Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 30 October 1897 — Page 4

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THE REVIEW.

—BY—

F. T. L.USE.

TSBM8 0» SOBSOBIPflO*.

0:1-? »enr, in the county, On voar,otu of to# county, 1 Inquire at Office for Advertliner s.

OCTOBER 30, 1897.

Free.iom Biptist Church.

The following is the programme of the Wnmarts' Missionary Meeting of Freedom Baptist Association to be held at Bimvii's VhIIhv, Ind.. Nov. 9 and 10: 7::5* i. —D u'.itiotm! service

Tne. i-rner Joweirv Store is

Mr.

Mrs. AUc-i Allen

\V.rU if \V ii') tie... Mm. O.im. ivlir Re*p in

lr9.

Graie IJ ula-H

Pre-i lrt it's 1 lr'irf.. Mr-i. M. B. H'Ujii Pap jr l' Sp rit of M.-iiioofi ttio Spirit of th'3 npM

Liriora Fullonwi'ler

WKD.VESOAY. S

P:')0 a. m.—I'ravor sarvics.. .Zjnia Wray in it a O as of a Foreign Missions

Mra. Anna Wenst-sr

The R?1 iMon ot Wo'inns'S pieties to iie (1 moral S :iflties ..... s. Cora Chomps)n Reei!atio:i O W or A no I an 3

Mrs. H:ittie Glenn

1:33 p. ill ivotional Service Mrs. I'urne Paett Hororm if N[issio:i .. Mr-. T. L. H.maa O is A

Mrs. Sallie Davis

Recitation-. i: Projfra ns for UireUs .Vl^etinijs. .. Mrs, Carrie Turnar

Tii s]]Tiut'Thompson Sang.

Ail e.itorprisins merchant at Darlin-j-ton lia-! In 1 a couple of Will Thompson's familiar (ongs arranged for the graphophooo, that he who buys may hear. All day lon^ the dulcet melodies are eroL'tv! fo.th to aa anxious, waiting throng, and every lad in the village old enough to pucker his lips is whittling the strain?. It is the hit of the sp.isoo. and is proving a Klondike to th happy in .'relnnt who hit upon the scheme.

Extending Plum Street.

'lhe mitter of running Plum street through from Wabash avenue to Main is still un ler consideration in the city council. Tae projeatod estemion of Plum street has bjea unJer consiileration for several years, and if there ia a ne.'-jssity for it, it should be carried through. rnr ist o? the work would be Vrtin the property holder?, living within bin!? or two of the extension, and -v ml 1 nount to thr.mnds of dollars.

Carriage License.

Firman A. D.ivia an L^ora F. Benson.

Oliver II i.vard (.Jriest and Mma Wilkinson.

George I\ Allen anil Alice R. Ramsey.

Joseph W. Buchanan and Florehco A. Boots.

II iivy P. !.).tvis and Mary IE*sley.

Mrs. F£. Broaksliire's lealth.

Mrs. Eiija Voorhoes Brookalnre went from Washington, I). C.. to Battle Creek, Mich.,jia July to escape the hot Beason and has just returned to Washington. She is enjoying the best of health.

Harried.

Mr. O. U. Griest of the Darlington E„'h waa fried oa WednesJay evening to M'sa Mina' Wilkinson, the cerrtrumy ,'ojcuring at the Christian churoil ill presence of a large number of relatives and friisr.ds.

Htiowing

the Urj'jst .stock in Orawforlsville. C. JL. Kost. tf.

Baby's Second Summer

is the time that tries ail the care of the mother and all the skill of maternal management. Baby comfort comes from fat fat babies have nothing to do but to sleep and grow. ^If your baby does not seem to prosper, if he does not gain in weight, you must get more fat there. A few drops of

each day will put on plumpness fat outside, life inside, baby and mother both happy.

Your baby can take and relish Scott's Emulsion as much in summer as in any other season.

For sale by

all

drug-gists at joe. and fi.oa

Two hours later ha arose to go to business. When he got to the Parkilie railroad station he found his dog, Borneo, standing guard over tbe missng domestic. The girl had been trying to get several trains, but as each me approached, bystanders declared the dog would hold on to her dress or jump in her way until the cars had •oiled by. As soon as the dog saw his master he wagged his tail and almost knocked him down in an effort to lick his face. Then he ran to and from the :rl in an apparent effort to say somehing. When he got near the girl he •could snarl. Mr, Kupfer appreciated lie dog's maneuvers. He stroked his :ead and told him to go Jwme. The :og wagged his tail and obeyed- Mr. lupfer requested Miss Rugen t? ac•ocipany him to the station house £(5 -plain her peculiar conduct. She reusrd and ran away. The matter was eported to the Parkville police, and 'ol icemen Carrougher and Rutherford .ir.nd Miss Rugen hiding in a clump of voods not far from her employer's •ome. She was arrested and when arched a crisp $20 bill was found in •r pocket.

Saved bya Hutchot.

Golden Days tells a story of a proscior in Alaska who, in company with it other men, was walking across a ,r«at ice-field. At one place a thin wet of ice hid from view a crack !)iit three feet wide. The party aprcaehed the cre-vasse diagonally, the •. o-pe'tor in advance, when suddenly unrt the next man iu the line slipped un"!Eh the thin coating of ice and sappeared in the chasm below. Their i-s narrowly prevented some of the rs from meeting a similar fate. :o second man carried a gun, and as held on to it, the weapon lodged ..•sways in the crevice, and enafbled

Un to lie rescued but the prospector '.•in down at least seventy-five feet, I was tightly jammed betw«en the 'ilis of ice. He could not be eeen, i-t his voice could be distinctly heard rwting the movements of his rescu-

Blankets were torn into strips .ft tied into a rope. This was lowered the imprisoned man, who fastened end around his body. When the was pulled, however, it was found hp was jammed in so tightly that "onId not be moved without tearing a.uinder. The rescuers were in a •i.-iidary, but the imprisoned man sugeil that they lower him a hatchet, ml when this was done he chapped j.ijFelf loose in short order. Alto--Uier he was thirty minutes in the tomb, and it was a week before recovered from the shock.

Tlio nalHiU'liiK of Trees.

A very interesting suggestion coneniing the utility to a tree of irregular arrangement of ite a.n-hes is made by a correspondent ,, f.'iture. Watching a large plane-tree •J -fig a gale, he observed that while great limb swayed in one direction, j.hea- swayed the opposite way, and nigh all the branches were plung--E and bending before the blast, they •d not move in unison, or all at once a the same direction. But for the leculiarity in the motion of the .•ranches, ho thinks, the tree could not ave escaped uprooting and he sug--sts that this kind of balancing serves general to protect large trees, like aks and beeches, which have their ranches unsymmetrically placed from jeing overturned by high winds

Wished He Had Kept Still-

1-Vet—-Well, even if I do live in an atic. 1 am proud and I will never marry •eneath me.

Cynicus—That's exactly what I told hat young heiress on the first floor, •vho is dead in love with you.—New ork Journal.

HELD BY A BIG DOQ. CONVENIENT CHECKS.

Kupfer fi Newfoundland Followed

an

Alleged Dishonest Servant.

If it were not for a big Newfoundand dog, owned by Frederick Kupfer of that portion of Flatbush known as Parkville, 18-year-old Margaret Rugen would not today be an inmate of Raymond street jail, says the New Yorit Journal. Margaret is accused of grand larceny, and was trying to escape the police claim iwhen the dog made her a prisoner. The girl came to this oountry about two months ago, and through the immigration commission gained employment at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kupfer, at the corner of Lawrence avenue and Forty-seventh street. She could speak but little, if any, English. She was quick to learn, however, and soon gained the confidence of her employers. Mr. Kupfer owns enough dogs to start a kennel. One of thc-iri is" a big Newfoundland dog named Rover. The animal has been a pet of the family for five years. On Sunday last Mrs. Kupfer missed $30 frem her pockethook. She thought at first that she had lost it, and that it would be found somewhere about the house. She called 'lie attention of Miss Rugen to the matter and requested her to 16ok for it when sweeping. The girl shortly ~'ter went to her room jind later left the house unobserved. Tuesda^ night she forced an entrance to the house by a parlor window. No one noticed ncr entrance. At abo.ut 3 o'clock on ednesday morning Mr. Kupfer was suddenly awakened. He jumped out of bed in time to s^e Mise Rugen walking out of the house with several bunlles. Mr. Kupfer wanted to give chase :o the girl, but he (tfdn't dare. It vrae •oo cold, and his clothing was exceedingly scant.

A Great Snccess. N"

"I am wriUng a play which cannot fail to be a great success," said Foyer. 'What is its clhief feature?" "in the p.st act the comedian who peryerated all the chestnuts dies a mlserlble death."—Pittabueg Chrwnlcle7elgraph.

Oar English Cumin Coiuos to Amcrlca and Describe* Thorn.

The American constitution has been called a sytem of checks, says the London Mail. So in American life. When you want to travel you give your baggage to the porter of your hotel and he gives you a check in return. At the station you reclaim it with the check and pass it in at a counter and receive another check. As you approach your destination another functionary comes along the train, takes your check and gives you another check in its place. He fishes out your baggage and conveys it to your hotel—for a consideration. You have left your third and last check at the ofHce of the hotel when you enter it and thence it is delivered up on receipt of the baggage.

At first you bless the arrangement as the salvation of the traveler. After a few weeks of it the tyranny of the check becomes so galling that you begin to long for the fine old English method of dumping down your goods in front of a porter and leaving them to find tae way themselves. You would even hail it as a personal triumph if some of your baggage would get lost. But it never does. Sometimes it arrives late, but it always arrives.

Yet it seldom arrives in the shape in Which it started, if that is any consolation. They who have to do with the baggage see to that. You will soon discover why Americans carry their goods in ironclad trunks and why it i? madness for anybody to do anything else. I started out, like an idiot, with a new leather pormanteau. They ripped the stout brass lock off it the first week—not for plunder, apparently, but simply because it is thu tradition of the service. They punched it and kicked it and danced on it. In softer hours, when literary inspiration came, they wrote on it. My portmanteau to day is an epitome of the politi cal sentiment of the United States from New York to San Francisco. Aa an. historical document it is beyond price, and I am contemplating the gift Of it to the library of congreus at Wash. Ington. As a portmanteau it has both feet in the grave.

The system of checks is not confined to travelers' luggage. The conductor of the train passes carelessly to and fro asking for your ticket and giving you a check in return or asking for your check and returning your ticket. If you hand your stick to a boy in a hotel while you write your name in the register he dashes off to stow it away In some secret place and returns triumphant with a check. In the very hotel bar when you buy seven pence ha'porth of whisky you get a check and walk two yarJs across the bar to pay at the desk.

But the apotheosis of the cu^-k is at Niagara. When you go down to til? Cave of the Winds you strip off all your clothes and leave them, as well as your valuables, in a tin box with an attendant. Then you go down to battle with the cataract attired only in a- suit of pajamas, a suit of oilskins and a check lashed around your neck and rising and falling with the beating of your heart. No wonder fhe American speaks of death as handing in hia checks. It is only by death that he can rid himself of them.

^PPUC'ATION l'OH I.IQUOK UuK.VSk'.

Notice is hereby piven to tho eitizens of tho .! ••.' "H, «i of Crawford*villi-, moil I owusl ip, .Niontgomeiy county. Stiite of nilimui, tliut I, Otto Si'hlemn.«r. tlii* underigued, a wliiln main inhabitant of the State of imJiniia, ami now and for more than ninety '•'W time prior to Urn date of this zioiico ol applieat'on a oontiimoun resident of mid Township, ami over the af,-e of iwenty-ono year.", will apply at the regular IJecvmber seKHion, IMC, of the ooard of Loiiin iseiuiiertt of baid county, commencing- on tin sixth ('ay of December, ih!'i. for a Pcenso to well all kinds of spirituous, vinous, malt and other ln'.oxicating liquor* ill a less quantily than a quart at a time tube iir uk on tlie premises whole sold.

Vv Tibice n| liiisin hs mid the promises\vher on and whei ein said liquors are to h- eohi «ud drank are situated and specifically dewribod (is follows, to-wlt: lieginning at the northeast corner of lot number one hundred and ten illU) us. I lie same is kno,vn and designate! o*. the original plat of the town mow city) of Crawforiisville, Indiana, and running thence west, eigliiy-tr.Lhl loet ui.tl nine do inches, thence -oiitli c'tilitecn US' feet find eight (H) inches, ihHiice ea-t eijrhiy.eiglii ,{$. feet and nino Ilichi-H, I hi- lire north eighteen US) feet and eight

im

inches to the place of beginning, upon

he giuuiid l.oor of the two story brick bniiiliug, Muated on said premises, said loom being seventeen (11'ifeet wide and sixty-live ,(i.Y) foot deep and fronting east. Uno»n as number 131 Nertli ire«n street,in said city ol Craw ford.sville, Indiana, and I shall also slate 11 my said application, that I ibs re to carry on in iln- smile room :ibov» described, other and different i-usi-ii'w, as lollous: 'J lio sale lunch, inineial vwiteis and all kinds of iioii-in: xii aling bi vurages, igai\- and tobacco, -r—

OTTO SCIILUMMER, -Applicant.

^rri.lCATION KOH U^LOii UlJKXSK.

NOti.'e is hereby givon to the citizens of

Mm

Second ward in the city of Crawfordtivilie, I nioii Township, Montgomery county, State ol 'iiiliana, that J, Howard Nicholson wl'ito n.ale inhabitant of the State of I'lOianii. and now and for more than ninety (Mb d-iytt' time piior to the date of thin notice of application, a continuous ret-llent of I'ninn 'I'own nhip, in Montgomery county, fc-tati of ind,ana and over the age ol twenty-one years, will apply to 'lie Hoard of rominifBioners of the County of Montgomery Jn the latc of Indiana, at the r-g. ular iiecember si ssion, commencing on the llist Monday of llecemlior18!!?,for a i.icoiihe to sell all Uindsof spirituous, vinou", malt and other inoxicating liquors in a less |iiantlly than a niart at a time, and allow the sumo to

lo

driiulc

on the premises where sold. .My place ol business .-.id the premises \v hereon and wln-rcln said llfjuors a'e tc be sold Mill! drunk are situated ud sieciflcallry described as follows: i.wii- -I lots numbered one hundred and ud thirty-one (1:111. and one hundred ,nd thirty-two in the original plat of the town iMUvcity^ of Crnwfordsvjlle, Jidlnnu. boundod aH follows: Hi-ginning at a point forty-three I13] feet and four inches i-outh of the northwest comer of said lot number one hundred and thirty-one running tlienco south twent}-two t'si) feet, thence eaHt one hundred and twenty-three(Ka) feet and ei^lit (8) inches, (hence north twenty-two I'JXI feet, thonco west one bundled and twonty-three (123) feet and 8 Inches, to the place of beginning, reserving fifteen 115) feel for an ailey on the east oud thereof, on the Ground lloor of the Ihreo story brick building i-ituato on the said above •«al estate, said room being eighteen [IK] fee? ,i ide and eighty-four [84] feet deep and fronting west on north Oi eeii street in taid city and kcown as number ",2li north i.reen street.

And t-hall also stale in my said application that I de-Ire to carry on in the (mine room above described, other and different business as lollows: Itunning one (1 pool table, the sale ol' cider, pop, ginger ale, mineral waters and all kinds of sol I drinks and liquors sold and used as boveruges, tobaicoand cigars. llOWAKi) NICHOLSON

I

tu

-a|,

1

,J(

itiffj 10- iys m-1'i

A PUSH

We have just

'NOT AW Efi SY POSITION.

Hints to the Girl "Who Kxpdbts to Marry

a

l'hvsiclan.

Let me disclaim all reference to the exceptional cases in which a physician defers marriage until late in life, or to the not uncommon instances In which the wife is able and willing to support her husband, says the Ladie*' Home Company. The medical profession fbr the last generation has been so overcrowded that the physician who earns more than a fair living is a phenomenal exception and it is not far from trae that the wealthy doctor owes his good fortune to patrimony or matrimony. In such cases the practical problems of existence are so far removed from the professional activity of the husband that his occupation need have little influence on home and social life. It is only to the young 'woman who must, to some extent, share and sympathize with the struggles of her husband in one of the most arduous, most responsible and poorest paid avocations that such an article as this can be addressed. Speaking as a cynic, to the girl who expects to marry a physician, I would say, don't. Realizing with pleasure that few who receive this advice will be actuated by mercenary motives, or •will shrink from self-de-nials imposed by love, I extend hearty congratulations and best wishes at the beginning of a life of comparative poverty and subject to disproportionate

BUY NOW

While The Line of

Are complete. As you are aware everything in Merchandising is advancing rapidly. You now have the opportunity to buy a Good Overcoat for $5.00 which will cost you $7.00 Later. A good Suit for $5.00 which will cost you $7.00,

received

,)ever

Every Purchaser of A Suit!

WILL BE PRESENTED WITH-

One-Half Dozen 0 lasses.!

We Want Your Trade.

Edward Warner.

Successor to Lee S, Warner.

The One Price Clothier, Hatter and Gent's Furnisher.

^uuumuuiuuuuuuuuuuauuuauuuuuuauaiui^uui

IN FELT BOOTS.

large lint- ol Men

CT

l-elt

before equaled iu ihis county- It is the finest Boot of its kind now manufactured and we offer it at a price that all

may

Ed. VanCamp & Co.,

MAIN STREET, OPPOSITE COURT HOUSE.

de'mands at the hands of society. Some will differ from me wJien I urge that at t'he outset of jrur married life you will drop the idea (and insist that others shall drop it) that your status is different from that of any other ladV. Do not allow people to call you or think of you as "Mrs. Dr.' I can see no reascm why the professionresponsibilities of either the doctor or the minister should be reflected on his wife. I may offend some kindhearted persons by expressing the conviction that the physician's wife should have nothing to do with his patients rich or poor, except to show them ordinary courtesy in her husband's absence or as she may meet them incidentally. The philanthropic idea of a noble woman ministering to the waate of the deserving poor and shar-

shattered by the rude blows of experience. The deserving poor are common, but they do not seek and rarely aocept charity in any form.

Art

and Chiropody.

"Among tte landscapes in my picture gallery/' said the chiropodist Have a picture of human feet, shoeing Uifiir differences of peculiarities and formation among the people of different nations." "Landscape? Feet?" BTirju-isedly exclaimed his guest. "Yes returned the chiropodist "cornfields you knrw."—Boston Ooarier.

I

Boots which we are now offering

have warm, dry feet this winter. Call and see them.

COME

till

at

juices

TO THE

Market Grocery

O

Groceries of the Freshest and i'nees of the Lowest.

Sample our Flour—none In tin in this market. v'

HIS

husband's mission has been

NEW STOCK OF

S A

Just in, and a very small profit asked of you in buying it.

Henry Sloan's

:'v

MARKET GROCERY.

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