Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 23 January 1897 — Page 4
-I*',,
Wfc
The Labor of getting [1095 Meals
confronts some one in
every
jg
home each year. Whoever
the ifo
work devolves upon should know about
'it's labor-saver—a woman-sav-'or. Without the long and wearychopping, hoilin?, peeling, igandn) quickly make mince pie, fruit pudding, or fruit cako that will be the do. ix light of her household. Since None Such is sold everywhere there is no more need of inakingyourown mince meat thanofmaltlngyourown yeast.
ing __ seeding and mixing, a woman can
Try one package—10 cents, Take no substitutes.
Send your •ddrcw, nfcmini tlilt ntper. we win »einl you ftw book, "Mrs. Poti-
kkina*Th»nk«ftvlof,"
by ouf of the oio»t
popultr bumorou* writer* of the day. HEHRELL.MULE CO., Syraaaaa. M. T.
THE REVIEW.
BY
F. T. LUSE.
VBRMS OF SUBSOHimOB.
Ooe year, in the county, Onryear.on of the county. Inquire at Office for Adrertlinsr •.
$100
110
JANUARY 23, 1897.
CIRCUIT COURT-
James A. Allen vs. Daniel Bonsack On account. James C. Knox ve. Joshua Davie. On notes and account.
Eve Black et al. ve. Walter Max'-veli ind Nowton Wray. On account. T. J. Weet ve. Charles W. Truax, John M. Truax unci Levinia Truax. On note.
New Hulls Plied
1
Alexander Maxwell vs. Lincoln Coolc and John Buskirk. On note. Mary K. Otto vs. Jonas Baker and The Surgical and Medical Institute of Indianapolis. On note.
Cornelia M. Geo W. Rusk and Amanda I. Rusk. Foreclosure. Eve Black, id. A. Black and Fred Joseph vb. Walter Maxwell a jJ Newton Wray. On account.
James
A.
Allen vs. Dan'l Bonsack.
On account. J. C, Knox ve. Joshua. .Davie, On note and account. -r ••••'*•.
Thoe. J. West ve. Chae. W. Truax et al. On note.
Clover I.eal fc'eal TraBc.
For the tiret time in the history of the load the coal mines on the Toledo, St. uie & Kansas City have been closed down because the ro id can not furnish the cars to transport the coni. Receiver Peirce a Bhort time ago purchased 500 coal cars and they have been in service continually. The orderb have been so heavy that a great amount of coal is in .re.
Not a Cundidate.
»eo, Lev
Wallace says in an inter
view: "Xo. I have not been mentioned for the cabinet yet. And it perchance I should be, 1 would not embarrass the President elect by urging my selection. Our State has a candidate for the cabinet Addison C. Harris who is considered eligible in every way for the portfolio of attorney general. He is an able lawyer."
At Lebanon last Monday morning six residences were entered by thieves and a large quautity of silverware jewelry, clothing and money was stolen,
Scott's Emulsion
is made up of the most essential elements that go to nourish the body. Where the appetite is varying or lacking, it increases it, and where digestion is weak, it aids it to perform its function in a more vigorous way* It enriches the blood, makes healthy flesh and cures chronic coughs and colds by making it possible for the body to resist disease* Our friends tell us
"IT
Works Wonders"
but we never like to over-state the merits of our remedy even when it has been tested and tried for over twenty-five years. If you will ask for it, we will send you a book telling you more about the subject than we can put in a few words.
Go to your druggist for Scott's Emulsion. Two sizes* 50 eta. and $1.00.
SCOTT ft BOWKE, New York.
vi*'
MURDER MYSTERIES.
SOME
CRIMES
THAT ARE PUZ
ZLING
THE
OFFICERS.
THE BRUTAL KI M.I X« OF HERS. HART QILVUIAK AT OSCKOLA. IOWA.
Th£ Tragedy of tho Tamp House May Never Bo Fully Explained—The Death of a Galvoston Painter an Cnfnthniuablo Crleie—Other Mysteries.
HEN Night Pumper Smith of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy pump station at Osceola, Iowa, went to the puinphouse the other night he found the lock badly battered and broken and upon opening the door
lie foutad the lifeless body of a woman lying upon a grain door In the building. The body was badly bruised and battered and covered with blood, and the woman's hat waa found lying near by. There wae a ghastly wound on her temple and one hand badly bruised, .is if crushed in trying to ward off a blow. The woman wa« Mary Gilflllan, aged about 30 years. She came from Bradford, 111., about two weeks before. She was married, but had separated from her husband. She obtained work as a waitress in the Howe hotel and was seen to leave the house about 8 o'clock that evening. A waitress in the hotel says she heard Mrs. Gilflllan make an appointment with an unknown man. The authorities are in search of a man named Wolverton, who is thought to know something about the crime.
The night clerk and a waiter of the hotel are held under guard as witnesses. The woman leaves one child, a boy of 4 years old. The victim was a very attractive looking woman.
Mystery of a le»d Man.
The body of an unknown man was found under the bushes two miles east of Bast Chicago, Ind., the other day. There was nothing on the body to identify the man, nor can be ascertained who he is. There were no signs of a struggle and but slight bruises on the body. Indications are that the death took place two or three weeks ago. The man was about 30 years of age, 5 feet 10 inches in height and weighed about 160 pounds. He bad a light mustache and was clothed well, except that his hat, ooat and vest were missing. Deputy Coroner Crawford received a postal card inquiry two weeks ago asking if a "dead man had been found under the bushes," and an effort will-be made to ascertain the connection of the writer' with the decedent.
"TVlV
.:
Bagiesw Woman t* Mtlaslnff,
Considerable excitement prevails at SagiqftWj Mich., over the mysterious diasppearancs of Miss Annie Dawer recently. Miss Dawer, who is about 35 years of age, was guardian and companion to Mrs. Inez Hill Hanley, half sister- of Arthur Hill, the wealthy lumberman of that place, which position she had held for nine years. They had just• returned to Saginaw from Milan, Italy, and Miss Dawer had been settling her affairs, having resigned as guardian to Mrs. Henley. The woman with whom Miss Dawer boarded claims she left her lodgings in the best of spirits about 11 o'clock the day of her disappearance and has not since been seen. Foul play is suspected. She had considerable money on her person.
klurdorod Man Found In the Majr.
The body of Samuel Martin, a painter, was found floating feet upward in the bay at Galveston, Texas, last week. When the body was landed it was found that the front of the skull was crushed in by some heavy blunt instrument, and around the neck was a rope, to the end of whioh was attached a heavy iron grate, indicating that Martin had been murdered, then weighted down and thrown overboard. Martin was 40 years old and married. He left home Tuesday evening, Dec. 14, saying to'his wife that he was going to make a "stake" for Christmas. He borrowed a boat and had gone out in it. A few
SAMUKL MARTIN.
days afterward the boat was found bottom up with a hole in it. His wife and the public were of the opinion that he had been accidentally drowned. Martin was well known in labor circles, and was a member of Galveston Painter's union, No. 716. The union is determined to run down his murderer. The police have in custody William Hansen, a companion of Martin, who avows his •nnocencs.
Feel Play Feared.
The body of Mike Martin, who wU& His partner, Charley the Swede, disappeared two weeks ago waa found on the beach near where their boat came ashore at Charlevoix, Mich., last week. Martin's now was broken am If by a Wew with aa oarand it to thought that
the Swede, whose Bam* la not know®, quarreled with Martin and knocked him overboard and then skipped out. Martin had told friends that he was afraid his partner would some time kill him.
A Woman Murdered at Memphis.
Friday morning was ushered in with a horrible murder at Memphis, Tenn., Mrs. Frank Watson, 25 yearn of age, was found dead in her residence on Pearce street. Her husband is under arrest, but has not confessed to the crime. Watson and his wife have had frequent quarrels of late. A babe a few months of age was found in its mother's blood, where it had lain all night.
A New Tork Mystery.
An Italian stabbing affray is puzzling the New York police. Antonio Zanone, an Italian barber, was stabbed and 'atally wounded by Lulgl Catalone, a laborer, in a dark hall of the tenement house, at No. 237 Elizabeth street, a few minutes after midnight the other morning. Zanone ran a barber shop at No. 10 Spring street. He has been in this country a little over two years. He is married, is a member of a number of Italian societies, and being handsome and prosperous has been regarded one of the lights of the Italian colony. Zanone spent the evening previous with three friends, who occupied a rear apartment on the third floor of the tenement where the stabbing occurred. Shortly before midnight the four men visited the saloon in the basement of the tenement. A few minutes later they returned to their rooms and played cards. About ten minutes after 12 o'clock a knock was heard at the door, The door being opened, a stranger appeared and requested a few words with Zanone. Unsuspicious, he went into the hall, which was dark and narrow, closing the door after him. In a few mo-
ANTONIO ZANONE.
ments the friends were startled by a cry of pain. "By the Virgin, I am stabbed," came the cry in Italian. The three friends rushed into the hall, to find their comrade unconscious and bleeding on the floor.- The strange visitor had disappeared. A policeman was called and the wounded man was taken' to the hospital. It was found that hts wounds, two in number, deep and jagged, were in the region of the heart and fatal.
After Waterloo.
"Never has the impression which the sight of Napoleon made upon me at the moment when destiny was about to pronounce between the world and him ceased to be present to me his look, once so formidable and piercing, had lost its strength and even its steadiness his face, which I had often seen, now beaming in kindness, now molded In bronze, had lost all expression and all its forcible character his mouth, compressed, contained hone of its ancient witchery his very head no longer had the pose which used to characterize the conquerer of the world, and his gait was as perplexing as his demeanor and gestures were undecided. Everything about him seemed to have lost its nature and to be broken up the ordinary pallor of hiB skin was replaced by a stronger pronounced greenish tinge which struck me."-—Me-moires of Baron Thiebault.
The Philippine limurrectlon.
The latest reports from the Philippine Islands represent the insurrection there as rapidly spreading. The insurgents are estimated at fifty thousand, and they have been reinforced by deserters from the native troops. The Spanish captain-general has been obliged to withdraw the garrisons from the smaller islands, and to concentrate them on the island of Luzon for the defense of the city of Manila, the suburbs of which have been repeatedly raided by insurgent bands. Spain has decided to send out twenty-five thousand more troops, and until these reinforcements have reached the islands no extensive operations against the rebels are probable.—Ex.
Kzhanstlon of Natural Gas.
Recent statistics show that the supply of natural gas in the United States fell off one-half from 1888 to 1895. The decline has been lesB in Ohio and Indiana than in Pennsylvania, the product in the last-named state being worth more than nineteen million dollars in 1888, and less than six million dollars in 1895. Owing to the adoption of less wasteful methods, the falling off has not been so rapid since 1891, but it still amounts to an average decline of five per cent every year.
"Grads," In Hook.
A New York clergyman who recently conducted a Sunday morning service on Blackwell's island learned that there are at present fifteen college graduates wearing the "stripes" in that penitentiary.
liexioo is now enforciag her mew law requiring the use of the metric •rate*) of weights and measures
call
and our plain
JT' .•
Edward
Best. Place in the City
Livery in connection.
Green Street, North of Ramsey Hotel.
JjOTlCK TO NON-RESIDENTS.
State of Indiana, Montgomery County:
J^OTK
January
In the .Montgomery Circuit Court, term. 189T. Henry K. Crawford, vs. Thomas Surface, James Puruell, Marie Bennett, Alice Purnell, Indiana 1'urnell, Elizabeth Osia.Jamec Couger, Fra Couger, CharleB McClnre, Julia Ann Couger, et al.
Comet! now the plaintiff by Hurley 4 Hurler, his attorn ys and files his complaint herein, together with an affidavit that the defendants,
James
Purnell, Marie Bennett, Alice rnrrMl, Indiana I'urnell, Ellzabeih Osla, amen Couger, Frank Couger, Charles McClure and Ju la Ann Couger are non-residents of the State of Indiana, and that said defendants are necessary parties 'o the above entitled actlr n, which action Is In relation to real estate to-wlt, for the foreclosure of a mortgago thereen.
Notice Is therefore hereby given said nonresident defendants, that unless they be and appear on the 1st day of the March term of tho Montgomery Circuit Court for the year 1897, the same being the st day of arch, A. D., 1897, at the Court hou«e In Crawfordnrille, in said County and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in their absence.
Witness my name, and the seal of said Court, atRxed atCrawfordsville, this 29th day ef IJeceinber, A. I)., 1896.
WALLACE SPAKKS, Clerk
TO HKIKS, CltKDITOKS, ETC.
In tlio matter of Uie estate of Frances A. Vanarsdall, deceased. In the Montgomery Circuit Court, January term, 1897.
N( tice is hereby given that John A. Griffin, aw Administrator of the estate of Frances A. Vanarsdal deceased, has presented and filed hU accounts and vouchers in flnal settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said Circuit Court on the 25th day of Jan, 1897, at which time all heirs, creditors or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said Court and show cause, if any there be, why said accounts and vouchers shoulJ not be approved, and the heirs or distributees of said estate are also notified to be In said Court at the time aforesaid and make proof of heirship.
JOHN A. GRIFFIN, Administrator
Dated the 30th day of December 189i.
A Magnanimous Act.
The Virginia state board of canvassers, in canvassing the votes for congressman in the tenth district, decided that certain votes cast for Jacob Yost could not be counted for J. Yost, the republican oandidate. If these votes had been counted, Mr. Yost would have been declared elected by a small plurality. The effect of throwing out the votes was to give H. D. Flood, the democratic candidate a plurality. With a magnanimity which is rare in political contests, Mr. Flood, while avowing his belief that he received a majority of the Totes legally cast, has declined to accept a certificate of election obtained by this technicality.
THERE'S YET A CHANCE!
A Fine Opportunity Oftwd ihose In Nml 01
I
HATS, FURNISHING GOODS.
..
Warner can and is selling Goods at a 20 per cenl. Discount and yet he is allowed a Reasonable
Profit on his sales. A man may claim to be selling at cost, etc., but he can't do it. He can, however,
ofler a discount when trade is not the liveliest, and that is what we are doing now
A declaration of this kind causes one to think, and it perhaps starts an inclination for a man to
I, price aed buy what he wants. He cannot help buying when the quality of the goods offered him
Oiu iT\ \V\Vu.i.v A.*.v \Y\YiY\Y
W IRONP
The HftrSe's Friend will Shelter your horses aB cheap as any one in the City. One trial will convince you that it is the
figure marked down prices confront him as a candid truth. We do not want anyone to
disbelieve our statements until they are made do so by misrepreHentation, and that time will never be..
.We Want Your Trade.
.1
Successor to Lee S. Warner.
One Price Clothier, Hatter and Gents' Furnisher
FOR
AQENT5 WJlHTCb
F-TIje'aw Year
:1V tthftuelB Tailor.made Suit and Overcoat, of-which you will and "I- .»....!,, .. the Grandest Line ever shown, at-
ben's ate siteClotlpgParlor
^And as to price*, wo can interest you, as every garment in our stock nas been marked down, so that you can't afford to be without naw clothe* for the new yy.ir.
Every Garment Oar Own Make! Be Sure and See Our Windows.'
FOR $7 50 mnor's1parrce,1»°,8made
IS8
Oft
PAID rs OR MAILED TO THE |OFFTCE OF
The CrawfordsTilie Review
Will pay for this paper one year, ami year's subscription to the
FARM. FIELD Alio FIPJSiDF
The Farm and Family Paper which those, who read It ar.e agreed Is
The Best on Earth!
Alive, Progressive, Fearless. A Leader of Thought, and an tntelllsrent Champion of Farmers interests.
It Contains 32 to 40 Pages Bacii Week. ^velV:00
These two Great Leaders of their Class
.The Best Borne Paper and lie Best Farm Paper
should be In evary farmer's household this country. As an additional inducement to get them there, to tl se who will take advantage of this offer quick, and pay cash In advan we wi I add
"TWENTY PACKET?' OF S EDS
These seeds are the tin tli :uai ket. Tli#• consist ofF ui, Ve& V-i! and Flower S^eds of ur own
SU" 0r°™r*0at
We ".ell a Tallor-mado Suit or Overcoat
*. 'ii W W tailor's price, tgo. Aft We sell a Tailor-made Suit or Overvv ooat tailor's price *25.
0
We sell a Tailor-made Suit or Overcoat tailor's prices 30.
Ruben's Cothing Parlors.
60 West Washington Street, Indianapolis, Ind.
Old Hard Times Knocked Out
THIS COMBINATION OFFER DID IT I
On© Dollar and Seventy Cents
f-
tion from a list of aoo rietiee. T-i- r' p«ckrtj are ae large ss a^-cduien's outil packets.
The seed* alene at retail prioee are arerth W Oo. CaM and f«e ue erut **to sweat after at enee, or send remlttaaee* to fchle efftee.
T*
-'•nTthtensffa».,ri
