Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 6 June 1896 — Page 3

ronsompin

jj AKD 1X3 *^CVim To

THE EDITOR

Jwliauapnlis Wy!® Woiks.

THOMAS It. CAfJK, Proprielor. ...Manufacturer of...

WIRE GOODS

Of every description. Bank and oflU-o railings, levator onolosuret1, window and counter guards, wire troilises, vases, settees, nuwa I'askoti", standi-, tc. Office, 27 Circle St., Indianap lis, Ind.

li()W to

Make $4

1 will sell&'i'i long tug Inrness for

$-U chain harness fur "Wool fare collars for £'J Best canvas collars Tacts... Sweat pads for 25

B. L.

t.vfSfKj' Wl Clubs. Detroit

Phv.1

:—1 have an absolute

remedy for Consumption. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been already permanently curc-ci. So poof-positive am 1 of its power that 1 consider it my duty to send two Miles free to those of your readers who have Consumption,Throat, Bronchial or Lung Trouble, if they will write me their express and postofiice address. Sincerely, T. A. SLOCUM, M. C„ 183 Pearl St., Hew York.,

Tlio Editorial iiud lJuMtifSB MunatCQincnL of this Pui»or Guarantee tnia ^unoruiia Proposition*

habits of

1

Horse clippers for si. Ball-bearing clippers 83. •"••••-:•.. Good leather halters for 7rcts. Ilopo halters for l'ij.-cts. Burlington "siay-on" blankets for 75cfcs.

Ornbaun

'I'll" lli'.rne^ Van.

North Washington Street.

Get the

Best I

and I

Save

ENGINES

Do not buy until you haver |read the ATLAS Catalogue. ., Write for it to-day.

ATLAS ENGINE

WORKS,

P. O. Box 7-13. IniUanaiioli*, Ind.

PARKER'S CINCER TONIC •baler Lang Troubles, Debility, distrcuing fttoiruch

female Ills, and is noted for making :ures when all other treatment fails. Every mother and invalid chould have it

PARKER'S

ICuresJ0c,aodtl.00atAtDruggistsGray!

HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautifies tho Promotes a luxuriant growth. Never Palls to Restore

Hair to Its Youthful Color. Bcalp diseases hair falling.

HINDERCORNS Coma. Stops all palo. Makes walkin

The only sure Cure for ng easy. luc. atDru^su.

JAS. BOGERT,

$ (JO W. Washington St., Indianapolis, Ind.)

MANUFACTURER

Sample trunksimd cases a specialty. Partly ular attention given to ladies' [latent tray dress trunks. Largest and bei:t aseortinsut of traveling bag?, valises, etc. Trunks and satchels re paired.

CASH

FOR WOOL!

1 will buy all the wool offered at the Highest Cash Prices, and will give down weights and the very best price the market will afford, and a fair and square selection. "We will pay you just what your wool is worth You will be satisfied with our treatment if you sell us your wool.'

Joe Goldberg:.

Office on Lafayette Pike, C'rawfoi'dsville, at the Old Reliable Hide House.

JJOTJCE OK AIM'OI XTM ENT. 'Estate of (iuV)riel Davidson, doooasod. "Notice Is hereby given that the -uftdorsigiid has boon appointed »tid duly qualified as Admlnlstrator.of the estate Of (iabriol Davidson late- of Montgomery county. Indiana, deceased. Said eHtatn is siippoHOd to beaolvent

HK'il Alii) 11. IIY I'ES,

Dated May 9.

Adm.

"M I.oagno. '.Von. Lost. Pr. Ct, 10 C7V .17 11 (107 ...17 13 n«J7 is 12 15 531 24 27JI I 233

Kansas City Milwaukee if, 1 Jitianapolis if) Minneanolip i" Colunibi:s Grand Rapids 7

At Mount Clemens, Mich.—St. Paul, 0 Detroit. 2 at Columbus—Milwaukee, 7: Columbus, «:at Grand Rapids—Minneapolis. 11: Grand Rapids, 10.

We*trrn .'.isnelatlon.

Clubs. S Won. Lost. Dos Moines ... .24

1

Peoria .16

Pr. Ct. tiliO -•'W 015 5SC 510 370 :-V 367 355 290

Dubuque 7 12 Rock ford Hi 15 St. Joseph

.1(K

7: St.

0.

KATE FIELD IS DEAD.

Weil-Known New-paper Wrltor Pamea Away In Hawaii. Chicago, June l.—Kate Field, the writer, is dead. News of her demise reached here days after she lind passed away in the interior of the Hawaiian islands, wh: re he had gone on a search health and incidentally to study the natives. Ex-Minister

KATE FIICI.D.

Thurston's short cable, "Kate Field died May 19 of pneumonia," contained all the details known in Chicago. This message to M. H. Kohlsaatcame to San Francisco by steamer and was telegraphed to Chicago.

When Miss Field was last heard from she was in North Kohala, an interior town. In her letter, dated May 4, she gave no intimation that she was not in her usual health. It is understood that her body will be taken to St. Louis for burial.

Politic* in North Dakota.

Fargo. N. D., June 1.—The state democratic convention will meet to select delegates to the national convention at Jamestown Thursday, and it is probable that there will be a very interesting battle between the opponents and the friends of sound money. It is conceded by the latter that the silver men will be in the majority, and it is probable that they will be able to dictate the platform and the selection of the six delegates. The "sound money" men do not propose to let things go by default and will compel the silverites to bring forth some arguments for silver. There is some talk of fusion with the populists by the freesilver democrats, but there is virtually no populist party in the state now. and it will not poll half its vote of twu years ago. ,,

Zella Nlcolaus Not l)cn(l.

Wabash, Ind., June l.—^Zeila Nicolaus, who was reported killed in Wednesday's tornado at St. Louis, is not dead. This denial is given out by her father, who resides here, who has received a letter from his daughter, in which she gives a vivid picture of the awful storm.

Iowa's I''lr«t Senator I* III. Dubuque, Iowa, June 1.—G«^. George W. Jones, Iowa's senator, wfio is now in his 92d year, is very seriously sick, and was anointed Sunday by VicarGeneral Ryan. He caught cold in Chicago on Thursday of last week.

GASOLINE TANK EXPLODES.

Four Killed nnd Two Badlj Injured at Chicago. Chicago, 111.. May 25.—By the explosion of a gasoline stove in a little frame house in the rear of No. 148 Townsend street early Sunday morning a family of six persons was almost wiped out of existence. Four are dead and a fifth is so badly burned that death is almost certain. The names of the dead are:

OTTO MAt/M, 32 years old. SIM A MALM, 8 years old. HILMA MALM, 6 years old.. OTTO MALM, JR., 3 yea re old. The injured are: Mrs. Ella Malm, 33 years old, burned about the hands, arras and face. Will recover.

Ellen Malm, 8 years old, severely burned about the head and body. Will probably die.

Mrs. Malm, the wife and mother, had arisen to prepare breakfast, and her husband and children were still in bed and asleep. She lighted a gasoline stove,when the tank, or reservoir which holds the supply of oil, exploded, throwing the burning fluid about the little tenement. Before the sleeping members, of the family could lie taken out or'-even warned, they were shut, in by flames and burned almost to a crisp.

Fear of l-Vileral

Indianapolis, June 1.—A conference of the various railway brotherhoods, including the conductors, engineers, lirenien, brakemen and switchmen, was held here Sunday, and resolutions were passed indorsing the bill now pending in congress looking to curtailing the powers and jurisdiction of federal court judges in contempt cases, the bill having its inciting cause in the punishment inflicted upon Debs and othei American Railway Union officers by Judge Woods at Chicago. The speedy parage of the bill was demanded.

•r

10

17

Cedar Rapids ... .11 19 Burlington .11 20 Quincy 19

At Rock ford—Dck8Moines, 4 ford, 1 «t Dub uque— -Burliuj Dubuque, 3 at 1 (riria--Peoria Joseph. 2 at eda Rapids Rapids, 7 Quincy

Mil k*Q'i by ii l.i vor ClielFcr.. Mich., June 1.—Emma Morek«^l was shot and killed Sunday by her fiance, Fred Hydloff, who was in a jealous rage because the young woman had been escorted home by another man. Hydloff then shot himself, and not succeeding in fatally wounding himself, lie tried to batter his brains out, but was finally controlled and taken into custody.

in Knzxard'* Hay TJil* %Voefc. Washington, June 1.—Mrs. Cleve land and the children will leave here early this week for Buzzard's Bay, and will be accompanied on the greater part of the journey by Mrs. Olney, who has arranged to spend the summer at Falmouth, Mass. The president will join Mrs. Cleveland at Gray Gabbles as soon as congress has adjourned.

AVasnington, June 1.—T. C. Piatt arrived in the city Saturday night, but left again at an early hour Sunday morning for New York. Among those whom he saw while here was Senator Quay, of Pennsylvania, but the latter declined to say anything about his conference with the ex-senator.

Escaping Murderer IB Seen* Piatt, 111., June 1.—A man answering perfectly the description of George Taylor, Missouri's escaped murderer, passed here going east last night walking on the railroad track. The man was uneasy and in a great hurry. He was identified from his picture by five prominent citizens.

EKSHTY VUI'ILS KILLED.

Hurled In A School Huildlng Which lu StormKansas City, Mo.. May 28.—Alton train dispatcher repoi

Ls

eighty chil­

dren killed at Drake, near Roodhouse, 111., by the cyclonc-. They were buried in a school building.

Drake, where seventy children are reported killed, is a small town in Greene county, and 240 miles from Chicago on the Chicago, Kansas City and Denver short line of the Alton railroad. It is five miles west of Roodhouse, a junction point on the Alton road, and 115 miles southwest of Bloomington, and directly in the track of the furioup storm. It is approximately sixty miles northwest of St. Louis, and about mid-' way between Chicago and Kansas City. It lias a Western Union telegraph station.

I N I A N A E S A S

Cyclone Had Spout Its Force liofore Ke.veiling the State. j. Indianapolis, Ind., May 2S.—From reports up to midnight Wednesday the storm seems to have largely spent its force before invading Indiana, though this city experienced a stiff blow at ICi o'clock. In the western portion of the state, in Fountain and Warren counties the wind had a high velocity, \ind some barns were unroofed and trees broken down, but no loss of life or serious damage has been reported.

Dep.th*

so

Far Reported.

f*

Chicago. May 28.—The latest reports indicate the probable number of people killed by the terrific cyclone which struck St. Louis and vicinity at 5:15 Wednesday afternoon to be a* fol' lows:

St. Louis, Mo., 300 to L000. East St. Louis, 111., 150 to 300. Labaddie, Mo., 10. Rush Hill. Mo. (doubtful), 50. Drake, 111. (unconfirmed), 80.

Will A*k Aid for Sufferer*. Lansing, Mich., May 28.—The resuit of the cyclone disastei in Michigan has assumed such proportions that Governor Rich left for that locality, and will spend the remainder of the week in a personal inspection of the path ol devastation and will subsequently issue a proclamation calling for contributions, being satisfied that local afri will be insufficient.

Fifty Children' Killed.

Chicago, May 28.—Officials of the Chicago and Alton received a telegram at 8 o'clock Wednesday evening, from Rush Hill, Mo., a small place in Audrain county, twelve miles from Mexico. The wind struck Rush Hill about 4 o'clock. The school-house filled with children, was crushed before the pupils could escape. The fifty children in tho school-house are reported killed.

Denied by Chairman Harrlty. Washington, May 30.—In answer to -i question Chairman Harrity of the democratic national committee has written to Senator-elect Money of Mississippi denying that the committee will exclude from the convention any demo. crats suspected of an intention to bolt in case the platform declares for gold.

Xella Nlcolau* Mny He Dead. Indianapolis, May 30.—Zella Nlcolaus' mother thinks Zella was buried in the ruins of a tornado-swept house in St. Louia.

WHEN PTMSE ISN'T MONEY

It I* Quite a UIJTorunt Tiling to ISo an Amateur and Tlltin Make Sure. "If you wish to cure a girl of conceit," said a woman who knew what she was iPll'ing about from experience, "let her try to earn her own living. As long as she does not ask to be paid, everybody will priise her work, but let her try to sell her services and then see!"

The speaker had been reared in luxury. She was a br-tl't, accomplished girl, says the Pbila.-le'yhia Press, whose great failing was ceK-onceit. Her little gifts had been so well cultivated in an amateurish way that she believed herself able to compete successfully with professionals. She was always ready to sing a song, or recite a poem, or paint a picture, and us she was a society girl and had a rich, prominent father, her little doings were often favorably noticed in the local papers. Then the change of fortune came and she was thrown upon her own resources without a moment's warning. She had to earn her own living or starve. The scales fell—or were very rudely pulled —from her eyes. No woman can become self-supporting without some mortifying experiences, and the more conceited she is the more of these experiences she has, because she attempts things preposterously beyond her power. This poor girl who had held her head so high was snubbed and told the truth with brutal frankness, and in time learned her lesson. She went from the extreme of thinking she'd do anything to that of believing she'd do nothing of value, and finally did the one thing she could do well at the outset, which was to keep house, and then because she tjad a moderate talent for drawing she learned slowly and through much tribulation the engraver's art and ten years later earned a competency by it.

Miss Nightingale's Good Work. The now venerable Miss Nightingale, whose state of health did not permit her acceptance of the invitation to be present at the dinner to the Balaklava veterans, has devoted much of her time and energy for some years past to the promotion of sanitation in North Bucks, where she has been accustomed to spend much of her later life. She has been the life and soul of a movement for bringing intelligence to bear on the management of the home and sanitary matters generally in a district where such a movement was greatly needed. It has been carried on by the technical education committee of the Bucks county council, but Miss Nightingale has been the moving spirit and very unostentatiously has, in her declining years, been continuing in this way the practical benevolence which so endeared her to all English hearts in the Crimean war.—London News.

In Great. Britain alone two trainloads of pills are consumed every year, yet John Bull still lives.

URUAN INCIDENT NOT CLOSED.

Negotiations to Settle t'.ie IMspato Are Still I'miding. Washington, May 20— Notwithstanding reports from Caracas to th contrary, it can be stated that th« Gruan incident has not yet been closed, and that no indemnity has yet been paid by Venezuela to Great Britain. Negotiations are proceeding, however, through the German minister at the Venezuelan capital, but so far it has not been possible to arrange the terms of the indemnity. The difficulty appears to lie, not in the refusal of Venezuela to pay an indemnity, but in the avoidance of a recognition in the payment of all language that by any possibility might be construed into an admission of British title to the Uruan country where the incident happened.

unci

for E

IHiRTY ywftrB* r"

million* of perm

It ia nnqnestioun

the world ha» over lii:

child's medicine.

1

Caatoria destroys Worms,

Castoria allays Povorishness.

Castoria prevents vomiting Sonr Cnrd.

No. 2IV West Slarket Streot.

How much business can a an do

whose system is in a at is Headache is only a symptom. It is not a disease. The pain in the head is the sign of rebellion. There have been mistakes in diet. There has been over­

work and sleepless nights. The machinery of the whole system is demoralized. A business man feels that he cannot afford to be ill enough to quit work. He drags along day after day, makes bad deals, says the wrong thing, and health and business collapse together. There's no need of either disaster. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are a gentle, effective renovator of both stomach and bowels. They assist nature without threatening to'tear the body piece-meal. There are no griping pains, no nausea. One is a barely perceptible laxative. Two give more noticable results, and they may be continued until the system is throughly renovated, strengthened, and put into harmony with nature. One need not tear a "habit" of taking the "Pleasant Pellets." As soon as health is restored they may be discarded without a return of illness because of their absence. Therefore, you don't become a slave to their use.

A GREAT BOOK PREE.

When Dr. K. V. Tierce, of Buffalo, N. Y„ published the first edition of his work, The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser, he announced that after 6K0.000 copies had been sold at the regular price, Ji..so per copy, the profit on which •woula repay liitn for tlie great amount of labor and money expended in producing it, he would distribute the next half million free. As this number of copies has already been sold, he is now distributing, absolutely free, 500,000 copies of this most complete, interesting and valuable common sense medical work ever published— the recipient only beinK required to mail to him.

at the above address, twenty-one (21) cents in one )f jost-pai( ical library, comp

cent stamps to cover cost of mailing /y and the book will be sent post-jiaid. It is a veritable med-. nlete 111 one volume. It contains over 1000 paKt' and more than 300 illustrations. The Free lidition is precisely tlie same as those sold at Ji.soexcept only Unit the booksare bound in strong monitla paper covers instead of cloth. Send NOW before all are given away.

Children.

Castoria onros Plarrhcoa and Wind Colic.

Castoria relievos Teething Troubles.'

Castoria cures Constipation and Flatnloncy.

Castoria nentraliees tho effects of carhonio acid gas or poisonous

oria gith tlia patronage of

speak of it -without gntming.

—..-'tly for Infanta nnd Children

a»"inlc««. Children like it. It

given thorn health. It will t»',i vli«iv lives. In it Mothers have

something which ii nbsoVjtp'y ap.fo nnd praotioally perfteot as

Castoria does not contain morphine, oplwin, or other narcotio property.

Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and "bowels.

giving healthy and natural sleep.

Castoria is put np in one-size "bottles only. It ia not sold in hulk.

Don't allow any one to sell you anything else on the plea or promise

that it is "just as good" and "will answer every purpose."

Soe that yon get C-A-S-T-O-R-I-A.

The fac-simlle signature of

Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.

The Cathode Rays

Reveal the presence of our

Etc., firmly imbedded in the minds of all, judged from the crowds flocking to

"THE SHANTY."

PEEKING BINDERS

AND MOWERS

With Ball and Holler Bearings are the Best. Buy no others. For sale by

JOE E. FISH KH.

The Hardware Man, South "Washington Street.

"BETTER WORK WISELY THAN WORK HARD." GREAT EFFORTS ARE UNNECESSARY IN HOUSE

CLEANING. USE

FINE LITEET

on every wrapper,

Crawfordsviile, Ind.

The best place in the city to get a nice turnout is at the livery stable of

W O. SMITH

East Market Street. Boarding and Feeding horses at the Lowest Prices.

IO TO 1

That you will get the Best Workmanship and Reasonable Prices at the

tShoe Shop--*

W. S. RICHARDS, Proprietor. 'No. 125 "VV. Main St.

THE GRAND

The Grand.

Style, Quaiity, Fit.

The Right Shac^e,' the Right Toes and Right Prices at