Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 15 May 1897 — Page 7
-NOT WHAT THEY
go^BUT
HOW.*.*
THEY DO
IT
9t
$100
\Three $7s
[erades J£g
Do what they DO, do right. And they do a .whole lot that's riRht. All right, send for our Art Catalogue and "you'll know ilit' rest."
HAY&
WILLITS M'FG CO.
7G N. I'cnnn. St., IndinnapolU
mmm
Our Business
[$ Selling
to the Dealers of the U. 8. of a quality, make and fit that
NEVER DISAPPOINTS THE WEARERS..
I
We manufacture ourselTOi everything we veil, our guarantee of
,s.
„t
smtn
asMoa rtrics iMlsb
6
nutans (omethlng and our trade-mark placed Oil every garment la the eal of our bond. If your dealer does Dot have them In stock, we'll tell you whore to get supplied.
Send for "From F«14 te Saloae,'* our hondaoir* jift to ro»deri of this paper—maiUd
frtt.
iKolwBrot., Sole manufacturers, Chicago
SLICKER
WILL KEEP YOU DRY.
Don't be fooled with a mackintosh. or rubber coat, if you want a coat that will keep you dry in the hardest storm buy the Fish Brand Slicker. If not for sale in your town, write for catalogue to
A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass
CURE YOURSELF!
'cUHESX I U»e Big 3 for uniiatural I discharges, inflammations, IfoM ^Munued irritation* or ulcerations |U)/tot to iui«««re. of mucous membranes. e«uuf*»«. and not
MtHlEvANS GHEM aontor
VCIHCIKNATI.O.ICALOO.I'aiuleaB,poUonouB.aatrln* "!J
®°W
BY »RA**UTA,
or sent in plain wrapper, br ezpreei, pretmid.
far
$1.00, or 3 bottTea, $2.75.
Circular sent on request,
lever Before, Never Agaip
Wer# or will be the prices as low for Scales we wl.l now offer you. ft number, Jones He Pays tha Freight
—ADDRK8S—
FONS8
OF BINCHAMTON, BINCHAMTON, N. Y.
ao
^Western "Wheel "Works c^c^
MAKERS
CATALQGVF
/ll/A/OtS' E E
took Kreping, Banking, Penmanship |waal Course. Open till year. Begin now.
('ct
Catalogue. Write
lllOKIJ, l'reHldciit. I'wliannpolin l!usin«'».s University, When ltldi
$80-g!2J—05-90 Styles Sllglitly Used. Send lor list. Enclose stamp. Enameling and repairing. Wm. Vanderpool. SS8E. Wash. St., Ind'plis
IK'QNS, PATENTS, CLAIMS.
u°HpW W MORRIS, WASHINGTON. D.C. jrt, ff*®clpal Examiner U. 8. Pension Bureau. a tat war, 15 •dedicating claims, ^ttj\ cinoa
WHtBE ALL ELSE FAILS. !*.K Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
BjP_tlniot
Bold by druggists. __
\U^TNDRL'S N0.20, '97
"I
am
only too glad to testify to the great value of Ayer'a Sarsaparilla which has been a household companion in our family for years. I take '"'ora 3 to 5 bottles of it every
Spring,•generally
beginning
about the first of April. After, "tat I feel like a two year old,, 1
fl»'
it tones up my system, gives
rne
an excellent appetite and 1 I
1
?l'ee!) "lte
a
toP-
As
blood medl-
ne it has 110 superior, at least that 's '"y opinion of it.—H. R. Wir-DKT, .5 "adelphla, Pa., March 20,1896
WEIGHTY WIRDS
FOR
Ayer's SarsapariUa.
NEVEH SATISFIED.
The Curiosity of This Spinster,"as To What lie Would Have Said.
She is a maiden aunt who has ceased to hide her spectacles when a gentleman calls, and likes to knit rather than be idle.
Of course, there's a romance in your life, auntie,' declared her dashing niece trie other day. "There's a romance in every woman's life. Now be good and tell me yours.
It nothing,"
ancj tjle
kindly face
blushed almost into youthfulness. there was a' very attractive young man with whom I had grown up. "We had been thrown together a great deal, and before he started abroad to pursue his studies as an artist he came to spend the evening with me and take leave. I recall that we talked of everything that offered an excuse for talking, until he rose to go.
Ihcn he took me by the hand. Ho faltered, turning red and then turning white. It seemed he could not speak then, and he took a nervous turn about the room. As he came back to me there was a steadier and more determined look in his grave blue eyes. Again he took my trembling hand in his strong grasp and pronounced my name—" "Yes, auntie." "Here father and your uncle entered unceremoniously, discussing some earthly matter of business. Man-like, they spread themselves out in front of the grate, talked to Hugh about his trip and remained there till he was gone." "O, the horrid brutes!" "Thank you, dear. Now you can share the curiosity I have indulged so many years. If he had spoken, what would he have said?"—Detroit Free Press. Keligicii and Language of the Royal
Family of Greece.
Benjamin Ide Wheeler writes of "The Royal Family qf Greece"jin the May "'Century." .Prof.Wheeler^&ays: The Queen is a Russian,-and & Rtissian with heart and soul. She never'fails to show the warmth of her allegjance, whether it be to individuals, to political interests, or to religion. She is a most devoted adherent 01 the Russian Church. The ministrations of the chtirch she generally receives at a little Russian chapel specially constructed for her use in the'' palace, but on the greiat feast days she attends the Russian church in the city. The King reguan^ attends •a. ^Lutheran' service heiu in- the royal chapel and conducted by the court chaplains in German. The princes and princesses, however, are all adherents of the national Greek Church.
Almost as diverse are the linguistic conditions. The Queen does not speak Danish freely, nor -the King Russian. Hence when by themselves they converse in- German. Both speatf English and French freely. In the family of the Crown Prince English is the established language. When the whole family is together it is made the rule that Greek shall be, used at table, but at other times English or German, is"the* usual language.
The Longest Gas Pipe Ijine, The hundred-mile pipe-line of the Natural Gas Company of Pittsburg is at present the longest in the world, but a line is building in the Caucasus, from Michailove to Batoum, which is 214 Russian verst, or almost 150 miles long. It will be finishe'd within a few weeks, and its estimated cost will exceed 5,000,000 rubles ($3,000,000).
To Prevent Grave Bobbery. At a recent funeral in Atchison, Kas., after the casket had been lowered, the grave was filled half way up with straw and the earth then piled in. This is in accordance with an old-time custom to prevent grave-robbery. It is alleged that to remove the -straw would require so much time that detection would follow. ..
S
Fine Bookeeping.
In a ledger of 456 pages which was found in an Auburn (Maine) curiosity shop among a set of business' books used a ccnturv ago by a .New Gloucester firm, there is no* a blot, ithough all the pages arc full of entries^. The books were kept with a quill pen and home-made ink.
The Waterbury American tells this new story about. Lyman 'J. Gage: In 1893 a customer of Mr. Gage's bank asked for a loan of $200,000. Mr. Gage asked him for what he wanted the money. The customer replied that cer taip street-railway stocks were greatly depressed and could b.e. bought .cheap, with a chance for a big profit. In answer Mr. Gage said, substantially: "All the money that this bank has is needed for customers who need the money. I will advance to any solvent customer •all that he requires to tide him over this crisis. I will not loan to any customer money to be used in speculation, however sure the profit."
SUDDEN AND UNEXPECTED REPORT FROM FINANCE COMMITTEE OF UPPER HOUSE.
The Original Dinglcy BUI Sadly Mutilated —Reciprocity Eliminated—Beer Tax Increased.
A Washing-ton special says: Nothing Is talked of among politicians tonight excepting the tariff bill. Its sudden and unexepected introduction Into the Senate gave the wiseacres little time for preliminary speculation, and now {he wholo bill, with all Its provisions and details, is public property. The features most discussed are the sugar schedules, the elimination of the reciprocity clause, the proposition to raise ,the tax on beer from $1 per barrel to $1.44 per barrel, the duty on hides and the woolen schedules. The Senate bill is being swiftly digested by practical politicians and by the representatives of the many interests who have been camped in Washington since the beginning of the special session. New England, v/hich is loudly demanding free raw materials and protection^ on manufactured articles, seems to be arraying itself bitterly against the West, with its moderate but firmly-grounded views as to what is best for producers of wools and hides, and a sharp clash between these sections seems almost inevitable. The proposition to tax beer is certain to bring a strong brewery lobby down upon Washington. The brewers felt safq against further taxation until a few daya ago.
Some of the more important schedules and provisions of the Dingley bill, as amended by the Senate Committee,, are as follows:
Sugar.
Sugars not above No. 16, Dutch standard in color, tank bottoms, syrups of cane juice and of beet juice, melada, concentrated molasses, testing by the polariscope above 87 and not above 8S degrees, '9-106 of 1 cent per pound, and for every additional degree shown by the polariscopic test, 2-100 of 1 cent per pound, and fractions of a degree in proportion. Sugar above No. 16, Dutch standard in color, and sugar that has gone through a process of refining, 1 16-100 cent per pound and in addition thereto, on all t..e foregoing, 35 per centum ad valorem. Sugars not above No. 16, Dutcn standard in color, tank bottoms, syrups of cane juice and best juice melada, concentrated melada, concrete and concentrated molasses, testing by the polariscope not more thato 87 degrees, 75 per centum aJ valorem.
Molasses testing above 40 and not more .than 56 degrees, 4 cents per gallon. Machinery purchased abroad, imported and erected in any beet-sugar factory and actually used in the production of sugar in the United tates from beets produced therein within two years from the first day of July, 1897, shall be admitted free of duty under such regulations a: the secretary of the treasury may prescribe.
Maple sugar and maple syrup, 4 cents per pound glucose or grape sugar, 1% cents per pound sugar cane in Its natural state or unmanufactured, 10 per cent, ad valorem saccahrine, $1 per pound and 10 per cent, ad valorem. Sugar candy in all confectionery valued at 15 cents per pound or less, 4 cents per pound, and 15 per cent, ad valorem.
Hides.
Following is the provision in regard to hides, which are transferred from the free list: "Hides of cattle, raw or uncured, whether dry, salted or pickled, 1% cent per pound, provided that on all leather exported there shall be allowed a drawback equal to the amy^nt of dutypaid on such hides.'
The addition of hides to the dutiable list made necessary various changes in tho bill concerning leather and articles made therefrom. A substitute paragraph was prepared in regard to belting leather, tho provisions of which are as follows: "Band or belting leather and sole leather, 20 per cent, ad valorem calf skins, tanned, dressed upper leather, Including patent, enameled, etc., chamois skins and other skins not specially enumerated, 20 per cent, ad valorem 'calf skins, kangaroo, sheep and goat skins, including lamb and kid skins dressed and finished, 20 per cent, ad valorem s^ins from morocco, tanned but unfinished, 10 per cent, ad valorem: pianoforte leather, 20 per cent, ad valorem boots and shoes made of leather, 25 per cent, ad valorem provided that leather cut into shoe uppers or vamps shall be classified as manufactures of leather and pay a duty accordingly." ,,
Cv\~ .' V. Beer.
The Senate has increased the internal revenue duty on beer by changing Section 3339 of the Revised Statutes to read as follows: Until Jan. 1, 1900, there shall be paid on all beer, lager beer, ale, porter and other similar fermented liquors, brewed or manufactured and sold or removed tor consumption or sale within the United States, by whatever name such liquors may be called, a tax of $3.44 for every barrel containing not more than 31 gallons and after Jan. 1, 1900, there shall be paid a tax of $1 per barrel on every barrel of such beer—lager beer, ale, porter and other s.milar ifermented liquors. (The present rate is ?1.)
Reciprocity.
The entire House provision relating to reciprocity has been stricken out and the following section substituted: "That w.-enever any country, dependency or colony shall pay or bestow, directly or indirectly, any bounty or grant upon the exportation of any article or merchandise from such country, dependency or colony, and such article or merchandise is dutiable under the provisions of this act, then on the importation of any such article or merchandise into the United States, whether the same shall be Imported or otherwise and whether such article or merchandise is imported in the same condition as when exported fror the country of production or has been changed into condition by manufacture or otherwise, there shall be levied and paid in all such cases, in addition to the duties otherwise Imposed by this act, an additional duty equal to the net amount of 6uch bounty or gain, however the same be paid or bestowed. The net amount
of
all such bounties of grants
shall be from time to time ascertained, determined and declared by the secretary
of the treasury who shall make all need ful regulations for the identification of such articles and merchandise and for the assessment and co»iectlon of such additional duties.
The House provision in the tariff bill keeping in force the Hawaiian reciprocity treaty is stricken out, the effect being indirectly to abrogate the treaty and Impose the same duty on Hawaiian sugar as imposed on sugars from other countries.
Wines and Other Ltquoro.
The provision In the House bill on dis-, tilled wines is stricken out anu the following substituted: "Still wines, including ginger wine, or ginger cordial and vermuth, in casks or packages, other than bottles or jugs, if containing 14 per cent, or less of absolute alcohol, 30 cents per gallon If con taining more than 14 per cent, of absolute alcohol, 50 cents per gallon. In bottles or jugs, per case of one dozen bottles or jugs containing each not more than one quart and more than one pint, or twenty-four bottles or jugs containing each not more than one pint, $1 per case and any excess beyond these quantities found in such bottles or jugs shall be subject to a duty of 5 cents per pint.
The Lumber Schedule.
The lumber schedule is changed by adding after the word timber the words "hewn, sided or squared and round timber," and the duty fixed at the rate of 1 cent per cubic foot, as in the Houso bill., The rate of $2 per thousand 011 all boards, etc., is retained, but when ^\nec( on one side the additional rate Is made 35 instead of 50 cents per thousand feet, board measure when planed, tongueci and grooved the additional rate is made 70 cents per thousand feet, board measure, instead of $1 if planed on two sides and tongued and grooved $1.05 per thou-i sand, instead of $1.50.
Wool and Woolens.
Many and important changes were made by the Senate tariff subcommittee in the wool and woolen schedule as passed by the House. First-class wools were reduced from 11 cents per pound, aF provided in the House bill, to 8 cents pen pound, and second-class wools from 12 10 9 cents, whereas the duties on wools of the third class were raised. The dividing line in this latter class was p.aced at 10 cents value, wools under that value being made dutiable at the rate of 4 cents per pound, instead of| 32 per cent, ad valorem. The wool growers failed to secure all the changes which they desired in classification, but it is understood that the rates fixed on the wools themselves are satisfactory to them.
Cotton Manufactures.
On cotton thread and carded yarns, warps and other forms, except the spool thread, the House rate was 3-10 of a cent per number per pound on number exceeding twenty. The Senate bill imposes 3-10 of a cent per number per pound in addition to the rate of 6 cents a pound on No. 20, on numbers exceeding twenty and up to eighty. The Senate bill makes the rate on No. 80 and above 50 per cent, ad valorem. The House duty of 8 centn per square yard.and 30 per cent, on cloth of cotton or other vegetable hoer witn an admixture of silk is replaced by a more specific paragraph putting the same rate on "cloth composed of cotton or other vegetable fiber, silk, whether known as silk striped sleeve linings, silk stripes or otherwise." and is provided that no such cloth shall pay less than 60 cent, ad valorem. Cotton cloth filled ot coated Is made 3 cents per square yard and 20 per cent.
Free Llt,
The following aaditions are made to the House free list: Benzoic, carbolic, oxalic salicylic and valerionic acids, all fast black coal-tar dyes, argols or crume tartars or less crystals, crude beauxlte, manilla twine measuring 600 feet to the pound, bolting cloths composed of silk Imported expressly for milling purposes books, maps, music, engravings, photographs, etchings and charts printed more than twenty years before the date of importation, all hydrographic charts and scientific books devoted to original scientific research and publications issued for their subscribers by scientific and literary associations, publications of individuals for gratuitious private circulation and public documents issued by foreign governments, books printed exclusively in foreign languages or for the blind, books, maps, etc., specially imported, not more than two copies in any one Invoice, for the use of any society or institution established solely for religious, philosophical, educational, scientific or literary purposes, for the encouragement of tha fine arts, or for the use of any college, school or public library and not for sale brass or Dutch metal, bromide, cruda liquid camphor, charcoal, unground chicory root, copper not manufactured and not specially provided for, ferlna, fashion plates, fish except salmon, caught in the great lakes or other fresh waters, by or for citizens of the United States ber ries, fruit In brine, tropical fruit plants for propagation, white glass enamel for watch dials, hones and whetstones, lemon, lime and orange juices, loadstones, orange and lemon peels not preserved, paintings, original drawings and sketches, engravings and statuary not otherwise provided for, paraffin, philosophical and scientific apparatus for schools, libraries and societies, professional books. Implements and instruments and tools of trade or occupation in the actual possession at the time of persons arriving In the United States, regalia and gems, statues, casts of marble, bronze or alabaster, where specially imported in good faith for the use of any society, school or library salop, sauerkraut, beet, canary, cauliflower, coriander, mangelwurzel, radish and spinach seeds and bulbs, not edible skins of all kinds, raw, not specifically provided for tapioco, poplar and other pulp woods, heading bolts, stave bolts, railroad ties.
Representatives of 8,000 miners of Birmingham, Ala., have refused to accept a 12 per cent, cut in wages, and a strike may be ordered.
Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Rice, of Ft. Atkinson, Wis., aged eighty-si^ and seventysix respectively, have just celebrated their fifty-eighth wedding anniversary.
The wife of Knute Hisstead, a farmer near Larimore. N. D., was assaulted, two of his sons murdered, and two others wounded, with little hope of recovery, by August Norman. "Bill" Adler, a notorious outlaw o| Kansas City, committed his second murder in three years Sunday night, killing William Johnson, a negro, and was himself fatally shot by James Gordon anotber oesro.
W,
W°,manT,Can
S IRSFTL.TlTFJ.Y (ITISPINTRRTI
DOCTORS HAD GIVEN HER UP.
A Convincing Letter Prom One of Mrs. Pinkham's Admirers.
,fresh
and fair
wh*
the omb. It is ridiculous to suppose that such a difficulty can be cured by an artifical support like a pessary. Artificia1 supports make matters worse, for they take awav all the chance of the ligaments recovering their vigor and tone. Use strengthens the ligaments have a work to do.
fuse menstruation, kidney, liver, and stomach trouble. The doctors said my case was hopeless. I had taken only four bottles of the Vegetable Compound and one of the Blood Purifier when I felt like a new person. I am now cured, much to the surprise of my friends, for they all gave me up to die. Now many of my lady friends are using Lydia
E.
"A middle-aged man of rather distinguished appearancc," says the Chicago Chronicle, "walked up to the desk in the Palmer House yesterday and wroto on the register 'Great Scott, Baltimore.' The clerk smiled when he saw the nam a and looked inquiringly at the guest. 'Yes, it is rather a peculiar name,' remarked the man, construing the clerk's smile as an inquiry. 'My family name is Scott, and my father was somewhat of a humorist. When I was born he ap plied to me as a name the common expression of surprise, and I have borne the name patiently and with dignity.' Mr. Scott is a prominent merchant o{ Baltimore."
10* ALL 25 50*
1
cnre
HDOULUICIIJI UUallnllluEil/ tirt. nPTtr rrip or pripe.but
pie aid booklet ft». Ad. STERLING BEMEPT CO., Chicago, Hoatrtal. Can., or Kw York. an
AKORKER FREE!
ST WITH EACH PAIR OF THE CELEBRATED
KOKPMO SINGLE TUBE
JSC TIRES
.: Similar and no less striking has been the evolution of grain and grass cutting machinery. In 1831 the scythe and the cradle were superseded by the McCormick .'Reaper. The intervening years have seen many improvements, until now we hav« that model Harvester and Binder, the McCormick Right Hand Open Elevator, and that veritable electric light of mower dom, the
New 4. ft is not only the handsomest mower
1
is suffering: from displacement ol
If they grow flabby and refuse to hold the womb in place, there is but otic remedy, and that is to strengthen their fibres and draw the cords back into their normal condition, thus righting the position of the womb.
Lydia E. l'inkham's Vegetable Compound is designed especially for this purpose, and, taken in connection .with her Sanative W ash, applied locally, will tone up the uterine system, strengthening the cords or ligaments which hold up the womb.
Any woman who suspects that she has this trouble -and she will know it by a dragging weight in the lower abdomen, irritability of the bladder and rectum, great fatigue in walking, and leucorrhcea should promptly commence the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. If the case is stubborn, write to
Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn., Mass., stating freely all symptoms. You will receive a prompt letter of advice free of charge. All letters are read and answered by women only. The following letter relates to an unusually severe case of displacement of the womb, which was cured by the Pinkham remedies. Surely it is convincing: "Lydia
E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
and Blood Purifier cured me when the doctors had given me up. I had spent hundreds of dollars searching for a cure, but found little or no relief until I began the Pinkham remedies. I had falling and displacement of'the womb so badly that for two years I could not walk across the floor. I also had pro
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound through
my recommendation, and are regaining health. It has also cured my little son of kidney trouble. I would advise fevery suffering woman in the land to writs to Mrs. Pinkham for aid."—MBS.
EUMA PANQBOBN,
Alanson, Mich.
^lAUDY CATHARTIC
The Empress of Germany has had the material for a gown made which, when completed, was so beautiful that she would not allow it to be desecrated by the scissors of a dressmaker. The material is o^ silvery white silk, upon which is raised pattern of flowers, foliage and bright-plumaged birds. The whole stands out in bold relief, and is such a masterpiece of^ work that the Empress immediately gave orders to have it made into curtains. The work was done by one skilled weaver, who worked months on it. lie received $20 a yard for the work, in addition to his regular pay, and the price of the silto when it was completed was $120 a yard.
robzQJxeXh
CURt CONSTIPATION
DRUGGISTS
any rue of constlpitloa. Caicarctf lire the Idea) I*xa
nase
eaif naturalmuilta
..
MANUFACTURED BY THE
Kokomo Rubber Company,
KOKOMO, IND.
6sm
I
The pine knot—the candle—the oil lamp—got—tallow these are stages in the evolution of illumination, which today finds its highest exponent in the electric light.
ever
there's ootiUng cheaper thoa the best.
built, but it
sense of the word, the best—and if your experience has taught you anything, it is that
McCormick Harvesting Machine Company* Chicago.
The Light-Running McCormick Open Elevator Harvester, The Light-Running McCormick New 4 Steel Mower, The Light-Running McCormick Vertical Corn Binder and
The Light-Running McCormick Daisy Reaper for sale everywhere.
SAPOLIO
IS LIKE A GOOD TEMPER,
SHEDS A BRIGHTNESS EVERYWHERE.",^—-
i.
is,
in every
"IT
•S'
