Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 15 January 1898 — Page 3
IONF ID ENCEI
Is what we started in for six jionths ago, and we've won it. Farmrs who fer1 tluir teams or hitched in |ith us then aie still our patrons and jw ones come to us every day. We ive room lor all that come, and [ean quarters.tor your horses.
DAVIS DAVIS!
|ke Street Livery and Feed Stable.
IBOB DAVIS. WM. A. DAVIS.
em Laundry
ALBERT S. GALEY, Agt.|
lest Wort In City.
Office, 109 N. Green St.
&
SUGGESTIONS FOR PRESENTS.
lia beats, genuine £1.75 re Screens 8Sc ^aia Japanese
Stands... .$3.!t0
Kbourettes A.v. SI.25 able Covers 23c |low Covers, per pair 15c
jjfelour Squares, Turkish Stuffs of all b|dB, fancy Cords, embroidered linens.
ind 20 North Meridian Street, Indianapolis, Indiana.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
|CleaxMe« and be«atif!ec the hair. I Promote*
A
kxxuriast growth.
•Never Fails to Restore Oray 1 Hair to its Toothful Color. I Cure# scalp dictates & hair Jailing.
fiOcjandJ^OOa^Drugltt^^^
lTARHH
DIRECTIONS for using
CREAM BALM
coV?l
Applva particle of the balm directly into tbe nostrils. After a moment draw a a through tbe nose. Cse three times a day, after meals preferred, and before retiring.
lY-FEVER
ELY'S UKEAM BALM opens and cleanses the Nasal
iges. Allays Pain and inflammation, heals protects the membrane from colds, is the senses of taste and smell. Ttc quickly absorbed and gives relief &t
Price SO cents at Drnggistsor by mail. BROTHERS,56 Warren St.,New York.
Menry Sloan's
MARKET GROCER "i
idy Dt 5g Pound.
lies, Fruits, and Nuts a Special
ty for the Holidays. Ui
ECIAL PRICE
Made to Schools and Sunday Schools. Come and see me before buying.
irket Grocery.
Promises
Look alike on Paper.
Our Garments
re offered to substantiate the claim that we can proluce the best fittiug and best lade clothing at prices fsr elow competition.
DoorW. 1st National Bank.
Core Constipation Forever. Cuscarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. C- fail to cure, druggists refund money.
Cf«*ut.. A-'.-' '-'-'--,,
WOMAN LED BOBBERS
CORA HUBBARD HAS WONDERFUL NERVE AND TACT.
THIS FKMALi 1KSI* Ef-AOO HIDES WD SHOOTS EXCKI.I.KNTI.Y.
How Many Men She Han Kflle LMirlnff Her Wild
Wcsi
Career Muy N«-vrr He
Known—Short, but Stocktiy Built anil Very Nervy.
ORA HUBBARD is a bank robber. Shs is a fine shot,an ex pert horsewoman and a raider with a record. She is th« .newest of the new women right up to date fearless, dogged, desperate. At the age of 20 she rode with Bob Dal-
ton in some of the bloodiest expeditions ever organized in the west. IIow many men she has killed may never be known. In the garb of a cowboy,with her short, black hair, worn pompadour, concealed beneath a waving sombrero, she assisted three desperate men in tho robbery of the bank at Plneville, Mo., recently, in broad daylight. While they intimidated the cashier and looted the vault, Cora stood guard outside and held the horses on which they were to make their escape into Indian Territory. She played her part well, and when the shooting commenced, none were handier with a revolver than she Nobody knew she was a woman
Cora lives at Weir City, Kan., with her parents and her brother, Bui Huobard. She is only 25 years old, yet she was a member of the notorious Dalton gang, and it was with a revolver bearing the name cf Bob Dalton that she shot at her pursuers, held them at bay and escaped, although the horse she was riding was killed in the skirmish.
A month or two before the robbery Bill went to Pineville and obtained employment with a farmer in that vicinity. He studied the local conditions carefully and then made a diagram for the use of himself and confederates. There seems to be no doubt that he went there for the especial purpose of planning a robbery. He imported the other three bandits from Kansas, including his sister, and their work was well done. But Bill made the fatal mistake of losing his diagram in the midst of the excitement, and this led to the capture of three members of the gang, himself included. While the robbery was in progress a posse of citizens was formed and they gave chase to the highwaymen. A running skirmish ensued and many shots were exchanged. Cora Hubbard's hat' was pierced by three bullets and her horse was shot and killed, yet she escaped unharmed. Several officials of the bank and other citizens continued the chase and at Southwest City, I. T., they overtook and wounded White Tennison, one of the robbers, and captured him. On the Sunday following the robbery Bill HuDbard was arrested at Weir City, Kan., and during the day his daring sister was also taken into custody. John Sheets, the fourth robber, was captured recently at Weir City,
Kan. The quartet secured $586. Of this amount $301 has been recovered, Cora had buried $141 in her back yard and it was not found until last Wednesday. She had also buried her hat and the suit of clothes she wore at Pineville and the Dalton revolver with which she shot at her pursuers. The revolver Is a 45-caliber Colt's, single action, sixshooter, with "Bob Dalton" cut on the wood handle and nine niches filed on the nickel plate. This is supposed to be the record of the men Dalton has killed.
Cora Hubbard is five feet four inches in height and rather stockily built. Her hair is coarse and black, and her complexion swarthy, and she greatly resembles an Indian woman. Her features are coarse and masculine, as are her tastes. Once she had a husband— bis name was Parker—but she took the trouble to get a divorce from him, and since then she has been known by her maiden name, which was Hubbard. Evejvsince she was a girl she has been of a roving and reckless disposition, and what would ordinarily be called a
CORA AND BILL.
tuffnut, although, as far as
Known,
she
was virtuous. But she cared no more for consequences than a toad does for side pockets, and did not hesitate to tacMe the toughest proposition that presented itself. Consequently when Bob Dalton invited her to become a member of his gang of gay marauders, the promptly accepted and donned male attire. In that garb she was chased all over the plains of Oklahoma and Indian Territory by United States marshals, but she did not give up the wild life of a highwayman until tbe gang was finally broken up. Bob Dalt6n was killed, Cherokee Bill
waB
hung,
another of the gang was imprisoned, and the others were scattered. But the girl seems to have been fascinated with the danger of tbe life she had been leading, and when her precious brother, Bill, suggested to h«r that they rob a bank, sbe was right with bim. It didn't take her two minutes to say yes. What did sbe care for the danger? She loved tbe excitement. $ince tbe Dal-
ton crowd had been scattered she bad pined for a taste of the old life. Her nerves .were getting rusty, they had been inactive so long. She wanted something to make them tingle and 'brill, to warm her stagnated blood, and make her pulse beat witli the merry leap that it knew of olo. What tetter than a bank robbery? Surely, there could be nothing mere to her likeing. She found the excitement, and she enjoyed it. She tried to escape, failed, though she gave her pursuers a beautiful run for their money—thfe money she had stolen. She took the arrest philosophically, and is prepared to go to the penitentiary if necessary. And it will probably be necessary, for Cora has already admitted her guilt, and to prove it would it be difficult, even without her unexpected display of candor. Cora is a stoic. Considering her record, she is a wonder.
BOUGHT HER OWN PICTURES.
S
for
Southern Society Woman Paid Photos In Job Lota*
Mrs. Edward Bright, one of the most beautiful of .ae society leaders of New Orleans, has just succeeded in buying up a large stock of her own photographs which were offered for public sale in many retail shops in New York. Mrs. Bright, who as Miss Ella Mehle was the belle of New Orleans, was a queen of the Mardi Gras and was photographed in her costume. In some way the negative escaped from the hands of the photographers and found its way to New York. Prints were made of it for the purpose of illustrating a new process of photography. Of course nobody knew who the beautiful original was. and the prints were scattered broadcast. So long as the picture went to the photograph trade only, Mrs. Bright did not hear of it. But when some enterprising photographer reproduced it in large sizes, labeled it,
MRS. EDWARD BRIGHT.
"A Southern Beauty," and sold it to fancy shops, which offered the pictures for sale at 15 cents a copy, Mrs. Bright's friends in New York soon wrote to her about the matter, and the lady was naturally indignant.
Her husband engaged a detective and ordered him to buy up all the copies he could. Disguised as a peddler of photographs he purchased all that were offered for sale. When he chanced into the shop of a dealer named Rosenbaum, in Park Row, he found 600 of the prints. These had been bought at auction for $3. vK
Now that the story is out, it is possible the supply of Mrs. Bright's photographs will increase and the offerings be so large as to go beyond the capacity of Mr. Bright's bank account to pay for.
D1SHWASHER GETS $2,000,000,
Clara Wilson Discovers a Mine of Wealth Near Circle City.
Clara Wilson, whose home is in Denver, Colo., and who went to a little mining camp south of Circle City, Alaska, a year and a half ago to serve as cook for a number of miners, passed through Chicago recently en route for her old home at Scranton, Pa. Miss Wilson does not have to wash dishes for a living now. She is not a handsome young woman as personal appearance goes, but sbe is now the possessor of that which makes her the loadstone where eligible young men are present, and would afford her an opportunity of taking her pick in ordinary company. In other words, the dishwasher, Clara Wilson, returns to the United States worth probably $2,000,000, and all through her own efforts. Miss Wilson was not satisfied with washing dishes. The result was that she located a copper mine, which is now being worked, and which, is said to be panning out as proliflcally as any of the gold mines that are making the Klondike fields famous. She would not advise any young woman to go to that country who has not had some experience with miners or who is not prepared to defend herself and undergo the severest hardships. In that country self-preservation is truly the first law of nature. Men forget all their chivalry, and although women are scarce they are not curiosities, and do not seem to awaken any special interest among men. Alaska miners are not sentimental. They are looking^ for riches and they do not care how they' get them. She had to defend her claim with a gun, she says.
Baby's First Tooth.
A Chicago woman discovered her baby's first tooth, fainted away and remained unconscious for three hours. In tbe meantime some old women rushed in and, thinking the baby had swaTlowed something, procured a stomach pump and came near pumping its soul out. The baby will doubtless be careful about springing its next tooth on its excitable motber.—Ex.
A report shows that there are 2,173 persona in tbe world known to have six fingers on one hand, and 4S1 witk •••en innni
SHE WEARS TROUSERS
FEMALE ARCHAEOLOGIST TAKES TO MALE ATTIRE.
Her Nairn Is Madame Dleulafnv and She IIan Attained Distinction In Her Callinc—Discoveries of the Temple of
Darlns.
ADA ME D1EULAFOY, one of the greatest archaeologists in Europe, wears trousers and men's clothes generally. She claims no credit for doing so, nor does she wish to call, attention to herself. She says that men's
clothes are comfortable and that they are a convenienc? to her in the pursuit of her profession.
Most people will say that they do not become iier, but she thinks that is nobody's business but her own, and possibly her husband's, who mildly acquiesces in her taste.
When people go to the opera or theatre or the Salon In Paris, they sometimes see a small, well-dressed man, with a clean-shaven face and small feet and hands, and they sometimes think what a nice, refined-looking man but never in the world do tfiey suspect that this «ame fine-looking man is a woman, and one of the most famous in Paris.
Madame Dieulafoy has been of great service to the scientific world. She discovered the ruins of the Temple of Darius, which are now in the Louvre, In Paris. For this great achievement the French government decorated her with the Order of the Legion of Honor, and gave her the right to wear men's attire at all times. She is married,
MADAME DIEUfflLFOY,
and her husband is m$t devoted to her, both having the same tailor. Their home Is one of great luxury and refinement, and the two gather about them the savants of France, who are eager to pay homage to BO learned and so remarkable a woman. Madame Dieulafoy's nature is not like her taste in dress, for she is entirely feminine in speech and manner and still retains her womanly gestures and mannerisms, which appear a little odd with her fine tailor coat and trousers. She never wears woman's dress at any time, and her wardrobe is as perfect as the best dressed of London swells. Her silk hat is the perfection of glossiness, her linen correct and immaculate, and her coats the latest cut.
Her hair is short and arranged in a her skin is fresh and rosy. When in the street with her husband she carries 4erself exactly like a man, and uses her walking stick with great ease. One would never imagine her to be other than a small, well-dressed man yet directly one is aware that she is a woman. It is easy to see that she has the little ways of her sex, and that her mannlshness is only in her clothes.
The Mother's Pay Day. What pay does a hard-working mother of a family receive for her labor at the end of a •week? The husband may bring home his regular wages. Some of the children may be old enough to earn theirs.' But the mother, what is her pay for her days of toil and often nights of anxiety? Well, she is either paid in love or she isn't paid at all.
The majority of mothers are perfectly satisfied with the
simple recompense of loving appreciation. If any mother doesn't receive that much, it's an awful pity.
It's a sad thing when the mother comes down sick with overwork or worry, or because some little weakness or disease has been neglected until it gets to be alarming.
It should never be allowed to get to this point. She ought to be looked after right away. She needs the help of common sense medical treatment. Of course no one medicine will cure everything. A medicine must be speciallyadapted to its particular purpose.
If the digestive organs or the liver are out of order Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is a perfect and scientific remedy. His Favorite Prescription" is specially devised for weaknesses and diseases of the womanly organs and it is the most potent remedy for these troubles which has ever been invented.
Where both these conditions exist these two medicines taken alternately constitute a thoroughly scientific course of treatment, which has been marvelously successful with thousands of dyspeptic, debilitated and nervous women. "1 take great pleasure In recommending Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription,
1
Golden Medical
Discovery' and Pellets,' writes Mrs. Jed Lawrence, South Hero. Grand Isle Co., Vt. My trouble was female weakness, kidney disease, neuralgia, change of life and bad flowing spells. I took eight bottles of Dr. Pierce's Fnvonte Prescription. seven bottles of Golden Medical Discovery, and seven small vial* of Pellets.' The doctors did not help me any. I could not sleep night nor day. 1 suffered everything before I began to take Dr. Pierce's medicines. When I began to use them I weighed loo pounds. Now 1 weigh 145 pounds. I can now do all my work."
rr^rrrTTiin .iri-i.i.iii.nillMlllllllliH'lll'I'lllllil'llMlltlllliliiliHnt
(cm:
it'iiiiminmimi'nniininiiiiu'nninnimmt nnm..n.fn Vegetable Preparationfor Assimilating UteToodandReguIaftn£ the Stomachs and
Bowels of
IN1 AN IS HI LI) KK\
Promotes Di4cstion,Cheer fulness andRest.Contains neither Opium,Morphine norMoEral.
KotNahcotic*
Km^afOl&lk'SMnBJnCBnt Pantfhn Smi" AbcJmmm
AmutSfd
HfmSttd-
A perfect Remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverishaess and LOSS OF SLEEP.
Tac Simile Signature of
NEW YOBK. At months old J3 »osrs 33Ci NTS
EXACT COPT OF WRAPPER.
Nothing Like It
-IK-
^-Old
THE OHCACO EVENING SCATCLL :-,l 'illy
Newspaper i.i Chicago, and under i.s iuw nianai'tr.ier.t *ias met wil.i l-.iiiiom.nal success.
THAT THE I
|FAC-S1MILE SIGNATURE
OF
IS ON THE
WRAPPER
OF EVEEY
BOTTLE OF
ICASTORIA
Oastoria is put up in one-size bottles only. It lis not sold in. bulk. Don't allow anyone to sell I yon anything else on the plea or promise that it I IB "jnst as good" and "will answer every purI pose." 49* Bee that yon get G-A-S-T-O-R-I-A.
The fusimile tSgutuei of
:MM\
Men who are accustomed to tike their regular "mum- .. ings morning," or buy
TADE CONNORS. "BOONE"CALLAHAN.
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DAILY (EXCEl-T
SUNDAY)
SILVER'S WESTERN CHAMPION.
ce Si!v.
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"A FAIR FACE CANNOT ATONE FOR
AN UNTIDY HOUSE." USE
SAPOLIO
Where You All Want to Go
tots) 1117
VTtpptV
Pure Whiskey
For Medieinal purposes, will find that there is none like our stock of genuine
Kentucky
Bourbon^
AND WEEKLY.
.1 is L.t:iv ie.l by carrier'in r.'.l
ti
PURE
WW
No. 108 South Green Street.
liM'j-c tow.~s within
two li'.M.tirt'i miles of Cliicaco ii.id 'e'rt by mail lor
$1.00 Year.
California Wine
50c Bottle
-AT-
The Clipper.
Crawfordsville, India®*
