Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 7 July 1894 — Page 6
i,.3i
pw PUREST
I
VAND
BEST
LESS ThAM HALF THEPRICt OF OTHtR BRANDS -i- POUNDS,20t
HALVES, ID QUARTERS,54
SOLD IN CANS ONLY
gWATC jWORpi
0
THE FARMERS of the North and Wert ore rapidly moving to the warm climate and rich farms of the South.
•M
You join them? Go tocommonities inTenn•«see, Alabama, Mississippi, or Louisiana, where your health will be better your neighbors the most hospitable in the World a Uttle capital required Academies and Colleges noted the country over climate cool In summer—no blizzards In winter.
ROU-TEI!
Runs HALF RATE Excursions to principal points South, June 5th, July 5th, Aug. 7th, Sept. 4th, Oct. 2nd, Nov. 6th and Dec. 4th. Over a MILLION Acres of for sale In Alabama, Louis- |^^H|N i| lana and Mississippi at $3 •••^1 to $5 per acre. Easy terms. 3S5SSSSSS
F. Y. ANDERSON, Land Commissioner, Birmingham, Ala. W. C. RINEAR50N, 0.
P. A., Cincinnati, 0.
tSPENDYo
MOUNTAINS
1ASHEVILLE
LOOKOUT MOUNTAIN RHEA SPRINGS OAKDALE CUMBERLAND FALLS POINT BURNSIDE SPRINGVILLE ALA.
N.C.
OR SOME OTHER OF THE MANY DELIGHTFUL PLACES REACHED BY THE
QUEEH&CRESCENT
O E
W.C.RINEARSON. G.RA. CINCINNATI,0
Ini-ortasit to Horsemen, Morris !•. Liniment removes all hard lump: pulTs, saddle or collar \y"''. .^•I'avh'ri, fhiMiis a a a criptii'ii. riie 11 -t .vifi, ..
N ve ,v ..
!il-k
ilow 'o Avo!! Fsinn Work 1" y\ 'lot it 'l» I'll* T'll "h ::n\ ll-vtI ill iV- "-o':' 1 Im ivi'ii".fi' ih- 'lar*! ern iiir'ii-r .i\*- to wot., crops. wn l- down ^nii'l-li., do inoNt ol their 'arm \vfall, winter ami spring
LOCAL NEWS.
Frankfort policemen are learning to ride bicycles. The Lotus Club talks of a big pieuic at Indian Ford before long.
Miss Flora Shultz has gene io Ripley, Ohio, l'or a three week's visit. i'ue wheat has about all been harvested and the yield this year is of the beet.
Trustee Iv.ldingticld, of alnut township. has paid in £200 in surplus school funds.
Warren county will refund overc3,000 of unexpended tuition money to the State treasury.
'11--
(toverj h- !ii:ji t't '"r)r iiriiiMti'd !y a t-t-leitr:it«-! Kr-triish vet(M'inarv ur-re )n: penctrat'-- to the bone itsi'll. Viets. ami olil liv
i!i Milium*ilie ml ii as j*'HI*• m'\. ja. I he not the \V,rr,hto siivc hit'ar.Viiri .liirii.^ ilic ii
weather is coo!, and dining '-he snninier they take life easy, ii is always cool in the shade down South ami the nights are always cool. .h- thermometer seldom uvuaixiv 9-). HIP hottest, day during th- p:ist live years was UT degrees, Von •:i:I grow om- ero^'lnring tht* winter, anotlier during the spring, and another during the lull on the same land each year. Von will net more money from each one of these Yrops than you can make from a simi lar erop in the North. Vou can get a home cheaper. It will tost, you less to live. Vou can make more monev.
applicants. Go .South row anu investigate. I ow rate excursions every month over the Mobile Ohio railroad.
II. K. POSKV, (1 T. A.. Mobile, Ala. ./ 2.'i 2m
J. 11. Hritjcs. the Warren county stock King, last week sold *8.500 worth of cattle and hogs.
A carp weighing about 0,'r pounds was caught in Sugar creek last Satur day by a stuail boy.
Mrs. W. K. .Nicholson and daughter, Mrs. T. Fastiiiau. of Indianapolis, are at .Uaxiakuckce for the suiBtuer.
Kid. W. K. Knowels, ot Hennsselaer. preached the Primitive Baptist church last Saturday and Sunday.
Rev. J. K. Dinnen will have been years in the priesthood on July -oth. and the same will be duly celebrated.
Uu Saturday morning Walter Bros, started two cars of horses for Montreal that will be sent to the Scotland market.
Last Saturday, Tip Davis. Tom Mathews and Kent W ise started down Sugar Creek in a boat for a week tloat.
Marry Conard has given up his position at a railway postal clerk for the reason that it was endangering health.
his
4
Leader says that the county is on •I, V. Brookshire.
The Ladoga largest barn in farm of Hon. that place.
the the
near
Mrs. Charley Bloss has returned home from the Martinsville springs where she staid six weeks to get relief from rheumatism.
Farmers in Boone and Clinton counties report the wheat crop the heaviest for years. The average will run from twenty-five to thirty bushels per acre.
A normal school for a session of sixweeks opens next Monday week at South Hall. Wabash College. An attendance of between 40 and ..00.persons is expected.
Tho number of bodies of deceased persons taken up and reburied at "Old Town" cemetery has reached over 100, ana the work will probably be completed next week.
Miss Nellie Morrison will succeed Lyda .Jones in the Ladoga schools and Miss Nellie Cunningham will take the place of Miss Laura Stephenson in the Waynetovvn schools.
"Buck" Brothers took Harry Bishop, fur bivalung into .Johnson Clore's store, and Mine. Marley. who extracted 87 from John Barry's place, to the reform .-chool last Saturday.
The deluge Svmday morning caused washout on the Big Four near Tile Siding, west of tho city. The repairs were made on Sunday so that week day trailic was not delayed.
While Jack Kreese. of Frankfort, was promenading with his wife, and sister in-law. Volney I rev, of Indianapolis, made a remark not to his lilting, and he riliuck lrey in the face with his fist, breaking his jaw in two places,
I lev. K. U. Pelly, of the Burlington Carroll county M. K. church, has been found guilty---by a church board of ly inti defamation of character, ami ins proper conducted towards joung ladies, lie has 'eft for parts unknown.
Fred ilotlman, the architect, slipped olY up to liochester. last week, and married a most excellent young lady in
M:... ....i Ol
the person of Miss Helen Sliarpe, of that city. They have rooms a! the home of A. F. Fastlack. on west Main street.
The Rock'vide Light Artillery, known as i!atti-ry C. Indiana Legion, has b**en •re-mustered with F. F.. Stevenson, captain diaries Bracken and Cyril Connelly, lieutenants, and i'jimneU L. tiiil--man, yr liTiy ('apt. Kd Lambert, who haB'been ltii the or^aei/ation as an otlicer b.r tour'.e'Ti veais. i.'tires to the ranks,
Thos lliley. larm band,-, hailing from Crawfordwville. is u, jHd awaiting ar raignment in circuit court on the charge of forging the name of Win. Wamnght, a farmer near High (.lay, to a couple of orders for sma 1 ani nnits. ltili*y waivi examination court. It will he has a hearing.- Laiayette 1'unes
ye»t» rtlay .n Mho
Political Inconniotrncy. ED REVIEW: The reason, no doubt, why consistency is called a ''jewel'' is because it is so seldom practiced. This was amply demonstrated in the last republican convention held in this county.
There were so many anxious oflice seekers that the issues involved in the coming election were not thought of until the more thoughtful in the party began to see where they had made a mistake in their nominations for commissioner.
In their persistent denunciations of democrats they overlooked the 6ulleu and determined etTort that will be put forth by the tax payers of this county to defeat any man, or set of men at the election this fall, who had anything to do with the donating of public money to Wabash College.
To any man of ordinary observation it was plain to be seen on the morning of the convention that the friends of the college understood this matter and were on hand to reward their servants, and at the same time to defeat any candidate for commissioner who was opposed to them, or who. by his silence, indicated that he was not in sympathy with them.
Their scheming was plainly shown in their defeat of John L. Davis, who has always been a faithful and industrious worker for his party, ami who has perhaps paid more taxes than the entire faculty of Wabash college as it now exists.
And. because he was not in sympathy with their scheme, he was defeated and that, too, by delegates some of whom never paid even a poll tax in the county.
The milk in the cocoanut is the remaining six thousand dollars that was to be given conditionally, which they hope to get secure for the college if they can succeed in electing men who are in sympathy with them. There were others blindly working for the college who went about among the delegates telling them that Davis would lose one hundred republican votes, because he had voted for some democrat in the past, and because he was opposed to what the commissioners did in their gift to Wabash college. But those henchmen seemed to forget, that the independent course heretofore pursue.! by Mr. Davis would have secured for him more than twice as many liberal democratic votes than what he might have lost on that account in his own party.
Some friend of the college tried to make light of those who were opposed to what the commissioners did. by showing that the extra tax would amount to but a few cents to the average tax payer, which perhaps is true. But the principle remains tho same, and besides what right had the commissioners to give money to abash college any more than to any other private school?
It would have been an act of charity to have given the money to the Catholic school in this city because it is poor, or to the Dunkards who are trying to build a school at Ladoga.
In view of the fact that our publicschools afford ample facilities for all to receive a liberal education, we are decidedly opposed to the giving of public money to private schools. But if this thing of giving the money of the taxpavers is to be the rule, don't slight the weaker schools, but help them in proportion to their necessities, for certainly W:j.b
ch
,1,c
in Septeinbff iuifou 1
James S. Allen, known as "Big Nose Jim,'' of Putnam county, living six miles from Greencastle, Monday evening shot
his WI'R to death then coinuiitted isuicide.
You will have better health, live Ion- He left a letter addressed to the editor Ker, and enjoy lil'e better in the outh of the (ireencastle Democrat, in whteh than in the North. A beautiful pain-• he gave the CHUFC as family and religious phiet that tells all about it free to all diseeneio s. He had in view the killing
of his father-in-law. Charles Nugent, of Fincastle, but failed to meet him. Allen was forty-live years old, and his wife two years his junior. The other mem-
Tbe tail of the kangaroo ic the fleshiest part of the animal. It is considered dainty food when boiled in its own Sixty Socialist Deputies have beeu F.kin, which afterward may he drawn «tT added to the French Chamber during like a gk ve. the last ten yearB.
college did not need the money
because she has thousands of dollars loaned out in this county at a High rate of interest, and that, too, on tirst mortgage security. And yet she had the audacity to ask for and accept donation from this county, when she pays no taxes to help support the county.
Those men composing the board of county commissioners are no more to blame for making the donation than tho.-e who signed stn earnest appeal to them in tho form of a petition. And certainly the tax payers of this county will remember when they go to the polls this fall that Hannibal front and Henry Hamim: are two names tnat are conspicuous on that petition/
:-v
1 rlitlriil».
.v^.y flitille tn
:..'iDKMOIMSAT.
}t tilt*.
),l(ipO-{t In ^tiprrin-
The county Fiipi'i-inO-ndents in scission at lndiaiiapoiiH a ioi.'ted the rule to hoid examinations on the layt Saturday of each month. A general awraue of 71 per cent, wiin no examination falling below'.'.") percent, will (ntitle the applicant too lnontha' lieen=e. An average of r." with no examination belo'v 80. wiil ut11it.- tic applicant to a 21 month's per cent. wr. per cent, uiii entitl" tlie applicant to .'!(! months' licen-e. In resolution^ it :js stated that the amount for county instituten should lie doubled, that the school book
1
applicaa* to
Sioenw.'. An avorait1' of
no
oxumination below -i.")
IW
g|10uld be amended tiiit. the textbooks may be placed in the hands of the
local dealers and that more hiy schools be established in towns and townships.
A simple ivay to remember the differ ence between the harmless Virginia creeper an'l poison ivy is this: If the
v»ne
bersof tho family included two sons, lb' fingers of your hand, you may handie it: if it has only three leaves,beware. seventeen and twelve years old respectively.
has five leaves corresponding to the
Of every man and woman living today at the age of twenty-five, one out of two will live according to the tableo to be sixty-tive years of age.
An Awful Fixli Story. Jere West tells a fish story that pulls the cork clear under the water. Il» is au expert with the fly rod, but the other c1av he concluded to try bait fishing. He and Ed Vaucamp accordingly east out with the minnow sein and made a fairly good ha"l. Among the lot wn? a shiner about luches long. The singular feature of this one little fish is now to be related. In attempting to put nim on the hook a sualte 4,'2 feet long ran out of its mouth and even after being relieved of this delactable article of diet, said little tish was still life size and as large as ever. If Jere didn't tell this for "the whole truth and nothing but the truth" we shouldn't have mentioned it,
I'rinriiniW (if School". The principals for the graded schools of the county as selected =0 far arc as follows:
Ladoga—J. F. Warfel, Supt.: Ceo. Brewer, princij t:i of high school. Waveland—'Walter Dunn.
Waynetown—Ci. B. W eltv. Darlington -Ceorge Huitz. Linden—A. S. Fraley. Wingate—Chas. Harlan. New Koss James LiUiu-gtield. Ma:e—W. B. Waikup. Brown's Valley--H M. Bobertson. Shannondaie--Edgar Siavens. .,
A Srvi'ii Potiuil Hr.***'. 1 )n last Saturday Hurry Campbell, a young lad who is the envy of all crack anglers, in town, walked up from the creek wivh a handsome specimen of bass that lacked but a few ounces of weighing pouncis. The bass measured two feet in length from snout to tail tips, and Harry sold him for oO rents. Harry is accordingly entitled to the c'J. prize oilered by the State Fish Commission for the largest bass caught in any Indiana stream weighing over pounds.
Chl'.drsn ©ryfo?
Pitcher's Castoria.
During the last ten years Maine has added eight thousand square miies to its area of settlement.
yothincr Strange,
Intelligent people, who realize the important part the blood holo? in beeping the body in a normal condition, tind nothing strange in the number of diseases Hood's Sarsaparilla is able to cure. So many troubles result from impure blood, the best way to treat them i~ through the blond. Hood SarsupaiHla vitalizes the blood.
Hood's Vills arc the hest after-dinner 1'iiis. assist digestion, prevent constipa tion,
A lioston woman speaks of a dirt, wagon as a "real estate conveyance.:
l\?rs Statement.
I. and I earn
It is estimated that there arc two million chickens hatched in the United States every year, but not more than one-had' ol these reach the size lor market. Cholera, gapes, pip. etc., kill millions every year. All those diseases are ouiekiy quiekly cured by the use of Wells' llonsier Poultry l'owder. Price ,e.ta..--- Sold 1\- N've liooe, MlHtn
1,'ev. Nathaniel cently on.buned aman in iJaltimurt:
I fid. .-
Carter, wbo ivas re a Lutheran clo'L'yis the lirst colored
man tbi".:oi!i a noi.it-i er of that denum iiiatiou in Marxlantl. !le is 2S years okl ami a native of Virginia.
For ve
tab plants', see Kratise waul, .lust
or jjottei. linii von
-ithor
loud of palms that .: up.
btdtii'd
Crist'.' Any
received a" car
1 ro 25,.cents on
Cry for
Children
Pitcher's Gastonau
It is f=ai»i to co^t. (ireat Britain to scrape the barnacles olf tin* bottom ot one of inen-of war and ii- paint it, :,a(id this iias to b- doci. twice a year tin case of nearly every vessel.
1)i-it'-uipei- and oiinln •es, sheep and do^^ positively
In hoi' prevenleil and quickly cured by usin^ (..'raft's disteaip.-r and cou^h i.-or Sale to use iind"i' all conditions. One dos prevents, one bott cures, in three tosixdays. Semi for "Trea'-ise" and testimonial from breeders who have used it for maiiv voars. Address the Wells Medicine Co. Lalaveite,
Fourth of Juiy Excursions Via Vandaba Line at half fare. Tickets will be sold tin .July lid and 1th. good to return until .July oth. ISO 1. ine usive, between all stations within two h..,idred miles of initial point. Tickets wiil also be sold to stations on eonnectir..: lines on same basis as above. For full particulars call on nearest Vandalia Line 'I icket Atren* or address •J. CNI-.MUior.II. A. C. P. A.
The fine=t cabinets at Lnwson'"
1 vol
will.
Digestion
We have bought tlie Henry Sloan grocery at a figure en abling 11s to sell good gi'oc-: ., •K:' cries at a price that will vV make you smile. W are a know what the trade needs. /,
Our line ot
Dried and Canned Goods
can't iic excelled. your Produce it will buy. Henrv Sloan is with us.
6 B.iliUKKS 0
All the time and the onlv
In the citSr at tiro™
Y. M. C. A.
B:\ Iil3Ei ,SHr.
A flew Feature
011-
Chiidrers Ory for Pitcher's Oastori-a*
Beginning Saturday.'"May 5th. wc will inaugurate, a
which will ic .-j. d.:iuit dav
re all now prices belt
.suable nnd l-'ctition.
I. OTTO,
ill .South W'.ish 1 n'aton' Street'.
TO
Mountains, Lakes
A
LI
VIA -V .:TV-VV
Four Route
i, ,' H1' txui'int line to l'ul-in •all I.ake trio Islnna^ via Sandusky Lstke hai»ati. uH. Nlncarn Pulls. Si. l,a«runcj Kivor. lious-ttml WamN, 1 fikiV* pii.ii.,, A'tiroii lacliH, (irei-n ui.l Wliit" l'"". Now l-.nplanil liesortM, ,\• \v Vorli ami I
S
'ita. via ciiiciijo.
,H
,'n
n. in....Daily p. in a. in
St. Louis. Mo.
a
Don't pay larce doctor's bills. The best medical book published, 100 pages elegant colored plates, will bo sent 1o you on receipt of three 2-cent stamps to pay postage. Address A. P. Ordway way it Co.. Boston. Ma«s.
1:15 p. in..
PAINT
FOR
irmg us
idjjsee what.
Milt Williams & Bro.
.51 ccial
Window itale!
Hy filling our show every Saturday with desirable pieces of
window new and
Jewelry, Watches,
Wise msin. lev,-a ana'
llarljir''l:""' ,.-"«:ui^'tn.i.,vla lien Ion:
«j'' Michigan, via ii
YE'I I"') on your vm-aticm sen
thai yo,i:- n,
IlllH via
„iK ,,
our
u. o. .trcoit.fiM K, i. u. HAUTIN, I a«s«iis«r 1 vallle M'gv. iv--iii-'iuii I I iiuu.
it
a
\M
n'roun^vu. Kill Ji.
cracks.—It
often costs more to prepare 7
house for repainting that has bec'i painted in the first place with
cheap
ready-mixed paints, than it
would
to have painted it twice with
strict
ly pure white lead, ground in pure linseed oil.
Strictly Pure White Lead
forms a permanent base for repainting and never has to be burned
scraped off
on
or
account of scaling
or cracking. It is always
smooth
and clean. To be sure of
getting
strictly pure white lead, purchase any of the following brands: "Anchor," "Southern," "Eckstein," "Red Seal." "Kentucky," "Collier."
COLORS.—National Lead Co
*«T
p.
Wliiie Lead TintiiiK Colors, a one-pound vi to 1 2,s-poiiml keg of Lead and mix voiir irnii paints. Saves time and annovancc in matchuV shades, and insures the best paint that it siMe to put cn wood.
Send us a postal card and jet our linok paints und color-card, free it wiil piobabh .- you a good many dollars.
NATIONAL LEAD CO., New Vc:i:, i, Cincinnati r.rancii. Seventh and Freeman Avenue, Cincinnati.
ir*! Clana Night and Day Service berw»»n
OLE DO,
OHIO,
AN D(
ST. LOUIS, MO.
E E A I O A S DAY TRAINS-MODERN EQUIPMENT THROUGHOUT.
VEST IB LED SLEEPING
hi
FRAP M'GALIP.
CARS
NIGHT TRAI
6.
&B-M£ALS SERVED EN ROUTE, any hour 4f OR NtQHT, at mc derate cost.
for tickets via Toledo, Si. Louis & Kansas City
r1.
,• Vt*jf
hr\ -n-
mil doiw corn-
U* "ST.
1
p. m.
'-\o-pt sunJay) Daily Iia'ily— S: I".I a. NI-
.. 1^: jo a. tn.
n.nly (i.xci..),t Sun.layi 1:]r, p, in 1. E.UOIHNSON, Airent.
WALL STREET!
To Operate SUCCESSFULLY inWALLSTREEl
anil Hallv
tlVa«»• O Ulfthestreferenco.
& CO.
G:aA
'1l .riroactviy,
AND STOCK
BROKERS.
"NTVTY^ City,
fl.
CLOVER LEAF ROUTE.
For further particular*, rail on n»ar»Jt A.gent of the Company, or ahlro** C. C. E N IN S 'rCBenl I'tMropfi Air»nt,
TOLEDO. OHIO.
-THE-
a
LINE.
No. iuy.................. v. in. A" 1 i:.\jiiCoe» :n. No. W Mail ... nl.
NOKTH BOl Nl).
•'J Mail..'.. \A* Kspre.-:-- .... No. :6 Daily ...
4
tioo 1 »I5 l' !i
-2 m.
UM'aU'
iJ i\i '•-$ *1
and Mm ilij» V,rfc *o )i, .% U'h.. niUAlntf- •1 nu«M2 W. r^elJpui pf iut^.
,\
sj in.
K. A MT IND N.
0 p.
Kxp»no All
)0 \K.
FTUI) at L.iiHli'II, LNILOLM. iOiil:£Hofii-T. MnMirlit .-any JIN.-T-'iitrers. [,. ,\. 1 1.A1:K. Air-iiL
X- ii
EE
ari'l.
O" 1-ia Ciovclainl, l,ai shore, New York Vri»tialiofl ]-.OKtuii .V Albany UnihvayK. To the !i regions of Aliiiin
TRIAL!
tt cut vouth'iVi l"
b-fe? 1 iI s. cell-. I'U N.'rvni,. I'ill.H will i, I\ I'v iis asi- tlioiismiils of ..! Ui \iy I klit'l una sf lontr smiiilinf linv.' biv i- -.'I'm. ]porioci •]tli. lr Hiousmi'l t.-^t::ti-i!ln!" nil ovi-r tin' uorli.1. I'rlff? p"i' |iiu.'K't" il.'" 1'ri'i 1 -•••.•no ly
1 to in Is
!'or?5ii(). Trwil 'v I for 10 «N'nts pv«ta{r*\ Srxftl** A'I'ln»ss. T}i.» ouM liom^'lial
N. W. Cor. Wnbusli Ave. and Iv'th
Montion this p/inor. IIUVIKO, iJl•l in
A G-r&/!k.]Wr3 OFFER!
I? A. aUPPERT'S il® FACE BLEACH 1YIME. A. RUPPERT pnys: "I npprcriato th*'I tljjit tlioro nro ninny
t-JnKt.u.
irtnU'stliat woiiM Itkot-jix? my »iiu»Hcnownt»l lii.KAni: tint bovo• Ufpt iT'*m clulnu so onnntof per b(*ttK*nr bottlus =•. touothor, Id nriflf. that all »»f LhOftQ m: nn opportunity, I wiU uivo. to every cnllor,
lroo. Fmnpln nna tsupply
Ce.
th«'se«''Jt
of city, it In any pnrt»f
-World.Thrill pond ittinl'olr packed In plain wntpp1'^ all clmr*£cfl prepuKI, lor centM, silver or Htauip.
In every case of i%r«rc.'kh»«, pimples,moih. 1 owners, black )eads, acne.
cc£enin,j»lllnerH,r»nL'n#
neHH, or any discoloration or disease of tin* and wrinkles (not caused by facial e.vpr« **l,m FACH KLEACIT removes absolutely. It
,|F,J
cover up, as Cornelia* do, but is a cure. A»Mrc?3 MAIIAM I: A, utPPKirr.(ik'pt.o NO. 6 East I4t.h NEW YORK CI1i
Cloanses and th- naif. lVunutfV a iu^uriixtit
Al
Never Fails to KcBtoro, «ray Ilntr to itr» Youthful Cc'.cr. PCALP DISONF'-A A: !u»ir RAMNG. and t\t
"ho Consumptive and Toetoie r.mi »ti -••r frtirn ''vlmusfiim ilisc-nwe* slu^uNI list1 Parker trl onlp. It ruivf
vmsl
Couch, W.'slk n01'.!,',,5.-.
jcp. neiMiuj.
»t'. Pv'ni.i^ W'-aWi.'-M, Jl)n'un«a-i-na»i,Jl'ain.(
