Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 10 August 1895 — Page 7
Over Thirty Years Without Sickness.
Mr. H. WKTTSTKIN, a well-known, enterprising citizen of Hyn n, Hi., writes: "Hofore ud niueli attention to regulating the bowels, I hardly knew well day but since learned the evil results of constipation, and the ellicaev of
AYER'S
Pills, have not had one day's sickness for over thirty years not one attack
that did not readily yield to this remedy. My wife had been, previous to our marriage, an invalid for years. She had a prejudice against cathartics, but as soon as she began to use Ayer's Pills her health was restored."
Cathartic Pills
Medal and Diploma a! World's Fair.
Jo Restore Strength, take Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
Ihc-tr:-
& a
W.1
5 O.0t|
•picti'
ORES VITALITY.
ir &
I ist "ay. /f Well Man
THE GREAT 30th 1 a /. |pH.^3NrOX3C DE |proUH «'S h«* uhovr results in !lO l:iys. It acts |l -..riiilly and *juickly. ur» all otlnTf fail. jiiiiLf in oil will rt'uain their
IOM
Offer Superior Accommodations for reaching the Great Resorts of the "tilth during the winter, and the cool
Northern Resorts during the summer, pfmnecting at Louisville with all points to the ....
ud at Chicago with all points to the porth and North-west. Elegant dinand Parlor Car attached, and Jleeper on all through trains.
TRAINS ARRIVE AND DKI-ART: |HT1, ,. SOUTH. f'5a. tn. ... ."Night Express, 1:50 a in.
1
Passenger (no Btop.-j,. 4.17 ft. m. Express /ill slops) 1:40 p. in.
Fw''' Local Freight «J:15 a, m.
'or full information address, L. CUUIK, Agent, Crawfordsville, N. FRANK. J. RKF.D, Gen'l Pass. k'1 W. H. MCDOEL, General Hanker.
NEW TRUSTEES
Time in Getting Here.
Ihe eleven old township trustees down t'llicial cares mi Monday last,
AND
the new
DIH'P
tirst business of tin- new ixiard ,ts the Domination of a coin.'y school superintendent to take the nee of
Scllinu iur-.i innv.
IViade a
Me#
manhood, and old
lei will rocoviT tlit*ir yotiihiui vipor by using |j:rVl VO. It fjulckly and MJivly restores Nervous|t«». Lof-t Vitality, ImpnuMicy. Nightly Kmi.ssionp, |t- -t I'ower. Failinc Memory, WaMiiu: Dis» aes.aud
I cJi-cib ot s»elf-abUH'! or excess atid indiscretion, it unfits one tor Kttidy. business or marriage. It only cures by starting at the h» nt ol dif«-a«\ but Ii.caeroat nervo tonic aud blood builder, bring* li:.c t'3'k the pink j^low to pair chocks and re* |ft•••ifij? the Arc of youth. It wards otf/nsanity ssi Consumption. Insist on having IIKV1VO, no
It can bo carried in vest pocket, 13y mail, 181.00 per package, or Bis lor $5.00, with a posl ttivi? written guarantee* to cure or refund Rho money* Circular free. Addn-F? ROYAL MEDICINE CO., 63 River St.. CHICAGO, ILL.
I'OI: SALI
Nye lsooc,Cni\vtord*vUlo, Indj/ina
E A A S S E
9
GRATEFUL-COMFORTING
O
BOILING W A T" OP.
-THE-
Moil on Route
It was lately discovered that some persons in Rush and adjoining counties were selling the questions that every month are placed in the hands of the school superintendent of each county to be answeredt by applicants for school licenses the same day in which they are given out. The Indianapolis News sa\s: "Superintendent of l'uhc Instruction (looting has received information that some one has been selling teachers license questions again. Recently the questions have been offered for sale in several counties southeast of Indianapolis. It is said at tho department that the questions must have come from .some County Superintendent, but as yet the department has not bfen able to locate the guilty person. As a precaution against the questions being olTered for sale the department has arranged that hereafter the questions being offered for sale tho department has arranged that hereafter tho questions shall bo sen* out in a linen lined envelope. The envelope will bo sealed and tho seal of the state upon it, and must be opened by the County Superintendent on the morning of the examination in the presence of at least three teachers of the county. These witnesses wiil certify to the department that the envelope was opened in their presence.
H'Kilnnu llicr I'm- ofsirvrii.
The city council of Frankfort Friday night passed an ordinance regulating the use of the streets, etc. A 6'20 is imposed for unhitchiDg a horse and leaving a vehicle on the the open square 810 tino for feeding in a box within in a box within two blocks of the publtc square ?10 fine for rack longer-than five consec* utive hours, and #20 for plying tho vocation of horse-trading on tho public square. Merchants and business men aro prohibited from occupying more than three feet of the sidewalk in tho display of goods. Tho ordinance also removes all peanut and fish stands.
Well I'lrasrd. Tho Frankfort Crescent Says: "Tho next Red Mens meeting will beheld at Covington, though Frankfort was asked to take it. Tho local order concluded it would wait another year before inviting them to the local hunting grounds. All who attended from here
Ai:i'::iion (j.
I Lovv allace has consented to
MEFT mwnMUTAmT, e.ni.mHnd tbe Montgomery county batMhET ND NOMINATE A SCHOOL '^°ofO. R. comrades at the Louisville encampment Sept. 11, 12 and 13- It is probable that comrades from a lj linini* counties will join the bat-
SUPERINTENDENT.
But His Official Career May be Some
|'di m. At the meeting of McPherson 1 of-1. No, next .Saturday night, Aug. •J, the matter will be presented, and a i-'B in the county are requested
coin'a
were n.stallmJ. The
H»
,J.
s. Zook
next month if the St.| reino Court so decides-. The republic, i, thirst for office wab strongly phown ic tho number of fellows who wanted tiiis ollice. Here they are: \V. I J. Uouii:un, D. 11. Ciilkey, l-'reii Maxwell. Walter Slavens, E. E. Vanscoyoc, Ward Walkup, W. \V. Ewing and Cerire llrewer. Each individual had friends working for him, and a number of balloting were hehl. W ith teachers and the public Ewit:s» was jfiierally the choice, with politicians and tln republican ring Uerw. was the Iavorite and he nomination. Tho nomim of the Iiadoira .Schools, sch ilar, and if ho tecures
Did Nu!
is principe
the posit ion I
by favorable decision of the .Supn me Court, will give satisfaction. He a however, liave to wait a couple of veai. in which event ho would stand a u-ior. chance through the nomination made this week.
A* was asserted not near as manv stores were closed on last Sunday as on the veek before. Some opened for at. houv or two in the morning and then e!os-i.l, others remained open the entire
Mct
receive. the
eri'h saloons di,L Mo^'of "tir'Ine'it "f
u.itr'et= we,-. ,,,n ."'
nl
a thorough! V' 7
iSunl )Jr'tn
ljusln, ss
Ale ,m, HP
C( to do Bo
r»|i:il.| To 111
Hon. Thomas M. Patterson, the well known criminal lawyer and owner of the Rocky Mountain News, of Denver, was at the -'aimer Mouse yesterday with his wile and daughter. Mr. Patterson is a radical Populist, and. al hough fighting the "Grand Old Anarchist aite in the nominating con\ention, was his most ardent supporter in the campaign. He is a prominent, silver advocate, but is better known over the country as a member of the bar. lie holds the reputation as one of tho most eminent criminal practitioners in the west.--Chicago Inter-Ocean.
I.ill- IiiMiirnni'i- 1'uiil. Mr. Morgan on Monday paid to Mrs. Martha Truitt, the amount of insurance due on the life of her husband from the jrtlrwestern Life Insurance Co. of Milwaukee. This is a total of over .h!,.)00 paid to Mrs. Truitt from three companies, and as he has been dead only about one month indicates promptness that is commendable on the part of the insurance companies.
Snyder's. .1111 Holilii-it.
A.
J. Snyder it Son's mill, at Vountsville. was robbed Saturday night. Flour, raxors. and many other articles were stolen. The postoflice matter was left untouched, xhey gained entrance from a rear door. Xo clue to the robbers has yet been found, and it is supposed to be the
-.vork
IN. V.UU OUCLIUL-U HUM SEVERELY
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of homo talent.
Miitliinil Prcpnriug lor
HIINIIH-NS.
President Crawford, of the Chicago A Southeastern railway, better known as the I ndianaMidland,has announced that the extension to Brazil from Waveland will be opened for general business on Aug. 1 fore, but the president says this is defi nite.
rlodlliltfi- (:,
u,t
WU,! fr ,J
,r niLr a Hi the
1,ver-
the entire dav. J'hi these places say. very general
T--
Dates have been named be 1 S
Ire ('renin Snrinl. rin* young people of Otterbeic church will pve an ice cream festival at \V. A Davis'grove two and one-half miles south of Crawfordsville, on tho Greencastle road, Saturday, August 10th. Music and refreshments of all kinds. All are invited.
A special from Marion regarding tho Clodfelter electric railway, under construction from Marion to Anderson says: "Work on the Clodfelter electric railway irom Marion to Indianapolis has been su-pended at this point, and it is rumored that Noah J. Clodfelter ie no longer connected with the enterprise, He is now in ork City, ancl it is thought that the next ten days
to be present, at least each Post should bring to light something new in this
represented For information re- undertaking. At a secret meeting held rr^'railroad fare, hotel rates, quar- at Fairmount last week, it is rumored r*. C" communications addressed to that representatives from eastern par(.omraoe Chas. M. Travis, l.'rawfords- ties were ])resent and olTered. under viI If, 1 ml., will rvccivG prompt attention certain conditidns, to take hold of the US he has been appointed to take these 1 road. matters in harul. C. W. EI.M.,1:,.
L-A. FOUTK. Adjutant. Loin. McITierson P(jst.
Some think tho head of the new
.company will bo Congressman Tom Johnson, of Cleveland." Clodfelter is not in New ork as the Fpocial states, but was here this week. Whether he is out of the work or not is r.ot ki own to a certainty at this time.
VVHITTIER'S BOYHOOD.X
Th
Jullkcr 1,,ot
1,11,1 b,,t
n11 If,..... tl.m In His Youth.
lM
«"nt Instrnc-
y"
1,00 nYhi,til h:ul in
for the district school was
open only a few weeks in winter^Ho
.| "I'eu lew weens winter. -He
had bnt lawbooks there were Parody
closed at all during 30 in the house. The one book he read
proprietors of all and read again tiriril he had it by heart
tllilt 1
aliiK.st was the Bible, and the Bible was
hereafter on always 1 he book which exerted tho
hefure the "(Jo.id strong,st literary inlluence upon him.
ii/.'.*ns l.oague began its crusade. But whfii lie was 14 a teacher canio ami .vid not clyse.,,,ou,. .Sunday unless who lent him books of travel and opened Prices, and a well selected assortment of Spectacles at tho Jewelry store ot
a new world to him. It was this teach er who brought to the Whitricrs ouo evening a volume of Burns and read aloud some of the poems, after explaining the Scottish dialect.
Whit tier begged to borrow the book, which wan almost the first poetry he had ever read. It' was this volume of Burns which sot Whittier to making verses himself, serving both as the inspiration and the model of his earlier poetic etiorts. 'The Scottish poet, with his homely pictures of a life as bare and as hardy as that of New England then, first revealed to the American poet what poetry really was and how it might ho made out of the actual facts of his owu life.
Thar book of Burns' poems had an oven stronger influence on "\Yhiuier than the odd volume of The Spectator which fell into the hands of Franklin had on the American author whose boyhood is most like Whittier's. Franklin also was born in a humble and hardworking family, doing early his share of tho labor and having but a meager education, although always longing for learning. It is true that Irving and Cooper and Bry-ant-did not graduate from college, but they could have done so had they persevered. and Emerson and Longfellow and Hawthorne did get as much of tho higher education as was then possible in America. But neither Franklin nor Whittier ever had the chance it was as much as they could do to pick up the merest elements of an education.—Professor Brainier Matthews in St. Nicholas.
Gasparm estimates that the evapora- I tion of water from the surfaco of tho eartJi is from 25 to 50 inches a vear, according to location.
Tho county institute begins' August 31st, and continues for five days. Mr. Johnson, county treasurer-elect,
char of
tem er
hp nreciftont oai-e jr. 1 1 rank II. Arnott and Miss Orace Monroe, of Toledo. Ohio, aro the guests of friends in the city.
Kii-Unl Hy .Mule. mate the efforts of tho Good Citizens' Hei Wilson, an employee in the League to enforce tho law. Under the James Francis' blacksmith shop, was Nicholson
wore more than pleased with their visit breaking it, while assisting Mr. Francis' of intoxicants on Sunday and after 11 p. and spoke htghly of Crawfordsville poo-] shoe a mule on Monday. He will not m., and it is claimed that business is sufplo's ability to entertain." be at work for some time. sering in consequence.
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.»"~w w. noo law the Good Citizens'
kicked on the right arm nearly League has practically stopped thosale6
A SALE WITHOUT A NAME!
Combined Bargain Sale. Clearance Sale. Cost Sale.
Inauguration of- an Immen^ Sale lo Benefit the Public!
Wash Fabrics, Linen Fabrics, "Woolen Fabrics, Laces, Embroideries, Parasols. Fans, Gloves, Lawns, Challies, Dimities, Org-andies, Crepons, Chiffons, Percales, Ducks. Our Immense Stock of Dress Goods and Silks we offer in this Sacrifice Sale.
MYERS & CHARNI.
the office on the 1st of
There are but two weeks remaining of the Normal school. Tho attendance this year has averaged about 65 scholars during the session.
A mass meeting of the citizens was held Friday nighr at Evansville for the avowed purpose of organizing a "liberal league," to make an open fight against the Ciood Citizens' League and to chock
.1* Matvf by
THE LYON
MEDi Co.
SALE
BY ILL
Call at the OldJReliable
Disappearance of a Stomach Trouble* Lyon Medicine Company: DEAR SIRS—For fifteen years I was afflicted with stomach, heart and kidney troubles. I was induced to try
Everything in any of the above lines will he fonml to bo first-class
every particular. Repairing of nil kinds of Jewelry at Reasonable
L. W. OTTO
MI South "Washington St root.
.Water is good for floating boats and bathing roses, but when you want
SOMETHING TO DRINK
CLIPPER
A. MUHLEISON, PROP.
At Home
I N
Our New Quarters
Corner of Main and Green streets. All our friends are invited to call and insphct the new place.
LYON'S SEVEN WON
DERS,
and am more than pleased
at the result. My stomach trouK has disappeared and my heart resumed its normal action. cheerfully recommend it. ,,
ALFRED p/.-'
ORLEANS, IND., July
ecl
Jew €ry,CnlGlas
to Pay
25,
iSguue Bridge or
nursday that tho
Hot Flashes issrt.Tiers would have t.Q To "''ash avenue brir^e or Lfter using ti'A1' to stann a liig pleased to say my ap^,uj,tlK' riorum railturned, the pains have hut it ^POliSmy side, I 110 more experieilavo
10
I hO, flashes and my headaches hav'^d to pay appeared. I am free to say that ade the it not been for LYON'S SEVEvn
foot
ex-
WONDERS I should not be aliv^ by to-day. MRS. LIZZIK JOHNSON.hut 1• ANS,
INII., July
26, JS94.
x-!
Street, Crawfordsville, Ind.
C. L. Rost.
