Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 28 February 1891 — Page 3

ferre Haute

EhaOldRdiatMollege]

BOOK-KBEPING, SHOBT-HANB and TELEGRAPHY |e taught by actaal bnBioess*

ra" a:'.*

nfi li' DC W.N io an'U whisht hoes do no the

Ladlo*,

10»0«0 Tw'lmonlul' Hold by ?.ocv

PATENT

jDLD clasps

()i(!\ STSv'I

1 ft NEW DISCOVERY I

AFTER

ill'1

*rsf

GOLD CLASPS

mWWm

-BY-

DR. ALBERT.

(And a fierce storm ot cuwmg sieet which strikes the face like a thousand needles. Wind forty miles an hour. You say a man couldn't stand such exposure? No, he couldn't, without just the proper clothing. And there's only one outfit that can keep a man both warm and dry at such a time, and that is the Fish Brand Slicker." They are guaranteed storm-proof, waterproof, and windI*proof. Inside one vi ihem, you areas much out of I the weather as if indoors. They arc light, but warm. Being re-enforced throughout, they never *, and the button* are wire-fastened. Noruljroad man who lias once tried one would be without it for ten times its cost. Beware of worthless imitations, every garment stamped with Fish Brand"

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A. TOWER, Boston, Wass*

CALL NOW,

year* of eiperieuoe In the leading Hospitals of the World, and as a Private Specialist In tbe treatment of Sexual Weak" noo*, JIt. ALBERT lia* finally been Induced to place before tlie aiatctod at a nominal oxpeni)«, tbli

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KliKTtlIKU JOIIKSOJI:

1

his work is a upletidicllu written l.ijr Kt.r, of the lleroof

''Mareh-

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WHAT IS IT?

Persons cmtsMe of the profession often rusk, what Is an Kmuision? We answer, an Emulsion is a combination of two or more liquids, so thoroughly mixed that each Is held In permanent suspension. Several of thu much advertised 'Emulsions' now on the market are uothini: more than compounds, and a mli'wsroiilc examination will reveal globules of oil In their original form. The Emulslom made by

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120 Main street

THE CRAWFORDSVILLE WEEKLY REVIEW.

AMONG THE HINDOOS.

A CHICAGO MAN VISITS AN OLD TEMPLE OF THE PAGANS.

Pined for Walking Through tlie ltulldlng with HIH Shoes On—Interesting Notes of Rambles Through ft Strange Country—Laughable Incidents.

Blatcliford Kavaii'tgh writes from Delhi, India, to The Chicago Post about a visit among the Hindoos as follows: 1 have been to Alimedabad. It is a small place and almost tilled with moeqnes arid temples. The mosques belong to the Mohammedans and tlie temples to the Hindoos. Most of the inosqnes are exquisitely carved. In one place there is a window of marble with a tree pierced out of it. Tbe carving is wonderful. These Hindoos are something like the Chinese. They will spend years of their life in carving some little thing. It's beautiful when it's done, but ail American wouldn't spend as many days on it as they do years.

In one Hindoo tehiple they let us walk {ill through with our shoes on, and when we got through and came outside we found a great crowd of natives making an uproar. Then we found out what was the matter. We had defiled the temple by going in with our shoes on. Then a man came up and said in English that the temple would have to be all washed out l«:fore they could worship in it again, and we had to pay three rupees—about $1.17 in our money—tc have the place washed, so we are not going into any more temples with, our shoes on.

THE SACRED LAKE.

We stopped at Ajmere, a small town, for about twenty-four hours. There are some mo6ques and temples there, but they are not so pretty a.s those at Alimedabad. Ajmere is very picturesqut on a sunshiny day, but it rained almost all the afternoon very hard. It stopped for about two hours and we drove out tc Pushkar lake. This is about seven miles from the city, through a pass. The ascent is about 200 feet. This is the place where the princes come to worship. They each build a small palace to stay in while tbey are here. The lake is sacred one, and tlie Hindoos believe any one bathing in it will go to heaven.

I wrote you about how the Hindoos burn their dead. Well, I took a photograph with my little camera of the casts of men who take care of dead bodies. It was just after tiiey had burned one up, and I got them to all stand in a row with their white aprons on. They didn'l seem to mind it a bit, and stood up as ii they were quite used to it.

We left Ajmere about 1 o'clock in the morning and arrived here about 5 in tlie evening. Tlie sleeping cars are not the same as ours. One car will accommodate eight people. The cars are divided into two compartments, each compartment accommodating four persons. We do not undress, but just take off out coats and lie down for a little while. The cars are a good deal like those in England. Our servant forgot to wake us up until we got into the station.

Tlie train only staid there seven minutes, and yon ought to have seen us scramble out of the car. Mr. Getty and I have a couple of suits made alike, and in the scrimmage he got my coat on, and he looked too funny for anything. 1 rushed out of the car in my shirt sleeves, with my helmet on, and he was bareheaded. I guess the natives thought we were crazy. We gor, to the bungalow all right and slept until 9 o'clock. We are going to see a palace. We go half of the way on elephants.

A DOG STOLK TI1E SACRED CAKK. I tried to give you a description in one of my former letters of our hizy life on sliipboard coining from Suez to Bombay. There wasn't much to do but lie around and read books and try to keep cool, and I have often thought of you people in Chicago going around with heavy overcoats and furs, while wo were fanning ourselves.

I saw a funny sight at Bombay—a poor man's wedding. The man and his bride paraded around the streets, he with his sword over his shoulder. He was 'oowlegged, she knockkneed, and what do you think their ages weoe'r He was 32 years old and his bride only 11 years! They were tied together by tlieix garments. They had a ceremony in the street that wa.s very queer. They placed on a stone some peas and a pancake and then bowed before it.

Just as they got through a dog stuck his head through tlie crowd and made a rush for it. Such a commotion yon never saw. Of course he got between the groom's legs, and altogether broke up the ceremony. He got the holy pancake, just the same, and then the groom didn't seem to care for it any more. I laughed until I ached all over.

Yon will remember I wrote you about tlie Hindoo musician in Bombay, who played on four different instruments at one time—two in his nose and two in his mouth. I took a picture of him one day as he was squatting on the ground playing away with all four instruments going at once. The funniest thing about Bombay and all India is that they only have one mail day a week, which is Saturday, and when the mail closes all tlie shops close also, and the people have a half holiday. While we were in Bombay they had a mail day, and everywhere we went we were informed that "it was "English mail day."

rrevuiliiiK Korni for InUi-.m Suicides. '1 he lavorite form of suicide in India is drowning, owing to the fact that this method of seli-destruction does not involve personal mutilation. This form of suicide is resorted to sometimes not onlv in order to avoid mutilatiou, but wiiii a view of propitiating the water spirit by an act of self-sacrifice, which has a fascination for some eastern minds.—London Tit-Bits.

Tlio Same Oll Way.

Bunting—Everything is getting so high in price I don't see how we can live.

Mrs. Bunting—Can't we still buy on credit, deiirV—Epoch. ,.

Venerable Vanity.

The vanity that survives the decay of every i*?rsonal charm is, of all foibles, the most ridiculous. One can hardly blame a beautiful woman for rejoicing in the admiration to which her mirror tells her she has aright, or for setting off to the best advantage the physical perfections with which heaven has endowed her but the withered graudam who was once a Hebe is not'excused by her antecedents for attempting the role of Hebe in spite of faded cheeks, lack luster eyes and hiiir that has depreciated from gold to pewter and is lacquered over to conceal the change.

Looking glasses tell the truth to threescore as to sixteen. They reflect saffron as faithfully as rose, and when the saffron is overlaid with manufactured bloom they tell the enameled elder to her face that it is unnatural. And what the mirror says silently society repeats with a sneer. It is impossible to mistake rouge for the tint of nature. The imposture is as apparent to every observer as if "Beware of paint" were written on the forehead of the pink saucered lady.

Pale voting women as well as sallow old ones are much given to coloring their cheeks in this age of personal artifice. Hundreds of girls between the ages of 1« and 20 paint their fcices at least as often as they clean their teeth.

Never were there more counterfeits of nature in circulation thiui in this our day. It seems to be the fashion to be bpunoiis.—New York Ledger.

A Wonderful Krojj Story.

Vv luie a large pine log was being sawed into lumber at Brown & Hall's sawmill near Acton, Ont., after the outsido slab and one board had been cut off, and while the workmen were turning over the log preparatory to "squaring" it, they were surprised, to see a large toad poke his head oat of a hole, where he was imbedded, and where he had barely escaped being cut up by the saw.

How the creature ever got there is a mysteiy, as he was completely encased in the wood, with no possible means of ingress or egress. As the log was the fourth or fifth up from the butt of the tree, his jtosition must havebeeu at least fifty or sixty feet from the ground. There is but one way of accounting for the fact that he was found in the position named. He had grown up with the tree from infancy, and was probably hundreds of years old when the saw awoke him from his long nap.

The animal was quite fat, and nearly as large across as a man's hand. The tree in which he -was found was perfectly sound, with the exception of a decayed si»t about a foot in length below the hollow place in which he was imbedded.—St. Louis Republic.

Have Plenty Air in the House. It isn't drugs or medicine that is needed at all it is plenty of the purest air that an be luid. Open the windows and the doors, clean out the cellar and ventilate it thoroughly, remove the dampness, the mustiness, the ancient odor, the smell of decay which greets the nostrils when one enters from the health giving- ,''atmosphere out of doors. Never mind if the outer air bears the taint of the gas house, the manufactory or some other unpleasant thing it is also mingled with the health and strength giving forces of nature, and is certainly better for the human system than the same .air which has been shut up and contammaU'd for an indefinite period, with no chance for purification.

Don't mind, even, if a little dust is brought in a few minutes with tlie duster will put the whole house in perfect order again, and even at the worst, dust is not half so bad as disease. And as for the fear of draughts, with colds and a thousand resultant evils following in their train, nineteen-twentieths of that is imaginary, and the other twentieth is easily avoidable.—Good Housekeeping.

The "Motion" Was a

Fulton one time went to see a perpetual motion machine, having a friend with him. After sitting and listening and looking intently for a few minutes, Fulton's sensitively accurate ear and eye told him that the machinery showed the recurring alternation of comparative speed and slowness which always comes from a crank turned by hand.

In spite uf the opposition of the enraged exhibitor. Fulton and his friend seized the machine, jerked away the table it stood on, found that a cord led through one leg and away under the floor, and following the tract into the back yard they found the "motion"—a venerable beggar seated on a stool, munching away at a crnst and grinding away at a crank.—Chicago Herald.

Klectrio Conduits of

Practiciil YOIIIIR riiHiintliropitet.x. Three little Sunday school boys in Fort Fairfreld not iced that one of their classmates was poor and ragged. They were the right kind of boys, so they didn't make fun of him. but called a council to consider what steps could be Uiken to better his condition and, acting upon their decision, they started out soliciting funds and obtained enough to buy an I eutiresuit. That seiiool evidently teaches practical Christianity.—Bangor Maine.

The Duke of Bedford prided himself on opposing all local improvements iu Loudon, lie was a bitter foe of that progress which the metropolis now consi lei's necessary to her salvation, and ite fought every attempt to open new streets through his property.

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Paper tubes are now being used as conduits for electric cables, water, gas and other purposes. The method of their manufacture is interesting. The width of the paper is equal to the length of a given pipe. The paper is first run through molten asphalt and is then rolled upon a mandrel of wood, the size of which determines the diameter of the pipe. When cool the inside of the pipe is covered with a certain kind of enamel and the outside with a composition of bituminous lacquer and sand, and it is said that a comparatively thin pipe will st-ind a very powerful pressure.—New York Telegram.

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I CURE

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