Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 27 November 1897 — Page 3
DANDY
Mill- Guaranteed to run 2" years without oil. Prices always reasonable.
WANTED^™
Both men and women. If you are willing to work, can give you employment with good pay, and you can work all or part time, and at home
or
traveling. The work is light and [easy. Write at once for terms, etc., to [THE HAWK NURSERY COM-
PAOY, Milwaukee Wis.
RAIN!
Has liiiitlly come and the house-wife looks askimct- al ter the door mats, soaio of which have disappeared others are worn out. We have Door Mats ealore
and cheap.
COCOA MATS 3&c COCOA MATS 46c COCOA MATS OOc COCOA MATS ...75c
|RUH13EII MATS. WIRE MATS.
Look at our Show Windows.
ice &
Carpets and Wall I'aper.
ad 20 North Meridian rftrM-', Imli anapolis, Indiana.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM Glcs&iet and beantiflu the hAlf* Promote* ft laxorUnt growth. IleYer Tail* to Ecwtorit Or«y
Hair to lta Youthful Color. Cures fc&ip difttuea bftir falling. _J0CjandJ£00«t Dnjggi«t»__
DIRECTIONS tor using
CatarbH
CREAM BALM
co^i in -HEAD!
CURES
Applv a inrtli-ln of the balm iltrectly Into the nostril*. After a moment draw a on a through the nose. Use throe times a day, after meals preferred, and before retiring.
ELY'S (J RE AM HALM opens and cleauseb the Nasal
W c.gx
[ay-fever
laseages, Allays Pain and inflammation, heals pe Bores, protects the membrane from colds, pstores the senses of taste and smell. Ttc aim is quickly absorbed and gives relief at nee. Price 50 cents at Drugglstsor by mall. I ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren St., New York.
\0u Risk Nothing
I byVivin^ our brush a trial, if tl.. i.ot lind it ip be as reprecuicti after six months' use, bring it back and we will refund in: money.
Whet can be fairer
iDr. Scott's
Electric
!1"
IS WARRANTED TO CURE Ilrndachc in funfnntca Bilious Headocht .i "i inutea! Sntnil'jut inbminutes Vanur JJnnd tlitfanen of the scalp I Prevents
Jalliuff hair auil Ifaltiuesul Makes the iir rjruw I *tud Qlowti/I Po.l tUir Itrtuh,$l. No. SH&lr Brush.fl.SG
lit
W
CuaJ
No. 4KfclrBnuh,$2.6Q
KG. & HfUr Biuah, 43. t'M* "li- I'? only accord*
.? at A&d Dry IS tor -, s.
for Iir Jrf-nu'r tu'.« mother or we trill netid »'!. *m !•_• i-1. i['«
1
if U.J
•i:., writu
pr.i-e mid tru f- «un
I MtiMie.i with your the mum-«
ii aM iv in in or
oui-ftunj
...I ur
poods wnt on ic«(ues,t.
[/--eatsWanted.
guar:
OHO. A. SCOTT, £42 Uroadw»y, N.
'There is nothing in the market ds feat and handsome as Joe E Fishsr's make of light harness, and they just as good as they look. Hie team harness is just as good be-
Suse every pieco is male under his*n personal supervision. Clote block, bath Washington street-
[The corner Jewelry Store ie Bhowioe largpst stock in Crawfordeville.
•KoBt. tr.
THE SAD SEA WAVES, fp.
Action of the Ml|fhty Ocean Along th® Coast. Ever since the land and water were formed upon the earth and separated by well-definotl boundaries the configuration of continents and islands has been constantly changing and shifting by the action of the sea waves, says Lippincott's. Whole islands have been cast up violently out of the sea or formed slowly but surely by the tides and currents of centuries continents have been cut in half and built up by a like process, and known lands have disappeared beneath the waves of the ocean. Mighty rivers have cut deep valleys in the land and carried the waste deposits to the bed of the ocean, where new islands and peninsulas have been subsequently formed. Of all geological wonders the history of the earth's changes by the action of the ocean and its tributaries is the greatest and most interesting. Through the couptless ages of the past this mighty process has been gradually evolving new soils and climates, washing away the old and renewing the primitive virginity of the worn-out lands with the ,rich sediments of the ocean's bed.
Rugged rocks have been undermined and tumbled into the ocean by the ceaseless rolling of giant waves, and miles of sea-beaches have been swept inland to engulf fertile farm regions and even to submerge cities and towns. Expensive works of man along the coast have been crushed and washed away as though they were but toys for a summer day's pleasure. The visitors at the seashore in the summer days see only the mild side of the ocean's life. The quiet, lapping waves, the beautiful foam-crested surf breaking upon the white strand, have il^'e of awe and terror in them. That these peaceful swells can be changed into the greatest power for evil known to man can scarcely be realized by those who have never witnessed a heavy storm along the coast. A storm in midocean is fearful enough, but the action of the ocean along the coast is ten times more terrible and powerful. Numerous rocks, sand bars and obstructing headlands interfere with the grand movement of the waves and tide in one general direction and the confusion of tide, current and waves can be likened only to a collision between two fast-moving trains. There is the shock that shatters the rolling seas into a million sprays the rebounding and turning of powerful undercurrents the meeting of land and sea winds in a fierce, titanic battle the roar and shriek of storm and seething sea and miles of angry waters, vainly endeavoring to sweep away the obstructions that have impeded their progress.-%
FROM TREE TO TYPE.
to Make
LeM Th»ii Three Hoars Newspaper. At 7:35 a. m. three giant trees were recently standing in an Austrian forest, says the New York Journal. In less than three hours a distinguished party of noblemen and publishers were reading the columns of a newspaper, printed on paper made from the pulp of those identical trees. This remarkable
The Second Wife.
«TvioMot anirl
TV,„„
Tynrtnir* Flrit Lecture.
About forty years ago, writes Mr. Arthur Waugh, the iate Dr. Bence Jones was the leader of all scientific organizations in this country. To him came one day, from Germany, a letter couched by Professor Dubois Raymond in something like these terms: "You English are the oddest people! Here, to our laboratories, comes every year a young Irish schoolmaster, called Tyndall, with the quickest bradn, the moat honest capacity for research I have ever seen. Would that our German youths were run from the same mould! This brilliant young fellow has never received the smallest recognition or encouragement from English institutions, or fr:m the soieuilfu men of England, and he tells me t" lay that, quite disheartened at last, he is preparing to emigrate to America."
Dr. Bence Jones was not the man to listen to such an appeal in vain. Tyndall was crossing London, in preparation for going over the Atlantic. Bence Jones waylaid him, and instantly fell under the spell of his copious and genial talent, and determined to "make" him. After a few conversations, Jones said: "I will not take any middle course. I think you can leap to the top at once. 1 shall announce that you will lecture at the Royal Institution." The announcement was made, and all London trooped to hear "Bence Jones' wild Irishman." As the great physician drove his protege down to Albemarle street, he suddenly exclaimed: "But, Tyndall, where are your notes?" "Notes?" was the reply, "I haven't any p.otes "No notes!" Bence Jones rejoined, in an agony. Tyndall grinned: "Well, I'm afraid- it's too late now!" and Bence Jones sank back in his carriage a prl ,' to the acutest despair. The hall was crowded all the leaders of science were present. Tyndall, who had never lectured before, stepped into the famous semi-circular tribune, smiled, bowed and poured fourth the results of his marvelous discoveries without faltering or pausing. He closed his address in the midst of an ovation he bad become in a single night the most acccn\pl shed lecturer of his age.
1
experiment was made to show to what
Traveling with Profit.
That "the dunce that goes to Rome" is not always the superior of the "dunce that stays at home" is shown by the following anecdote from Mr. A. J. C. Hare's "The Story of My Life:"
Gibson, the eminent English sculptor, used to relate with great gusto something which happened to him when he was traveling by diligence before the time of railways.
He had got as far as the Mont Cenis, and while crossing it, entered into conversation with his fellowtraveler—an Englishman, not an American. Gibson asked where he had been, and he mentioned several places, and then said, "There was one town I saw which I thought curious, the name of which I cannot for the life of me remember, but I know it began with an R." "Was it Ronciglione?" said Gibson, "or perhaps Radicofani?" thinking of all the unimportant places beginning ith R. "No, no it was a much shorter name —a one-syllable name. I remember we entered it by a gate near a very big church with lots of pillars in front of it, and there was a sort of square with two fountains." "You cannot possibly mean Rome?" "Oh, yes, Rome—that was the name of the place."
1
perfection the process of modern pa-
1
per-making had been brought. A notary carefully recorded each stage of the progress of the experiment. At 7:35 the trees fell to the ground. The timbers were at once stripped of their bark, cut into small pieces and converted into mechanical pulp. This was placed in a vat and mixed with the materials necessary to form paper, and the first leaf came out at 9:34 a. m., in one minute less than two hours. Some of the sheets were then taken to a printing office three miles distant and the first of the printed papers was is- I sued at 10 o'clock, the entire time occupied in converting a tree into a newspaper being exactly two hours and thirty-five minutes.
Mr. Chipmunk's Pockets.
A chipmunk, unlike a boy, has his pockets in his mouth. And they are good, big pockets, too. Not long ago a Vermont man thought he would see Just how many kernels of corn little Mr. Chipmunk could carry home to his family all at once. So he laid thirty kernels on a board nea? the barn and
For Cure of Voung Children. The Paris municipality has resolved to increase from V)8 to 400 the number of infant schools, or rather places where young children are taken care of while their mothers .are at work. These institutions are a kind of second-class creche, serving not for infants, but for children under the school age of 6. The existing institutions have 4,700 innuites and cost 80,000 francs a year. The cost will now be increased to 530,000 francs.
Blind-fold. A woman has no right to "go
il
then hid behind a shed to wa/tch. h/alth She has Presently Mr. Chip appeared, bobbing no right to shut his tail and looking a little auspicious, her eyes to the When he felt sure that everything was safe up he scampered and picked up every one of the thirty kernels and Btored them away in his pockets, until hie face looked as if he had just come down with a bad case of the mumps. Next time forty-five kernels were pieced on the board and Mr. Chip succeeded in getting every one of them into his pockets, altough it mad-e bis eyes bulge a little. For the third trial seventy kernels were placed the board. This time Mr. Chip was beaten. Although he tried as hard as he could, his pockets would hold only fifty-eight of the kernels, and he had to leave the rest. But that's a pretty good showing for a little fellow.
blind" in mat-
plain facts of her a and the consequences of neglect. She has no right to be wretched and ill when she might be hapj,y and free from pain.
1
QT\iiirf?liTiop
Dearest, she said, snuggling up to
Then a look or uust overspread "er I
countenance, and she murmured: "Oh, you have made me so happy."—Cleveland Leader.
What Will Sh« I»o With li? "I am sorry, monsieur, but I cannot consider your proposal. I shall never
marry.
Women who drag through life weighed down by some torturing, dragging weakness or disease of their sex are not doing their full duty to themselves. They are not taking the means which enlightened science affords them of being well and strong and capable.
1
These special complaints from which so
many women suffer are not necessarjr. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription positively cures even the most severe and obstinate cases. 1 It is not a haphazard medicine. It is not a ''cure-all." It is a scientific remedy devised by an educated and experienced specialist for the one purpose of curing the
special diseases of women.
un tn lens of thousands of women ha\e been
mad-
'Never marry? But
emolselle, what do you intend to do with your Immense ffcrtun*?"—IVI1*ustre de Pochfe.
restored to fect heaUh by thi9 wondcrful
him, "are you sure you love me more "prescription." In many instances they than you did your first wife?" "Why, I were actually given up as hopeless by phydarling," he replied. "I paid only $7 Gotden Medica, nisfor her wedding-ring. Yours cost $15." covery' and Favorite Prescription' for chronic
nf trust nvprpmrpari hpr inflammation of the uterus and bladder," writes
A-
Scott, of
Parlc
Rapids. Hubbard Co.,
I Minn. I also had stomach trouble which was 1 terribly distressing. I have been cured of all. I had suffered untold misery for four years previous to talcing your treatment, but began to feel the good effect at one*."
Dr. Pierce's thousand-page illustrated book. "The People's Common Sense Med-ie.-.i Adviser contains information of priceless value to women. A paper-bound copy will be sent absolutely free on receipt of
Don't think that your liver needs treating if you are bilious. It don't. It's your stomach. That ie, your stomach is really what causes the biliousDcus. It has put your liver out ot order.
See what's the matter with your stomach. Sick stomach poisons liver and then there's trouble. Shaker Digestive Cordial cures stomach and then all's well. That's the case in a nutshell.
Shaker Digestive Cordial is no secret. Formula's on every bottle. But it's the simple honest way it's made, the honest Shaker herbs and otheringiedients of which it's composed, tnat make it so eflicacious.
Any real case of indigestion and lilioueness can be cured with a few bottles of Shaker Dig,estive Cordial. Try it.
Sold bv druggists, price 10 cents to SI.00 per bottle.
The ''Wabash" California Limited! To Los Angeles in 75 hours from LaFayette. On Wednesday and Saturday of each week the "Wabash" California Limited will run during the Wir.tsr 6eaeon, reaching Los Angeles 5:50 p. m. Saturdays anij^ Tuesdays.
This tiiii is a magnificent one throughout. The cars wore buiit es pecially for the "Wabash." ThiBservice is without doubt up to the highest Pullman standard. Elegant double Drawing Room BufTVt Smoking and Peerless Dining The latest periodicals and every luxury of home life on wheels. The undersigned will call on you personally or answer promptly any communication relatives to a Western sojiurn.
TIIOS. FOLLEN, Passenger and Ticket Agent, Wabash Line.
LaFayette.Ind.
Hitherto rubber has usually been se. cured by the wasteful method of cutting down the trees. The recent discovery that the leaves furnish a purer and more copious supply of gum than the treeB promises to produce a great change in that industry.
OASTORIA.
The tielimile •Igutor*
Aon Arbor Railroad, Baltimore & Ohio, Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern (jnicago & Eastern Illinois, Chicago & West Michigan. Chicago & Muskingum
valley,
Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton
Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St, Louis, and a score of other railroads throughout the United State?.
These books sell for $.30 and are not transferable. If the ticket is used in I its entirety and exclusively by the origiI inal purchaser a rebate of 110 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.
COMB
TO THE
Market Grocery
O
Groceries of the Freshest and Prices of the Lowest.
Sample our Flourthis market.
21
one-cent stamps to pay the cost of mailing mi/v. Address World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N.Y. Kor a handsome clolh-bound copy send
31
stamps.
-none better in
NEW STOCK OF
S A
Just in, and a very small profit asked of you in buying it
Henry Sloan's
MARKET GROCERY.
All Promises
Look alike on Paper.
Our Garments
Are offered to substantiate the claim that we can produce the best fitting and best made clothing at prices fsr below competition.
John L. Callahan
1st Door W. 1st Rational Baijk.
March 8,1897.
TOtMb
Big Four Interchangeable Thousand Mile TicketFollowing is a list of the lines over which the one thousand mile tickets of the Big Four ieeu« will be honored for exchange tickets:
AN OPEN LETTER
To MOTHERS.
WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD "CASTORIA" AND "PITCHER'S ASTORIA," AS OUR
I, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massachusetts, was the originator of "PITCHER'S QASTORIA," the same that has borne and does now ^70 on every bear the facsimile signature of wrapper. This is the original PITCHER'S CASTORIA," which has been used in the homes 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 ^-0 //rt on the and has the signature of //xmZ&Qa wrapper. No one has authority from me to use my name except The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is President.
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
BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF
Insist on Having
The Kind That Never Failed Yon.
Nothing Like It .. ^jj-
Men who are accustomed to take their regular "morn ings morning,"'or buy
For Medieinal purposes, will find that there is none like our stock of genuine
-Old Kentucky Bourbon—
-^The Midway^
TADE CONNORS. "BOONE" CALLAHAN.
Don't Think
That you 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. ,t
H0BERI M'MAIfS,
127 W. Main St.
ALBERT S. GALEY, Agt.J
Office, 109 N. Green St.
Fifty cents bue a dozen fine photog graphs at Willis & McQuown's.
$100.00
In Greenbacks
GIVEN AWAY.
We want a smart boy or girl in every city.and town in the United States and Canada to represent us as our SPECIAL agent. We pay you wtll for your leisure hours. In addition to this we give prizes in Greenbacks, Bicycles, Diamond Rings, Kodaks, Gold Watches, etc. The first applicant from each town gets the agency,
Send iO cents for instruction and how to obtain these prizes. (Writ today.) Addrers
Universal Supply Co.,
DEPT. A.
69-71 Dearborn Street,
CHICAGO,.. ILLINOIS. Mention thib Paper.
TRADEMARK.
does not know.
"The Kind You Have Always Bought"
Pure Whiskey
CONFIDENCE!
Is what we started in for six months ago, and we've won it. Farmers who fed their teams or bitched in with us then are still our patrons and new ones come to us every day. We have room for all that come, and clean quarters for your horses.
DAVIS & DAVIS.
Pike Street Lively and Feed Stable.
BOB DAVIS. WM. A. DAVIS.
Veascy Co.
-BROKERS IN
GRAIN, PROVISIONS STOCKS.
Chicago Correspondents—Lamson Bros. & Co members Chicago Board of Trade.
New York Cotrespondents—Purnell, Hagaman & Co., members of New York Stock Exchange.
Commission on Grain per cent. Stock per cent.
Fisher Building, 131& east Main Street. Telephone No. 298.
SUGAR!
20 Pounds $1.00
P'c'k Coffee 12 l-2c
A
Harve Gray's
Music Hall Grocer.
Other Staple and Fancy Groceries in Proportion.
AftTMMA
V.
JAFT'B abthmalene
ftW I nmn—pnpCnnever'aU8
we
1!'
i'l
Mm
a 1
Ben(lnayoar
win UU LII
mall trial botUernrp
lb# DR. *FT BROS. M. Co- Rochester, N.Y.rlllX
