Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 4 January 1896 — Page 4

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Cures

Prove tlic merit of Hood's SursapanUiv positive, perfcct, permanent Cures.

Cures

ot scrofula in severest forms, like goitre, swelled neck, running sores, hip disease, sores in tle eyes.

Cures

of Salt Rheum, with its intense itching and burning, scald head, tetter, etc.

Cures

of Boils, Pimples ami all other eruptions due to impure Mood.

Cures

of Dyspepsia and other troubles where a good stomach tonic was needed.

Cures

of Rheumatism,where patients were un

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able to work or walk for weeks.

Cures of Catarrh ly extolling the impurities which cause and sustain the disease.

Cures

ot Nervousness by properly toning and feeding the nerves upon pure blood.

Cures

"f That Tired Keeling by restoring

strength.<p></p>Hood's

Send for book of eures by

Sarsaparilla

To C'. I. Hood & Co., Proprietors. I.owell, Mass.

J« r»«ii are the best after-dinner

HOOCl S HlllS

pills, aid digestion. 25c.

T"1 Rkvii w.

F- X. C.USE

dSi UIPTIO

On»year, tue const). Oncyear.ouiofthe courity, Ingutrcat Office for Atvertline-if.eR-

$1 DO 1 l'1

JANUARY 4, 1396.

Court convenes on Monday fiext. The winter season of tho city schools begins on Monday next.

John Hardy, bout and shoe drummer, Indianapolis, was in town thi6 week. Elijah Z.ickery, aged ~n years, living near the junction, died on Tuesday night.

Paul &, Vancleave have removed their law oflice to rooms over Joel's clothing store.

Remember the democratic convention at the court house this afternoon at 1

o'clock.

The Davis livery stable on west Pike street is to be enlarged to twice its present size.

Tho P. O. S, of A., gave their annual bail on New Year's which was largely attended.

T, W.Irons has purchased the feed barn and grounds upon which it stands, north of the Nutt House.

A "railroad wreck clothing sale'" has opened for business in the Ornbaun Dlock, west side of the square.

Miss Myrtha Ilerzog, daughter of Morris Herzog, formerly of Waynetowc waB married at Covington, on Wednesday evening.

Mr. John Hell was married Minnie Liter at tho residence of her father, three miles Bouth of town, on Tuesday evening.

The ''Sowing the Wind" theatrical troupe, of which Mrs. Aletha Underwood is a member, is playing a week's engagement at Louisville. "Clearance sales'" are tho order of the day now among tho merchants, and many lines ot goods aro to be had much cheaper than a month ago,

Erank Dice and W. F. Hunt have formed a partnership for the practice of law. Their ofiice will be in the Joel block, south Washington street.

C. L. Kraley living near Linden, was robbed Monday night of ?S0. The burglars entered by cutting out a pane of glass. The blood hounds were not gent for.

Harry Duckett, the democratic circulator, who was taken to his sister's homo at Muncio to battle with an attack of tho mumps, is reported to be. seriously ill with the disease. -Anderson Democrat.

The Craig Kinder elevator at Darlington, which has been closed for some weeks o:i account of the ileath of the junior partner of the lirin. has been leased to Sellers it Atkinson, of Frank fort.

Sleepers were much annoyed Wednesday at midnight by the fools who, onco each year, think it necessary to rirg bells to lei the public know that the old year is passed anil a now one before them. 15oys runninir and jumping on fast goinsr sleighs on tin* streets take yreut risks, an that some have not been injured is marvelous. The practice should be prevented and a few arrests would do it.

Come to the new siore on the corner, 2J1 south Washington street, opposite ithohe hurch. for uroceries, nice new and frech and cheap. Any thing \ou need, liring ua produce, lie sure to call on us. J. H. LAW IT SON.

Death iHrs. .1* V. Mrs. John V. Galey died Wednesday at her home oil South Washington 6treot at tho ago off/.! years. Tho funeral services took place this morning and tho remains wore interred in the Ouk Ilill cemetery,

Road the Big Store clearing ad.

Zf:i££

THAT COLD NEW YEAR'S DAY.

An Impressible Incident of it in this County-

It was exactly 32 years on Wednesday since that cold Isew Years dav—Jan. let., 1861. It Wd3 a day indelibly stamped on the memory ot all old enough to have a recollection extending that many years past. The thermometor ranged from 28 to Ifc! degrees through

Indiana, a'id as cold a day has not been known rir.ee. No one ventured out oi the house unlesss absolutely compelled to do so. As it was, hundreds of persons throueh the west and north-west, who v.ere compelled to, were badly frozen, while many lost their lives. Stock by the thousands of herds perished from the intense cold. An old settler talking about it this week, •'poke of terrible tragedy resulting from Uie in tense cold of New Year's day, 18(31. It took place in the Kincade neighborhood of Brown township, A small school was being held in that neighborhood on that day at which theie were not more than ten or twelve scholars in attendence. At the close of school in the afternoon the scholars at once sarteil for homo. Three of them in age ramging from 8 to 10 years soon became ^hillod and benumbed with cold, and ran into a fence corner by the side of the road to protect them from the chilling winds which seemed to penetrate the bidy with the keenness of a knife. Late that night parties out with lightB to find the absent scholars, walked up to the fence and there found them frozen stiff, the three having died before the rescuiug party had reached them.

An Arties- .*]nui«e.

In the south of Ireland a short time Ago a prominent gentleman was elected to the eojo.ieishi] and very naturally was proud (.1 tho honor which hud been confi'nvd noon bin:. When he earrii 1 the news «.t i::.s ol*M:*nn to Ithoj!:e, approved his wii« in a very dignified m-.ini,: i' ,:iu I "ilv I is rh-' 'rd coroner today, and tl.eie is so:*. king I wish to say to you. In the future 1 wish you cease talnmg so much with the servants and tissu:. the tv bw ming th wife of a i:i«h pnl lie otlicial. Do you nnderstaiid.'1 "Yes, Tom. Oh, I'm so glad that yon have been made a coroner! Just think'

Mrs. Brown and all tho rimitlis will be calling to seo me!" Ami her eyes fairly blazed with delight.

After revolving the matter in her mind and cackling with pride as only a woman can slie suddenly exclaimed: "Oh. Tom, if you are a coroner, I suppose I shall be a coroneress, won't I?"—Liverpool Mercury.

The story is told of a famous mathematician that he was frequently guilty during his courtship of walking the greater part of a mile with the young ludy of his choice without speaking.

One evening shn took advantage of his absentiiiindedness to play him a trvk. She slipped her hand from his arm and hurried home a nearer way.

to Mic-3' continued to hold his arm in tho same position, walked up the steps of her father's house, and rang the bell, whon, to his astonishment, she herself opened the door. Ho stared in an incredulous manner and exclaimed, "Why,

S how in the world did you get on that side of the door?"

Prevarication.

Mother—You've been into that jam again: Truthful Son—No'in, I haven't. I'll declare I haven't

And he chuckled at the thought that his mother had not. accused him of putting tho jam into him.—New York Herald.

A man wl: gets mad at what the newspapers -ay of him should return thanks three Mines daily for what, they know about iiiin, but don't say.—Carter Countv

Hukle.

Sensibility would be a good fortress, if she had but. one hand with hor right she opens the door to pleasure, but with her left to pain.—Colton.

meansthe prevention of scores of cases of colds, coughs, bronchitis, pneumonia, and consumption. Wet feet do not directly make the germs of consumption appear in the lungs but they do cause coughs and colds and inflammation of the throat and lungs weaken the whole system. In this condition the germs of consumption find just the soil •in which to work.

Scott's Emulsion

Exchange.

of Cod-

liver Oil, with Hypophosphites, is a most valuable remedy for restoring the system to health before thes? germs get the upper hand.

SCOTT'S IvMt'i.PION* has been endorsed by the medical profession for twenty vears. (Ask your doctor.) This is because* it is always palatable—always uniform—always contains the purest Aoruegian Cod-liver Oil and J/ypophosphites. l*ut up in so cent and $i.oo sizes. The small size may bo enough to cure your couch or help your baby.

sf^ _i~i

4-wsh*@iVy22#

Hcnf Sympathy Is Marred.

Sympathy, beautiful and pure, is apt to be

marred by

its

true

It

being prompted

merely by a sense of duty, and thus ita

and natural spontaneity is veiled.

is true that the habit becomes second nature to us, nnd by habit we may and do develop honorable and charitable sympathy with all suffering,

but

the

truly sympathetic are so born, and it is as impossible for thus to enshroud their true desires and witions as it is "to soil a sunbeam by a touch." It is iu the late youth and mature years that, as a rule, we see its most splendid achievements. In childhood it is apt to be in abeyance.

In the old age of prod people its boauty is enhanced, ami yet in many instances, in the sear and yellow leaf, all that was of sympathy, what little there might have been, becomes bitterness, and the selfish man clings to what he has gained, coveting wl at he has not, with a tenacity which baffles description. All his treasures are on earth, and as he knows lie must and shrill leave them, there can be no tern p. 1 hope in him, and his mind becomes centered on that which is of but short: duration. He becomes "earthen," and the rest of his days are spent in sordid contemplation of what at best is but an idle dread.—

An Egg With a Golden Yolk. A characteristic story is being told of a well known Parisian actor who recently found himself in a small town iu the south of France, where an entertainment was about to be given for the benefit of the poor. One of the promoters begged him to take part in it, a proposition to which he readily assented, and no sooner did his namo appear on the bills than tickets went like wildfire, and the success of tho entertainment was something unprecedented.

The mayor naturally felt grateful, and turned over in his prosy and pompous mind what conld be done by way of acknowledgment. He asked the actor to breakfast with liiin and a few friends, and placed before liim an egg in which 10 goldeu louis had been concealed.

The actor took a spoonful, and, discovering the contents, ceased eating. The other guests, who were in the secret, watched him attentively, and the hostess inquired why he did not finish the egg. "Madam," he replied, "I never touch the yolk." "Do you throw it away?" she asked in astonishment. "No I always leave it for the poor.

Tableau I—Paris Journal,

Tho Modern Store.

Obliging Clerk—Ten yards of brocaded satin—there you-«re, ma'am! En'g else—

Customer—Er—yes, a kit of mackerel— "Yes'ni. Send 'em home?" "I see yon have some very fine laceB, I see"— i"The rarest, ma'am. A few yards off this piece?" "Well, yes. Send eight yards and a load of coal"— "Exactly. And tho ribbons?" "Send 20 yards of tho pink and a bale of hay"— "Um-liuh! Now, as to tho wrap. Here's a beauty for"— "That will do. Send it with a bushel of turnips and a barrel of lime"— "So! And the silk muffler—'want- it, think?"

Oh—I—yes yon might send it wirh a thousand lap shingles, a peck of onions, a pair of tongs, a bolt, of cidy cotton and a load of tanbark!"—Cleveland Plain Dealer.

•Short Editorial* In KiiRland. Yes, there is undoubtedly a strong taste just now for books of fiction made up of short stories—sketches, theymi«ht even be called. It is part of the spin* of tho time, which is fond of brevity in every form. Snst see, how the newsj.u-, pers have been affected by this mod •. In my early days the London Times used to thunder in leaders a column and a half long now half a- column often suffices. I think I may claim to be the pioneer in cutting down the length of editorials in England. But in the matter of fid inn it seems evident to me that the mental processes which produco a sustained, complete and logically elaborate novel arc very different from those employed in the writing of a collection of episodes, even though they be of a common type as regards scene ami characters. Some of your American writers do this sort of work admirably. —Hall Caine. -.. ..

A fIol«'.(-ii I"l«or.

King George II wis once invited out to dine with a wealthy and eeeeut-ric old duke, who possessed more money than he very well knew what to do with. Upon this occasion, wishing to impress his majesty with tho immensity of liis riches, he had the floor of ihe din-' ing hall paved from end to end with sovereigns, tho head boing up. Each coin was stuck in a mixture of lime, which soon dried, leaving tho precious "tils'' securely fastened. 'When the king arrived, and was shown what had been done in his honor, his amazement knew no bounds, and if was with difficulty be could be persuaded to set foot upon the golden floor.-V'*

K:ul to Stay Homo#

Husband—I thought you were going to tho nice it of the Society to Rescue Chiarse Women From the Crueltv of Foot Banda.vng.

Wife—I couldn't get my dress on "Why not?" "The cook was out, and 'here was no one in the house strong enough to lace my corsets."—New York Weekly.

Loveliness.

What is lovely never dies, but passes into other loveliness—star dust or sea foam, flower or winged air. If this befalls our poor, unworthy flesh, think thee what destiny awaits the soul, what glorious vesture it shall wear at last.— Aldrich.

S&If you wish to become thoroughly acquainted with the tree's mode of growth the first thing of importance is to keep in view the function of the "cainbian layer"—the soft, spongy substance lying between the wood proper and the bark. The pulpy, porous substance is really a tissue of minute cells, visible only under the microscope, and apparently all of the same size and shape in any given variety of tree. The cells lying nearest the bark contribute a permanent accretion to the tree's covering, while those which lie nearest the wood slowly change from "cambian layer" to real tree fiber.

In this way the hark becomes thicker each year, and at the same time the tree itself is permanently enlarged.

In the spring and early summer th« bark on all trees is to a certain extont loosened to pe::nit of the cambian layer exercising its functions, and when this wholly ceases ti.e result is manifest iu the "ring" of new wood and the thin, layer of uewly formed inner bark. The onds of each liuib have also grown perceptibly—from two inches to two feet, according to the species—but. knots, marks, forks, etc., on tree trunks are no higher from the ground than they were the year before. If some one tells you that a limb which is now but three or four feet, from the ground "will be high, enough to walk under when the tree gets its growth." put him or her down as a person knowing but little about the natural history of trees.—St. Louis Republic.

A careful investigation of tho reliaI bilityof different: paints used on bridges I has been made by iv Gerbcr of tho

American Society of Civil Engineers, with soaie important practical ie ,. :rs. It appears 'hat in a!) cases rus' as to re a ring always- in spots in ti.e clean metal, most of this, howevavrl^'ing thin and as bad in m".v s:r„ iui'-i as in old. It \v is. neverth dess, found that the iron oxide paims aoiicred more firmly to the metal than the lead paints only one case being found in which i! latt 'r adhered well and was tough, though much of liiis brittleness, is suggested, may I"1 due to adulteration of the oil by turpe tine, benzine or other })etrulcum products, there being more likelihood 1 such adulteration with lead paints than with iron, as they are more difficult to spread, and consequently dilution of tho oil is resorted to. In some cases bridges coated with iron oxide 11 or 12 years ago were found to be still in good condition without having to bo repaintod. Only two of the bridges examined had boon painted with carbon or asphaltum paints, but the condition of things in these two cases was found to bo not altogether satisfactory, as the coating was not tough or adherent. Too little attention, Gorbor remarks, has been paid to thoroughly cleaning the metal before tho first coat of paint is applied.

Everything At Cost For

Nothing reserved. A Genuine cost sale and no humbug about it.

Abe Levinson

Many Were Disappointed

One riore Week^

COME TO THE''.

Our stock of

Cut Glass,

Because our cut sale 011 Ladies' Fine Shoes closed too soon.

^One More Opportunity. You can get any size of some oi our Finest Shoes tor $1. No more $3 Shoes for $1 after January 11th.

SCOTT-RINARD SHOE CO.

H. ARCHIBALD, Manager. Repairing Neatly Done.

TO SELECT USEFUL AND ORNAMENTAL

lino sterling uul silver plated

Art Metal Ware. Umbrellas and Canes

CHRISTMAS PRESENTS

L. W. OTTO wel rv Store

II S W as in to S re el

Watches, Pine Clocks,

variety to select front. Remember our prices are always the lowest.

"HE THAT WORKS EASILY WORKS SUC­

CESSFULLY." TIS VERY EASY TO

CLEAN HOUSE WITH

SAPOLIO

1 1 I

Fancy and useful pieces

in

Table Ware, Novelties,

will afford yon ample