Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 12 October 1895 — Page 8

v.

OUR

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DARLINGTON.

Fannie Booher is quite sick at present. Ira Booher still has one nice new cottage to rent.

Darlington has a telephone line from Crawfordsville. Tell Cook moved on Kirkpatrick's farm this week.

Morelis Booher was at Crawfordsville Wednesday on business. Miss Mate Lewis, of Chicago, is visiting A. H. Bower and family.

A1 Wood is completing his new residence east of town this week. Mrs. J. W. Jack man is visiting home folks at Bringhurst for two weeks.

Uncle John Hulett is in California, where he will remain for some time. Trade is very quiet at present, but we merchants have a better time coming.

Miss Ella McNichol made a flying trip to Lebanon this week on business. W.B. Linch has bought Finch Bros'. Baw mill. Work still goes on with a hurrah.

The government still has the Vandalia people to deliver the mail to the postoffice. /.•

See Ira Booher & Son if you want robes and blankets. They are in the push for low prices.

Mrs. Brassfield was buried at Crawfordsville laBt Monday. She died Sat urday near this place.

W. II. Booher, the postmaster, who has been laid up for six weeks, is able to go to the office on crutches.

Joe Marshall, of Hoopeston, 111., is home this week shaking hands and having a good time with the boys.

The grocery firm of Guntle & Guntie now reads Guntle & Hiatt, Uncle Johnny closing out to Ira Hiatt.

Winsom Craig and Ossey Chambers both have typhoid faver. They have been very bad, but are improving some cow..

Cox

St,

To you to come to the Trade Palace to see the beautiful new Fall (ioods. The letest effects in Wool Dress Goods and Trimmings. Lovely Millinery and handsome Fall Capes and Coats and Furs. Our Dress Goods and Trimmings are a most superp collection of all the new weaves and novel effects the Eastern markets afford. Tnev are strikingly beautiful.

Knows no competition in Style. Price or Variety. We have lhis season bought lavishly of the new things shown in New York, and the department is replete with lovely Fall Goods and the latest and most artistic

creations in Millinery.

Our Pall Capes 3 And Coats in Purs 3

and Cloth, for Misses, Children and Ladies, are the things. Variety the largest and prices the lowest in the city, and we can confidently say of our new Fall Stock, after having spent three weeks among the best Eastern manufacturers, that we have the right goods at the right prices and we ask everyone to come and see

IM'CLUEE&GEAHAM.I

THE

MODEL" SHOE STOEE

•\Vliile in the city fair week make our store your headquarters. You are always welcomc.

We have the Finest Line of

Boots and. iSlioes

In the city. Everything new and up to date.

McClure is still drilling on

Wm. Black's well. Bill sayB he is getting tired of carrying all his water from the tavern.

O. E. Kelley, of Hillsboro, will preach at the Christian church Saturday night •nd Sunday. All are invited to come and hear him.

IrB Booher has two of his new houseB plastered and another one framed and ready to raise. All three will be comleted in three weekB.

"THE MODEL"

125 N. Washington St. Arms' Old Stand.

Roe Miller was telephoned for from Linden last Wednesday morning to bring hiB hounds, and he went as fast as a livery team could take him.

E. B. Booher will have a public sale on Oct. 22. He will then move to Cerro Gordo, 111., and go in partnership with Milt Mickels in tho hardware businese-

It is said that we are to have a wedding soon and Darlington will have one dress maker lehs, and the old folks will have a preacher connected to the family.

John Kirkpatrick moved to Frankfort last Tuesday. We were Borry to lose Mr. Kirkpatrick, as his family is one of the best, but our loss is Frankfort's gain.

Isaac Larrick went to Maxinkuckee last week to fish and got 11 fine lot of bass. Ike said he went on purpose for them. The^report is that he bought them.

George Sebold, who has had typhoid fever so long, is out hustling for trade in the hardware business, but goes off lame like an old rooster with his toes frozen.

Tom Kelsey gave his company comrades a big dinner last Tuesday. Tom and his wife know just how to entertain old friends and make them feel at home. Seventy took dinner.

Aniel Booher went to Crawfordsville last Monday afternoon and did what business he had to do and then walked home before the evening train. Aniel says he would rather walk home than loaf in Crawfordsville.

Our new school house is progressing very slowly. We think they could not have found a set of men that would have come half way up with the ones who have laid the brick work for drunkenness. If sober men had been employed the house might have been completed and ready for school or in a short time, but as it is we will not have school here December if that soon.

When Baby was sick, we gave he Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave them Castoria.

Children Cry for

Pitcher'sCastoria.

Your horse will be Bhod at reasonable figures and with the utmost care, if you take it to J, A Pierce, corner Green and Market streets. tf

Gold Nugget*.

The structure of gold nuggets was the subject of a paper recently read before the New South Wales Royal society by Professor Liverbridge. Among other facts stated was tho peculiarity of such nuggets, on being cut through or sliced and polished nud then etched by chlorine water, of exhibiting a well marked crystalline structure closely resembling tho figures shown by most metallic meteorites. On heating such nuggets in a Bunsen burner blebs or blisters form on both the polished and unpolished surfaces, and on s411 more strongly heating these in sumo cases burst with sharp reports, and pieces of gold are projected with considerable violenco. As no explosions have been obI served on dissolving or eating away the I crusts of these blisters by chlorine water it is thought that the blebs may probably be due to tho evaporization of some liquid or solid substance. Further, in slicing some nuggets, scattered granules of quartz were met with inside, although quite invisible outside. At first it was supposed that such explosions might be duo to the quartz, but the gas in some instances continued to issue from the burst bleb—where tho aperture formed was small—and forced the

Bunsen flame out into lateral, just as if urged by a blowpipe.

Tho Suinonn Mascot.

In time of war it is tho tapo's duty to lead on to combat the warriors of her village, and she is often in the thick of the skirmishing, but should she be wounded or killed it is a pure accident, as the Samoans have the greatest horror of hurting a woman in any way, and would not even injure tlieir enemy's tapo. There is a story told of how, during the war which was carried on in Upoln for a considerable time, five or six years ago, two armies had met and were drawn up, blazing into each other's lines, when a native woman appeared with a cow she wished to place in safety. The entire firing was immediately suspended on both sides till she and her charge had crossed the lines and were completely out of harm'sway.

Tho women could rely so thoroughly on the gallantry of their countrymen that they had no fear during the fighting, and would take food to their husbands and brothers at anytime, and pass through the ranks of the warriors of the belligerent army with perfect impunity as long as the daylight lasted and they could be easily seen they were quite 6afe.—"In Stevenson's Samoa," Marie Fraser.

Engraving on Glass.

A most ingeniously contrived machine for engraving on glass, insuring the rapid and economic production of decorative work in that line, as also in metal manufactures of every variety, is described in The English Mechanic. Among the merits claimed for this device is the fact of there being no limit to the number of objects that may be operated upon simultaneously, with a perfect uniformity of workmanship, and further, the facility with which this machine, being of 12 multiplying power, can be operated upon and replaced with fresh objects, is another important characteristic, and three different patterns may be produced in one hour on a single machine. The construction of this apparatus fulfills the desideratum of great simplicity, it would appear that is, the globes, or whatever is to be engraved, are fixed on platforms in two upright cylindrical forms, these platforms being raised or lowered as desired by means of a handle, and the engraving needles are applied or let off by a touch of the treadle—the pattern to be followed resting on a board at the back.

Where Franklin Flew His Kite. Colonel Enoch Taylor of this city, speaking of the researches of tho savants into the vagaries of lightning, remarked that probably there were few people who ever gave a thought when they crossed Spring Garden street in the vicinity of Thirteenth street that they were walking over the spot where Benjamin Franklin flew his kite. Yet such is tho fact. A diagonal line from the southeast corner of what is now known as Thirteenth street to Spring Garden will about cover the space in which "Poor Richard" drew lightning from tho clouds. It was a bare field then, with a few farms and country houses scattered around. Bostonians fondly imagine that it was on Boston Common Franklin conducted his experiments. That's a mistake. It was in the Quaker City and on the spot referred to. —Philadelphia Times.

Daudet.

M. Daudet, tho eminent French author, was for a long tiiuo an usher in a second rate school on a pittance which scarcely sufficed to keep body and soul together. After a timo I10 grew sick of this hard and unremuuerativo kind of work, and then made his way to Paris, where he arrived with only a capital of two shillings and a bundle of poems. He was fortunate enough to find a publisher for the latter almost at once, and it was not very long before he obtained journalistic employment, which kept him going until ho found novel writing sufficiently lucrative to provide him with a living. Now ho can command almost any price he likes to ask for his books and articles, and must be a very wealthy man.—Paris Letter.

Bill Nye and Paul M. Potter. It will be ploasant to learn that Mr. Potter's next venture is to bo in collaboration with Bill Nye. They are busy at work on a comedy, which, with Mr. Potter cultured talent for dramatic construction and his experience in stage literature, Nye's crude and inexhaustible humor, his wit and philosophical torn, ought to be a great go.—Chicago NOWB.

Bafltcient Cause.

"I hear Mrs. Youngwife haa doubts her husband*8 sanity?" "For what reason?" "He told her she was a better ooolr than his mother. "—Detroit Fr*o press

Mr8. •James Itean

Muncie, Ind.

After Paralysis

Death Was Expected, But Hood'9 I Sarsaparilla Cured. I The testimonials published in behalf of

Ilood's Sarsaparilla are not purchased. They are written, voluntarily, gladly and gratefully. For instance, read this: "I think it a duty to send this statement of the benefit I have received from Hood's Sarsaparilla. I had a severe stroke 1 of paralysis and lay three weeks without I eating or speaking. The doctor said I

1

would die. After three weeks a friend have me a bottle of Ilood's Sarsaparilla, and when I had taken seven doses I Logan to get better. When I had taken eleven

Hood'

Hood's Pills

Sarsaparilla

ures

bottles I was able to do my work, and am as well today as can be expected. ®I am glad to give Hood's Sarsaparilla praise: I cannot recommend it too highly." MES. J. DEAN, BOX 658, Mnncie, Indiana.

are

purely vegetabe.

SSe,

^aniacl a. Tilden'H L'mbrella. Abrnm S. Hewitt, who was a great friend of Samnol J. Tilden, one day brought into his office an old cotton umbrella, with a broken rib or two and a few holes. It could not have cost over 50 cents. He placed it in the accustomed corner, beside a fino $10 silk umbrella belonging to J. L. Haigh, his partner. When starting homo in the afternoon he walked off with Haigh's umbrella, leaving his own, which Haigh had to use, as it was raining hard. On opening the old cotton affair Haigh noticed a pieco of white tape sewed on the inside near the top, and on going to a light read, "Samuel J. Tilrlen, Gramercy park, New York. Tho next day he returned it to the same corner and said to Mr. Hewitt, "This is Mr. Tilden's umbrella you forgot last night" "Oh, yes," said Hewitt, rising and going after it, "I am very glad to get it back. Mr. Tilden is extremely careful about his umbrella." "But where is my silk one that you took away last night?" Haigh asked. "Oh, I don't know anything about that," was the roply, and that was all the satisfaction that Haigh ever got New York Press.

The Nervy Barber.

I struck a nervy barber down in southern California once. You know they have earthquakes down there 60 often that they don't mind a terrestrial shake up any more than we do a thunderstorm. But for strangers the sensation of having the earth do a sand jig under you is far from pleasant. It makes you lose confidence in the stability oi things.

I was sitting in a barber's chair one day when the windows began to rattle and the floor to heave like the deck of a ship. The barber was a dago of some kind, but he had nerve. I started to jump and run, but he held my head down firmly and said: "Seetpairfectly still, senor, or I might have ze meesfortune to cut you.

And, ding me, if he didn't keep right along shaving, with the shanty rocking like a cradle, and ho never even scratched me. But it scared me so my beard hasn't grown well since.—Washington Post

Sunshine and Disease.

It is rather surprising to bo told that sunshine is not always a promoter of health, and that London fog may be a blessing in disguise. In experiments by Do Renzi guinea pigs inoculated with tuberculosis died after 24 to 89 days when kept in glass boxes in tho sunshine, but survived only 20 to 41 days in opaque wooden boxes. This makes it evident that snnshino is a material aid in combating consumption. In a later investigation by Dr. Masella, however, guinea pigs were inoculated with cholera and typhoid bacilli respectively, when it was found that previous exposure to sunshine increased tho susceptibility to both diseases, while exposure to sunshine after infection so accelerated the progress of tho malady that death occurred in 3 to 5 hours instead of 15 to 24 hours. That this was not due to increase of temperature was proved by cooling the boxes in snnshino by a circulation of water.—London Letter.

Outdoor Work Preferred.

Some years ago a young Irishman was hunting for work among tho fanners of a western town at harvest time.

He made his application to a benevolent looking farmer, who was attracted by the young man's frank, merry face, but was not really in need of extra help. "Can you cradle?" ho asked, after a moment's hesitation. "Cradle, is it?" repeated tho young Irishman in bewilderment "That Oi can, sorr, bein the owldest av 11 childera, but," he added persuasively, couldn't yez give me a job out av dures, sorr?"—Youth's Companion.

Ambitions,

"My hair," remarked the baldheaded man as he rubbed his bare poll in a reminiscent way, "was the most ambitious thing ahout me."

titoingly

re8paQdedhlwofl,nP'lntoQIPe«-

Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov't Report

aiuans. "Ac this very timo I know_a Louisville business man of great oulturo and refinement who is vigorously pursuing an old wooden dosk which ho owned many years n^o—a dosk on which he mado an enormous amount of money by few lucky strokes of his pen. The dosk passed from hand to hand aud out of his possession. Ho is now earnestly endeavoring to traco it aud purohaso it, bolioving that recant business reverses aud hard times will flee awny if ho can only stretch his legs once moro under that samo old desk."—Louisvillo Cou-rier-Journal.

With tho Charcoal Brazier. Many cases of suicido havo,tbus been brought about by means of burning charcoal, of which

0110

examplo may

suffice, that of sou of Borthollet, the celebrated chemist. This young man became affected with great mental depression, which rendered life insupportable to him. Retiring to a small room, he locked tho door, closed up crovices which might admit fresh air, lightod a charcoal brazier, and with a second watch before him notod down tho time, together with his sensations as tho gas accumulated.

FURNISH "NEWSPAPER"CLIPPINGS.

The Business lias Grown to Great Propor» tioiin In New York. There is a peculiar industry in Gotham which has grown to astonishing proportions. This is tho business of furnishing newspaper clippings to individuals, firms and corporations. There are half a dozen of these concerns in New York, which supply customers not only in the United States, but in all parts of the world. One of these newspaper clipping bureaus received an order from tho Hawaiian government to 6end President Dole all the notices, editorials, cartoons and other published matter regarding Hawaii, its government and Its affairs.

Every prominent author, actor, politician and professional man is now a subscriber to one or moro of tho clipping bureaus, and a btu?y man finds the system very convenient, for he is enabled, as it were, to read his newspapers by proxy.

Tho manager of a New York clippLig bureau in speaking of tho peculiarities of his business said yesterday: "Many at

our customers are folks with fads and hobbies. A man sent us an order recently for all items about two headed calves, three legged chickenB and other monstrosities. A leading politician ordered 100 Memorial day. addresses, from which he could compile a Fourth of July oration which he had engaged to deliver. Society belles are beginning to make scrapbooks of their newspaper notices, and the custom will doubtless become a regular social fad in time. The wives of public men are among the best patrons erf the clipping bureaus. About the strangest order we have is that of a dealer in tombstones and monuments. Ho takes all tho death notioes." —New York Oommeicial Advertiser.

Orange Trees.

An orange grove in full bearing is one of the most dolightful sights the eye can witness. The trees are a beautiful shape if left as nature made them. The limbs come nearly to the ground so close that an orange pioker goes under the tree flat on his back and often cuts 100 oranges from the tree before he comes out. Oranges are never picked, but are cut off with shears having a spring between the handles. An orange that has no stem on it is considered a "cull" and is notpackod by a first olass packer.—Pomona (Cal.) Progress.

What the Boston Man Said. "Believe me.-, dear, I love you more than life. I swear by tho honor of my ancestors, by my hopes of happiness, by tho sacred cod"— "Ah, Harold! Now indeed I believ* you!"—New York Rocorder.

Powder

ABSOLUTELY PURE

J^OTICK TO IIK1KS, CKKOITOHS, In the miittor of the Ketate of .)0|,„ i. deceased. In Lho Montcoim.rv il"5',""1-

Soptombor term, 1895.

1

lenn,timl0'Ue0mUry

lr"u"

•M,

Vet soles stay on and thread is strong,

And leather never breaks.

That is What Everybody Says Abont Our New|

I'oui|

Notice is hereby'glvon that Wlui.. ... ns Administrator of the ostato decoased, has presented and nioa u'1 and vouchers In flnnl m-u

ix'0t

aaid estate and that tho same win 21'"' the examination and action of V'',1V Court on tho 2-1 th day of October IM

LRT'

a I

estate are required to appear in si* V." show causo if any thero be. WIU

1

and vouchers should not be apnYor l.olrsor distributees of said 4 fled to be in said Court at tho tim '"1 and make proof of heirship.

WILLIAM T. (il.KNN, Adiuini I Dated thte 1st day of October, lHi.".

^OTICE TO I1KIHS, CHKDIToUs.

K'l\.,

In tho matter of the estate

.Jonew, deceased.

(,r

u,^e

ClrcUlt

l'ourt- **«.,

Notlco Is hereby Riven that Llewellyn jiiipo, us administrator of the estate of i1 Jones deeeaeod. has presentou"*"" tllod his accounts and voii.h,! linal settlement of said c(Uitt' that tho same will come up for ti,,.' inatlon and action of said Circuit Court ?''J 4th day of November, 1895. at which il ,' !.^ ho rs creditors or logatees of said eM.-it-' ar«.l quired to appear In said Court and if any there be, why said accounts

Hnl

should not ho approval, and tho li. lrs

or

„1

tributoes of said ostato are also noUMci.7 sni.1 Court at the timo aforesaid and make

,'rv

ofhoirship. LLK\V LLIA J. COl'l'AGE, Adinini^f^B.r-1 Dated this 1th day of October, ISI.'I.

When In L)oul)

CONSULT THE BE3T.

Ili-nlili IN the (-rciUt'Nt Luxury

of

"\ou \Vnul to Kiijoyjthr I.uxuricof Ufa COIIMIII

Dr. E. J. Wasll

Formerly President of tho Modioli andJarjI leal staff of St. Anthony's Hospital, lmeofci'l cago.

Acknowledged by all as the work!'* fres:« and modt successful Specialist in al! ch:cd and nervous dlseasos of both sexes.

Permanently located In IndtHinpoll?. i:ll Consultation freel Prompt ami ptrmaitq cures.

CATAHKII, ail throat and lung troubles.!, pepsia, Blood and Skin Diseases, as wellKsl affections of the Heart,- Liver, Kidneys u| Uiadder.

MKN-A perfect cure guaranteed In alien of weakness. IF YOU ARE troubled with nervous ileUlitjj exhausting dlsoases, sleeplessness, threAtHirf Insanity »r any other symptoms ol norretueil haustlon, you should consult htm before tof late. Delay is fata!- Varleoceli- positivel! cured in seven days by his lateil painie" me tiled.

KUPTUHE, Plies, Fistula anil iiyteell cured by the only successful method. StrictJ private and confidential.

ONLY CUKABLE CASES TAKKN. Besl references and credentials If y«u can not call, write! All letters must!), addressed to DK. WALSH, INDIANAPOLIS INDIANA.

Office 29 1-2 West Ohio Street, Piel Ulo-.k.«««] Illinois street. Hours: 9 to 13 a. m. 2 to 5 p. in. 7 »e m.

Come early. Delay Is fatal.

WORKING MAN'S SHOE

No Pegs, No Tacks, No Screws! Every Pair warranted not to Kip

Scott-Kinard Shoe Co.

H. W. ARCHIBALD, Manager. Repairing Neatly

Notice to Tax Payers-

The receipts for tho last installcfij of taxes for 1894 are now all miicleHtif the treasurer's office. The last fltj'ol payment is November 4th. l'rfrtieslsi itig delinquent tax unpaid are earctilfl requested to call before that time ul avoid additional expenses bofore ih| books are returned to the auditor.

WILLIAM JOHNSON, Troiieurrt-•

Mr. Feeder has opened a restnrant Ellinwood, Kas.

Tramp