Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 9 January 1897 — Page 4

een now be devoted to other tnes. I It* former delightfol emeUing andj ^^DttHking contents are dupli-1 cited inqaality end flavor in None 8och Mince Meat, a pore, wholeeome, cleanly made preparation for] mince pies, fruit cake and fruit] podding*.

NONE SUCH

MINCE MEAT

nee the housewife long houn of weaHaome work and give* the funily all the mince pie.thiiy can derireattitUecoat.

A

ft

tkl»

package makes

i. loc. at all grocers.

Take no substitute. Om

mi

rwhl

tfnmr cwmttml

illiwmttiuw

|H». will Mil pafWtN"lliKhpUH' Mnk|Mi|i''.lNk by ton* kuwraaa wtlm. •nuiMonji co., •aeae.X.Y.

CIRCUIT COUBT.

Frthrick B. Gardner vs. Charles Rauntree. Oa note. Diamieeed. Mary T. Small vs John W. Small. Divorce. Dismissed at Plaintiff's coat.

Orestes B. Taenia vs Alice Harlan On aeeount. Judgment for plaintiff given in tha num of 186 25.

Charles W. Gould vs. Henry Clem ante. Oo note. Defendant makes default.

Richard Braalcs, guardian of Louisa Bennett vs. Alice Bennett. Alice Brown aod Albert Brown. To aet aside deed. Defendant makes default. /:t,

Thomas J. Mclntire vs. Joshua Davis and Ben T. Tipton. On note. Dismissed. Bnate of.Jeeee Durham vs. J. E Talbot and estate »f Isabel Talbot. Complaint. Diamiaaed.

J. E. Liuikay at aL va. M. A. Rapp. Partition. CommiasiOoera ordered to eell real aetata at publicjeale.

NEW SUITS.

J. L. Shrum et al. va. Gommiseionere of Bft a J. H. Shrader vs. Jacob G. Shrader et al. Complaint.

John A. S witter vs. Wm. D. Piercu and EUie Burk. On note.

Bar|lmt L»|mi»h,

ly done by some one acquainted wiib 1 Q|r|g

the fact of Mrs. Rich's custom of keeping moh

jy

in her house.

Dr. riafloway,of Kalamazoo, Mich., Ihi old army comrade of John W. CU mson was letting hid' this week. lie iB about to locate at Torre Haute.

Throat

there tickling in the

tkroat?

D*

you eougn amat

deal, gspccUUy wnea lying down? j^re you hoant nt tfantf?

Docs

nearly every

ROMANTIC STOj

HOW LOVB LAUQHBD PARENTS, i'

wan A oxn wnx ALLT DOBS IT.

-1} li

Loganeport ie overrun with .burglera and the police seem powerless to prevent it.

Last Saturday night Frank Rose aod Joe Molique were met by a single highwayman as they were returning.. home, and were forced to give op their valuables at the point of a revolver. Sunday evening Michael Fornuff, a prominent mueician, wae aocoeted by a footpad in a lonely atraet and ordered to throw up hie hands. The robber leveled a revolver at FornolTe head, but the latter grappled with him, and after a desperate struggle, succeeded in getting poes esaion of it, his assailant raakiog be escape by runoing into a Dark alley, Yesterdav afternoon a man entered the reaidence of Mra. John II.oh, an old woman, who presented what be repres* eotml to ha an unpaid bill. While Mre. Rich was examining the paper she was felled oy a tlow oa the- head with a Band-bag. When she regained conscious nesa she was securely hound and gagged and it was three boura before ahe managed to looeen her bonds and giv» the alarm. The robl er bad secured 1200 in gold and $100 in paper mouey, secreted beneath a mattress. The job was evident

coll

you take settle in ydwr tnroat? Tlhese "throat coughs" are Jecepthrc.

Doi?t

neglect

Troches, or cough

•rr«ip• won't touch tha spot. You must take temedks that wiO enrich the Uood, tancup da airvesi aai heal the in-

SOOTTS EMULSION al QilUwm OH wtthHypophoa•hltii aontalne such remedies. Jtfcas wanMnI nourishing nul healing fewer* Thecal al the eough is «mwra4 Jt whala system ii yhran new We 1md wifar) and tha lanw hmm Aieatcaing iung tmAk is swept awat*

For sab by al 9140.

saarr a sawim, iiywTaA.

&

••BUN

•m ami'

't

Mas RMMt ItofMBMls lart and Waal —Chicago Bl|k Sehoel Olrta rem a Btuwtf ibnkfi Oak-Oa* VtabM niflla Bar OMMeb

CHICAGO high school girl eloped to Milwaukee the other day with a traveling salesman and waa married Parental forgive ness has not been held out to ,, the girl.

Jennie .Tennliiga, 5718 Klmbark ave­

nue, is thO bride and A. R. Wlckhelmer the bridegroom. They flew to the Wiacensla Gretna Oreea In the morning, and the first knowledge the gill's parents got .•€ the affair was this telegram: Jennie and I were married today. Will be home to-morrow morning. WICKHEIMER.

Mra. Jennings went Into hysterics and Mated. 8he was in a serious condition and two doctors watched over her the greater part of the night.

The bride was a pupil of Hyde Park high school, and would have graduated Itt Jane. The groom la young busit representing an eastern Arm dealing In lanndry supplies. The relatlvee of Mm. Wlckhelmer say they nothing about him, and there Is th« trouble began. He made his tret appearance at the residence fuMo recently and told Mrs. Jennings' parents he wished to marry their daughter. Mrs. Jennings tainted and the young man beat a hurried retreat,, but4eft a diamond ring on one of Jennie's fingers. On Mrs. Jennings' recofory ln«ulry was made about Che prospective son, but all that the daugh ter knew, er at least all she oonfeased, was that ahe waa In love and she did not care who knew It, so they elepdC':.

:i::

a a to

Mr. Frank MeMnllen, a young lawyer of Now York city, Is a keen Judge of human nature. This has led Mm to observe that those who are often loudest In denouncing a theory are the first to accept and make the beet of It when confronted with the condition. That Is nfey Mr. MeMullen Is a married man. At Lake Mohegan last summer Mr. MeMullen fell in love with Miss Fannie Ceman. 8he is a pretty brunette. Her family lives at No. 16 West Om Hundred and Twenty-third street The rouai nu was visiting his uncle, W H. Burke, the Harlem Tammany

leader., When the eonjpie announced ihalr eng|gement the MeMullen family objected, declaring the' bridegroom waa- too young to be married, Miss Ooman's parents looked on him with favor, and the two families took sides upon the question. The suitor, against Ma paMSta' urgings, visited the youag woman at the dty home of the Corneas and en the other evening took tea there. It was shortly after tea, when the couple were left alone, that youag Mr. MeMullen, despairing of obtaining his parents' consent, resolved to confront them with the actual condition—that of marriage. "Let's go ent new and be married," he said. The two went te St. Stephen's Church and were made man and wife. Mr. MeMullen'* father and mother are reconciled.

Girls Forai Klepement Clofc The marriage of A. R. Wickbelm

0

10

Mlfii Jer.aings which followed an elopement to Milwaukee, haa brought to light an elopement club in Hyde Park.

membsrs. Miss Jennings' elopement Cut following others In Hyde Park has given widespread belief In the exist, of an elopement club, and, ln

the high school said to be Teung Squler declares he will succeed

(N1N08.

credible as It may seem. It Is said a cardinal principle ot the elnb Is that ths older the man Induced to elope the more credit will be accorded the girl who wins him. The ehib is so mnch reality that Its written constMution haa been discovered, and the salient features of It are as follows:

This srganlsatlen shall be called "The H. P. H. 8. Elopement dub." Absolute sssrsag as to time and particulate of elopement shall be saalntnln-

ship sl)all be limited te ssen and shall eease the moment the wlltng ring is pleeod en a true rietart ingai. The elder the nav Invoiced late elepiag

better next time.

II be given the de

statsr to

talcs her plaoe. Strait, last and always ie motto of the club shall be: "Blots! elope! We care not where.

Just as we find a husband then,"

wm Wad the Man She Levaa. Miss Emma Ruel, a handsome young woman of Muskegon, Mich., would now be the wife of Frank Goodberg, a former Muskegon boy, now a shipping clerk in Chicago, had not a friend betrayed her confidence. Her father had another man picked out for her, and while she allowed his attentions she found It Impoeslble to change her love, though Lake Michigan separated her from the man of her cholee. The other night, while the house was filled with company, she shipped her trunk and started for Chicago. Mr. Ruel got word of her departure through a friend of his daughter and overtook her at the depot, and by agreeing to let her marry whom she pleased Induced her to return home. The wedding will net take place for a year now. "If I can't marry the one I love I'll marry no otfe," she said.

•loped After Charch.

Annie Wilklns and Charles 'eaton attended church together at Mverly, Mass., Sunday night and neitha of them has returned home yet Parents and friends of both believe thai they have eloped. Miss Wilklns had ia former attachment that had a sad ending, and which Is curiously connected with the present affair. The young man waa William 6. Flynn, and hs was a Catholic, while Annie's parents are Protestants. The marriage was, therefore, objected to, and Flynn's subsequent despondency lsd te his sutelde. Yeaton was a cloae friend et Annie's dead lover.

•lepea wltn an Aeter,

Fascinated by his stories of the ad« venturse of theatrical profession, Nel

BMMETT DOOL

lie Hagerton, a stage-struck damsel of Ote, feu, eloped, it Is alleged, with Enmelt Dooley, whe plays Simon Legree In an "Uncle Tom's Cabin" troupe, now touring the northwest. Nellie's father, J. K. Hagerton, Is one of tjhf wealthiest merchants in the eounty, and from letters left by the girl her parents are et the opinion that Dooley has been maturing for some time the plan for an elopement. The girl is but 17 years old and the authorities are' on the lookout for the runaways.

Tried te Plaj Lochlnnr. A romantic marriage planned by Carl flfuier and Miss Ora Bain, a prominent young society couple of Calhoun County, III., has been nipped in the bud by the prospective groom's parents, who oppose the uston. Owing to his being under age young Squier was unable to secure a license in his cennty, but succeeded in procuring one in Missouri. He had as he thought perfected every arrangement for the happy event at Wlnfleld, when to his dismay the proceedings were abruptly ntopped by the sheriff of Calhoun County, who had been summoned te stop the wedding by his Irate parents.

rriiiww ISlvIra Haa BCapad. Prinoess Elvira, Don Carles' third daughter, has eloped recently with a Roman artist named Folchi, a married man. The Prineaes Elvira wae born in Geneva in 1171. Princess Elvira took with her her jewels, which are valued at |S0,000. The whereabouts of the couple are unknown.

It to an X-ray pheteg-

mpher snd asked Alia to main a pietaae of It In a fowmlnates the of ha MM te tke eentfusadlpg et lutein of Ihi

mwmmr

of *0

et

I

price

50

sine, only 15 cents.

::..V

We are full up on Gloves and Mits. to $1. so. See them

T. W. IRONS

The Horse's Friend will Feed and Shelter your horses as cheap as any one in the City. One trial will convince you that it is the

Best Place in the Citj

Livery in connection.

Green Street, North of Ramsey Hotel.

J^OTICB TO NON-KESIDKNT8. 8taU of Indiana, Montgomery County: In the Montgomery Circalt Court, January term, 1897.

Henry E. Crawford, vg. Thomas Surface, James purnell, Marte Btonnett, Alice Pnrnell, Indiana Pnrnell, Elisatoth Osia,

R1

Ummmr't

Fh*t*grapbla

BOOM.

A collector ot curios la Philadelphia says he owee a debt of gratitude to Prof. Roentgen. While traveling in Egypt he aui'iaUtoueiy purchased what was reputed to be the mummiled hand ot a penmnage et rank, who flourished 3,M0 or 4,M0 years ago. The brown and withered tend waa looked apen es a great prise by Its possessor, wfce bewught .It with no little pride to Ms country, with the idea plaeiag It lit a national mnaeum. Oyaioal Mends prone unoed the hand a take and the general verdict was: "It Is a modera make** la only plten, mixed wMh ptoees et refuse mummy cloth, with now anger nails aluek In." Thus an element of doubt was likely forever to hover nheot the relic, which wns stftl reasrded ns tee valuable te be Wasatal tor essmlnatien. Keenly and almaat In daspair, the

(.••••asS&tilt'#*

cents. Best Irish linen for a5 and

.ii&, ft*

Jams# Concer,

Vra'ik Conger, Charles MeClure, Jnlla Ann Conger, ot al. Comes now the plaintiff by Hurley A Hurley, hit* attorn y*, and files his complaint herein, together with an affidavit that the defendanta, James Puruell, Marie Bennett, Alice Pnrnell, Indiana Purnell, Ellsabeih Osla, James Cogger, Frank Couiter, Charles McClnre and Ju.la Ann'Cougurare non-residents of the State of Indiana, and that said defendants are necessary parties to the above entitled action, which action Is In relaUon to real estate to-wit, for the foreclosure of a mortgage thereen.

Notice is therefore hereby given said nonresident defendants, that unless they be and appear on the 1st day of the March term of the Montgomery Circuit Court for the year 1807, the same being the 1st day of March, A. D., 1897, at the Coart hou»e in Crawfordsrllle, In said County and State, and answer or demur to said com-

lalnt, the same will be heard and determined their absence. Witness my name, and the seal of said Court, aflxed at Crawfordsrllle, this 39th day

et

For those who are at a loas to know what to buy their friends for Christmas. Warner intends unloading his immense stock of

and is offering some Bargains that will not escape the notice of those intending to make purchases at this time. A few of materially reduced prices are given as follows:

MCFFLERS.

Never was there a more complete stock of pretty and servicable mufflers shown in Crawfordsvilla- 25 ceoti will buy good heavy cold weather muffler that you have been asked 50c for. 50 cents will buy a beautiful, I he wy weight all-silk Scotch plaid that formerly cost $1.00. It.sO will quy a handsome white or black muffler, either silk or satin, that has been sold heretofore for $2.50. V-

HANDKERCHIEFS.

De­

cember, A. I)., 1806. WALLACE SPARKS, Clerk.

^OTICE TO II El US, CREDITORS, ETC.

In the matter of the estate of Frances A. Vanarsdall, deceased. In the Montgomery Circuit Court, January term, 1897.

Notice is hereby given that John A. OiifBn,aa Administrator of the estate of Frances A. Vanarsdal, d-ceased, has presented and filed his acoounta and vouchera in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said Circuit Court on tha »th day of Jan, 1897, at whlob time ail heirs, creditors er legateea of aaid estate'ara required te appear in laid Court and show cause, If any there be, why said acoounta and Tauchais ahouM net be approved, and the heirs or distributees of said estate are also notified to be in aaid Court at tha time aforesaid snd make proof of heirship

JOHN A. GRIFFIN, Admlnlatrator.

Dated the 80th day of December

1893.

-buloi.'.y one fH.ne"

ihi

'"Bearing"^

0

You never had such a chance to buy a genuine silk or Irish linen Sandkerchiefs for either ladies or gents this great unloading sale affords you. A good Japanette Silk initial Handkerchief for only

50

NECKTIES.

.1 "j ::5

the latest effects in Necties worth all the way irom lo cents to ll.oo Nothing in the way of neckwear I ever produced prettier effects than the new Persian patterns. This line is the proper one to look to tor a present to the boy.

KJ

A GREAT REDUCTION

In nil departments. Our prices are calculated to please. Do not miss ihe bargains offered You will find t'Kem exactly as advertised.

,v.We Want Your Trader

WARNER CLOTHING HOUSE!

The On© Pr ce Clotnier, Hatter and Furnisher.

Best

Tfce

25

cents, formerly 50 and 750. A good all linen handkerehief, extra

Dressed or undressed kids, lined gloves,the warm kind. Fo a 10c

Prepare For Tlie New Year

cents, former

an elegant Tailor-made Suit and Overcoat, ot which you will Sid the Orandeat Line ever shown, at

Rubeii's Bates House Glottiing Parlor

And as to prices, we can interest you, as every garment in our stocL haa been marked down, so that you can't afford to be without new clothes tor the niw ye.ir:

ETery Garaent Our Own Male! ...

91.

Be Sire ail See Oar MM

ITl IT? 17 KA We sell a Tailor-made Salt or Overcoat ,,r*»iV

OV tailor's price, ai8.

FOR 58 00

We sell a Taiior-mado Suit or Overcoat tailor's price, tao. OA We sell a Tailor-made Suit or Overcoat tailor's price SS5-

Ocoatsella

We Tailor-made Suit or Overtailor's prices SO..

Ruben's Cothing Parlors.

60 West Washington Street, Indianapolis, Ind.

Old Hard Times

Kricc'ce

THI9 COMBINATION C7FER DID IT I

One Dollar and Seventy Cents

PAID IN OR MAILED TO THE OFFICE OF

The Crawfordsv ille Review

Will pay for this payer one year, aad a year's subscrlptiea to the

FARM. FIELD AND FIRESIDE

The Farm and Family Paper which thoea who read It trs agreed la

:Y The Best on Earth

Alive, Precreaelve, Pearleee. A Leader of Thought, and Champion of Parmere intereete.

It Contains 3a to 40 Pages

Theee two Great Leaders of their Claea—

I*M

1

CM

Pipr ud

TWKHTV PACKET*

A MCHT5 V/MTCB TRUFM.*

1

Gr.t

in Intelllsant

Prloe:

Bach

00

per Year...

Week.

Best Firs Paper

ehouM be,In every farmer'e heueehoid l.- thie oeuntry. As an additional Inducement %e set them there. «e th-ie who will tali* advantage of Mile offer «uiok, and pay eeeh in advance, we w! I add

Count'/