Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 7 March 1896 — Page 6

Persons exposed to weather are protected by idend

BcUadcnna

N,

Ploilar^.

IT TOUCHES THE

SPOT.

-THE-

Yandalia

LINE.

SOOTH BOUSI).

Ko. 51 Express a. No. Mail 5:10 p. m. NOHTII BOUND. No. 52 Mall.....

For full

8:16

J. C. HUTCHINSON, Agent.

Big Four Route.

TRAINS AT CKAWF0RDSYILI.K. lilG POt'It.

KAHT. WEST 8:17 a. Daily (except Sunday) G:0T p. 4:59 p. in Daily.. 12:87 a. 1:*9 a. in Daily 8 55 a. 1:18 p. Dally (except Sunday) —1:15 p. m.

W. B. PATTERSON, Agent.

-THE-

Monon

Offer Superior Accommodations for reaching the Great Reports of the South during the winter, and the cool Northern Resorts during the summer, connecting at Louisville with all points to the

South and SoutJi-West

and at Chicago with nil points to the North and North-west. Elegant dining and Parlor Car attached, and Sleeper on all through trains.

TRAINS A Rill VE AND DEPART!

SOl'TII IHM'Nl).

No. I) No. 5 No. 1. An!ant:i l-'lyer No. 33

3 :.ril a. ill. j:ur p. in p. Ill

1:00

a.

LOCAL NEWS

a.m

No. 54 Express C:19 p.m Good connectlor in ado at Terie llnuto for the South and South-wost. Trains run through to St.Joseph,Mich.,making good connection with C. fc W.M 'orMichigan points.

Frankfort is to have an artilical ice plant. Mrs. D. MaOson is recovering from her long illness.

Elder Vancleave on Saturday married his 831st couple. Commissioner's court has been in session all this week.

Republicans nominate a ticket for councilmon on Tuesday next. Champion & Ficken have opened a photograph gallery at Waveland.

Malachi Bill Scott will be released from the penitentiary March 17th.

Oran Hartley has gono to De^bit aorl will take service with a soap company.

111.

NOKTI1 l'.Or.NI).

No. 2, Chicago Eiyi'r No. ti No. a No. -14

... 12:55 p. m. .... 1:9S p. in. ... 2:20 a. m. .. 3:05 l. in-

information address, L. Agent, Crawfordsville, J. RKED, Gen'l Pass. MCDOEL, General Man-

A. CLARK, Ind. FRANK Agt. "W. H. ager

j^OTICE TO SON UliSlDKN'I'S.

State o( Indian:), Mont^ri mory (.utility: In the 'Montgomery Circuit mt, January t«im. lS[*i. JohnS Hrown i-s. Willi.-i N. .iwcjUSfli'. Elisabeth 15. Ilarbert, M-trtin Cannon, Eliza II.

Talbot. Sine WinMhoil, Hugh Talbot. Jo oph A. Davl3, Rolln O Will oil, Albert I). Willioit and Elizabeth Wilhoit, Complaint No 11 yG •.

Comes now the plaintiff by William T. Hruuli, h:u attorney, «nd flies bin complaint nert iu, togetherwith at aflldavlt that said defeu lantf, above named, are not residents of the Stateof Indium, and that this is an action broupht Oy the plaintiff to quiet title to real estate. Soli' i* Ib therefore hereby given each and all of said defendants that unless they be and aptear on the S8rd day of th March term of the Montgomery Circuit Court for the year 1890, t. name being the 37th day of Mir h. A. D.. lHSti, at the Court House in Crawfordsville, in said connty and state, and answer or ieinui tosaid comnlaint, the same Trill be heard aud determined in their absence.

W tness my name, and the teal of said (.'curt atDxo'J at Crawfordsville. this 25ih duy of Jai uary. A. D., lU'JIi, WALLACE SPARKS,

CI rk.

MONEY FOUND

by buying from us. If you want first-class Fruit Trees, Roses, Shrubs, etc., write us for our

N

1896

catalogue.

(Do it now.) Its full of all the choice kinds.

Globe Nursery v'o.

Rochester. N. Y.

OTICE OF APPOINTS!EST.

Estate of Louis Starko, deceased. Notice is heroby given that th( undersiguod has been appointed md duly qualified as Administrator, of the oatate of Lou's Starko late of Montgomery county, Indiana, deceased. Said estate is supposed to besolvont.

JOSEPH if. STARKE, Adm.

Dated Jan. 33d, 18%.

It is not to be wondered at that Ayer's Pills are in such universal demand. For the cure of constipation, billiousness, or any other complaint needing a laxative these pills are unsurpassed. They are sugar-coated, easy to take, and every doBe is effective.

0- Hall's Vegetable Sicilian Hair Re-•,-'newer is, unquestionably, the best preservative of the hair. It is also curative of dandruff, and all scalp affections.

For all kindB of reliable Insurance see C.. A. Miller & Co.,118 W. Main St. tf

The P.ig Four intends enlarging its repair shop heae and aUo the freight1 depot.

The graud jury, in session thin weak, haa the Hauk-McClamrock case under consideration.

Jesse Canine has removed from Waveland to this city and will work for the Chicago candy store.

James Kelly, the insurance aeent, is a candidate for county assessor before the republican convention.

Dudley Woodfork, a well known colored man formerly of this city, died in Indianapolis last week.

There were 65 applicants for teachere.' license at the examination held by the county school superintendent.

Win. Otty, Ladoga, who stole $23 from James Stanford received a sentence of one year to the penitentiary.

The Republican senatorial convention of Boone, Clinton and Montgomery counties will meet at Lebanon March 20.

Ex-Congressman BrookEhire, of Washington City, waB in attendance at the bed side of hie mother a Bhort time be­

fore her death. President Ingalls of the Big Four, has decided that a new passenger station shall be erected at Terre Haute, and its estimated cost is $20,000.

During the recent cold snap Louis Duenweg, of Terre Haute, moved his large two-story house across Lake Maxinkuckee on the ice.

The horse and surry, which are said to have carried Pearl Hryan to the scene of her foul murder, are big drawing cards in a Cincinnati museum.

Lebanon's $10,000 canning factory, that never canned a can, has been sold for §2,200 to a local manufacturing concern, who will convert it into shops.

T. II. B. McCain has been elected Treasurer of the republican state editors'association. Its a rare form as this class of people rarely have any money to handle.

Charles and Ed. Oriest, both old employees of the coffin factory had their fingers badly injured a few days since in the machinery of the establishment with which they were working.

Mathias Luppoid, who died in Wil-liams-port two weeks ago, left all hiB property, valued at $70,000, to hiB daughter, Sadie, his wife and son received nothing from the estate.

The Linden revival closed on Sunday night and Miss Edwards, the revivalist, will commence work next at Romney. There were 102 accessions to the church at Linden during the three weeks of protracted meeting.

The suit of Jack Baldwin aeainst the county fair association for injury to hi9 horso while running on the track of the association last September, has been under way this week at Rockville, th case being venued to Parke county.

With a little petty office worth only 8125 per year most business men would be amply satislied with one term. Not so however with Reynolds and Myers, and both are working day and night for the re-noinination. What is the reason

Jacob Kennedy, a brother of Peter Kennedy, died at his residence near Lizton, Hendricks county, on Saturday last. For a year or more he had re sided in Crawfordsville when first coming tf/ this State, but removed to

Hendricks county a few years before the war.

Many republicans say that if Reynolds andJMyere are renominated for councilmen they will vote against them at the election in May. But will they? That party has a way of whipping in recalcitrant members that is generally quite ef fective, and will strive to do so this year asjusual.

Did You Ever

Try Electric Bitters as a remedy for your troubles It not, get a bottle and get relief. This medicine has been found to be peculiarly adapted to the relief and cure ol' all female complaints, exerting a wonderful direct in lluence in giving strength and tone to the organs. If you have loss of appetite, constipation, headache, fainting spells, or are nervous, sleeplesss, excitable, melancholy or troubled with dizzy spells, Electric Bitters is the mcdicine you need. Health and strength are guaranteed by its use Large bottles only 50c. at Nye fc Booe's drujj store.

Rhode Island has fewer square incheB aud more people to the square inch, than any other state in the union.

DR. SHRADY ON VENTILATION.

Hmiie Venerable Theories on This Subject That Have lteeu Exploded. The offe« of expired air upon animal life is the subject of an interesting article in The Medical Record by Dr. George F. Khrady, its editor. "We need not," says Dr. Shrady, "emphasize the evil effects of what is usually called bad veutilatiou. It is perhaps true that acute diseases are not to be traced to the same, hut it may be safely stated that there is a distinct deterioration of vital forces in those who are constantly subjected to the impure atmosphere of badly ventilated rooms. The cause of the sickening sensation which comes over us upon entering an atmosphere contaminated with many breaths or of the gradual deterioration of the vital forces which follows confinement in such an atmosphere is not known. For a number of years prior to 1888 the view prevailed that the discomfort and danger to health aud life in badly ventilated rooms were largely due to organic matters contained in the air expired, and that the increase in carbonic acid due to respiration has but little effect in producing the bad results. Recently, however, several experimenters have concluded that the organic matters in the exhaled breath are not harmful, at least to animals."

Referring to recent experiments on the subject, Dr. Shrady says: "The results justify the conclusion that the discomfort felt in crowded, ill ventilated rooms is not due to excessive carbonic acid or to bacteria or iu most, case* to dusts of any kind, but is in reality due to excessive temperature and un pleasant odors. Nothing in these experiments shows the cause of the un pleasant, musty odor of an unveutilated room, and attention is called to tin1 curious fact that cases of fainting .in crowded rooms usually occur in women and are connected, the authors think, with defective respiratory action due to tight lacing. Finally these iuvesti gations, the authors declare, go to prove that some of the theories upon which luoderu systems of ventilation are based are either without foundation or doubtful, and that the problem of securing comfort anil health in inhabited rooms requires the consideration of the best methods of preventing or disposing of dust of various kinds, of regulating temperature and moisture and of carrying off poisonous gases derived from heating and lighting apparatus rather than of simply diluting the air to a certain standard of proportion of curbuuic acid present."

Got Their LicenseK.

There is an ancient law iu Rhode Island, which, however, is almost forgotten, requiring clergymen to take out a license before officiating at marriages. The other day Father O'Hare ami Mr. Stewart, the Episcopal rector of Auburn, went to the town clerk for this license. At first the town clerk was much puzzled what to do, as ho had uo proper liceuse blanks, but ho finally got over tho difficulty, and the clergymeu departed. After they had got 011 a street car they opened their licenses, and each was horrified to find himself in the pussession of a full Hedged second class liquor license, with power to run a liquor shop subject to all the privileges ind penalties cf the law. A closer inspection of the license, however, showed that the words "second class liquor license," giviug power to sell "malt, spirituous and intoxicating liquors" at retail or wholesale, had had a line drawu through them, aud instead of tho words "to sell malt, spirituous and intoxicating liquors" were interlined the words "to perform marriages," and so forth.

Each clergyman made a wry face as he contemplated In battered license, and each silently v.uve 1 to exhibit it only in case of dire petil of a $20 fine But both blessed 1I10 ingenuity of the official that could tran.-form a document which portends so i:iu.'!i evil for the race, according !o their views, into an instrument with power to give such happiness. New York Tribune.

I'luyini iit SSuiug Horn*

The strange sayings of children would fill a volume—IVr ilie matter of that, have filled one, 1 believe—while, as for tho situations they ado in their play, they are imitated from the life dramas of their ciders with that reckless disre gard for coaM.stency and development that often disiinguishes the. dramatist. A friend of mine who had been Christ rnasing in the country told me. of a very funny example of this trait iu "our lit tlo ones." A largo party cliihln were sent up lo tho schoolroom 1 nc an ernoon to amuse theizi.- 'lves, :.::d al'ti time two ladies made ..i excu' -ion f"i .-i the drawing room to how ii:ey v.i-n getting on. Tho y.mn^sters v. tre "pi acting," and the ict:e in v. :.!: th'.y re a as at a 1 a wedding. Away Iroi:Ml'gio::, formers stood 1.1 a CM SH .• a tn.\ 11 /. about 3. Thini.::i ihu -.diihl .d hi ci banir.hed as too .anj 1 j'K.i u. th am of I 0 1 dole with her and ask :iio u. her solitude. "Oh, hush!-' said tho lin} mite, who could scarcely speak plainly. "1'zo the baby, 'on know, and l'zo wait iu to bo boru'd."—London Sketch.

Capital 1'anisliiiieut In Calabar. The famous Calabar bean is said to bi worse than strychnine. The natives us it for an ordeal. If a person is accused of a crime, ho is made to eat one, being adjudged to be guilly in caso of death, which is almost inevitable. Another Feed employed for a like purpose is that of the ordeal treo of Madagascar, said to be the most deadly of vegetable products. One of these seeds about tho size of an almond will kill 20 men.

Forever from the hand that takes one blessing from us others fall, and soon or late our Father makes his perfect recompense to alL—Whittier.

A great many flowers close at night. The marigold shuts up at sundown and .•emains closed until morning.

AN EASY BET TO WIN.

Took OkIjt a Short Time to Collect "More Than Twenty" Fools. They stepped to the edge of the si dowalk and looked long aud earnestly iu the direction of the cornice of

0110

of

the big buildings. Of course under the circumstances the man who had been standing in the doorway felt impelled to join them. He could not see anything extraordinary at the top of the building, but he kept his eyes upturned becauso they did.

A man who was hurrying along saw the three, and he at once forgot whore he was going and what he had to do, and joined them. "I told you so," said the man who had first cast his eyes in that direction, and he made a motion as if to point out something to his companion.

Four men who were passing saw tho gesture and stopped to investigate, and before they had fairly fixed their gaao upon the cornice three others joined them. "You maybe right," returned tho companion of the man who had first spoken, "but you said 20, you know."

Six more people, including two women, wero now straining their eyes to see what was wrong with the cornice, and a rumor svas in circulation that some one had tried to throw a child or.t. or one of the windows. This was promptly denied by the man who knows it all aud who is always present ou such an occasion. He said that a gang of counterfeiters had been found on tho top floor and had taken refuge ou the roof, where they were preparing to do bat tlo with the officers who had been sent to arrest them.

Meanwhile the little group at the edge of the sidewalk had ssvelled to a crowd of over a hundred. "Well, are you satisfied now?" asked the man who had first stopped. "Yes," replied his companion. "There are more than 20. "More than 20 what:" anxiously inquired several of those nearest, the two. "Fools," returned the first speaker promptly, inspired idiots. You see, we had a dispute as to the number of fools to be seeu on the streets of a great city, and I bet him we could gather 20 around us in ten minutes by simply standing out here and looking up at the cornice. Gentlemen, there are more than 20 of you here, and I win.

Theu a hundred or more solemn looking men, and a few women, went on about their business, and they all felt like kicking themselves without intermission for a period of not less than two hours.—Chicago Post.

The Wheel and England.

Take the Great North road. Except upon market days, 0110 might have traveled any 50 miles along it between Highgate and York without meeting 50 people. Towns which literally lived by the road had drifted into a helplessly somnolent condition, from which no apparent human agency could awaken them, and tho stranger thereto was stared at as much as if he had been a highlander or an Iroquois in full warpaint. The highway itself, being of no particular value to anybody since the Great Northern railway began to whirl tho old patrons of tho road along at. -15 miles an hour, was allowed to decay, and in wet seasons or snowy weather was well nigh impassable.

Tho rage for wheeling has produced a rapid transformation. Station yourself at any point you like, and try to count the machines which pass on a fine Saturday afternoon during the course of an hour, and you will soon abandon the task as hopeless. Then, consider that every rider of every machine spends something during his trip, even if it be but the cost of a temperanco drink. Consider that a very large number of Saturday riders sleep out and make good meals during their journey that they are constantly spending something over and above their actual traveling expenses that the wonderful extension of our acquaintance with our own country resulting from these peaceful invasions of it by the inhabitants, not merely of the metropolis, but of every city and considerable town in tho land, has led to tha refurbishing up of such local lions as the castle, or the abbey, or the great Somebody's birthplace, or the waterfall, or tho view (the inspection of all of which means the expenditure of money), and an approximate idea may be gained of the influence upon national trade which this pastime alone exercises.

Chambers' Journal.

SuperntitiooH About the Weather. Popular superstititions about tho weather linger long, aud in spite of tho teachings of science people persist iu believing that seaweed hung up in a backyard will become damp at the approach of rain, or that a similar indication is to be found in the fact that a pig is seen chewing straw. Mr. Richard Inwards, the president of the Meteorological society, it is needless to say, has no belief whatever iu such methods of piophesying the weather. What belief could be more firmly rooted iu many people than the belief that if.it rains on St. Swithin's day it will rain for 40 days? "Au unadulterated fallacy," such is what Mr. Inwards calls it, yet in spite of tho evidence accumulated upou the subject by the Meteorological office, people go ou putting faith in it as though thero wet '. 110 such thing as experience. Then, again, it is said that a full moon will cleat away clouds, and that a change of moon 011 a Saturday or a Sunday is an indication of floods, although not a little evidence iu favor of either belief has ever been adduced.—Loudon News.

An Advantage.

"What advantage do spiritualists have over other men?" "Their first wives always advise them to marry again."—Chicago Record.

The Australian sword found iu use among the aborigines when that country was first discovered by Europeans was modeled after the sword grass which rows wild in that continent.

Remember

Seven Mile* of Clothesline. One of the most extensive laundries in the world is sitnated in a southern suburb of London, and was recently visited by one of our own representatives.

Tho principal building, he writes, is upward of 400 feet, long ami four stories high. Over 250 hands are employed, and the machinery cost about £'18,000. Thero are ten solid ironing machines feet long, and each capable of finishing 1,500 serviettes per hour.

The vast extent of this business may be realized on learning that 15,070 articles a week ar" received from one great west end club, and 35,000 in the same period from each of several mainmoih hotels. A hotel like tho Meuop.,: tho Grand, by I he way, uses npw.i.d of 4,000 towels every day. Nearly :i,u o,000 pieces of linen of all kinds pat-s through this laundry in tho course of a week, and seven miles of drying lines can be run out at once. —Pearson's Weekly-

A Model Citizen.

If anybody wants a model for a citizen of tho highest class, ho may find it in this eulogy of a Boston man, written by a friend who was worth having: "Martin Brimmer, freed from private care, dedicated himself to the oommonweal lie took his part in legislation, in charities, in education, in cultivation of art. He mingled in all public affairs —not only mingled, but led. Nature had made him prepossessing. His dignity, his deliberation, his reserve were imposing, his gentle courtesy was winning, and when at last he uttered a few pregnant words in a judicial tone the majority of his hearers fancied that he was but expressing their sentiments, while the minority decided that opposition was vain. The fusion was complete.

Posters, Programmes, Circulars, Envelopes, Statements, Etc.,

Are printed at this office. No office in the County lurnishes this style of printing Better or Cheaper than the

Review Job

Before ordering anything in our line call and inspect.

Critic.* and tfanAgerft.

Mr. Charles Wyndham has explained that bis contempt for the press is nor, like Mr. Penny's, absolute, but refers only to Christmastide criticisms. He holds, iu short, that the critics are "but mad nor'-nor'west. When the wind is southerly, they know a hawk from a heronshaw." Tho truth is that some actor managers are superstitious in their reverence for the press so long as it prophecies smooth things for them. A critic tho other day got iuto correspondence with a manager who thought he had slighted one of his productions. By way of conclusive testimony to its merits the mann»er sent him a paragraph emanating rrom an obscure press agency, to the effect that "if there is one thing iu the world tho lessee of this theater understands it is the histrionic tastes of the English people." -This was of course most gratifying, but the beauty of it was that tho writer of tho paragraph evidently had not and did not profess to have seeu the play, and had sent the paragraph to tho manager with a demand for a couple of seats "so as to give further particulars in our next." Such is the flattering unction Which some managers lay to their souls. —London World.

Eesults Tell the Story.

A vast mass of direct, unimpeachable testimony proves beyond any possibility of doubt that Hood's Sarsaparilla actually does perfectly and permanently cure diseases caused by impure blood. Its record of curee is unequalled and these cures have often been accomplished after all other preparations had failed.

Hood's Pills cure all liver ills, billiousness, jaundice, indigettion, sick headache.

Fresh material for the discussion as to what there may be or may not be in a name is afforded by Alderman Stammerjohn, one of the most fluent and eloquent talkers in tho Booneville. Mo., city council.

Bncklen's Arnica Salve,

The Best Salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulaers, salt rheum, fever sires, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,crrns, and all [.skin eruptions, and positively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give pe« feet satisfaction or money eunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Nye & Booe. ly

A ratttlesnake with thirty-two rattles was killed near Phoexix Ariz a few daysapo

Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.

Forty-six years ago last Thursday night—November 14, 1849—Hartford was lighted for the first time with gas.

Children Cry for

Pitcher's Castoria.

William Blackman, the oldest resident of Sonoma county, Cal., died at Healdsburg last week, shortly after passing his 100th birthday.

EIGHT AM) NINE CENT Investments. Nontaxable. The State Building and Loan Association of Indiana. Gallon JOHN M. Sonui/rz, CrawfordB ville.

Mrs. Hunt, of Merrimac, brated her 100th birthday ago.

N. H., celea few days

yjlfANTED—An 'agent in every Bectiion to canvaBs 84.00 to J5.00 a day tuade, sells at sight also a man to sell Staple Goods to dealers, best Bide line $7'c00 a month. Salary or large CommiBBion made experience unnecessary. Clifton Soap & Manfaeturing Co., Cincinnati, Ohio. 81yr.