Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 5 February 1898 — Page 5

•J^OTICK OF SALK OF REAL R8TATB.

la the mtutei of the assignment of f.ftyiin ,J. Moore. Jotlee Is herebr given that by virtue of an order of the Montgomery Circuit Court the undersigned aunlgnee ot Flavtuo J. Moore will otter lor Bale at prirn.ti- gale at the law office of Claude Thompson iu Orawfordsville, Indiana, until th« elovenih day of February, Itf'.*% at not 1-B8 than its appraised vain?, and if not sold ut said date then on tho ISth of February and from day to nay thereafter until Bold Uiv will offer at pnblicjsaie at the door of Court Hoiu» In Urawfordnvillo, the following described voftl estate in Montgomery conuty, Tndiana, to-wit:

Tho east half of tho yoatb-eaat quarter of aectiou seven, (7) toivusship nineteen, (19) north range llvo, (5'i we-«t containing oighty, H'l, acre., also tho west hair of tho »outh-east quarter of of section eight (S), township nineteen (19, north, rang.'.' five (ri we*t, contiiiiing eighty, SO, acres. AIHO fifteen, 15, acren off of the west s.de of the oast half of thi south-west quarter of said section eight. 8, ar id ilftoon acres being a Htrlp of equal width oifendlng the entire length north and south of sail east tulf of paid southwest quarter of said eectlon eight. Also a part of the west half of the northeast quarter of section eighteen, 18, townsh nineteen, 19, north, range Ave, 5, west, bounded thus: Beginning at a point forty, 40, rods south of the northwest corncr of the northeast quarter of said section eighteen, IS, running thence south fifty, 60, rods, east eighty, 80, rods, north fifty, r0. rode, west elghtv 80, rods to the place of beginning, containing twemty-ave, 26, acres.

Bids for the privato sale of said lands will bo received either at the W iynetown Bank in Waynetown, Indiana, or at the law ofHc« of Claude Thompsou In Crawfordarille, Indiana, but said sale will be consulate 5 at said law otflce.

Terms of Halo: One-third iash in hand, one third in nine months and one-third in eighteen months, subject to a mortgage of seventeen hundred dollars to Cliffo.-d I). Voris on the west half of tho iuthwost quarter of section eight, township nineteen north, tango five west and flftoen acres in a strip ot equal width off of the west side of the east half of tho southwest quarter of said section eight or the purchaser may assume said mortgage as apart of the purchase price of said land.

Th« purchaser to execute his promissory notes for the unpaid balance of said purchasi -mtfney, secured by irtgage on said real estate, said notes to waive valuation and appraisement laws and to draw intere.it at the rata of sis per cent, per annum from date of sale and provide lor at'.orney's fees. Said pur•ctiaser to pay the cost of execution and recording of said mortgage.

A

RAHIL T. MEKRir.L,

Assignoe of Flavius J. Moore.

Oi.AtJi)R THOMPSON, Attorney for Assignt:

J^PPLICATION FOli LIQUOR LICENSE.

N0tl:e is horeby _'lvon to tho citizens of the Second ward in the city of Orawfordsville, Union Township, Montgomery county, State ol Jadiana, that I, S imuor 8 Burrows, a white male Inhabitant of the State of Indiana, and now and for more than ninoty (901 days' time prior to the date of this notice of application, a continuous ret-i'lont of Union Township, la Montgomery county. Stat, of Ind.ana anil over the ago of twenty.one years, will apply to the Board of Commissioners of the County of Montgomery in the state of Indiana, at the r-1?-tilar March session, commencing on the ttrst Mon layof March 1H98, for a License to soli all Wills of spirituous, vinous, in lit and otlior intoxicating liquors in a less quantity than a quart at a time, and allow the same to co drank on tho premises where sold.

My place of bualnes- aud the premises wheroon'and wherein said liquors are to be nold and draulc are situated and specifically described as follows Besinning at a point twenty-six and one-half feet west, of the northeast corner •f lot No. ono hundred and thirty-two [138], as the sains is known and de^ignited on the original plat of thi town, now City of Orawfordsville, Indian?, and running thence nouth on hundred and seven [1071 feet tlnnce west sixteen [16] feet, thrnce north one hundred and seven [107]foer, thence oast sixteen rioi fet to the place of beginning, in the lower front room, on the ground floor, of the two story .'brick, building, situated, on the above described premises, said room being fortv-seven [47J feet, four [4] inches deep, and fifteen [15] feat, two [S) inches wide and fronting on east -Market Street lu said City of Crawforasvilie,

Indiana. And I shai! also state In my said application that I desire to carrv on In the same room above described, other aud different business as follows: Running one (1) pool table, the sale of cider, pep, ginjer ale, mineral waters and all kinds of soft drinks and liquors sold and used as beverages, tobaoco and cigars.

SOMNBR9, BORROWS.

D&tel this 99th day of Jauaary 18M.

D!K1N13TK\T0R'S SALE.

The undersigned administrator, with the will •annexed, of the ostate of Nicholas Schendorf, •deceased, hereby gives notice tliot by virtue of an order of thi Montgomery Circuit Court, he •will at 10 o'clock a. m., of the 1st DAY OK MARCH, 1808, At his place of bu-tln»-ts on (Jr«eu street, in tho city ot CrawfordSk-llle, Montgomery county, Indiana, ani from day to day thereafter until sold offer for sale at prlvite sale all the Interest of eald deoedant and free from all liens against the same at the time of deceden's death, the following descrlb »d real estate in said county an State, to-wit:

Apart of »hs south-wost quarter of section twenty (201, In towuship (19) north, rang" four •4 west, b(jundo«Ia-! follows Beginning at the •south-west corner of slid qaarter section, Vhenae north 14 :4."i ch'iins tn the south-west corner of the land set off and and appertlonod to Kmmt Sohsnderf, thence ew 8S chains more or less ta the west bank of Sugar Creek, thence «outh-east along said west bxnk ta a point 1: 25 chiias west of the out line of said quartet' sootloa, thence south on a line parallel with said east line to tho south line of said quarter section thence west "?!t chains to the place of beginning, •containing and 45-10!) airm more or less.

Said sale will be made subject ta the apprjval of sild court and upon the following tonus, at not less than the appraised value:

At least one-third of the purchase money cash "In hand, one.third in nine months and ono£hlrd in eighteen months, evidenced by notes of the purchaser, bearing six per cent, interest per annum from date, waiving relief, providing attorney's fees, and secured by mortgage on the real estate sold.

OTTO SCHLEMMEK.

Jfat-5J-lw. Administrator.

HEHIFF'S SALIC

^By virta of a certified copf or a wired t) ma •directed from tho Clerk ot the Montgomery Circuit Court, In a cause wherein Wabash College is plaintiff, and Charles W. Wright etai. aro defendants, requiring me to make the ram of Thirty-Nine Hundred and Ninety-Eight Dollars, (J3,9!H.OO), with Interest on said decreo and aosts. I will expose at Public Sale to tho highest •bidder, on •SATUKDAY, tho 19th Day of February, 1398, Between the hours of 10 o'clock a. in. and 4 o'clock p. m. of sal I day. at the Court House, iu Orawfordsville, Montgomery County, Indian i, the rents an 1 profits for a term not exceeding seven years, the following real estate, to-wlt:

Part of tho north half of Lot numbor twenty, \J0), In John Wilson's addition of out lots to the town (now olty) of CrawforJsvllle, Indiana, sounded as follows: Beginning at the northwest corner of said lot numbjr twenty, pOi, and running th'me- south two hundred and nine, sKW), feet, tlience oast, seventy-sight, (78), reel, thence north two jiuudred and nine, i^OD), r»ot, thence west seventy-sight, (78), feet, to the place of beglnulug

If such rents and profits will nol, sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said dejive, interest and costs, I will, at the same time aud piaco, •expose to public sain the foe simple of sui.t real -estate, or so much thereof as ly ba suilicieut to disclrirg' ild decree, interest aud costs. Bald site will bo made without any relief whuf--ever fmui valuation or appraisemsut laws.

DAVIO A. CANINE.

Sheriff Montg iraeryCouutp.

By J. A. BUKSN'AN', Dfnuty. KtSTtSR & RISTISK. .THU. 25, A. I., 1S9S. .i4i1t".5rt:ors for l'lalntill.

Gem Laundiy

ALBERTS. GA.LEY, A^t.

Best Work In City.

Office, 109 N. Green St.

P0WER0FM0RM0NISM

STRAWS FROM RECENT UTAH ELECTIONS,

The 8ect Founded by Joseph Smith Still Retain* ml its Political Strength Mormonlnm Viewed From It* Results —Spreading Rapidly.

PPONENTS of the mormon church have been stirred to renewed activity by several recent

am ng these is, perhaps, the result of the recent elections. which are taken to indicate a

founded by Joseph Smitii still retains all its political power. Statistics also spem to show tliat the general growth of the ohurch has been accelerated rather than otherwise of late. At the October conference President Wilford Woodruff demanded that the mormons should unite In politics. At that time the demand was set down as merely the talk of an old man, but the November election stems to show that a large element among the mormons still entertain deep respect for the revelations of church elders. John Clark, the candidate for mayor of the citizens, but a very devout mormon, and an undisputed church candidate, was elected by a small majority. The gentile vote and the

independent

PRESIDENT WOODRUFF

vote.

received a comparatively large The same result was seen all ov«p Utah. Ogden'8 administration, as well as Salt Lake City's, will be in the hands of mormons, though In each case the gentiles form the bulk of the population. The city council in each case, by a majority of mormons, show result of religious voting. The tendency of mormons to vote for men of their own faith has an important bearing on national affairs. It is not improbable that next year a legislature may be elected in Utah which will be •o overwhelmingly mormon that a United States senator will be chosen who will give his allegiance to the church leaders.

At the conference already referred to it was shown by statistics that the Increase In membership through baptism of children who have reached the •ge of 8 years, and of adult converts. In Utah, Idaho, Canada, Colorado, Wyoming and Arizona, has been larger than during any year in the church'a history. Outside the Rocky mountain region the mormon church has received more accessions than in any two years previously. The greatest comparative Increase has been in New England, In states east of the Missouri river, north of the Ohio, and in Oregon and California. Outelde of Utah 1,400 missionaries are hard at work, many of them abroad, seeking recruits for the cburch. Most of them are young or middle-aged men. and none receives any salary, the church requiring Its missionaries to depend on the hospitality of the people among whom they may be laboring.

Jack Tar» Wouldn't To ait.

I heard the other evening in a railway carriage an amusing story with regard to English and German jack tars, says a writer in the London Sketch. It was told of the members of the crews of two ships engaged in the recent blockade of Crete. These tars were engaged in a festal gathering ashore and one of the Germans proposed the health of his omniscient emperor, which was duly drunk In rum by the assembled party of both nationalities. Presently the English boatswain suggested that the name of her most gracious majesty should be toasted with similar honors, but the tars of the fatherland received the proposal with a chilling silence. "Ain't you a-goin* to drink the queen's health?" came the English inquiry. "Nein, nein," was the Germanic response. "Now, then, boys," exclaimed the boatswain, "I don't want any unpleasantness, but we can't have this, you know 'tain't fair. Take yer time from me two fingers down yer throats, and up comes the bloomin' emperor."

,V%-" The

Extract from a letter written from eollege: "I am much rejoiced, dearest uncle, that you are coming to visit me next Monday. I will be at the station to mept the train. As wp hs.von't seen each other for a Ions rnp 'hat I may «ft?ny rvoen!7.e v.

ID

nold

a £10 note

vour 2ht hn-^, -Tit-Bits

OUR THREE GREAT SPEAKERS.!

\o

vote

were divided among three candidates -—all gentiles. Mr. Clark was supported by the politicians whose names are always associated witn church politics, and the conclusion that the church elected him Is well supported. Every gentile who was on the ticket with him was defeated. Every gentile who was on the other tickets was seriously scratched, and every mormon running

of

Reed Hai None of the U*(n«tlim vC Clay or Blaine.

Tim in the succession of the great speakers of the national house is Thos. Brackett Reed, says the Illustrated American. Henry Clay, James G. Blaine and Mr. Reed—these three stknd out like mountain peaks in the long line of the speakers of the house. Clay and Blaine were each men of famous personal magnetism. Tales of the peculiar power they exerted on men who came within their aura are so multitudinous that they seem almost legendary Certainly a very large part of their supremacy among uien was due to this force. Both Clay and Blaine were dreamers. A certain Oriental imagination was a dominant note in each. Reed, on the other hand, while

many a very attractive per­

sonality, does not rule men by any subtlety of personal magnetism. He is notably careless of effect in manner. He is rugged as a cliff. While he is I withal a man of big kindness of heart, he often is as relentless as a serpent I In his stinging sarcasm. He reigns by sheer largeness of his uncompromi3lng and unanswerable manhood. All three of these speakers have been too pronounced to be president. To Clay and Blaine the presidency was the most darling ambition. But both at critical moments lost it Clay because of his high principle in writing the unpopular Texas letter about which he said: "I had rather be right than be president and Blaine because of a sudden concert of trifling atoms against him which altogether made an obstacle he could not clear. To Reed, however, the presidency is no such magnet. But though the question of the presidency seems to interest him but little, perhaps for that reason he is, in some roaring convention, the more likely to be singled out for it. Americans are a race who love a Man, and at times this admiration for sheer manhood becomes an idolatry with them.

HOLLOW MODERN BRICKS.

Sawdust Is Fonnd to Be a Very Good Filler.

The use of paper in the manufacture of high grades of bricks for interior housework, trimmings, facings and lor decorative purposes is evidently much on the increase, says the Philadelphia

Jlecord. Already some very good sam

pies of enameled paper orlck have been

HISTORICAL BUILDING TO GO.

It Is stated that the house in St. Martin's street, near Leicester Square, at one time occupied by Sir Isaac Newton, is about to be pulled down. It was here, to use the great scientist's own words, that he passed "the happiest years of his life in the observatory at that house." The building, which was duly marked with a tablet, was once before threatened with destruction, but public sentiment being aroused in time, this interesting relic was saved, only,

NEWTON'S OLD HOME.

It would appear, to ultimately suffer the fate which awaits all our interesting buildings.—St. James' Budget.

Two

Ways

of Looking at

A PINE ART.

Seme of th« Preliminaries of SucceMfaf Carrlng.

The season that tries the carver'i skill is with us. The whole matter ol carving is capable of orderly and

a

shown. Jr. the latest process of mak- lucky methods of America, a prelimi ing and enameling the paper bricks the bricks are made on the hollow principle. The object of making the brick hollow is practically the same as sought in the making of hollow forged steel shafting. Not only is a defective center removed, but it is possible to put a mandrel into the hollow, and by applying pressure, the walls are operated upon both from the Inside and from the outside. When a solid body Is heated, the temperature of the interior always varies from that ot the outer portion at first, often resulting In an expansion of one or the other that causes defects. For these reasons the plan of forming the bricks upon the hollow principle, plugging them afterward, is recommended. Sawdust is found to be a good filler. It is first fireproofed, as is the paper pulp used In the bricks. Then It is mixed with cement and pressed into the hollow of the bricks, smoothed and enameled over, making a perfect shape.

A

It*

Prom the Boston Transcript: Milbar—"Hogine has a face that will make his fortune one of these days. At the restaurant the other day he handed the cashier a dollar bill. When he received his change he said very coolly, "That was a five I gave you." And if you'll believe it, the cashier handed h!m out .four dollar bills." Stilson—"But that was downright stealing." Milbar— "Not at all. All that Hoglns was after was to make the chappies standing •round think he had as much as $5." Stilson-"But he made $4 out of th« wtlne bonpp by It MIlbar—^Yee but rbfir '.ividpntal, dont yoiy vv*v. rrffT*''*-.

BU«-

cessful conduct, but he who trusts to luck or chance is certain to come to confusion. Preparation is half the battle, and the needful preliminaries are well summed up in Good Housekeeping: The first requisite—beyond something to carve—is a proper knife. This should be of tho best steel, and with a blade not too large. The extra size is seldom or never needed and is quite often a hindrance rather than a help, especially where the work must be performed within a limited space The knife should have a keen edge and having been well sharpened in advance, it will require no further attention during an ordinary dinner Should it require sharpening, let it b» taken from the table, and preferably from the room, as the operation ia not only inelegant but often decidedly unpleasant to persons of sensitive nerves. Care should be taken to hav? a platter of sufficient size to accommodate the fowl or joint that is f.o b# carved and to leave room for the slices which will be cut off. It this cannot bo done, a spare plate or small platter should be provided for that purpose. The carver should take into account the number of persons to be served and mentally calculate the amount which will be required for one generous serving. This should be cut at once, and the remainder of the stock should b« left in the best possible condition for subsequent use. If additional serving? are desired it is better to carve for them as needed. This not only save? the appearance of furnishing a guest's plate from the remaining fragments of the feast proper, but gives an opportunity to carve especially to meet th« preference of the person to be served The quality of observation is one of the greatest of aids to the man or woman who would carve successfully and deftly. Given proper tools, carving is not a task requiring the exercise of any special amount of strength, and th* lightest handed woman can carve as rapidly and gracefully as the strongest man, provided she understands thf proper management of the knife and fork. In the case of fowls, for instance. it is of the greatest importance to be able to reach the joint* surely and accurately. In Europe, where the business of carving i3 mad»

UUMltcai, l3 maaf

study, in contrast to the happy-go-

nary dissection of fowls is required the meat being used for any appropriate frlcasse or compote. In this way the position of each joint can be accurately determined and actual experiment will show just how to direct the knife in order to certainly produce the desired effect.

BRAVE WOMAN.

California women seem to possess an especial aptitude for felling robbers. A few weeks ago, as was reported in the Cronicle at the time, a 17-year-old girl In San Jose, Cal., floored a man with a blow from her fist, for attempting to hold her up. The robber was stunned by the blow and unable to rise, and the girl calmly proceeded on her way. The other day Dr. A. M. Tuchler of San Francisco knocked a footpad out for attempting a similar offense. She is now nursing a sore hand and the highwayman a black eye.

The woman who thus valiantly defended herself, her watch and her puree, lives at 1012 Mission Btreet, with her husband, who is aUo a physician. She was returning from a visit to a patient in Berkeley, and was walking toward Ashby station, when she encountered the would-be robber. Mrs. Tuchler tells the story as follows: "I went to the depot and was waiting all alone, when a man came np to me and said: 'What time is it?' I answered: *It must be nearly 5.30, the train Is coming.' He came closer to me and said: 'Let me see your watch.' I told him I had none, and at once he grabbed the front of my coat to tear It open. 1 was so excited I hardly knew what I waa doing, but I struck him as hard as I could over the left eye. He staggered and almost fell. He was dazed,

MRS. TUCHLER.

and as soon as he recovered himself a little he went behind the station, and In a minute more he was going across the tracks as fast he could on a bicycle."

Photography Under Water,

Photographs have recently been successfully taken under water at a distance of 10 or 12 feet. The camera was carried by a diver, the light waa supplied by ah electric lamp carried In the diver's headpiece. The experiments were carried out in the bay of Rio de Janeiro. Brazil.

Enrnti r*,xed

En J#ro:i. v'\ t!J" c-:it

THE PSYCHOLOGY OP MOBS.

Prof. Royce Telle the Different Ways Tber Are Inaplred.

Prof. Josiah 'Royce, in a lecture on "The Psychology of Mobs and Other Assemblages," at Cambridge, Mass., recently said 3 mob was an assemblage of excited persons, but such persons wpre not necessarily of a low order of intelligence. It was not correct, either, to regard a mob as necessarily a dangerous body, for it might be excited by joy as well as by anger. In a mob every individual was interested in what every other was doing and each was inspired with strongt.-: emotions than he would otherwise have had. Things are done by a mob which no member composing it would have done as an individual. The leader makes strong suggestions and all the others go In the direction of these suggestions. There is an abolition of ordinary clearness of judgment and whatever may happen on such an occasion nobody afterward finds that the effect Is anything like equal to the cause. The phenomena of a mob are not always those of excitement, for sometimes the phenomena have to do with intellectual processes. Thus, during an excitement In the stock market the process of thinking 1-s going on all the time. In the case of intellectual processes it is sometimes true that an assemblage of professional men reaches a hopeless condition of contagious stupidity and no one seems able at the time to separate his own judgment from, the common opinions. The most marked feature of all mobs is the negative feature, that is, that the crowd Is of less intelligence than the intelligence of any individual in It. The more highly trained are the members of a mob, the more helpless frequently they are In excitement, because thPir higher training makes them less used to acting as a crowd. On the other hand, it is to be considered that vast numbers of expressions of human intelligence, such as languages or the English constitution, were the result of co-operation in large bodies and from som^ conferences lias been derived something of value which could not have emanated from any one person. The tendencies of mob prenomena are those which lie deepest In the social nature. The spirit of the mob is contagious, because in human nature there is a vast collection o£ Imitative tendencies. An important part of every man la his extreme sensitiveness to the doings of his Tellowand to their approval or disapproval of his own acts. Men are not less sensitive than women in this respect, although few of them realize it. and when there comes a moment when Judgment is abandoned the door is left open to sensitiveness and the imitative tendencies and men act together as animals would do. The kind of assemblage which takes wise action 13 one in which the individual takes his principles from the crowd, but judges the facts for himself. Suoh an assemblage is usually rather small and mutual criticism Is free, each Individual retaining the sense of personal responsibility.

a DONNELLY'S ROMANCE.

Miss Marian Olive Hansen, the pretty stenographer who is to marry Ignatius Donnelly, is only 21 years old, and has not had a very easy time in the struggle for life. She is a Norwegian by birth and blood and her family at one time occupied a high position In their native country. Reverses in business, however, overtook them and they lost their entire fortune through bad judgment, chiefly in the indorsement of notes for other people. On coming to America the young daughter was educated for a business life and secured work as a stenographer in a law office. Her earnings were very light, and she never was successful until she secured her present position with Mr. Donnelly, as

stenograph­

er in the office of his paper. Working daily side by side the beautiful Norwegian and the great cryptogramist soon grew to be very fond of each other.

Miss Hansen was fascinated by the books of Mr. Donnelly, and the latter began to feel that he couldn't get along without his fair stenographer. Miss Hansen says she knew that Mr. Don-

MISS HANSON.

helly was in love with her before he knew It himself, and she was not at all surprised when he proposed to her. She 1®

f°nd

A 1 1

receive

•lis m'- ial and J( service

of travel and she looks forward

to her wedding tour with much eager anticipation.

Some Chance for Him.

A little fellow, talking to one of the boys at the Decatur Methodist Orphan's home,yesterday, said: "You boys seem so happy out here I'd like to stay with you always, but my folks are so healthy, I'm afraid I won't bp »n orphan for some time yet!"—Atlanta Constitution.

Th i!ore the average man se*ss'"'Of •wrnua ..i?.ure the more respectfiriiy ht removes bis hat and bows to the mir. rn»

f: FROM FOOT TO KNEE

bhfo Woman Suffered Great Agony* From a Terrible Sore—Her 8tory of the Case, and Her Cure.

For many years I was afflicted witk a milk leg, and a few years ago it broke out In a soie and spread from my foot to my knee. I suffered great agony. It would burn and itch all the time and discharge a great deal. My health was good with the exception of this sore. I tried a great many kinds of salve, bnt some would irritate the sore so that I could hardly standi the pain. I could not go near the fire without suffering intensely. Some one sent me papers containing testimonials ot cures by Hood's Sarsaparilla, and I told my husband I would like to try this medicine. He got me a bottle and I fonnd it helped mc. I kept on taking it until my limb waa completely healed. I cannot praise Hood's Sarsaparilla enough for the great benefit it has been to me. -It cleanses the blood of all impurities and leaves it rich and pure." MBS. ANNAE. Ea.ke2?, Whittlesey, Ohio.

You can buy Hood's Sarsaparilla of all druggists. Be sure to get only Hood's. Hond'c Pillc

Hrn

the favorite family

I iUVHl a rills cathartic. Price 25c.

-"—•-'J

STRINGTOWN..

W"m. Taylor ia ill. John Ames butchered Wednesday. Mr. illiamsis hauling corn for Lent McCiamrock.

Sherman McCiamrock and family Sundayod in Wingate. Some small pupils are missing school on account of sickness.

Mary Ames entertained a few of her friends last Friday night, Tom Hazlerigg will build a business room to his dwelling in the spring.

The Rev. Dr. Click is holding a series of revival meetings at Mount Pleasant. Harry Nolan is fond of one task this winter taking his little sisters to school.

One of our philosophers has a new way of freazing cream. He places the freezer on a stump, turns the crank, and the wind does the rest.

^PPL.TCATION I'OK LIQUOIt MCENSK.

Notice in hereby elven to the cltlzeM and voters of the seuond ward In

the

cltir ot

Crawfordaville, Union township, Montgomery county, State of Indiana, that I,

the under­

signed. a male Inhabitant of eald townihlp, over the age of twenty-one years, of good

moral

character* not in tbe habit of beaming intoxl* catert, and a continuous resident of

s&Td

town-

ship tor inoro than ninety days \vcimediately proceeding the giving of this notice

filing of

his

application,

regular session to be begun and

spirituous, vinous and

and tbe

will

apply

to the

of Commissioners of aaid County at

Board

their next

held on (he

ttrst Monday in March, 1898, for a

license to sell

malt

intoxicating

in a less quantity than a quart at

liquor*

a time and'

permit the same to be drank on tho

premises

where sold. W place of business whereon and wherein said Liquors are to be sold and drink are-to-wit-'d an*

BPec'fically

described asjiftjllowpS

A front room on the ground floor of a thr«!..istory brick building on east Main street in

city of Orawfordsville, I ndlana, said

Difference In Price!

said

room

located on the east half (H) of tho west

being

half (kT)

Af lAt nttmhoMn/l ••... V. _• .... /t5*

of lot numbered one hundred twenty nln in the original piat of the town (now ci( ('rawfordsvllle, being known as No. 2li) Main Btreet in said city.

Notice Is also given that I will at tbe time apply for billiard and pool table prlviranu and for permission to sell lunch, mineral wate and all kinds of non-intoxicating drinks.

MICHAEL J. CALLAHAN,

.lohueton A •Tobnston, Attys. Applicant.^

Lovers of Pure, Old Wines Should Insist Upon Getting

Santa Clara Wines

For sale at all leading Druggists i*. the city.

"BLUE SEAL"

Champagne, None Quite so Good

E

Santa Clara Wine Co.

143 North Illinois street, Indiana^* olis, Ind.

The saving that is almost cer-. tain to follow purchasing front Indiana's largest Dry Goods retailer?) is of scarcely more importance than the greater variety that is open for your* choosing^ Here is the point-o-we mail'Bam pies of anything* anywhere, anytime.

33 to 37 W. Washington Street. Indianapolis, Indiana,

a Agents f« Improved Standard Patterns.