Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 30 October 1897 — Page 3
It I
r!uts
fa me
pANDY
find Mill- Guaranteed to run 25 v. irs without oil. Prices always
reasonable.
WANT DM
Both men and women. If you are Jling to work, can give you emllovment with good pay, and you can loi'k all or part time, and at home [traveling. The work is light and dsv. Write at once for terms, etc., to
IE HAWK NURSERY COMIAOY, Milwaukee Wis.
.THE.
JlJ
11U1CE-A-WK12K E1) 1TI ON.
18 I'nffRu a Week S: 150 l'npars a Yeur
For One Dollar. tn
1)1 foiled Evt-ry Alrcrmilr Day.
The Thrice a-week edition of The ew York World is first among all •weekly"' papers in size, frequency of ublication, and the freshness, accurtv and variety of its contents. It as all the merits of a great §6 daily ilio price of a dollar weekly. It is st the, monopolies and for t)je jcoplo.
the news of all the world,
laving special correspondence from 11 important news points on the lobe. It has brilliant illustrations, .capital humor pag£, complete iniir :ets, departments for the household unusual interest.
We offer this unequaled newspaper MD TUF. REVIEW together one year or 81 05. The regular subscription price of ihe two papers is i?-.5(l,
OR.<p></p>ROYAL-TANSY
PEFFER'S
PILLS
NF.W1HSOOVEBY. KEVEK FA1I.S. A new, reliable and fjiTo r»Ue- for™ pressed, excessive, eciuity or painrjil roensturation. Now
ufMbyover 6«,WO
Indies Invigorates these organs. «c nare of dftiur&rouR Imiifltionfj. nancr per box. small box 81. Sent Foaled In plain wrapper. Send 4c In stamps for particulars. Sold by local drueeli'to or addressj'i'.f I' Ms MKIU* CAlTA*StiClAliO?, CMcuato- 'U.
Sold by George Y\T- S'.ee e,j
CATARHH sSliw,,
Dr.
DIRECTIONS
for lining
CREAM BALM
^ilm
Api'l a particle of the ijiilm directly hire thu nostril*. After a moment draw a on a throueh the nose. Vso tltreo timer) a rocks day, alter meals preferred, and before retiring.
J'l.V'S
1
KLONDYKE HORSES.
THOUSANDS CROSSING
E A 1
BAI.M opens and cleanses tlie Nasnl
HAY-FEVER Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation, hea'p tho8oren, protects the mombrano froin colus. restores the senses o£ taste and smell, i" balm is quickly absorbed and gives reliei f-i once. Price 50 e.ents at lrii(r^i«t»or bv mail.
EI.Y BUOTUEKS,56 Warren St., Now York.
You Risk Nothing
fe Vy giving our brush a trial. ii t)o not find it to be us repre--.:e after six months' uv:, tjing it back and we wiil refund iv r.'.ouey.
What can be fakcr
Scott's
Electric
Hair Brush
IS WARRANTED TO CUMi I .Vf-1
iTca-Ueht In
5
minutes 1 Ittliout UcaA'iciu in 51.».
-s »ti iniM a in in $ I 3 dru# und diseMca of the twilp V'Vl
jailing hair a«i
Mnets the
hair grow lon{J yhwty-
PHceS No.l HalrBmsh,?!. No. *5CV
1 CS
Ma *TiB.L-ftrfiflh.S2. No. 4H«ir Bnub,$3.0« Ho. Brush, »3. Vnslity the tame In nil thn pnoo riiilcie only tooaii to Btfo ana power. S
Vox Bale Qt Crcfffflsta nua Cry Q-oods Stores. ,V«k for Dr Pcntt's take no ollin- or a|pruv»l, ixiMpiud, mi rMcipt ol prlc-o and '...iw, If y/w not
$ Of,
bargain,
wriui us ana we
oar
*ul
ramm
the
"TheDoctor*.
uion(
Story,"
a mliiaM*
mation nonremlnff all onr ifCH"1'••',l"n
1
A XBT i. Qmok WtwnU Agents W Sen-Khrliau jpwraEUi-d- «». A. SWT. •.
KILLED WHILE MOUNTAINS.
Terrors of tho Skaguay Trail—Many Ways in Which Death Overtakes th« Faithful Aulmal XU« Story of
Despondent Man.
W
(Special Letter.) HEN the Alaskan snrv melts neat spring the bones of 5,000 horses will be ancovered on the riiits around Skaguay bay and along
Lite trail to the lakes. Hundre win have perished before the snow begins to fall and the
remainder will starvation before the winter Is half over. There is nc way around It—the poor horses must die. For weeks they have been rushed to Skaguay on every steamer sailing for the north. Many of them are already useless, and have been shot and thrown Into the bay. Unfitted for the rough work, the scant supply of hay and grain takep alon^ has provei) Insufficient, and many of them live but a few weeks after they ar® thrown overboard from steamers to swim ashore. Perhaps they will be used by the hungry miners for food, but at any rate their frozen carcasses will be found in the spring.
Not the least interesting part of the great rush to the Klondyke has been the horses taken in by the hundred. After the first Argonauts reached Skaguay word was sent back that horses were absolutely necessary if one expected to reach the lakes over the White Pass trail before the river froze up and navigation was stopped. They sent back for horses in numbers, this move started the demand. A Klonc
THE VILLAGE S ($20 per.)
dyker could POt- take too many horses, and %verf one advised at least ttjree to the man.
There is hardly a horse left In th«J entire White River valley. Worn-out farm horsea, young colts, unbrofcen and every sort of horse were driven re Seattle by the enterprising farmers and sold to the Klondykers. A horse market was established In one of the prominent public squares, pnarw of horses were sold just ielCTe e-icu eteamec sailed for Alaska. Oxen, mules and dogs that were placed
RRle with the horses were quicklf chased at the owner's flffures. A fcorBB was a horse, it made no difference •whether it was Blck, lame or blitul,Mt was wanted In Alaska.
It was not until the horses were landed at Skaguay that their troubles really began. In purchasing the animals no attention had been paid as to whether they were broken or not, and ag a result h&M of the ponies and cayuses had never had a Saddle on their backs before. The breaking of the horse took from three to five days, and was only accomplished after hour's of constant cursing on the part of the owners. In several instances the animals refused to be broken, and were killed by their angry owners, or. becoming frlghtenel, plunged into the bay, and were drowned.
A worse trail for horses than the Skaguay trail could not be imagined. It through p.wamps. over slippery around bowlders, the sharp fragments of which cut the horses' feet to pieces around projecting rocks up the eidr* of the canon, where the trail is but a few feet in width and beyond is a drop of hundreds of feet. So many horses have been killed along the trail that one canncrt get aw»y from the smell of decayed horsee from
runs
J3ka-guay to the summit. In several places, where a great many horses were killed, tho stench has grown so sickening that the dead bpdies have been rolled down the hl'l by the mlnthe same reason. One horae on the rocks, and was sufferings. The dead loose ami its
era for got fastened ehot to end its tfbdy co«i'd not be juried
1
jogs were sawed oC. the body thrown
0ve.r
h.lU, and the Btuajpe
that were Evened fn tlift toclcs wer3 covered up. anollier place a htfrse has stood erect for weeks with two foet fastened in the rocks. It waa shot the second day, but the body cannot be pried loose.
There are many ways which_tne horses meet death on the trail. will be daggering over slippery rocks and put their legs into crevices which hold them in vice-like grip until the momentum of their bodies snaps their lei~ They are then shot by the owner
some one comes along who haa. Beveral have been mired in tho mud bo deep that they could not be pttlled out XX several points where
very
luf""
Y-
narrow and rana along the e^# Mb bluff howes are daily p««h«d wltl their paekB.
They tall a etory ol a msa^^o tm tJ^thly deerrtmdenl. It ^hs lag hard. Everything bad ftme wrong.
Hvma lost qt« or
hx
Bow
than two days, soma of then with their pack* on their backa. He am to a bluff with hl» last rem&inlsg hosse loaded down. A blockade, on* of those trying features of th« trail that occur very frequently, waa on. The miner drove his horse up to the ed'ge of the cliff, drew his revolver and fired a bullet into the horse's braon, and watched the body roll for hundreds of feet down Into the canon. He started back to Skaguay and took the first steamer for Seattle, without paying the least attention to the remainder of his outfit.
A WONDERFUL MAGNET.
What an Old Cannon Wrapped With Wire Will D*. Some years ago, at Willi's Point, N. Y., Captain King, of the United Statfs jfFiii}', made an interesting experiment, fte took an old gun sixteen feet in
be killed or die from lfefeth, wound it with ten miles of copper wire, and then connected It with an electrical battery. The result was astounding, The old gun, used to repulsion, the synonym of destruction, only useful when opposed to great force, had changed Its character completely. It now exhibited wonderful attntotlve power, The cannon ball that oncA whistled from Its mouth now, Vy an inffesistible force, leaped towards It. The iron and steel that it used to repel were now enticed. In short, Captain King found that the disused gun wag the most .powerful magnet In the world. It soon became one of the Bights to see cannon balls, which no man could lift, piee from the ground to the muzzle of the magnet, and it did not take long W find out that this wonderful magnet liad a lifting power of twenty-twe^ons.
One of the most interesting experiments was to place a soldier about a foot from the muzzle of the gun, and then turn on the current. Great Iron spikes would jump from the ground and attach themselves to the silent soldier, who bristled with them all over like a metallic porcupine. Even great canon balls would leap up and hang upon him. There he would stand, holding up a much greater weight than he^could ever possibly lift, and all with no-conscious expenditure of strength. TM'8, which was the natural, seemed the wonderful part of the scene, and always impressed the visitor. For the power was not in the man, but in the magnet behind klm. It was simply working through him, and would always do so as long as he stood within the radius of its activity. When he moved away from the magnet the iron would fall from its body, because there was no power in him to sustain it—'
Youth'B Companion
A Drawing Fen.
A Philadelphia, Pa., genius ha» inYSftted 3. iiew and useful drawing pen which will prove a great convenience to all needing such an implement. It combines a fixed with a movable blade, and an adjusting screw threading into one of the blades, and provided with a thrniflJg'-head, and with a atop upon Its stank, intermediate of said blades,
The arrangement prevent?
ping or of Uw» adjusting
when tjioW-ues
Plain Dealer.
'.i.
A
matter ..-ith
They I of Dr. Pierce's
uropscrew
flj-e
geparatej f0rciean-
tng or sharpening, as was often the case with, other drawing pens.
BadFofuli
S HiB New Mamma-ill-Law: "I trust, my dear son, that you never Indulge in that pernicious habit of going out between the acts for a drink of intoxicants." The Bridegroom: ''Why,, mv dear mamma, you didn't think 1 had it brought in, did you?"—Cleveland
Young
l,ochiiivai who, according to the story,_ rati away with his bride, did not love her one particle more
I ,than a tliousaiid honest husbands of the present day love their wives.
No novelist could invent
a story of truer an than'the "humble rotuanca revealed
Aliout fourteen or fifteen months rro
in workine with a sans of men and happened I to sav to onccf them, I hope It will not ram as I 1 'iave a bii warhing to do for the chilaien. tlif man said, 'What is the matter with your
1 years my wife had been suffering from iviat the doctors called proln|HU5 of^teni.^ I was nervous, had cold h»udheadache, l.ackacht, constipation, a aisn
down pains no ap-
Sh^St nouet around a always in debt.with
ct well.
8°.VftMirman
whatth, SiS
ss wf srarn "ySI's a
three bottles and try them, ^'the
The Indiana Reformatory at Jeffersonville is becoming crowded. There are now 778 prisoners, and the fflcials say more room is needed.
J. W. Scanlon has been succeeded as postmaster at Clarks Hill by FraDk E. Hammel. J. W. Koyer takes the place of R. B. Arnold, ap postmaster at Stockwell
The Zeiglar & ReiD an restaurant was sold this week, Mrs. Zeiglar beiDg the purchaser. It will be removed probably to the west side of the square in the room formerly occupied by the gas office.
The Music Hail program is now printed at the Iteview office, with Walter Scott and Harry Swan, as the publishers of it. They have still some .'pace to eel! for advertising to those desiring to .be accommodated.
When your stomach begins to trouble you, it needs help. The help it needs, is to digest your food, and, until it gets it, you wont have any peace. Stomach trouble is very distressing, very obstinate, very dangerous. Many of the most dangerous diseaees begin with simple indigeston. The reason ia that indigeston (not-digettion, not-nourishment) weakens the system and ullows disease germs to attack it. The antidote is Shaker Digestive Cordial, strengthening, nourishing, curative. It cures indigestion and renews strength and health. It does this by strengthening the stomach, by helping It to digest your food. It nouiishes vou, Shaker Digestive Ciordial ia made of pure herbs, plants and wine, is perfectly harmless and will certainly cure all genuine stomach trouble, hfolcl by all druggists, price 10 cents to 81.00 per bottle.
An oak tree in Pachang, Conn.,- has a trunk nearly twenty feet in circumference, while the spread of its branches exceeds 240 feet.
This Tells Where Health May Be Found, And that is more important than money. If your blood is impure, Hood's Sarsaparilla is the medicine for you. It cures scrofula, salt rheum, rheumatism, catarrh and all other diseases origriating in or promote'.! by impure blood and low state of the system.
Hood's Pills nro e.isy to take, easy to operate. Cure indigeston, headache.
Palestine is rapidly increasing its trade with Europe, Among the articles exported are olives, oranges citrons, raisins, wine, soap, etc.
Elizabeth X. J., Oct. 1G, 189^
ELY PKOS., Dear Sirs:—P1"
-*us
Sceno II.—Mr, Johnson reads atesti monial which t1!s of scrofulous troubles curet' liy Ilootl's Sarsaparilla. lie resolves to try it, sends for a bottle aud begins taking it.
Scene HI-—Mr. Johnson has *„^ken six bottles of Hood's Sareapar,
d-
Uken'ln aU Xn.f thirtee^botUe.^ .he day as stoirt and healthy as any woman ».ths Vnited States. This is not the only case. Whenever 1 hear tell of any woman whJ lnWi in tha ndehlwhood I jtutaend the book and pf.per that wrapped around .very bottle and U!at doe. th® taS aim no longer bothered «b*ut doing mv own washing and cooking, for my w.fe can it nil In one fay and arrer aeema tir«d or out of Bpirita now."
Ir. Pierce'A Pleasant Pellets cut® comtipation, promptly and permautntly.
March 8,1897.
&XCept
mv thanks for your .. .. -rtvorin thegiftoi a bottle ot Crp' -nr. Balm. Let rue say 1 have usp
t(
for years
an( can
thorough
ly r^Sominend it ior what .it claims, if Actions PJCt'oiioweu. Yours truly, (Rev.) 'IT. w. HATHAWAY.
No clergyman shotild be without it. Cream Balm iB kept by all druggists. Full size 50c. Trial size 10 cents. We mail it. ELY linos.. 50 Warren St., N Y. City.
A. Massachusetts man, seventy-two ears old, was recently sent for two years to the penitentiary tor stealing three hene.
A Common Experience'
1
*"Who is that woman with thalgiwxjking coetume on? I never aaw such •Wreftched taste." "That is Lulu Bar'., who writes the toshloti nodes for the Evening 9*y Rotdtet."—Cleveland Leader.
Scene 1.—Mr. Johnson is ojliftcil to give up work, remain in the house and tVke care of himself on account of a dreadful scrofula sore on ono of his limbs.
(|]ai
jjj3
scrofula sore is cured, lie is l'eeling stronger, bas a good appetite and is able to attend to his work. lie writes a testimonial telling of his experience with flood's Snrsnparilia. and reeo mends it to others.
France bas kept 200,000 tons of stored at Toulon sinco 18!)3 to be in case war should break out.
OASTOIIX.
timila
Oi^a-.ais
^r by th« following letter from Mr.
Harry Chant, of 2ti Haskell Avenue, Dallas, Texas.
In the lust year thf of 25 per cent, in the trained teachers in
Big Four Inte
A..
1
!i oa ever7 TTippe?,
i-e was an increase Dumber of normalGeorgia.
cbaiigea])ie
Thousand
4ile Ticket-
l-VHowing which the the Big Ff exchang
iS a list of the lines over Qe thousand mile tickets of nr issue will bo honored for tickets: Arbor Railroad, Baltimore & Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern, ^•go & Eastern Illinois. Chicago & st Michigan, Chicago & Muskingum Riley, Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis, anil a score of other railroads throughout the United State?.
Aon
Ohio, Cnii" W
told
me
These books sell for 830 and arc not transferable. If tho ticket is used in its entirety and exclusively by tho original purchaser a rebate of 610 will be paid, provided the owner is properly certified and returned within eighteen months from the date of its issue.
E. O. MCCORMICK, Gen. Pass. Mgr., Cincinnati, Ohio.
AN OPEN LETTER
To MOTHERS.
WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD ''CASTORIA" AND "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," AS OUR TRADEMARK.
7, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Eyannis, Massachusetts, was the originator of "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," the same that has borne and does now
/Ap^?.v
For Mediein pUrp0se? like our
cock of genuine
TADE CONNORS.
In Case of Fire Ring The Towel-
Before going to the ilie stop ai
Cold Boer 2t
Eat, 'jrink and Be Merry
//tf,
bear thefac-siiKle signature of wrapper. This is the original PITCHER'S CASTORIA," which has been used in the names of the Mothers of America for over thirty years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is the kind you have always bought on the and has the signature of wrapper. No one has authority from me to use my name except The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is President ,y
Do Not Be Deceived.
Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer you (because he makes a few more pennies on it), the ingredients of which
even he
•men you tome .0 tovn a.i.l leol like 'tAtot with a bite to eat thrown ui, don forget
No. 20T
East ilarket Street.
"TUB I^ODGB
Whiskey Saves Lives.
Doctors prescribe it their parents getting get it at
on every
does not know.
"The Kind You Have Always Bought"
BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF
Insist on Having
The End That Never Failed You.
TMK CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STRUCT, NIW YORK CITV.
Nothing Like It
Men who are accustomed to ings morning," or buy
'morn-
Pure Whiskey
will tind that there is none
Old Kentucky Bourbon-
Midway^
'BOONE" CALLAHAN.
a
glaSg of.good
.•^^L_-uThe New Idea.
No. 126 North Grcon Street.
in many cases and insist on tho best. You can always
DRURY'S PLACE.
Where they sell nothing but the finest whiskeys matlo. A sample will convince you of this. No. 10!) nuith Washington street.
JOHN DRURY. WILL DRURY.
JOB
95
.1^
PRINTING.
