Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 30 October 1897 — Page 6

on't

That yo'u are saving money when you buy from foreign concerns. I am saving buyers money on Granite and Marble jobs of all kinds. Prettiest and latest monument designs.

PERI M'MAip,

127 W. Main St.

Gem Launch*}

ALBERT S. GA.LEY,

gets the agene}',

Agt.\

fork In City.

Office, 109 N. Green St.

CARPETS.

In the short time since we have re embarked in business we have mad' a reputation for the best work in wall decorating and draping. Now you will find us on deck with a choice line of latest patterns of Carpets, all selected with a view of combining "Wall Paper, Draperies and Carpets.

Sehleiclier Martens.

No. IS and 20 N. Meridian street. Formerly Eastman, Schleicher & Lee. Indianapolis, Ind.

BUY NOW!

Canned Baked Beans, Heinz

a

Dig

Standard, at

S

aiSCOUllt for the

4iext two weeks.

Pat McManis' Old Stand.

Greenbacks

G-IVEN AWAY

We want a smart boy or o-iri

every city and town in the United States and Canada to represent us as our SPECIAL agent. We pay you well for your leisure hours. In addition to this we give prizes in Greenbacks, Bicycles, Diamond

Kings, Kodaks, Gold Watche^'TiT 1

The first applicant from each town gaT

Send 10 cents for instruction and how to obtain these prizes. (Writ to-day.) Address

IJiiiyorsal Supply Co., DEPT. A.

Dearborn Street,

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS Mention this Paper.

~minrnTS ASTHMAXEK.'J

DMINXSTKATOK'S HALE.

eceai-od, horoby gives notiiVthnfi

15th DAY OF NOVK-MljER, 2807, thte place of business on Grooii Hfruot », ty Of Crawfordaville, Montgom/ countv V'6 iano, and from (Jay to l,-iy thorn -fi.'r nntti J, i1)' )rtrdeceilont,U

Bf'e !M'lvat0 sale a»

the Inter of

id and free from all n«nlr

u^V^t°U co^ierM?1^",1= *t.t"

".Je north7™45 chal^'1 JnXn°V ni.'r of tlio laud BotoU an.f appurSTT

thence south on a line ,,2 ^}SrH6«line to the south line of sin hm said nee west K9 chaine 'f'^s 58 and 45-IC(la res moro la sal« wll be made subJoct in „Iess'

W oourt and upon the foliowlm" ,^^'roval less than the appraised value

In'o^hteTrn^tlSeviC.d,,^11.°U0"

OTTO SCHLEMMKR,

Administrator.

[NDIANSOF NEW YORK

COLONY IN BROOME STREET, AND ITS MEMBERS.

A Stannoh Friend In Mrs. Harriet Maxwell Convene, the Only White Wo­

man Ever Made Chief of An Indian Tribe.

(New York Letter.) MALLEST of all the "quarters" of

New York if "quarter" it may fairly be called—is the Indian colony Of Broome and Spring streets and West Broadway, a region half commercial, half the

flfcWWfTM.CONVERiE abode of the poor, whene tall tenements are not and little houses half a century old fill up the side streets. In some months there are more and in some fewer ot Indians In :he colony. Few have what ould be called permanent residence here, Thus at one moment a hundred Indians or more may be about Broome street, and a few weeks later the visitor would find it hard to discover a score. Three triuSs or professions are what bring the redmen and their women to New York—beadwork, engagements as braves and squaws in traveling Indian medicine shows, and jobs as artists' models.

Of b6&d "working ch6 chronicle Is a sad one. While trifles of this sort sell well at Niagara and such places, the New York city market for them is poor. It is even poorer than it was a few years ago, and miniature shoes, pincushions, and the like, heavily ornamented, seldom pay the worker mor« than 10 cents apiece. It is difficult for the most industrious Indian woman to make more than 25 cents a day at this work. Some, with a baby or two to support, have all but starved in fact, many, men and women alike, would have found life in this alty Unbearable for the last few years had It not been for Mrs. Harriet Maxwell Converse, the only white woman chief of full rank ever created.

Mrs. Converse, or Ta-ie-wanoh, as she is called by the Indians, is a Seneca Indian chief of the Snipe clan, adopted by this tribe in recognition of her services to the redmen of New York Btate. Her father, Thomas Maxwell, of Elmira, always paid the keenest attention to Indian matters. For many years} Mrs. Converse has followed up legislation in their interest, visited with great frequency the reservation in the west-

I ern part of the state, and keptTwatch-

to' Indians of New York

Scad forking, these days is the ^00r

Roinir at thu '.'118"110'

11 18 ln

the most plctur^u^®,0^^™1

town.^ g^ a Canadian tribe whose,influences

of

in the thtr-a itoSck ^°lony'

I Broadway bull din-

Up

&

ited by Italic

?,ngy

oth«r,wiae

inhab-

most not- home of the Indi&n bead worker, a hali-

has

t1™®8'

even

in

a

th furnishin® uniforms for I

mLw®oclet,i6a—a"ch as the rode-

aBln8 and 0ther

limited and unoertain.

PU^

a

S ^6 French. She is small and 5,

tvn

faclally

an excellent Indian J'ank6ts

type. »er daughter a year ago mar- i.

riedt a» Italian, and lives with her, the

baby, now a few months old, showing

™RS- lizzie saylor

v^WhnRM!t0,Jt

v-ay Who flakes Bead Work.)

tremely in'teres'ungf

S

ra"fS

6

with dormer

a. mother of ttesc

terms)

Caughnawauga also, in

*#S-

that is

Broomo ,tr«. ,/"•

tie book ah* oies la unique. ProkMy there la not another one in this country. It is a French Catholic mission hymn book, with sacred verses translated into Caughnawauga dialeot.

Susanna Dibeaux is this woman's civilized name. She is known far and wide as the "old woman of the Indians," and, despite her poverty, manages to keep her health. She is abjectly poor, and her only salvation now is a long-de-layed pension, which will probably be granted very soon. Her husband served in the civil war.

Three Indians of the colony have gained some reputation within the past year or so from the success they have ma^e in the outside world. These are Thunder Cloud, White Moon and Falling Star. Thunder Cloud no longer lives down Broome street way. A man of over fifty, of fine physique and muscle, he was seized upon soon after he came to New York, and has flguYed in many of the notable Indian canvases of the past few ye^rs, especially^ those of De Cost Smith, the painter. A finer Indian model never came to New York, and so well did his physical majesty avail him that a few months ago he married a promising woman artist, a Miss Hashgen, and haja now do*h t? the enjoyment of

street 1?

wv/iivci, O. ua.iL- mvuige, DUt tne uoeu wkws piou-prob Saylor by nam«-

kePt

F1"V-fiInth

-iung Star's experiences wer(i inflch the same. She first saw New York from the Indian medicine bpoth of the Commercial Travelers' Fall* & year ago. Falling Star is not a pretty JfftqjSn maid, or even a young one. 'there is no hint of springtime In tier strong, stern face rather that of early autumh. Yet Falling Star is a fine painter's model, and slie soon became popular. It waa Mrs. Converse who introduced, her to the art world, and, once known there, she had no lack of opportunities to pose.

Odd Trick of the Camera.

The gentleman here portrayed does not live in a dime museum. He Is a single man. The peculiarities of hia appearance are due to the skill of Frederick S. Stedman, the crack trick

i«ier, or P^sburg, knowii

throughout the

The phot^g^pk

for hls doublea.

from whlch the lllus_

jfrftJlW was made is regarded as one of Mr. 5tedman's*b«st. It is printed from a single plate, fljere are secrets of the process which Mi". £tedman does not dtvulge, but the method used was

H«r ably t6 photograph the object leaning

her

I the taljle, but open the on?"

going at this work tor upward of twen- half way. Wen "the ilSi ty years In New York. Few Indiana end fnn a t. wS tujrtt®'^

£-^nodero tradB 6hrewdness ofj half nd^^R

this b?ight-eyed, snappy little woman ing taken in tW »ho^aph fceor her industry. She ha, the regular glL^StmoS

uao cue reguia]

business of the chief shops which handle. bead work, and these are mostly the UtUe emporiums along the river front that sell to Bailors. ,A}

two images,

enough orders come

W 1° °n

a

or two,

uciyer or two. I

but these occasions are rare. As a mat*

Say!or

cannot maita fndlke

Bhe speaft

Lai°*3(^

for i'nd the

necessary in this mwould te

evld,„V"'™ess

,or.

Dt ot

°°ntactot

KlontVIk©

*'lrawbacki.H^»wuacni."

RaM T^,e som«

drawbacks up there,"

MunchaU8en,

3 8 0

C°Urse

of

S,°

tion

of We8t

ex- Slutter~

509

West

bI,Z

lZtZfJl'

be called a "quarter-breed su In°,Me'h^n'fl

c}laracterifiticK

tlnctly, though the children h! Here lives a curious old

at

a

un^UaW'

that holds a bed, two'chairs a

a

r°°m

a washstand, and the b«ad 'tAMUreaU' Intervals, when bead work is slack th^ squaw, etah-wah-na-ti, may ,' '9 crooning Indian hymna In a soft 5 fnl voice. These Indian BymSf J?!" of wi«rd,

gravely.

••rp* gTaTeiy.

you get in

y°"r eyes,

bo-vs

pendent Order of Redmen—teadgemv Lu account You can't bear the

inslStJ I uS1', °f n'

,.Ja,'k,pay8 imuch better, but it Is J^,y"

went stone blind

hl9ky UP ln that

^untry.

0n MCOIlnt

18

f?

the

aWfully

Ca^nawau-

1

of the dust--the

S°ld dust—that you get into your ays-

another

th,n^

the nuggets

troub'^^.'

Thev are

thiCk everywhere that

6m in your boote

y°"r

and

have

y°U

i""* areand^rso.^.

Without A Rival.

has no ep-tl. Mrs.

very di^

Giallot

a-lean^^ no rival as a li£

1

Jtiuily

-pramed

they

feet you get em

your

to pick 'em out be-

g0 to

bed=

Ll™

pnH

and

J°,y0Ur.

you even get

eatablee-

I got stomaoh

'em in your eatables, complaint that way. just wouldn't digest."

Them nuggets

Didn't of th« Feast.

?JeSf0nApprove

^as

from the

Pr°digal son

.and the teacher was dwelling on the •, character of the elder brother. But amid all the rejoicing," he said,

6 t0 whom the

by a

itJ" mbs'

I lease, sir, it

nroad-

Prepara-

,r ^on of the feast brought no jov, to I prodigal's return gave no Idid^r' °nly

bIttorne3S

laP^rOVe

one

of th0

feast

lo^r0KWaS

being held

and who had no wish to attend it"

iS."*""!"1

-e"r,hS

a

hlTa{hlcss

silence fol-

Vi?0^U8

cracking o,

'1"d thc?n fro'vi a dosen svH

.pa-ietic little geniuses

LVime

the ohor

Was tbo fa(

«(i

rate»°«^3SiS

-1

"Tti4WuV'i

IT,'

I

BR.-/J

cajf

,„

1

™suctf *i

n-ank

-.3.,

DOt"

Juif, 518

Detroit, Mich., writes:

I used• vivalion Oil in

my fami]

cures pains.

0 L,le

I

ankle ai)(] j( cured

aiK sine have always used it ind bruises," Salvation 0»ly25 cents, toother

for any )!i Oil is sr.Ji remedy

w°rk

as promptly.

NVE&

HoOfi.

So 1

mm

iSsSfefif:

mm

as

r-X

I

WS

!i

*c

SB 1

1

j-

Now Is Your Time!

2585.?"

REVIEW $1 PER

Review andliState Sentinel, one year Enquirer New York World, 3 papers a week

_^ Read below of presents to be given to those securing clubs subscribers, more of these premiums. These prizes are for REVIEW subscribers only.

cOq 2

co 55

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Read our clubbing rates aend see pictures of several nf I fine presents to be given:

YEAR

Any

'Z+*2$htiUl\Mvv\

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hmMBS

mm

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OIIG

may secuio one

O OQ

S SI P- 2. fi E

O

GOLD RING.

This elegant 10-karat gold ^v''mg. genuine diamond setting, i,ru inintccd, for 10 subscriber.^.

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Height is 6 inches, length 10^ inches It 113 lUl.UlfO, ±yJ/2 is beautifully polished, will not tarnish and is really one of the most beautiful as well

11..tiny ijni, ui Liiv7 itivau uLtiuiuu1

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useful ornaments that could be desired subscribers