Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 12 March 1898 — Page 4
THE REVIEW.
TIBXB OT SCBBOBIPVIOM.
One year, In the count (100 Oneyear,outofth« county,- 110 Inanireat Office for Advertlinar a.
MARQH 12, 1898. ANNOUNCEMENTS.
Announcement Fee $3, InvarlablyJlnSAdvanco.
Announco the ua:uo of Will 1" Paul as a candidate for Protcc-: lug Attorney, subject to the decision of the ensuing democratic county nominating convention.
FRANK W. ITUHLKY will bo a caudidato for Trot.' euting Attorney, sublet to the decision of the domoci'tttic^nOminating convention.
Aunount-c the name of UAKRY X. FINE for the nomination for ProaeL-uting Attorney before the ensning democratic county nominating convention.
COURT NEWS.
A venire composed of Marion Watson, Frank] Btilser, jRobert Jefferies,"Martin Birdsell, Franl.JjBooe, andRhoden Ham are summoned to appear as petit jurors
J. K. P. Thompson vs. Sheriff Mont gomery county. Habeas corpus. Dismissed.
State vs. Wm. Thompson. Indictment. Defendant moves to quash indictment.
Joseph Z. Gilkv vs. Atuos M. l_,use and Joanna Luse. To foreclose lien. Dismissed.
McCormick Harvesting Machine Co, vs. Isah Crain and Albert H. Rhodes. 'O': note. Judgment for plaintiff in the sum of S70.43 against lsah Grain. Case continued as to A. H. Rhodes.
Stow S. Detchon vs. Thomas Doran On note. Defendant makes default. J. L. Shruna -TB. C. C. C. & St. L. R. R. Co. Complaint, Defendant's motion for new trial is overruled.
Katherine Cronan vs. Cornelius Cronan. Divorce. Dismissed at plaintiff's cost.
Wra. P. Binford vs. Francis Bruso et al. Complaint. Motion overruled for a new trial. Plaintiff takes appeal.
Win. Lewelien vs. George Kellar. Appeal. Motion for new trial overruled. Susan A, Layson, administratrix estate of Jos. Tinsly, deceased, vs. .John Coplioger and Robert Coplinger. Complaint. Judgment for for plaintiff for $84.65.
State of Indiana ex]rel DoraJLytle vs. A. H. Hernley et al. On bond. Defendants file motion to set aside jury's verdict.
Emma Rankin vs. Wm. Dewey. Appeal. Judgement for ^defendant Plaintiff appeals.
Stowe Detchon vs. Thomas Doran. Complaint on note. Judgement for plaintiff for $201.12,
Fitzgerald Trunk Co. et al vs, Ettie E. Schlcppy et al. Complaint. Judgement for plaintiff in the sum of $630.
Reeves & Co. vs. Michael Fruits. On notp. Dismissed.
Mass Convention.
The democrats of Crawford sville will meet in mass convention at the Court House on Thursday, March 24tb, at 7:30 o'clock p. m. to nominate candidates for city offices. WALLACE SPAKKS,
F. HALLOWELL, Clerk. Secretary.
Wants $8,000 Damages. Capt. W. II. Neff, through his attorneys, George S. Harney, brought suit against the Monon railway for damages to the amount of 58,000. Mr. Neff lives in Ladoga and was injured in a collision near Bioomington last December.
John M. Win ton has been declared of unsound mind, and he will be sent to the State insane asylum.
What is Scott's Emulsion?
It is a strengthening foocJ and tonic, remarkable in its flesh-form-ing properties* It contains CodLiver Oil emulsified or partially digested, combined with the wellknown and highly prized Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda, so that their potency is materially increased.
What Will It Do?
It will arrest loss of flesh and restore to a normal condition the infant, the child and the adult* It will enrich the blood of the anemic} will stop the cough? heal the irritation of the throat and lungs, and cure incipient consumption. We make this statement because the experience of twenty-five years has proven it in tens of thousands of GdSeS* Be sure you get SCOTT'S Emulstott.
50c. and $1.00, all drugg'sts.
SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, New York.
THE LISTENER.
The Rov. Sam Jones, the evangelist, It is said, makes $80,000 a year. Prince Blsmarak will celebrate on March 25 the sixtieth anniversary of his entering the Prussian army.
Hannis Taylor, formerly United States minister to Spain, is a candidate for the Democratic nomination to oongress in the First Alabama congress district.
Granville Hubbard of Fayette, Me., carries the greatest record for thrashing grain that has been heard of. He says be has thrashed 51 seasons in suocussion.
President Diaz of Mexico, once liberated a bandit and made him chief of police of the worst.district in the country. Since then there have been very few robbertes in that district.
M. Victor Baillot, who died the other day at Auxcrtv, Franco, entered the French army in 1S12 and was in the battle of Waterloo. It is said that he was the last of the Waterloo veterans.
William Scott of Delphos, O., who recently celebrated his one hundred and third birthday, has lived under every president and cast his lirst vote for James Monroe for president in 1820.
Senator Mason of Illinois prefers the Democratic atmosphere of the bouse of representatives to the haughty surroundings of the somite and is often seen talking with the members of the lower body.
General John A. Bingham, a member of the Thirty-eighth congress and president of the court which tried Mrs. Surrait for conspiracy against the life of Abraham Lincoln, is now 82 years old and almost penniless.
Mr. Robert Taylor of Scarva, County Down, Ireland, who has just completed his one hundred and fourteenth year, is postmaster of that town, a position which he held in the reigns of George IV and William IV.
The Kansas City Journal says: "W. R. Cannon, general foreman of the bridge department on the Hock Island, with headquarters at Herington, hag been engaged by a graphophone company to tell funny stories into their machines. He is said to be the best story teller in Kansas."
Senator Hoar is polite to everybody. Not long ago he took great pains to assist an old sea captain who oalled on him, and after they parted the old mariner turned to a bystander and said: ''GoshI Who would have thought that a United States senator would have gone to all that trouble just for me?"
Captain Sigsbee was born in Albany and educated at tho Albany academy, having been appointed by Erastus Corning to the United States Naval academy, from which he was graduated in 1863. He was immediately detailed, to active service as ensign on the Metacomet, which took part in the naval operations that ended in the capture of Mobile.
Stephen C. Foster, author of "My Old Kentucky Home," "Swanee Ribber" and many other negro songs, never lived in the south and knew nothing about negro life except what he had gleaned from books. When Foster* married, he moved from Pittsburg to New York, and, being lonely, wrote "Swanee Ribber," culling the name from an atlas because of its musical sound.
ORCHARD NOTES.i
Manure applied now will increase the size If not the quality of the fruit this year.
Good mulching prevents the early flow of sap by preventing the ground from warming up too early.
One advantage in growing boed crops in a young orchard is that the trees get the benefit of the cultivation.
When given proper cultivation, any land that Will make a good crop of corn or potatoes will grow strawberries.
Early planting has the advantage that there is more time for the soil to get settled around the roots before dry weather.
Bed clover alone or red olover and orchard grass are best in seeding down an orchard after it has come into full bearing.
Trees that bear stem fruits must be grafted early, as the bark will peel off and ourl up if it is injured after the sap starts.
The peach and plum are sufficiently related to be budded or grafted on each other. The plum endures cold weather better than tho peach.
In many casos decay or rot in trees can be stopped by carefully removing all decayed portions to the sound woyd and then covering with whita lead.
In growing a good crop of onions it is important to have the soil very rich and well prepared. Use good seed and sow at the first opportunity.—-St. Louis Republic.
PERT PERSONALS.
Joseph Chamberlain has doubts as to who is the biggest man in the Salisbury cabinet anyhow!—Buffalo Express.
If Nan sen ever oomea to this oountry again, the railroads shoiilft provide a refrigerator car for hie exclusive use.—Rochester Herald.
That new "biography of the Prince of Wales says his ureforms are worth 175,000. General Miles may aB well give it up.— Detroit Mews.
From the lively way old Joaquin Miller is getting around in the Klondike it must be a tight raco for nlmblenoSs between his material and metrical feet.—St. Louis Republic.
Richard Le Gallienne has Indignantly denied that he wears lace on his trousers. But If Mr. Le Gallienne expects to live off the receipts of his American lecture tour he will soon be wearing fringe.—Detroit Tribune.
A notable omission of the queen's speech to the British jteriiament was laok of reference to her neighbor, "Oom Paul." But, as he has just been re-elected president of tfransvnal, he doesn't- mind the oversight. Oom Paul" isn't pretty in his pii-turss. but he's what the Bowery would call a '"bute"' in fact..—Kansas City \Vorld.
SPAIN.
Spain's oolors are significant of the nation's characteristic. What is not yellow Is black.—Buffalo News.
There could not be a more quixotic scheme than that under discussion by the press of Don Quixote's country to confederate the Latin-American countries of South America with Spain against' the United States. The South American republics have had enough of Spain.—Louisville Courier-Journal.
It may be that Spain has succeeded in alienating from ns all the Spanish-Ameri-can states save Mexico, Brazil and YeneBuela, but she has left as the most important
one of the lot, and thew-lsao particular
reason why any of them should be mixed tip in whatever disagreements may arise botween Spain and the United Statea —Woroester Spy-
THE TATTLER.
Mrs. Jefferson Davis and her daughter, who now live in Now York oity, are engaged in literary work.
The London papers ha v« been transforming Miss Fifl Potter, daughter of Mrs. James Brown Pouter, into Miss "Fiji" Potter.
The name of Mine. Jules Simon appears in theofiiuinl list of the persons tc whom the French government has given tho privilege of selling tobacco.
It is understood in Washington that Mme. Pak Ye, wife of tho Korean minister, has expressed herself as being converted to Christianity and is desirous of espousing tho faith.
Mrs. IJaUington Booth has had an office arranged in her home in Montulair and now does her literary work there. It is doubtt'ul that she will over enter into active life again.
The Countess of Dudley, it is said, will soon marry Dr. Jameson of Transvaal fame. The lady is still a remarkably beautiful woman and is persistently young, as is the Princess of Wales.
Mrs. Joshua Speod of Txuisvillo has given $25,000 of the $40,000 wishod for to erect a now church edilice for Trinity Methodist Episcopal church of that city. She tried to keep the good deed secret, but vainly.
Mme. Crispi, wife of the Italian statesman and ex-premier, is noted for her eccentricities. An Italian paper relates that she entered tho city of Palermo leading by a chain a little calf that sho had trained like a dog.
Mrs. Fannon, one of the pioneers of Iowa, died recently at her home in the town of Eldora at an extreme age. Her son, a clergyman, declares that an old fasliicned clock stopped for the lirst time at the moment she died.
The Duchess of Marlborough has kept her love for American shopping. She often walks in Bond streot, faultlessly attired, and the shopkeepers bow to her as a buyor of excellent taste, unlimited wealth and a hard customer at bargaining. "North Dakota's strong woman" Is dead. She was Mrs. Justin Charlotte Wray of Milne, N. D., and was able to lift a bushel and a half of grain with one hand. Mrs. Wray was only 30. yoars old, and her death was due to broncho pneumonia.
Kitishima Kata Haschi, or, as she is known to magazine readers, Otano Watanna, is a young Japaneso woman living in Chicago. She was at one time in her newspaper career the only woman allowed at the sessions of the British council at Jamaica.
TOWN TOPICS.
Chicago is agitated becauso some of her sohooltcachers livo outside of the city. They should hold their jobs. They know something.—St. Paul Dispatch.
A St. Louis couple recently celebrated the.eighty first anniversary of their marriage. If such a thing as that could ocour in Chicago, it would excite the wonder of the whole civilized world.—Denver Post.
St. Louis olaims to havo a woman whose eyes are turning to stone. She would probably get along all right in Boston all tl}§ Boston girls use tfie cold, stony glare, if the novelists are trustworthy.—Chicago Times-Herald.
Robbers broke in on a Chicago dinner party the other evening, plundered the guests and 6tole the silver. And this befor dessert bad been served 1 What ungentlemanly thugs they havo in Chicago, to be sure!—Buffalo Express.
In Chicago the board of health Is constantly advising the people to boil the water for SO -minutes. This renders'it so pliable that chunks may readily be broken off qpd allowed to melt slowly iu the mouth.—Peoria (Ills.) Herald. .-
THE BEEHIVE.
If a queen dies, she may always befoaod near the entrance. The entrance to the hive should always be near the ground.
It is the young bees that do the nursing and feeding of the young brood. Whenever bees hang on the outside of the hives something is wrong.
Foundations' for good combs must be made heavier than for comb honey. Any dark beeswax may be improved and made whiter by melting it over several times.
If foundation is made from a good quantity of beeswax, the bees will thin it down properly.
When the queen goes up into the surplus boxes, she selects drone comb in which to deposit eggs.
If the section boxes are properly constructed, the queen will rarely go into the surplus chamber.
Italian bees are proof against iqoth and worms, but the black beas will no* protect themselves.—St. hoiin WagnMlu
GLEANINGS.
Twenty-five par cent of the population of England have tbpir lives insured. The fashionablo quarter of Sydney bears the beautiful name of Woolloomxnoolloo.
Bank of England notes are numbered backward—that i"H, from 1 to 10,000— hence the figures 00,301.
The 1,500 Mormon missionaries Mattered throughout the world go forth for the most part at their own expense.
The Eiffel tower, in Paris, is to be altered for the exposition of 1900, and work on it has already begun. The second platform is to be extended six feet on all sides, and other changes will bo made.
The floor of the' rotunda at the London Coal Exchange, where tho merchants gather, is very unique. It is composed of Inlaid woods, arranged in tho form of a mariner's oompass, with a border of Greek fret. Upward of 4,000 pleoes of wood are employed.
GERMANY.
There is every reason to boliove that the only insect found in the importations of American fruits into Germany is the humbug.—Chicago Times-Herald.
Germany in ay object to accepting American horses on the hoof, but in the guise of Newark Frankfurter sausages they pass unchallenged.—Philadelphia Press.
Our pigs carry triohinas, our horses
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fluenza and our plants and fruits lioe to worrit the war lord of Germany, but worse than the vermin and the infiuonza is
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sugar differential. That is'the poison in the porridge.—-Philadelphia Record. Germany has not yet found any germs in American petroleum, but is liable to eome out any day and announce that it is fall .of'firebugs. When Germany waste to find defects in oar products, she generally finds them, no matter whether they are there or not.—New York Mail and Express.
And still there's no war with Spain. Dr. Griffith and wife are both quite sick at their residence on south Green street.
Sam Burkholder, the lumber buyer, who has been quite sick for several weeks, is recovering.
It is reported that Demas Gilbert will return from Chicago and again take up his residence in this c'ty.
Hubert Wilhite will next week remove with his family to Lewiston, Idaho, where they will locate.
Leroy Clore, son of Elijah Clore, has formed a partnership with Judge Britton in the real estate business.
William H. Hoffa and Mis3 Mable Haynee, of this city, were married by Justice M. Y. Buck, Monday evening.
The season for maple molasses and sugar making among tl ose manufacturing the genuine article is about over.
The "Blue Jeans" company gave a very creditable performance to a large audience at Music Hall Wednesday night.
The revival services at Trinity church still continue. The interest is intense and several accessions have been made to the church.
Mrs. Maty 15. Campbell, widow of Wm. Campbell, of Mace, has been granted a pension of 18 per month and two dollars a month for each of the three children.
Beautiful Spring Style® IN MEN'S AND WOMEN'S" Slioe^ and Oxfords
We have them in Tau, Patent Leather or Enameled. »Ve have them at all prices. Nobody can" undersell us. We won't pern,it it. People who have traded with us for years know that and we are willing to convince others Try us this*spring.<p></p>VanCamp
Ed. & Co.
Now Is The Time
To Buy Our 50c Underwear at $ .25 To Buy Our $6 Overcoats at 5 00 To Buy Our $7 Overcoats at
To Buy Our $9 Overcoats at 7.00 To Buy Our $12 Overcoats at -7 10.00 To Buy Our $15 Overcoats at 13.00
Everything in the House in the same Proportion.
We Want Your "Trade.
Edward Warner.
Successor to Lee S. Warner.
The One Price Clothier, Hatter and Gent's furnisher.
Last Sunday Col. Dick Thompson had a sinking spell, which gave his friends much alarm. Yesterday, however, he had sufficiently rallied to indulge in driving.
Dr. Talmage, the well known minister, lectured at Music Ilall Thursday to a large crowd of people. The lecture is well spoken of, and seems to have been appreciated highly by the audience.
Ross Myers, of Mace, and Miss Carrie Reichard, of Liunsburg, were married at the home of the bride's parents last Sunday evening, Rev. II. C. Riley officiating.
A Mace Marriage.
Brenton Engle, of Darlington, and Miss^Lilhe Faust, of Mace, were married at the M. E. parsonage last Wednesday evening, Rev. H. C. Riley officiating. Mr. and Mrs. Engle will make their future home in Darlington.
nilan Overton's Remains. The remains of Milan Overton, who died in Tacoma, Wash., last Sunday, will be shipped here foj|.burial. It io not definitely known bunt is expected the funeral will be held' on Tuesday next.
Marriage Licenser. -V
Ross Myers and Carrie A. Reichard. Wm. H. Hoffa and Mabel Haynes. Brenton P. Engl« and Lillie B. Faust.
Bicycles at the 99 cent store. tf
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Opposed to the Opening. A petition with the names of orer 100 property-holders, opposing the opening of Plum street through Elstoo Grove, at least at their expense, was presented at a meeting of the board of street improvements at the council chambor on Tuesday forenoog. The persons who seem so much interested in tho opeoing of this street shouM go down into their own pockets and pay for it. There is no general demand that tho street be opened through the groyfl that wo are aware of.
See«l»: Seede! SCOIH!
My- new garden seeds for spring planting are now in and comprise every known variety. I have 1,000 bushels of seed potatoes which 1 have, purchased especially for seeding purposes.
JOE II. TAVLUIEast Main 8t.
OASTORIA.
Tis f»-
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Age of Front.
Tlu oouunon pond frog's natural lifetime Is twelve to fifteen yes-s
Educate Your Bowels With CHicarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation fnrerer to. 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund toooffXte
The sextos rings the ehvreh ixU & ter the yoaof DMUI rings the o®* belle.
