon feel, as one* woman expresses it, "like anew creature."

New Lirarj Firm.

Having parchased one-half interest in the livery barn known as the Hiatt and Booher barn, opposite the Natt Hotel on Market street, we will be glad to see our customers at all times, night or day. Special care taken of feeders aad boarders at the same price heretofore. WK. HIATT.

THE NEW YORK STORE

Hew goods in all the latest shades and cloths. Silks both black and colored. Henriettas, Brilliantines, Mohairs, Sieillians, Surahs, Armurs, Drab A'lmas Cashmere, etc. We have the latest trimmings for dress goods, such as Efliel Point Lace, Vandyke Lace, Band Trimmings, Fancy Silks, etc. In onr Gent's suitings, we will save you 25 per cent.

MILLINERY! MILLINERY! MILLINERY!

For our Millinery department we have secured the service# ot Mrs. Betta Larsh ac saleslady. Trimmer Miss Luna Slayton, of Chicago, with an able corps of assistants. Our Spring stock was carefully selected by Misi Slayton and 3Jr. Myers, and has now arrived for the public's inspection. Give us an early call. a.

W*. JOLLY.

lm Proprietors

Big l^irsJay.

Juie 5, the Vandalia will aa excaesioa train leaving Terre Baate at 8^8 f. m. to enable those visiting Barnim or the raees to returning home that evening.

J. C. HUTCHINSON.

Silk Umbrellas.

we will save you money

MORE NEW

Just received and at such popular

not fail to call and see

on every purchase.

MILLINERT STOCK

Abe Levinson,

Next Door to Blston Bank.

No! We Are Not Bragging!

When we say that we are prepared to show

THE FINEST, FULLEST, FANCIEST AND BEST STOCK OF

BOOTS AND SHOES

Slippers, Oxford Ties,

Ever offered for sale in'this part of the country Wdvnwfn -,i

stand prepared to prove every point that we claim in favor of our goods'?veT all^nth^

nized that figures are the first and final test.other things beina 1. .1 tilings being equal," ind w* triimphTthis'test as C**"' W«l

Champions of Choice Cheap Goods.

You may be sure you are right when you go to

105 and 107 N. Washington St. Opposite Court House.

J^OTICE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS, ETC.

decea^d®8!!?^11^

e9tate 01 WllBOn

Crosse,

May term, 1890. °ntg°mery

Circuit

Conrt.

Notice .a hereby given that James Wright ae ad^no.ir'\t0r

the

°r Wilson Crease de­

ceased, has presented and filed his account and thRtthn8sime •8icome

ettlcmcnt of 8aid

estate, and

that the will up for the examination ?n Circuit Court on the X4th ji? •*un®« 1690, at which time all heirs °r

8aid

estate are required

said Court and show caut-e if any

nnf h? n'r, account and vouchers should

nnd

t?e

heirs

fhL

or distributees of

re

a!^°notifled

to

n., oe.®Lai?

be in said court at

anfl

make proof of heirship.

Dated th I* 33d day of May, 1890. JAMES WHIOHT, Administrator, B. Js\

Billy

Co!man

THE-

New Merchant Tailor,

NEXT DOOR TO P. O.

Buy when you get through corn planting. Come in and see us and examine our goods Our prices are the lowest.

SUITS

from $20 up. Pants from $4 up.

Q^LINDSEYS

BLOOD

SEARCHER

a Lfrvely Conpltxioa. Si a^ idid Tonioi aad ouyes Boils, Pirns 6«rofuU, Mercurial and atl Blood os 8«14 by yjnr Drugfist.

Medicine Co., Pittsburgh,Ps

Itch, Manjie and !cratclips etw-d in 30 minutes hr WoolfowTf Sanitary Letion. This never fails. SnW ly Dr. E. Deletion druggist

Crawfordsuille. -^30-4

MYBR8&C HARNI.

ki

them f|

prices that cannot fail to pleafe,

claims«to

the test

anl

SMOKE

CIGAR.

The best 5 cent cigar oil earth! Ask' your dealer lor it and take no other.' The Lot is strictly a hand-made, Ha-! vana filled cigar, and is sold every-i where.

JOHN HUKLEY,

M't'r. Crawfordsville.

Sold in New Richmond by W. W* Washburn and Ira Stout.

James Bogert,

MANUFACTURER,

Opposite Transfer Car, 40 West Washington street. Samplo Trunks and Cases a Specialty. Faticular attention paid to I.adles' patent Tray dress Trunks. Lnrgost and best assortment Of Traveling Bags, Trunks, ValiBeg, etc. Buy your Trunks whore 'licy are made.

HIRES'

IMPROVED

Its*

ROOT-BEER!stlmmmwiN

THBWHMIIIBHIRVI &ULOIM.

ROOT BEER.

Delicious ft&D BparkHwy, TRT IT. Ask your DruggUt or Grocer Jbr it.

C. E. HIRES, PHILADELPHIA.