Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 12 March 1898 — Page 2
LOANS AHD IFSURANCI.
MONEY!
6
MONEY!
Morgan & Lee
Ornbaan Block, CrmwfordBTllle.
ABSTKACTS
Loan, Real Estate,
^[NSUBANCBr
A complete set of Abstract Books at my office.
T. T. MUNHALL
No. 107 8. Green St.
Prank C. Evans & Co.,
(Successors to Evans & Cox.)
Mortgage Loans,
—AND—
Insurance.
GOOD NOTES CASHED.
I N re S
'Phone 257
FIRE INSURANCE!
I have several of the best and most reliable agencies. Farm and town property risks written in reliable companies.
W. K. WALLACE.
Joel Block. Crawfordsville, Ind.
LOUIS M'MAXNS.
Attorney At Law
—AND—
General Insurance.
{Successor to C. W. Wright.
Office with Bistine & Ristine,
4
3
and
Fisher Building.
Dr. H. E. Green,
Practice^LImited toJDiseases of the
Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat.
OFFICE HOURS— to 12 a. m. Sto4 p. m.
Joel Block, Crawfordsville, Indiana.
Clodfelter & Fine
ATTORNEYS ATLAW
Wiildoftgeneralpractieeln all Courts.
fflceoverSmith & Steele's drag store, south
W ashlngton Street.
CATARRH
DIRECTIONS (or using
CREAM BALM
CURES
Applva particle of the balm directly in* to the nostrils. After a moment draw a a through the nose. Use three times a day, after meals preferred, and before retiring.
ELY'S E AM BALM opens and cleanses the Nasal
Y-FEVER
Passages, Allays Fain and inflammation, heals (be sores, protects the membrane from colds, restores the senses of taste and smell. TLc
balm 1«
quickly absorbed and gives relief &
HOLD-FAST,
THE REVIEW.
TBBKt or sworno-nom.
One y«*r, In the county, Onoye*r,oaioftli«county, Inqnlreat Office for AdTettliaar
I
Mtoe. Price 50 cents at Drugglstsor by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren St., New York.
HANGER*.
UNE
Anew and useful device which every family will buy, is sold only through leeal agents. Simple and strong can be put up anywhere securely holds rope or wire Instant adjustment and removal of line no props needed. Sells on sight. Popular price. Agents wanted everywhere. Exclusive territory. Attractive terms. Premiums and profit sharing. Anyone may become aurent. Sample pair, by m^il, it.5c. KELSO NOVELTY CO., 528 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa.
To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cnscarets Candy Cathartic. 10e»'-*' tt C. C. C. fall to cure, druRKtsts refund money.
|^OTICE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS, ETC. In matter of the estate of Abbey Line,
fota^e'Montgomery Circuit Court, January
^Noticf
and
is hereby (riven that .John Line,«u ad
ministrator of the •••'tato of Abbey M. Line, S^d haB Proseiuod and filed his accounts B^vouchere in final settlement of said estate,
that the same will come up for the
ex®™"
lnatitm and action of said Circuit Court on the SUst day of March, 1898, at which time all heirs, creditors or legatees of said estate are required SYopear in said Court and show cause, If any Sere be, why said accounts and vouchers Hhoul I not be approved, and the heirs or dls-Sribuu-es of "aid £tate are also notified to be In said 0«nrt at the time aforesaid and make proof Of heirship. ,,J£)HN
LINB
Administrator,
with the Will Annexed.
Dated this 24th day of February, 1898.
1U0 no
MAROH 12,1898.
J1NQOS FAILURE.
The jingos of the country, those
so
anxious for war with Spain, have thus far failed to create a very intense belligerent spirit in this country. When the disaster to the war ship Maine took place the jingos concluded that now their time bad come, the interesting moment was at hand when Congress would declare war and their wish fulfilled. Huppily they have thus tar been disappointed. The bogus dispatches, the paragraphs "It is rumored," or "it is reported" and a hundred other rumors manufactured to order, have failed thus far in their intention. Investigations thus far, so far as we have been able to observe, do cot show that the Maine was destroyed by and with the connivance of the Spanish authorities. That Spain does not desire war is evident from every point. Financially she cannot afford a war with this or any other country. The result is almost certain to be disastrous to her. She will do everything within the bounds of reason to avoid so disastrous a matter as a war.
The investigation, we are inclined to believe, are done as much to bide the carelessness of some of the officers on board the Maine as anything elee. There seems to us as much reason to believe that the Maine was ruined as much from the inefficiency of those having her in charge as to believe that the Spanish authorities would dare undertake it. If, however, the ship was destroyed through carelessness it will never be discovered or made known. It is not intended that it should be. The jingos, those that want war, but will keep as far distant from it as possible should it occur, must for the present bide their time. Their day has not yet arrived, and tor the good of the nation it is hoped is a long distance off.
REPUBLICAN SENATORIAL MATERIAL. Political gossip from the State capital in conmection with the office of U. S. Senator among republicans includes that of ex-President Harrison. While so far as Harrison is concerned it is useless, as his ambition for official honors has been fully satisfied. It indicates without doubt an unsatisfactory state among the leaders of the party with the present material offered for Senator, Wallace, Henley and Taylor. The friends of Geo. Wallace knowing him as they do must candidly admit that he has assuredly few qualifications for the high office of U. S. Senator. No difference what positions he has heretofore held he can never be a Senator satisfactory to the people, ife may be a chief in literature, but would be a pigmy in law making. He is extreme at times in many views entertained by him, in fact fanatical. He would make about as good a minister of the gospel as he would a Senator from Indiana. Henley, the Tippecanoe county man, who aspires to be a U. S. Senator, is a political upstart, about on the order o^ Land is, and probably has no more fitness. Taylor, the Fort Wayne attorney, who desires the Senatorial honors, it is said, intellectually is superior to either of the ethers, but his fitness for the place is very questionable. It is not to be wondered at ihat the politicians of the republican party in Indiana are dissatisfied with the material furnished them for the nomination for benator. It is not first class, and in this day of intelligence and the need for brainy men is anything but of the kind demanded.
REDUCE THE DEBT.
For the size of the city, the few really substantia! improvements made within the past few years, and the very large debt we have, the voters of the city in choosing councilmen this year should examine carefully the material offered. We have a debt now of nearly $80,000, and it has been largely created within the past six years by nicumpoop councilmen, men in many instances who hardly knew their own needs, let alone those of the city. One of the aims in selecting councilmen hereafter should be to get those who are actually and honestly in favor of retrenchment, who will determinedly seekto reduce the debt of the city and actually lighten the burdens now borne by the tax payers. Our taxes are entirely too high. Let them at the outset reduce the salaries of all the officials of the city. The mayor's, marshal's, and councilmens' salaries are too high. Reduce all of them 25 per cent. There are plenty of grod men to be found who will fill any of these places at a reduction from what is now paid. Retrenchment should be the word. Our city government costs entirely too much. Our councilmen who dictate the taxes and create the expenses can be improved upon. Now is the time to begin the work.
Tom Maung, a rat-eating washee-man on Green street, was fined 10.40 in the Mayor's court Saturday for assaulting hia celestial partner.
PROSPERITY TIMES.
What an era of prosperity we Save had and are cow having
u.
siDce
the in
auguration of McKinley aB 'President year ago! How business isruehing, how few men are idle, how money is to be found
BO
plentiful in all quarters,
ho rapidly all debts are promptly wiped out, etc. We have had just one earnowof McKinley prosperitv and
gold
standard timee. All these t.)i s,» Wfre to come just as soon
as
McKin
's
I election was assured. Tho win carried banners and huzzaed
for
and prosperity, have i*.
McKinley
full
realiz ition
now of what the gold standard system .Money loaner6, note shavers and bond buyers approve of such prosperity as
we
are
now
having, but if
aty
other
portion of the people are in love with it to any extent we have not learneu
of
Beware ol Oiutmeuts lor Catarrh Thai Contain.* Mercury.
as mercury will surely destroy thr sense of smeli and completely derange the wh tie system when entering it through ine mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on proscriptions from reputable physicians, do the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. (Jheney &, Co., Toledo, O.. contains no mercury, aud is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the
Byetem.
lu buy
ing Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally, and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheeney & Co. Testimonials free.
Sold by druggists, price 75c. per bottle. Hall's Family Pills are the best.
A 130 pound, conger eel hBS been caught in Louh .Long, Scotland. It measured six feet ten and one half inches in length and two feet seven inches in girth.
Don't think that your liver needs treating if you are bilious. It don't. It's your stomach. That is, your stomach is really what causes the biliousness. It has put your liver out of 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. Formulas on every bottle. But it's the simple honest way i'ts made, the honest Shaker herbs and other ingrediants of which it's composed, that make it so efficacious.
Any real case of indigestion and biliousness can be cured with a tew bottles of Shaker Digestive Cordial. Try it.
Sold by drugS'st. price 10 cents to li.eo.
There are more wrecks in the Baltic sea than in any other place in the world. The average is one wreck a day througRout the year.
Did vou make your Graln-O this.way?
Here are the latest directions. Use one tablespoonful of Grain-O to two cups of cold water. Mix the Grain-0 with half an egg and add the water. (Be sure to measure.) After the water gets to boiling point let boil for fifteen to twenty minutes. Use cream and sugar to suit the taste. If ycu hare not cream use hot milk.
A lady said: "The first time I drank Grain-0 I did not like it, but after using it for ten days and forming the habit, nothing would induce me to go back to coffee.'' This is the experience of all. If you will follow direction, measure it every time and make it the same, and try it for ten days, you will not go back to coffee.
"What is the rest of that quotation, 'Art is long, but—"Art is long, but artists are usually short."—Truth.
A Real Catarrh Cure.
The 10 cent trial size of Ely's Caeam Balm which can be had of the druggist is sufficient to demonstrate its great merit. Send 10 cents and we will mail it. Full size 50c. ELY BROS., 56 Warren St., N. Y. City.
Catarrh caused difficulty in speaking and to a great extent IOSB of hearing. By the use of Ely's Cream Balm dropping of mucus has ceased, voice and hearing have greatly improved.—J. W. Davidson. Att'y at Law, Monmouth, Illinois.
The smallest salary paid professors at Glasgow University is $3,000, the largest $9,200, the total amount being $118,000.
THE STATE
Building and Loan Association of Indianapolis, Indiana, does a safe business and has over $500,000 assets. We issue investment stock and have plenty of money to loan. See Mesrs. L. A. Scott, Schultz & Hulett, or correspond with
DR. F. H. HOVEY, Indianapolis. Ind.
CASTORIA
For Infants and. Children. Ik) tu~ ilalli riiutsn tl
Great
voters.
•n
Britain has 135,000 illiterate
HOW ELIZABETH DRESSED.
He was keen and wide awake.
Sb«
Haver Allowed Anjr Oae to Forget Wah Hnrjr TIll.'s Daughter.
Qneen Elizabeth's love of sumptuous apparel, Indeed, grew with her years and the leading fashions of the courts ot Europe furnished her with designs for new dresses, which she would continually cast aside for others such as her fancy might suggest, says the Nineteen'ii Century. On all occasions she dressed in the richest costumes, adorned with brilliant, precious stones and jewelry of the rarest workmanship. Even in her old age she continued to dress like a young girl, afraid of nothing so much as of being thought old. "Upon the subject of her personal beauty she would smilingly accept the most extravagant flattery," says Carte, "however fulsome it appeared to everybody else." When Paul Hentzner saw her, she was in her 67th year. Being a German, he observed her with an eye wholly unclouded by any sense of reverence for the divinity which hedges round a monarch.
Indeed he was so ungallant as to jot down in his notebook that Queen Elizabeth wore a wig, and that red! He goes on to remark that she had in her ears two pearls with very rich drops and that the bosom was uncovered. She was dressed in white silk bordered with pearls of the size of beans and over it a mantle of black eilk shot with silver threads. Instead of a chain she had on an oblong collar of gold and jewels. He adds that "wherever she turned her face every one fell upon his knees"—an act of homage which on state occasions had been paid to her father and Elizabeth never forgot that she was the daughter of Henry VIII.
Not Unlike Others.
The activity aiul power of intellect of the late Henry George did not prevent absent niinrledness. A writer in the Review of Reviews says that this quality was "the jest of his circle." Xames escaped him. I heard him say to Mr. Dayton, the candidate on nis ueket for comptroller and one of the best known men in New York: "You won't mind it. 1 hope, if I forget your name I am so conscious of the danger of getting names wrong, that when she need of remembering comes it rattles me, and away the name goes." He came iate to a recent dinner at the Lotus club, where he was to discusa .v'th some friends the question of his eing a candidate in apprehended contingencies. It was raining, and he took from his pocket the slippers with which Mrs. George had insisted om providing him in case he should get his feet wet, and as he put them on he apologized with honest gravity: "X lost time looking for a man I kept asking after as Kinsella, and It turned out his right name was Moriarity. At least I think that was what he told ma it was when I found him." But there was no absent mindedness when discussion of the business in hand ensued.
Thought His Let Wu Broken.
From the Louisville Courier-Journal In these slangy days, when children just beginning to lisp simple words paralyze their dear mammas by telling them they are "not the only cans on the dump," it is refreshing to run across an innocent soul who knows nothing of these things that we hear on the streets. A good old mother receiv ed a shock the other day when she read a telegram from her boy, who is enjoying himself in the east, and at the same time afforded some amusement for the up-to-date members of her family. The boy, who is having a good time in New York, telegraphed his father for more money. The father, not relishing the touch, took the telegram home to the mater, who read as follows: "Had my leg pulled. Broke. Send me fifty by wire." The good old mother was startled. "My poor boy," she moaned. "He must have been in one of those cable car things. Send him a hundred, father, and tell him to get the best doctor in the city."
Relics of Sir Walter Kalalgh.
It is now 300 years since Sir Walter Relelgh lived in Ireland, but, according to Sir John Pop* of Henaessy, many traces of his residence there can still be seec. The richly perfumed yellow wall flowers that he brought to Ireland from the Azores, and the Affane cherry, are still found where he first planted them, by the Blackwater. Some cedacs he brought to Cork are to this day growing at a place called Tiyoi. The four venerable yew trees, the branches of which have twined and intermingled into a sort of summer house thatch, are pointed out as having sheltered Raleigh when he first smoked tobacco In his Youghal gardens. In that garden he also planted tobacco. A few steps further on, where the town wall of the thirteenth century surrounds the garden of the warden's house, is the famous spot where the first Irish potato was planted by him.
Birthdays were kept even as far batik as the time of Pharaoh.
New England's Early Currency.
The earliest money, or substitute for money, iised in the colonies—except, perhaps, small quantities that were brought from England—was the Indian money, known as "wampum," or "wampumpeag," for brevity called "peag." This "peag" was for a long time used as money both among the Indians and the settlers though it would appear that the Massachusetts colonists had some other kind of money in use, as in 1635 the court ordered that "brass farthings shall be discontinued and musket balls shall pass for farthings."—Exchange.
Iron 8mftltliig fn Ireland.
Iron smelting is to be experimented upon in the western hlgMaiUto of
Ssyour hair SreenP
U's only another way of asking, is your hair growing? For green means growing. You can MAKE hair grow by tistng
J^yer's affair fyigor
let Day
-,'v'No.
if
REVIVO
RESTORES VITALITY.
203^ E. Main St.
PURE FOOD
Gives you Nourishment. Try some Of our Pure Food.
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 COMPAOY, Milwaukee Wis.
Pointers!
We manufacture pianos. We manufacture organs. Our reputation is unquestioned. Our warranty the best. We sell Baldwin Pianos. We sell Ellington Pianos. We sell Fischer Pianos. We sell Haines Bros., Pianos. We sell Valley Gem Pianos. We sell Estey and Hamilton Organs. We sell Monarch Organs. We sell for Cash. We sell on Time. Call and be satisfied.
D. H. Baldwin & Co
No. 113 South Washington Street, Crawfordsville. George F. Hughes, Manager.
Gem Laundry
ALBERT S. GALEY, Agt.J
Office, 109 N. Green St.
You
Made a
Well Man
15thD»y.WfW
of
Me.
THE GREAT 30th bay. phench: hemeidy produces the above results in 30 days. It acts ?owerf ully and quickly. Curee when all others fail, oungmen will regain their lost manhood, and old men will recover their youthful vigor by using REVIVO. It quickly and surely restores Nervousness. Lost Vitality, Impotency, Nightly Emissions, Lost Power. Failing Memory, Wasting Diseases, and 11 effects of self-abuse or excess and indiscretion, which unfits one for study, bnsiness or marriage. It not only cures by starting at the seat of disease, but is a great nerve tonic and blood builder, bringing back the pink glow to pale cheeks and restoring the fire of youth. It wards off Insanity and Consumption. Insist on having REVIVO, no other. It can be carried in vest pocket. By mail, •l.OO per package, or six for 85.00, with a positive written guarantee to core or refund the money. Circular free. Address
ROYAL MEDICINE CO.,269 Dearborn St., CHICAGO, ILL
•For Sale by Moffett & Morgan.*
A Pretty Face
Can easily be offset by an unshapely hat when with due consideration on the part of the patron and the milliner such contrasts are not apt to occur and the appearance
Is Mare Beautiful
The selection of styles, the place of purchasing, the quality of goods are all at
The Columbia
Wish Thills ecially Nice
To eat let me supply the eatibles. I handle only what's freshest and most toothsome. Besides I have a number of dainties and substantial that you can't get everywhero at the low price I ask:
W.B. BERRY
The Grocer.
Corner of Washington and Pike Sts.
-THE-
LINE.
NORTH BOUND.—DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY No. 6, St. Joeaccommodation a. ra No. 8, South Bond accommodation....6:18 p.
SOUTHBOUND.—DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY. No. SI, St. Louis Mail 9:25a. No. 3, xerre Haute Mail 4:43 p. Good'connectlor made at Terre Haute for the South and South-west. Trains run through to St.Joseph, Mich., making good connection with C. & W. M- tor Michigan points.
.J. C. HDTCHINSON. Agent.
inn
rO CHICAGO, MICHIGAN CITY
And the North.
LOUISVILLE AND THE SOUTH.
The Only Line to the Famous
Health Resorts,
WEST BADEN
—AND—
French Lick Springs.
"The Carlsbad America."
COMPLETE PULLMAN SERVICE. Time Card in Effect July 1st, 97. SOUTH BOUND. No. 3 1-40 ft. m. No. 5 1:15 p. m. Local Freight 8:45 a. m.
NOBTH BOUND.
No. 4 2:15 a. No. 6 1:1ft a. m. Local Freight 3:25 p. m.
L. H. Clark, Agt., Crawfordarlile.
Big Four Rout.
TRAINS AT CRAWFORDSVILLE. BIO FODK.
AST. WIST 8:52 a. Daily (except Sunday) 4:59 p, 6*15 p. Daily... 2:02 a. 12:37 a. Daily 8 52 a. 1:15 p. Dally (except Sunday) 1:15 p.m.
W. J. FLoOD, Agen-t.
MERRICK Y, BUCK Justice of the Peace.
Rental and Collecting Agency. Office No. 105^ eAst Main St., opposite Court House. Over Kline's.
....THE.
CentralHo tel
Is the place to stop when in Roachdale. Everything comfortable and convenient.
ASTHMAJpHRFn
TACTS ASTHKAIXNE oerer falls send na your Imailtrial bottlePB
addre88,_ire will till 11CU
CC
The DR. ""AFT BROS. M. Co.. Rochester, N.Y.f
NEC
CONFIDENCE!
Is what we started in for six months ago, and we've won it. Farmers who fed their teams or hitched 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 Livery and Feed Stable.
BOB DAVIS. WM. A. DAVIS.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
ClMBiei and bcAtitifloi the htlf. Promote! ft lnrurijnt growth. Mever P«il» to Hcstore Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color. Carefl ecalp dimtea i0c.and tl.0uitf_lniffiig»__failing.bairA
Everybody Says So.
Cascareta Candy Cathartic, the most wonderful medical discovery of the age, pleasant and refreshing to the taste, act, gently and positively on kidneys, liver and bowels, cleansing the entire system, dispel colds, cure headache, fever, habitual constipation and biliousness. Please buy and try a box of C. C. C. to-day 10,25, 50 cents. Hold and guaranteed to cure by ail druggists.
