Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 11 January 1896 — Page 3

The Doctor'sDiscovery.

DR. BROWN, OF DAVID CITY, NEB., FIKL.S A MEDICINIf OF RARE VIRTUE.

He First Citrra Hiiimrlf with It, and Uint PrcHcrlbrs It lor Ilia PaUtnta wltlt Cratifying Kctnilta. (From th Lincoln, „V«6., Cull.)

Dr. Samuel I-. Browu is a pioneer reeident of David ity, having lived there for twenty years. lie is well known all over Butler County, having practiced medicine in every part. It is liis recovery from a verj serious disease that is looked upon an a miracle. When visited by a Call reporter I?r. Brown gladly related the history of his sickness ana his final cure.

This will be my first step into the field of a personal interview, but I am so enthusiastic over my recovery that I feel like conducting a regular experience meeting. "Six or seven years ago partial paralysis •et in upon my left side, and 1 soon became affected by kindred ailments. The pension board found my trouble to be "partial paralysis of leftside, varicose veins of both legs, and left varicocele.'' I was also troubled with Diabetes. I bec:nue unable to perform manual labor, having to give up the larger nart of my practic. "l could hobble around iy the use of crutches and cane. I tried every medicine ihrtt I ever heard of in endeavoring to rcii.'ve my suffering. "About a yea 40 1 read of a medicine called Dr. \Y: I'ink 1'iU?, that seemed to fit h.y case, so 1 sent for samples. I was so "well sutisfiod with the samples that I sent for more, as they acted directly in harmony with nature." Those are the things 1 look for in treating diseuses. I used a nu::iber of boxes of the pills, and I am now entirely relieved of all my several ailments, and mil abl.* to move about once more, without living hampered with crippling (lifvase?. in my practice I always use I'ink Nil .where the iiiugnosis of the" case favir- t" 1 :i't a remarkable case at Brainerii. /. .. 1 jus Tuii.ot. the postmaster, was siitl-v.-.v'sU'in uia'uctu and insitiidnen-, and wi .• .• iirst stag.:.1 of Briglil'e disease. 1 ii had failed to give him any relief. AH :. liis recovery had been gn en up when T-.i-is call-id in and took charge 0!' the case. He is now on the road to complete recovery. The Bright's disease was headed off, ami the other ailments overwhelmed. A happier family eannot be found than that of Postniaj-ter Talbot, of Brainerd,"

I

Sworn

IInd

subscribed to before rne this

seventh day of September. A. D. IM13, at David City, Neb 1 HUNYO.V. (Signed

-Votary Public.

Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People are now given to the public as an unfailn,/ blood builder and nerve restorer, curing ali forms of weakness arising from a watery condition of the blood fir shattered nerves. The pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent posi paid on receipt of price (50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50—they are never sold in bulk or by the 100) by addressing Dr. Williams' Med. Co., Schenectady, K.Y.

JJOTICE TO NON-HESIDENTS. State of Indiana, Montgomery County: In the Montgomery Circuit Court, November term, 1895.

Robert A. Warren vs Chas. E. Warren et al. Complaint No. 11697. Comes now the Plaintiff by Coppago and Burton his Attorneys and flies his complaint horeln, together with an affidavit that said defendant, Charles E. Warreu is not a resident of the State of Indiana, and that the obejet o: the suit herein is to obtain judgment on the note set out in the complaint executed by the defendant to the plaintiff herein.

Notice is therefore hereby given said defendant, Charles E. Warren thatunlessho be and appear on the 40th day of the January Term of the Montgomery Circuit Court for the vear 1894 the same being the 20th day of February A. 183G, attic Court House in Crawfordsville in said County and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard .and determined in Ills absence.

Witness my name, and the seal of said Court, affixed at Crawfordsville, this 23rd day «f Deeember A. D., 1895. WALLACE SPAltKS,

gIvil

Clerk.

GRATEFUL—OOMFORTINC

EP FS SC0CA

BREAKFAST—SUPPER.

"By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion one nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well-seiccted Cocoa. Mr. Epps has provided for our breakfast and supper a delicately flavored boverage which may save us many heavy doctors' bills. It is by the Judicious use of such ortiulas of diet that a constitution may qo gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to diseaso. Hundreds of subtle maladies aro floating around us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. Wo may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well forttfled with

ure blood and a properlp nourished frame."— SorVico Gazotto. Maee simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only in half-pound tins by Grocers labelled thuo: JAMES EPPS & CO.. Ltd., Homoepathic Chemists. London, Englank.

V^ANTED—An agent in every secliion to canvass 84,00 to $5.00 a day iuado, sells at sight also a man to sell Staple Goods to dealers, best side line$7-g00.a month. Salary or large Commission made experience unnecessary. Clifton Soap & Manfacturing Co., Cincinnati, Ohio. 81yr.

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

All Tree.

Those who have used Dr. King's New Discovery know its value, and those who have not. have now the opportunity to try it free. Call on the advertised druggist and get a trial bottle, free. Send your name and address to ET. E. Bucklen & Co., Chicago, and get a sample box of Dr. King's New Life Pills free, as well as a copy of Guide to Health and Household Instructor, Free. All of which is guaranteed to do good and cost you nothing at Nye & Booe's Drug Store.

Children Cry for

Pitcher's Castorla.

Hood's Sarsaparilla, taken at this season, will make you feel strong and vigorous and keep you from sickneBB later «n.

The Queen & Crescent runs handsome Parlor, Cafe and Observation cars on the "Cincinnat and Florida Limited" between Cincinnati and Chattanooga.

M. pays to trsdeat the Big Store.

THE MOUNTAIN.

Large chest-d giant, shadowing the land. With lazy limbs stretched out nt length, Covered with sling and gnurlod with strength,

I watch' .« i- day by day,

7

A hemlock hoar the staff of thy huge hand, Driving along the accustomed upward trail Thy flocks of mist that morn and even stray

Across the valel

Pressing with sun browned body earth's green couch. The goldun days of summer through,

With liult vi'il(-d eyes of melting blue OVr whi ii the shadows flit— What drcums i.re thine, that with a magic touch Thy spirit t' '-ontentment they beguile, And o'er iy brow, where rugged frowns might sit,

Persuade a smile?

When the empurpled curtain of the gloom Drops slowly from its loosened cord, Across her rose Hushed terrace toward

The purlieus of thy rest,

I watch the figure of the evening eotne, Ono starry brooch upon her shoulder shining, And lean upon thy broad and loving breast,

With arms entwining.

Warden art thou of all the trooping stars. Through the hushed hours of night they wait

Upon the threshold of thy gato Of pin trees that uproars Itself against the sky. Oft, too, those bars Behind, fresh from some fountain bath, is seen The moon, when with her quiver she appears,

A huntress ijueen.

—E. A. U. Valentine in Youth's Companion.

ARE WE CIVILIZED?

One Who Analyzes Fashions Says We Arc Still Half Savage. The prevailing motive not to appear singular accounts for the continuance of certain fashions, many being the results of superstition, religious observances and the desire to be "up to date."

We are acquainted with what facility hair may bo fashioned into various fantastic shapes for personal adornment, and when a part through the middle is decreed it is worn without regard to contour, and whether it may add to or detract from one's intellectual appearance no thought is given.

If fashion says crimp, we crimp if curl and wave, we obey. And the custom of keeping the head closely shaved prevails, as among the Fijian women, while the men cultivate loqg hair, thus reversing the conditions met with among highly civilized nations.

The lips, ears and nose offer a variety of possible alterations and are a means of ornamental display, and, Bays Captain Cook, over a hundred years ago, in describing the naked savages on the east coast of Australia, their principal form of ornamentation was a bone, which they thrust through the cartilage which divides the nostrils from each other. The lip ornamentations by the Bolocudo Indians and the Tlinket Bella are disgusting in the extreme, and in the heart of Africa among the Bongo women a clamp or clasp is worn at the corners of the mouth, as if they wanted to contract the orifice and literally put a curb on its possibilities.

The teeth cannot escape, and the Malays view in disgust the natural tint and stain theirs a jet black.

One views in horror the Chinese method of foot binding, but which is much mitigated when considering by degrees the fashionable toe used in the last century.

Thus we can see that fashion's fetters torture and harass equally civilized men and savage vanity. Are we not the same in kind, but differing only in degree from the savage?—New York Advertiser.

Edmund Halley.

Probably the greatest service which Halley ever rendered to human knowledge was the share which he took in bringing Kewtnu's "Principia" before the world. In as Dr. Gliiisher, writing in 188S. kiss truly remarked, "but for Halley the 'Principia' would not have existed."

Halley hud the genius to perceive the tremendous iini or! n:ce of Kowton's researches, a ml ]•.• ceased it to urge upon the somewhat ir-dnse man of science the necessity for giviim his discoveries publication. Bnvii:# I'.tcs authorized by the Royal srrriety tu uurt^-rtthe printing of the l.-juk at his osvn t:.i3euse, Halley spared no pains in pushing forward the. publication '.f h!s illustrious friend's great s-o n, ocli so that, in the same year lie is in a j.osition to present a complete copy K:i:g .Tames II, wilh a proper dSmnnve cf his own. Halley also wrote a *. i" Cf L. iin hexameters, in praise of Nowtr.n'.s genius, which lie printed at beginning of the work The last lin" of sin ^pecinuni of Bailey's poetic in: thus je»':er i, "Nor morta?.-:. ..rc-r

.i.y

:ipj.nut(.h

gods. "—Kir :t Bali in \7«.a J..--.

EfphN«*j» V*«avs Aft. When l:h 1 j-l i-y r. at Pompeii gives forih a hollow sc when striking fh.5 -r. .1 v.i care is inimediau'ly .tis cavity that is \v:i ic K* 1. this cavity plaster •. a poured. Tho the plaster .v ji h:.. ,.'n in.:.- ... has been rs::.r.ved, th^ fs: «.Uc usually proves to be that W a •%. or man 111 the agonizing convuLi-^ death, the limbs contorted a::.I the tures drawn or.t of .-hapc were when the j.-crsci wa: ov.: iai .j file flood of rc-'.hotluva l,b0u year. —St. Louis Republic.

...a::

S OA

i, «t-

11 by uga

Punishment*

Lucy—The wretch And so he haG been proposing to both of us? Jenny—It seems so.

Luoy—I wish we could think of some fearful way to punish him. Jenny—I have an idea.

Lucy—What is it? Jenny—You many him, dear.—Pick Me Up.

According to Professor Ar is tide Marre, a distinguished French linguist, the name of the Madagascar capital, Antananarivo, means "city of the thousand villages." It is composed of the Malagasy words "an" (the), "tanana" (Tillage), "rivo" (thousand).

Farewell originally signified may 70a fare or travel well or in safety.

HER FIRST REHEARSAL.

Mary Anderson de Navarro Tells of the Preliminaries of Her Stage Debut. Iii writing of her first appearance on t'.:o stage Alary Anderson de Navarro tells in Tim Ladies' Home Journal that the opportunity to play was presented her bv Manager McCauley at his Louisville theater. The star who was playing at the theater had failed to attract paying houses, and Dr. Griffin, who was Mrs. de Navarro's stepfather and her business manager, suggested to Mr. McCauley that she be given a chance to play. The offer was gladly accepted, and Mrs. de Navarro writes that there was only one rehearsal, and it was called for the next morning. "On my way to the cathedral," she adds, "I was enchanted to see posters on the fences making the announcement. The main part of the poster was devoted to advertising Millies Levick in 'The Spy,'and at the bottom in smaller typo the ehow bill read: "Saturday Evening, Nov.27,1875.—Miss Mary Anderson, a young lady of this city, will make her first appearanee on any stage as Juliet, in Shakespeare's 'Rmnoo and Juliet Milius Levick n.-i Mereutiu, mid a powerful east cf characters. "As I was in the quiet church the hour for rehearsal struck, and I started for the theater in a radiant frame of mind. Passing with my people through the darkened house and private boxes covered with their linen dusters, I found myself for the first time upon the stago. How strange and dreamlike it seemed, that empty theater, lighted only here and there by the faint glimmer of the gray day without, bereft of all the eager faces it had always been peopled with! And the stage 1 How dismal it was with the noisy patter of the rain on its tin roof, a small gas jet burning in the center, throwing a dingy light on the men and women (they did not relish the extra rehearsal), gloomily standing in the wings. On seeing me, all looked surprised. Some made remarks in whispers, which I felt, to be unkind others laughed audibly. Scarcely 16, mv hair in a long braid, my frock reaching to my boot tops, tall, shy and awkward, I may have given them cause for merriment, but it was as cruel, I thought, as underbred, to make no effort to conceal their mirth at my expense. However, their rudeness was salutary in its effect, putting me on my mettle before the work began."

Keeping Employees Honest. "Distrust probably makes more thieves than were ever evolved by the laws of heredity," said a gentleman recently who has a business in which he employs a large number of men, all holding positions in which the element of trust is peculiarly great. "In my business I always make my men understand that I have the utmost confidence in them, and the result of this has been that I have never had an employee exhibit the least dishonest trait. "Put a man on his honor and make him know that he is not being watched, but being trusted, and he will rarely, unless disposed to it by heredity, steal. Of course some men are born thieves and should never be trusted. They steal because the influence is too great for them to resist. Often surrounding a man with all sorts of devices and systems to prevent him from stealing has the effect of causing him to look out for a way of beating the bank. We are all strangely susceptible to that much talked of force, suggestion—more than we appreciate—and when the very environment in which we work suggests dishonesty every minute it is not much wonder that it has a very positive effect upon the mind in causing it to think dishonestly. "—Pittsburg Dispatch.

An Intimate Friend of Hornets, It is Mrs. Brightwen's privilege to be unusually well placed for the minute study of living creatures, and her pets have included lemurs, an ichneumon, squirrels, doves, owls, tortoises and so on. Squirrels and birds she has lured from the woods and won. their affection by kindness, and in addition to giving many particulars about these she has something to say about studying nature, teaching children to be humane and the pleasures of insect observation, etc. That insects can discriminate between friends and enemies is, she holds, true, and she remembers once in a country village seeing a man hard at work thrashing corn in a barn, and quite near to him there was an immense hornets' nest hanging from a beam. When asked if he was not'afraid of them, he smiled and said: "Oh, they know me well enough. One of 'em fell inside my shirt the other day, but he was very ceevil and never stung me, for I never interferes wi' them, and they never interferes wi' me."—Westminster Budget.

British Army Pensions.

The ordinary pension to the widow of a lieutenant in the army is £40, and £10 for each child. A captain's widow has £50, and £12 for each child a lieutenant colonel's widow, £90, and £10 for each child a general's widow, £120, and £20 for each child. If death is directly traced to fatigue, privation or exposure, the pensions are increased by half as much again If the officer is killed in action, or dies of wounds within 12 months of the battle, the pensions are doubled. The ordinary pensions are not granted if the officer was 26 years older than his wife.—London Echo.

Speed No Otyect.

4'What

do you think of my new bays?''

"Why, they're beautiful animals, but they can't trot for shucks." "Oh, well, I don't care for that part of it." "You don't?" "No. If they could do a mile a minute, the boulevard police would hold 'em down to eight miles an hour anyhow. "—Chicago Record.

Have Had Fourteen Indian War*. Our government has had 14 great Indian wars, which are estimated to have cost not leBS than $100,000,000 and as much more in private loss was sustained by individuals.

A "CONVENT PRISON.

The Consideration With Which Women PriKoners Are Treated In Austria. In Austria a woman, no matter what she nay do, is never regarded or treated quitii as a criminal. She may rob, burn, kill—set every law at defiance, in fact, and break all the commandments in turn—without a fear of ever being called upon to face a gallows. She is not even sent to an ordinary prison to do penance for her sins. The hardest fate that can befall her indeed is to be compelled to take up her abode for a time in a convent. There the treatment meted out to her is not so much justice seasoned with mercy as mercy seasoned, and none too well, with justice. Even in official reports she is an "erring sister"—one who has, it is true, strayed from the narrow path, but quite involuntarily.

The convent to which Vienna Bends its erring sisters is at Neudorf, only a few miles away from the city. There any woman who is convicted of either crfme or misdemeanor is at once transported. The judge before whom she is tried decides of course how long she shall remain. Be may, too, if ho deems it right, give orders that while there she shall pass a day in solitary confinement from time to time and 011 these occasions bo less plentifully supplied with food than usual.

In the great majority of cases, however, 110 instructions of this kind are given. The women are simply handed over to the keeping of the superior of the convent, to be (ioalt with as she thinks best. She houses them, feed." them, clothes them and provides them with instruction and occupation, and the government gives her for what she does 85 kreutzers a day for each prisoner under her care.

So long as these women are in the convent the full responsibility for their safe keeping and general well being rests on the superior, and in return she is allowed practically a free hand in her management of them. There are, it is true, certain regulations in forco with regard to the amount of work they may be required to do and the punishments that may be inflicted on them, but these are not of a nature to interfere seriously with her freedom" of action. She is, in fact, virtually an autocrat within her own domain, and there are not half a dozen women in Europe today who have so much power for the weal or woe of their fellows as she has.—Cornhill Magazine.

The Daughter.

The superior wisdom of the feminine mind is shown in the fact that the mother never rebels against her daughter's guidance. She is the first to discover the young woman's wisdom and she enj^s the security and sense of rest which come from feeling that she has some one to depend upon, some one to think and plan for her. She regards it as providential that as the husband of her youth grows careless, as his judgment becomes untrustworthy as to details, as he grows inclined to shirk the little questions which arise in the conduct of the household, the daughter quite naturally takes up the neglected duties and assumes the management of the affairs. Of course it is often difficult for the mother to live up to the course the daughter marks out. She sometimes finds herself deficient in tne strength or wisdom the daughter expects from her. But this is not real trouble, for under it all is the comforting sense of being guided by a strong will, the sense of being free from responsibility for the social and domestic welfare of the family is filling the young woman's soul with satisfaction, flattering her with the consciousness of hpr great usefulness, making her realize her importance in the world.—Kansas City Star.

jl® A Rare Coin. A coin of great rarity, which is worth several thousand times its face value, is in the possession of Harry O'Grady, a conductor in the employ of the Reading railroad. It is a copper penny of 1783, which bears upon its obverse side a bust of Washington and the inscription, "Washington and Independence." The coin was given to Mr. O'Grady by his father, who prized it very highly, having 011 one occasion refused $250 for it. Several years ago a similar coin was given by George Stinipson of New York to President Harrison upon the occasion of the latter's visit, to Now York city during the celebration of the centennial of Washington's inauguration. $•*, Stinipson presented another of the coini, for which he had paid $180, to the Bartholdi statue fund, "to be placed under the statue of Liberty in New York harbor."—Philadelphia Record.

Robin Redbreast.

The country people of England, as well as of several other countries, have, an idea that the red of the robin's breast was caused by a drop of blood which fell upon it at the crucifixion. According to the story, the robin, commiserating the condition of Christ, tried to pluck the crown of thorns from his brow, and, i\^ doing so, got its breast wet with tl« blood flowing from the wounds. The color became permanent, being transmitted from generation to generation, and thus, according to the legend, the robin is a perpetual reminder of the sufferings of Christ.

for

1°°

6

V-.,

Obeying Orders.

Mistress—I told you that I did not want you to have so many male callers In the kitchen.

Pretty% Domestic—Yes'm. Mistress—Last night you were entertaining three policemen.

Domostic—Yes'm. I had them there io as to keep the others out.—New York Weekly.

The desire to be beloved is ever restless and unsatisfied, but the love that flows out upon others is a perpetual wellspring from on high.—L. M. Child.

He who recognizes no higher logic than that of the shilling may become a very rich man, and yet remain a very poor creature.—3. Smiles.

infants

Y°q K""-^

Yon

and

t"at

25

Children.

|OTHE!£S, Do You Know tMtPareeon^

Bateman Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, many so-called Soothing Syrups, and re re os pi or in

ojiiurnand morphine are studying narcotic poisons?

Do_Yon most countries druggists are not i* rmitted to sell narcotlca' without label. *jns*

Do Yon you should not iKTii.it any medicine to be given your chilli unless you or yoi. ^i.ysiciar. know of what it is etmiiwsed

Do Yon Kno-r. vJastoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and frits ingredients is punhsu-^ with every bottle

Castoria Is the prescription of the famous Dr. Sac"

That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is nc7, of all other remedies for children combined

Do Yon Know that the Patent Office Department of the United States, and oC other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to use the word a a to a a it or a a at to it at Is as at is on of

Do Yon Know that one of the reasons for granting this government protection was because Castoria had been proven to be absolutely harmless?

Do Yon Know that 35 average doses of Castoria aro furnished for 35 oents, or one cent a dose

Do Yon Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, your children may be kept well, and that you may have unbroken rest

Well, these things are worth kncwlnir. They are facts.

The fac-iimile signature of

Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorla.

Read This Advertisement!

If you are in need of Groceries you will never have a chance to buy at such Low Prices We will sell you Flour at the following low prices: 50 lbs Pride of

3

The above are only a few items we mention as we haven't the space.

Furniture and Queensware.

We have enlarged oar stock of Queensware and made some changes in our store. We now have the most complete line of Queensware

Crawfordsville. To our stock of Furniture we are adding new styles everv day and our lines are very large. Remember we sell stoves.

Barphill, Hornada j, Pickett

Cheapest Grocery House in Crawfordsville.

Strike a Ian

Through liis stomach and you either gain or lose his good will. In giving him a clean, well cooked

P. S.—All Hot Drinks ten cents only.

ket Street, Opposite Sherman House. Remember the place.

Ii op »v»ry

wrapper*

ioria, 90c

50 Wonder, all Spring Wheat $1.00 25 50 50 Big A Flour 75c 25 40c All Package Coffee 20c Ono lb Good Baking Powder lOc One lb Rice 5C

7.45c

HOT LUNCH

with every drink we have gained his best wishes for success. Come in and try ono when in town.

THE LODGE."

In Buying a Piano or an Organ

in

John Potts

Has tlie Finest Line of

Oysters, Fisli.Gffie,

Etc., in the city.

Salt: Water Pish

A Specialty.1* Don't fail to give him a call. 107 East Mar­

do not foil to examine the latest Mason A Hamlin models. Recent improvements together with time tested points of soperlority render them instruments par excellence. Old pianos or organs taken In exchange. Instruments sold for cash or easy payments.

Catalogues and full information sent free.

iHason&^aralindltt.

350 and 35a WABASH AVENUE, CHICAGO, ILL.