Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 16 January 1897 — Page 3
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differing Women
To the many suffering women who }re weak and dejected we would nd a comforting hand.
Herje is something ou may need. Please read the inclosed circular and ethaps you will find somothing to fid you if you are in poor health, as many women are. Look among jur female frie and you will Ind scarcely one whottis not ailing in »me way. Look again and you will ind a large per cent of them nervous knd tired. They have lost elasticity |nd feel as though they weighed a n, or perhaps the brain feels light |nd dizzy the memory weak and eacherous.
How many women have grown ^is. juraged after years of doctoring Irithout relief.
Time and money are thrown away dosing with medicine from which bey gain only temporary aid. They not sleep well, have headaches, Irvous prostration, backaches, neu-
Igia, rheumatism, melancholia, ichorrhea, dysmenorhoea, ulceralons, displacement and other irregujrities.
Nervous diseases include all aflietions of the brain, spinal cord and ^erves. Pains or congestions in the pinal cord, which constitute most
IckacheB and tenderness, are spinal |r nervous diseases, which nine les out of ten, are reflected from lie female organs, and are sympalictic only. These may be removed jr a proper use of Elzena which is aplied direct to the weak parts and ^us have an advantage of their full jwer. Price per box $1.00 and l&oo. 'M CZ3
Directions for the applicatien of lie Capsules, accompany each box the Elzena Compound. Woman Vn treat herself without the aid ot physicia [Aftrial box will convince any wotan whether married or single, of le great utility of this remedy for Sulies. Sold by
MOFFETT & MORGAN.
"J
thotuund wheel*—but only
one
Use the
SSicyele
For A. I Comfort Fit and 1 1
Shoe"
"Ball-Bearing
ROB
I Wear. Pratt Fiwtanors hold laces. iMditta
DEALER* KIM Booklet Free I a
C. H. PARttO CO. (hkrn), OUTieO. (gp
QGjfO KB Bin filBrtUirJPirilPmlgin] Pirn tn?ai
rouVe
Been Told
[uch regarding th
e9xti' a
fancy trimmed
/RESCENT HAMS
—SOLD ONLY BY—
lickerson & Truitt
The Corner Grocers.
fry one for final information.
They're just right,
bggsassssssssgssasssssasBB SBSE
EH WANTED
a
'd Traveling Salesmen for SPAULDING JEBY & ORCHARD Co., Sl'A UMHNO, Ii.u, to eel I I? iAN?.
l'rict
to the retail trade,
JV?Ta
L'ri-
"Jobbers'"' -profits.
LinS??,dum.ed,? treef"- 6°0 acres—40th year•OO.OOCapital. Write for terms. Send references.
EN WANTED
«1 and traveling Salesmen for SPAULDING jsrjr and Orchnrd Co., Spau|(llng, 111., to sell •Tret sand Pla-uts direct to the retail trade, "Dealers" and "Jobbers" prottts. Pre-
1
K°1J medal trees. 600 acres—40th -•106,000capital. Write for terms. Send ences.
LnTBD:—Several trustworthy gentlemen or ^ladies to travel in Indiana for established ble house. Salary $780 and expenses. By position. Enclose reference and sell (taped stamped envelope. The Dominion py, third floor, Omahnttldg.. Chicago, ill
$1.50 Reading and
il8Wii8
Magnifying Glass for
CSiz02J!in. (linmetcrbv Vsa 6in.Ions'. Reml inonry
kmps. If not3atisfuctory money will be refunded. IS. VAN HOUTEN, Manufacturer of Cut Lenses, 74 Park Place, Net* York City.
leen & Crescent to New OrleansI Miles Shorter.from Cincinnati and joints north by the Queen & Oresthan, by aijy other' lines. Two erb veetibuled trains daily»
W.C. Krnearson.
linois spends at least $2,000,000' a I in punishing criminate. It spends bely anything for their reform
Idge Torrey has put up over 10-00(1 I of hay on his Embar ranch, in Rig Fn courijty, Wyoming.
Nine.
Figures are funny things. They •V be and often are manipulated in a moat marvelouB manner, so as entirely to deceive the uninitiated. Of course these remarks flo not refer to ladies' figures, out to the common aumeral of arithmetic. Strange tricks may be played with them tricks as amusing and perplexing as with those time-honored confederates of conjurors —a pack of playing cards. In moat of these the figure 9 is' the Important factor. There are some peculiarities about that little bullet-headed gentleman which'are really startling. He has a pbeenlx-Iike power of raising himself from his ashes. Smother him up as you will, multiply him by any group of his fellow figures until his identity is completely lost, and he will bob up again, if not in shape, at least in spirit and substance, as the sum of the result obtained by the process of multiplication.
Thus—Twice 9 Is 1J. Add one and eight together and you get 9. So, for example, 17 nines are 153, which, added together make nine, or 138 nines makes 1,242, and thuB the same selfassertive little chap popB up again in different form. A seeming exception Is when applied to 11, or to a multiple •f eleven then the little Joker comes in paira, as 22 nines give 198, or sev-enty-seven nines make 603. But even then the exception is only apparent, for adding 1 and 9 and 8 gives 18, and 1 and 8 gives 9 6 and 3 and 0 make 9.
Perhaps a more puzzling trick provided,.by the eccentricities of the figure 9 is the following: Let your subject put down any odd number of figures, three, five, seven, or even more then add them together and subtract the result. Now he may cross out any one figure and tell the trickster the others. It is easy, by mentally adding them, to discover the value of the figure crossed out, as this is the one needed to make up the result to the nearest multiple of 9. Thus: 136-10 33,404-14 7,633,458-38 10 or 14 or 35 1x6- 3x,390-18 7,6x3,423-87 2 S 2
Anotner use of the magic 9 is made in the fallowing effective trick: Let A put down any number of figures and show them to you. Then, on another piece of paper, you privately write the answer, fold it, and give it to some one to hold. Then adds another row of figures, under which you write a row, taking care to place under each af his the particular figure which will complete the sum of nine. Then may write another batch, beneath which you again place numerals, making up a string of nines. The result upon addition of the whole will be found exactly to correspond .with your written answer, which you had made a repetition of tbe first group of figures, less two and wi'b the figure 2 added la front, thus:
A 96,548 1 (Answer.) 42,317 (296,546) You .... 57,682 47,831 You .... 52,16$
296,54«
A .... 7,G:S2,146
(Answer.)
.... 8,231,578(27,632,144) You 1,768,421 .... 5,407,936 You .. 4,592,063
27,632,144
A trick much more difficult to explain is the $10.89 mystery, but it should only be done once during an evening or among the same set of friends, for, unfortunately, the answer never varies. It is a curious fact that any supi of money, dollars and cents, manipulated in a certain manner will produce the inevitable total of |10.89, provided the original capital is not more than $10. This looks like a profitable business—on paper. The process is thi^: The tortured trick bearer is told to put down a sum of money (again on paper, he probably will not do it otherwise), then to reVerse the figures and subtract the lesser from the greater. Again the figures must be reversed and the two lines added together. The unfailing answer Is $10.89. Here are examples: $2.75 $991 $3.21 199 1.23 5.72 2.75
792 297
2.97 7.92
1.98 '8.91
$10.89 $10.89
$10.89.
The process'of reversing and sub-
trading causes our irrepressible 9 to bob up serenely, and thus arises a simple trick. The wily operator asks his subject to put down secretly three figures, then invert these and subtract the lesser from the greater. If he will then divulge the first figure of the result the correct answer can be stated, for it is known that the insolent little figure 9 always usurps the place in the middle, and moreover insists that his supporters together shall sum up nine. Thus with a knowledge of the first figure, the other two are easily told. Here are examples: 321 722 911 524 425
123
227
198
119
495
792
LOOAL NEWS.
99
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a
A Lapsp. of Memory.
"1. hear. Li 3 Tung Chang intends returning to AnierTcs .". "Oh, has he forgotten to ask some thing?"—Truth.
Freedom from want Is not for the strongest lion, but it may be enjoyed Sr the weakest of (he Lord's .sheep,
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Te^re Haute claims a population of 43,316.
Geo. Harney was op frota Ladoga on Monday. Doc Boraker was down from Kankakee this week.
Mrs. Tom Nicholson is visiting Mrs. Geo. Hall in Chicago. W. T. BrUBh,\the attorney is reported to be somewhat better.
B. A. Archey was in Louieville, Ky., this week to buy cattle.
G. W. Pay ton was in Indianapolis Wednesday on business. The bridge carpenters on the Big Four have been layed off.
John Gilberts house of Wabash avenue will be completed soon. Attorney Stover of the Midland railway was in the city on Monday.
Mr. E. M. Henkle, Brazil, has been graoted an increase in pension. Lou Cumberland, of Kokomo, in in the city, the eueet of his father,
W. T. Bru who has been ill for some four or five weeks improves very slowly.
The Monon is again showing nn increase in earnings, both in its freight and passenger departments.
Portland, Fountain county, is a good point for a yuung doctor. The nearest physician is seven miles away.
Luther Benson, the noted temperance lecturer, will Bpeak at the court house to-morrow afternoon. The admission ie free.
Gus Freeman, of Flora, who was shot while trying to force his way into the Flora fair grounds, and whose right leg was amputated, has been released from jail pending good behavior.
The storm of trampB that have been annoying roads crossing in the northern psrt of the State are giving the Big Four a good deal of trouble, ten to fifteen men eometiineB boarding one train.
Congressman-elect Landis. of Delphi, has received a letter from John R. Proctor, president of the Civil Service Commission of Washington, stating that pension examining surgeons are in the classified service.
POX HOUNDS.
A Description of a Hunt That Make* One's Blooh Tingle. We became aware, from the shouts of the darkies as they urged the dogs into the thickets, that these animals had names of famous flavors, though their appellations had not been bestowed by one who possessed a fine sense of the historical or chronological unities, says Lipplncott's. "Hi, yo' Clovls!" "Come h*ah, Uncas!" "Qit on, Brutus, git on! What yo' sulkin' 'bout?" These ejaculations were accompanied by sundry kicks, delivered upon the representatives of these and other renowned characters. To such uses do men's names come after death.
After the disappearance of the hounds in the thicket we rode slowly along the devious ways of the pine lands, listening intently for that peculiar canine cry, which announces the discovery of a trail. It was not long delayed, for gray foxes are almost as numerous ID eastern Virginia as rabbits are in the western states. Suddenly, amidst the chorus of sharp, short yelps, we heard that long-drawn, walling cry which at night would be interpreted as a cry of the banshee, but which, ringing out on the air of a bright November morning, loses itB ominous significance for every one except the fox whose trail has been "struck." As the cry rose and swelled and was taken up by thirty other mouths, our blow-filing cavalcade became enthused with the life and animation of a cavalry company that has just received orders to charge. Reins were tightened, knees were pressed closer to the saddles, hats were pulled down over eyes and men leaned forward over their horses' necks like jockeys waiting for the fall of the starter's flag.
A New Treatment of Measles. The secondary symptoms of measels and the dangers attending relapse have turned the medical mind toward research, in the hope that some means would be found by which such aftereffects could be avoided. Experiments with jacket-poultices prove their great value in cases of measels. As soon as the disease is clearly indicated, the patient is put into one of these poultices and not allowed to become chilled unt4I the severity of the attack is past. In renewing the poultices the utmost precaution must be taken, and the old one should not be removed until the new one is at hand. Inded, it is best to take the old on§ off little by little and at once apply that which is fresh. The operation should be performed in a very warm room. In open houses where there is no possibility of keeping up the proper temperature, a bandage made of cotton-batting should be wrapped around the entire body and limbs. If there is any trouble experienced about keeping the cotton in place, it-may toe secured by quilting or tacking it into the insi,de of a knitted shirt and under Vesf."It must'be applied very thickly and the garments must fit snugly and be Worn contihubusly. The grant value- of this form of. treatment seems to be 'Keeping he patient perfectly warm, and avoiding any exposure of the surface of the body to cold. Out of three hundred children treated with jacket-poultices all but three recovrred.
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Lands!
Write to W. G. Rinearaon, General Pase'r Agent Queen it Qreecent Route, Cincinnati, for a copy of the new book Land and a Living" Gheap farms in the South. No sunstroke. No dlizzards LAW railroad rates twice each month Printed matter free.
To the Blue Grata
The Queen & Crescent Route has inaugurated a service of observatios cars on the famous Blue Grass Vestibule between Cincinnati and Lexington. Free parlor can and Queen & Crescent Standard veetibuled Day Coaches. 4 Trains Daily. 17 Miles shortest line, unequalled train service.—W. C. Rinearson.
AGENTS FOR THK REVIEW. The following gentlemen are agents for THE REVIEW, and will receive subscriptions for it for the year 1897:
J. S. Bennett, Linden. L. P. Lafferty, Coal Creek tp. Ira Booher, Darlington. James Walter, Yountsville. Jere Chadwick, Mace. Charles Snoderass, Ladoga. Lon Stingley, Balhinch. Oath Long, Bowers.
Home Seekers' ExcursionHome seekers' round trip excursion tickets will be Bold on the Big Four to all points in the south and south-west, at one fare for the round trip, plus 12, except to points in Florida, Alabama and Georgia, which will be one fare plus $5. Tickets will be on sale January 19, February 2 and 16, March 2 and 16, April 6 and 20, May 4 and 18.
Tickets will be good returning 21 days from date of Bale, For further information call on W. B. PATTERSON
W. H. WILLIAMS.
Underwear^at coet. Myers & Uharni.
Queen & Crescent Route Half Rates SouthVia Cincinnati and the Queen & Crescent and vestibule limited traine. Tickets on sale 1st and 3rd Tuesday each month. Ask your ticket Agent or write to. W. C. Rinearaon.
Black silkB at cost. Myers & Charni.
An English journal eays that Queen Victora has been a total abstainer (or throe years,
quickly and permanently, by the use of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. They area perfect remedy for this most common of all
troubles. They give to nature just the little help that she needs. They are very mild in their action, and act without any violence whatever. In this, they are different from many preparations offered for a similar purpose. Sometimes the remedy is worse than the disease, Dr. Picrce's Pleasant Pellets are mild, but they are infallibly efficient. They do the work 'vhicli they are intended to do, without deranging tlie system in any way. They not only give immediate relief, but the benefit derived from them is permanent You can stop taking them by and by and there is no danger that you will become a slave to their use. The druggist who tries to sell you something else just as good," either does not know what he is talking about, or he makes more money 011 the other thing. If you care more for his prosperity than you do for your own health, take the other thing. If you value your health, insist on having Dr. Picrce's Pleasant Pellets. A free sample, of from 4 to 7 doses, will be sent to any address.
A copy- of Dr. Pierce's celebrated 1008 page book, "The Common Sense Medical Adviseri" profusely illustrated will be Bent
free
cents in one-cent stamps to cover cost of mailing oar.'. Address. WORI N's DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, MO.
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Agen
L. 0.0. M.
Resolutions of Montgomery Lodge No. 6. WHEREAS, Death, tbe arbiter of fate fate, has set his seal upon the temple that contained, the life and soul of our well loved Brother Moose, Fred C, Bandel, and, as with all things beyond the power of man to control, it becomes his to bow in bumble resignation to the inevitable long journey of the Moose.
Therefore, Be .it resolved that this lodge has sustained.a lose which it deeply feele, and that in memery of the fraternal spirit shown our lodge and of his loyalty to the teachings of our order, we cause the JewelB ot the Lodge to be draped in mourning for the period of the budding of tbe velvet horn.
That, Tbe sympathy of the Lodge be extended to tbe family of our departed brother, in this, their great loss.
Resolved further, That these resolutions be recorded among the archives of our Lodge, a copy be transmitted to the bereaved widow and family, and that the same be published-in the papers of the City of which be was Chief Magistrate.
I. M. Davis, "j W.D.J ONES, J. F. BARR, ^-Com. E. S. SIMPSON, I
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table frepar&tion for As
similating tteToodondRegutatiqg theStoaachs andBowels of
Im
a ii ii in
FronK)lesT)igesiion,Cheerrvilness and Best.Contains neither OpmnuMorpUne nor
fa
A foul breath is one of the greatest afflictions that a man or woman can have. An affliction not only to themselves, but to those with whom they come in contact. A foul breath is a dreadful discouraerr of affection. or t* V-r of the ir '.•• of af
fection. It would prohnbiy •. more so if people only realized just what, bad breath means. Bad breath is one of the symptoms of constipation. Some of the other symptoms are sour stomach,' loss of appetite, sick and bilious headache, dizziness, heartburn and distress after eating. These things mean indigestion. They lead to dyspepsia and worse things. They all start with constipation, and constipation is inexcusable because it can be cured cured easily,
$
A*
V? •m
WMMI.
Not Nabcotic.
vvtfeun-SfHUZiBTBnt Smi~ Jkx.Smmm
JbJUkSdkthft
Apcxfect Remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach.Diarrtoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverishoass and Loss OF SUEEP.
Tac Simile Signature of
NEW "YORK.
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EXACT CO FT OF VBAFPEB
In Buying a Piano or an Organ
SAPOLIO
We will send from
.Mi.
I
-hi*
'1?
•H?.
on'- receipt of "twenty- one (21)
66J
Buffalo, N. Y.
Main Street^
to
..16
One to
I
Silver Army.
Great Campaign Document.
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THE SILVER SUPPLEMENT:
To the FARM, FIELD AND FIRESIDE, the most complete, instructive and convincing discussion of the silver question ever published.
Send us your name with stamps to pay postage.
JP{_|| J|ll L/TS.
For 25 Cts
.'IV
..
1
THAT THE
.• r,-
[FAC-SIMILE
SIGNATURE
•OF-
IS ON THE
WRAPPER
OF EYEEY
bottle op
MSTHH
Otsteria ia put np In lottlis oaly. XI 111 not sold la balk* Dont allow aaytn* to M!1 I you anything elM on th« plea pnmiM that it I la jut aa good" and "will answer win MIW (poae." 49-Be* that yon g«t 0-A4^T4-££A.
IO To 1:
That you will get the Best Workmanship and Reasonable Prices at th
^Oity Shoe Shop^
W. S. RICHARDS, Proprietor. No. 125 W. Main St.
do not fafl to examine the latest Haaon A Hamlin models. 1 Improrementa together with time te*te4 point* of superiority tender laatrumenta par excellence. Old planis or organs taken in excbi Instrument* sold for cash or easy payments.
Catalogues and full information wot free.
350 and 35 WABASH AVENUE, CHICAGO, ILL
"THRIFT IS A GOOD REVENUE."! GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM CLEANLINESS AND
Free
10,000
A We will send the FARM, PIBI,D AND
FIRESIDE
until Nov. 1. Fresh 6ilver
matter every week.
Until January 1, 1897.
AGENTS
FARM, FIELD AND FIRESIDE, .•
CHICAGO, ILL.
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