Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 14 March 1891 — Page 3
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KTOBZ
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to
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tl "AIs. L. IK" thi' protilho, bo
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Old Rtliable College
WHERE
OOK-KEIiPINO, OUT-HAND and EtEGRAPHT aught by actual business
PATENT CLASPS
warni Mi
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Corralling a irovc of horses pves you plenty of work for hours. You don't have time to think what the weather is. You let everything slide, till the worli is over. But the cowboy is never unprepared. When this picnic'1 happens, whatever the weather, he is not drenched and wet to the skin before it'* over, because he is always provided with a Fish llrand Pommel Slicker. With one of these sr.-Mte coats on, you can get wet if you try. Your saddle will be inside the coat, and it will be drv, too. Did you ever try the Pommel Slicker? Jut try one, they cost Tery little. Tlvsn no more colds, fevers, rheumatism, and other results to exposure of weather.
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Students in a Hnrgn Car.
It IH seldom that one student BO successfully gets the best of another in public by practical joking as did senior in a Fair Haven horse car. Two devoted chums boarded the car when only one seat, close to the door, was vacant.. To the amusement of the spectators, each eloquently but vainly endeavored to persuade the other to accept the vacant place. Filially they decided to toss up penny to settle the matter, stipulating that the loser should sit down and hold the other in his lap. With studentlike deliberation they earned out this plan, and after the toss-up Iwfch calmly sat down on tiie single seat. Soon the car stopped, and at the door appeared a handsome young woman. Instantly the man who had wou the tossing contest of a moment before saw his opportunity and made the most of it. "Won't you please to accept my seat?" he said softly in his most polite manner to the maiden, gracefully uncovering his bead mid slowly rising. "I thank you," said the youug woman, blushing, and apparently pleased by the student's marked attention, she proceeded to take the seat.
The other college man had been absorbed in thought, and so quickly and quietly was the action taken that he had not realized his companion's joke until he found the young lady innocently attempting to appropriate the place in his lap. Then with suave '"and take mine, too," that startled and at first nonplussed the third party in the joke, he darted from his seat just in time to save the young lady from complete emlmrrassmtMit. Among those who seemed most, highly amused by the joke, however, was she who unconsciously had participated in it.—New Haven Cor. New York Times.
Iail
rHE CRAW FollDS V1LLE WEEKLY REVIEW.
Luek.
"I hopped out of bed on the wrong foot yesterday and" "Bad luck?" "Just so. I am not superstitious, but I have noticed tli at, as soon as a person gets in the habit of doing things in a certain, set fashion, anything that tends to change or disturb that fashion is likely to upset man's equilibrium. In my case it makes me nervous and iu a degree foreboding. You know when a sleight of hund man starts to do a trick and for some reason fails he has to begin all over again. He cannot go on from where he failed, because his muscles have been trained to act iu certain definite order, to depart from which means inability to accomplish the feat in question. Now I fancy it is much the same with our daily lives. We acquire the habit of doing a thing thus and so, and if for any reason we are obliged to depart from our accustomed method we do not feel right about it—a suggestion of what physicians call liypercest liesia.
Of course I know that hopping out of bed on one foot or the other is no criterion for a change of luck yet, as I said before, habit makes the sum total of our lives, and a violation of the little habits of daily life leads us to look, quite at unawares, for happenings, occurrences, etc., out of the ordinary. Wo actually begin to look for something going wrong, and it is an easy deduction thus to associate circumstances that otherwise are as distant as the east is from the west. Hence our fund of superstitions, ill omens, etc., etc.—of which hop ping out of bed on the wrong foot is a fair illustration."—Deiroit Free Press.
A Fortune Paul for lioard. Sixty thousand dollars for board and lodging is pretty steep, but that's what Frank Parmelee, the omnibus man, has paid the Grand Pacific hotel. Mr. Parmelee is lie oldest boarder in the house. He was the Grand Pacific's first guest. Hi: helped destroy the first meal placed on the table. He hasn't missed a meal iu seventeen years, except when he was out of the city, for he has not been sick day in that time. He is certain to have his appetite with him at all times. He is 74 years old, but be is as active aud energetic as a boy. Perhaps the credit should be given to the wonderful digestive apparatus which he has concealed about his person.
Mr. I'arnielee eats two meals each day in the big iliniug room aud one meal in bed some time during the night. For fifty years Mr. Parmelee has never failed to awaken in the middle of the night aud refresh himself with a square meal, consisting of such wholesome food as lobster salad, cold sausage and mince pie. Because of his consistent diet Mr. Parmelee is of a happy and frolicsome disposition.—Chicago Herald.
1'aces with Lanterns Behind Them. There is nothing more catching than a face with a lantern behind it, shining clear through. I have no admiration for a face with a dry smile, meaning no more than the grin of a false face. But a smile written by the haud of God, as an index or table of conteuts to whole volumes of good feeling within, is a benediction. You say, "My face is hard and lacking in mobility, and my benignant feelings are not observable in the facial proportions." I do not believe you. Freshness and geniality of soul are so subtle and pervading that they will, at some eye or mouth corner, leak out. Set behind your face a feeling of gratitude to God and kindliness toward man nnd you will every day preach a sor mon long as the streets you walk, a sermon with as many heads as the number of people you meet, and differing from otiier sermons iu the fact that the longer it is the better.—Dr. Talmage in Ladies' Home Journal.
The Hall of Tarn.
A reader asks, "When did the kings and nobles of Ireland hold their last gathering iu the hall of Tara?"
Tradition has it that tho last assemblage in the hall of Tara took place in the year A. D. 044. The great triennial council of the Irish nation was held there for several centuries previously, but because a criminal who had (led for safety to the monastery of St. Kuan had been drugged to tin: hall and executed the holy abbot and the monks cricu aloud ugaiust the sacrilege and pronounced a curse upon its wails. "From that day," says an old chronicler,
"110
Gei]! ftiiisr
king ever again sat at Turu."—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
An Iron Watch.
At tiie mechanical fair held at Worcestershire, Kughuid, Browthcr Hrothcrs exhibited watch, in perfect running order, constructed wholly of iron. The object- of .-this curiosity was to illustrate the malleability of iron and its consequent adaptation to a wide variety of novel uses. Such articles, when made of iron, may be easily electro-
THE BELLS OF C01RE.
Where rose tho mountains, line on line. Above the brawling upper liliinc. Wo heard from soaring tower and spire Outring the mellow bells of C'oire.
Sweet were the echoesdownward borne From heights that climbed to meet the morn From heights that bade the soul aspire They rang, those tuneful bells of Coire.
While darker glooajed the arinieil firs. While sharper loomed the mountain spurs. While sunk the sun, a disk of tire. They pealoil, those ancient bells of Coire.
They rang of hopes, they rang of foars. They rang of joys, t.hey rang of tears, They rang the wandering heart's desire, Of home and friends, tho bells of Coire! -Clinton Scollard in Harper's Bazar.
Wliy They Never Speak.
America is not the only country in which fortune tellers flourish. In Europe they also thrive, as will be seen by the following incident:
Near Beauvais there lives a family the members of which, it is said, have never spoken to each other.
Several years ago a local sorcerer informed the head of the family that if he and his wife and daughter would keep silence during their lives they would iu course of time inherit a large fortune. The husband communicated this happy intelligence in writing to his wife, and she informed her daughter, aud so for several years the three lived together dumb as oysters.
Recently, however, the two women found life unbearable under such conditions and resolved to ask the fortune teller for permission to use their tongues, if only at rare intervals. At this suggestion the prophet was inexpressibly shocked, but seeing that the women were unable to overcome their natural love of loquacity, he finally granted them permission to talk to each other outside the town boundaries. The result is that the mother and daughter continue to keep silence in the house, but start every Tuesday for Tournay, where they enjoy a long, healthy chat.
The husband and father remains silent at home, and as he has not asked the prophet to show him any favors it is evident that he prefers silence to speech. He is confident, also, that he will some day inherit the large fortune, and this hope sustains him in his silent, solitary life.—New York lierald.
A Way of Announcing Names. I have a bachelor friend of extended acquaintance whose pleasant rooms are quite a resort for his friends on Sunday evenings indeed, they present something like across
between clubrooms and the idea of tho "salon." These Sunday evenings are devoted entirely to conversation and the discussion of some kind of novel lunch, which the: generous host presents in some odd and picturesque manner. My friend has a number of curious fashions in the details' of receiving and entertaining his visitors, 1 some of which are very bright aud sensible. I For instance, he has a large wire rack hung in a conspicuous place, and upon the arrival of any new visitor a card, upon which the name of the latter is painted in large letters, is stuck into the rack in plain view of all who are present. "Persons rarely understand or remember names when they tire first introduced," remarked my friend, "and I find that this simple system not only relieves my guests OJ" embarrassment, but sometimes is a matter of great convenience to my forgetful self."—New York Star.
Where Theatrical Interests Clashed. The theatrical caterer has often to contend with outside influences over which be lias no control, resulting in scanty audiences, or it may be no audience at all. A manager of the old Bower saloon meeting a friend one day near the Horse Guards, tec latter inquired how he was getting
plated with glil or silver, or adorned with by swelling the wood of the outside case ail the beauty of the enameler's art.—St. will be extremely injurious. Louis Republic.
ufactured in great numbers iu England and in this country. Yet these countries continue to import some of the cheaper kinds from Germany. The extent to which dolls are manufactured in England may be judged from the statement made a few yeurs ago in the house of commons that a manufacturer had an order for £500 worth Of dolls' eyes.
011.
"Oh, we live, sir, we live," was the reply. "Well, 1 must be ofT," said his friend, "I'm in a hurry to see about seats at the Italian opera next week." "What!" exclaimed the Bower manager, "does the Italian opera open next week? I'm very sorry to hear it." "Why, what can. it matter to you?" cried the otiier. "Surely you don't imagine that the opera performances will clash with yours?" "Won't it, though?" was the answer. "My audience won't be inside Her Majesty's, but they will all be there—picking pocketsl" aud shaking hands, the dismayed manager went sadly on his way.—Chambers' Journal.
To Circumvent the Sampler" An effective method of reducing losses from sampling, and at the same time allowing goods to be seen by customers, has been adopted by many retail grocers. Boxes about the height of a barrel, and of similar capacity, are constructed of hard wood, 1 with a hinged glass cover. Tho contents can be easily seen, owing to the fact that the covers slope downward from the back about thirty degrees, and can be removed as expeditiously as from an ordinary bar-, lei. Only the most impudent sampler would dream of lifting the covers to get at the goods, hence the saving in the course of a year must amount to a considerable sum in stores where the business is large.— New York Commercial Advertiser.
Knew One Time.
Some persons have an ear for music and others have not. Gen. Grant used to say that he UCW two tunes one was "Yankee Doodle" aud the other wasn't. One night not long ago Mr. Homer Lee sat at a banquet table in the Hotel Brunswick. A muscular and iudustrious orchestra was struggling manfully with "The Last Rose of Summer." Mr. Lee listened with evident enjoyment for some seconds and then exclaimed: "Ah, that is a sweet air. I' always did enjoy 'Away Down Upon the Suawnee River.' "—New York Times.
A I.ucratlvo Business.
There is good money iu canvassing if it is properly worked. I have sometimes made $20 it day, and I always average $10, but that is nothing compared to a book agent I know, who makes every year from 515,000 to $20,000. He has a specialty, however—rare old books and etchiugs. But he is a canvasser. That man hires a carriage when he is at work and his profits arc enormous.—Interview in Chicago News.
Rosewood, the material used in most pianos, is a tropical wood, with large, open pores, and if tiie instrument, is exposed to the dampness for any considerable length of time the effect on tho polish or varnish
1
(VBIJTCHINISON.
a S
In the Wlicatstone automatic method
Dolls of the latest pattern are now man- telegraphy, when transmitting at the rate
of 600 words a minute, there are 33,000 currents per minute sent out, each having a duration not exceeding .002 of a second.
It is the experience of physicians tb«t children of tuberculous parents properly fed, with no fermentation of their food, do 1 not die of tuberculosis, but live to grow
Up in decent health.
fcr Infants and Children.
"O—toils l«n Ti recommend its* superior to any preecripUoo known tome." H. A. Aacnxa, M. D.,
Ill Bfe OxXord 8t^ Brooklyn, N. Y.
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Lock Box fKl, l«w York City.
-THE-
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NO. OU
SOUTH ISOi:XI).
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I CURE
WHEN I eny CURB I do not mean merely to stop them for a time, and then have them return again. I MEAN A RADICAL CURL. 1 haw inado the disease of
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"TT7 ANTI'D to£-el! our guaiantoi N S a a a
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ryi
HUiKilES, the lest at Tmsley fc Mnrtins.
Un t« Con Cuuniugham's for hats.
Con Cunningham for neckties,
Con Cunningham for overooats.
-dl lo«isviut.»cwIiMiira CHICASO Rt(a
ALWAYS GIVES ITS PATRONS
The Full Worth of Their Money by Taking Them Bafely nnd Quickly botween
Chicago Lafayette Indianapolis Cincinnati
Louisville
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ALL TRAINS RUN THROUGH SOLID Tickets Sold and Baggagn Checked to Destination.
Maps and Time Tables if you want u. more fuily informed—nil Ticket Agents atOouinn Stations have ttoem—or addrooa •NO'tTII i«'H
1U.4AINS.
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SOCTH BOrNl) TIIAINB.
Khm
Mail, iliiilv except Snndtty, 1:4tt S'ii ht, KxpreHH, dully, 1:4*i a• *V»y Freight 8:30 a
Addrees W. Mtchie, HUCDI for further par ticnlars. JOHN 1$. CARSON, RAltlvEH Ucu. liimager,
G. P. A., Chicago. Chicago.
J)K lfLTBAKEll.
King of Specialists
lvooatert nil liweiisus wu'lhout asking a iiuostl Tim r«iu)*t l)ini:ii'iH t/ian ot ttiiu I'.Uli Co ntu
ileal Unparcrnen*. mversit
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