Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 28 May 1898 — Page 3
Iron, Chain the market.
I
and Wind. Best in
We have just received stocl: of the purest and best
Lubricating
Ever handled by anybody in the S city. Don't forget us,
PLUMBING.
In this line our reputation has long been e-ui'olished. You know we are headquarters.
WILLIAMS BROS.
South Green Street, Opposite Music Hall, Craw fordsville.
Drs. Sadler
"RELIABLE AND EXPERT
SPECIALISTS!
Oilice: 129 south Illinois street, Indianapolis, Ind. All diseases of the Blood, Skin and Urinary Organs will be treated for half price for next .thirty days. Catarrh, Piles, Fistula, Rheumatism, Stomach, Liver and Kidney Troubles positively and permanently cured. Gleet, Impotency and Stricture cured in the shortest time. No pain, no danger, no knife used. We effect the most speedy and complete cure in every form of Uterine, Ovarian and Pelvic diseases and all Female Complaints. Call, or send stamp for a valuable book of information freeof charge.
Address, DRS. SADLER A HOPE, Specialists, 12!) South Illinois St., Indianapolis, Indiana. Rooms 3, 4 and 5.
Santa Clara Wines
HOW W'JCH LOVED
in
For sale at all leading Druggist the city.
"BLUE SEAL"
Champagne. None Quite so Good.
THK.
Santa Clara Wine Co.
Indianap-
3 43 North Illinois street. olis, Ind.
Sold in this city by it. C. Smith, N. W. Myer and A. Muhleisen
EVERY WOMAN
Sometimes needs a reliable monthly regulating medicine.
DR. PEAL'S
PENNYROYAL piLLS,
Are pn mpt, safe and certain in result. The genuine (Dr. Peal's) never disappoint. Sent anywhere, #1.00. N. W. Myer, Crawfordsville, Ind.
Dr. Bull's Pills
When a
purgative, family medicine is Deeded, you can always rely on Dr. John W. Bull's Pills. For constipatiou and headache they have 110 equal.
O A S O A Bears tho _/ The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of
A1'1'
I'l'LICATION FOK LI^UOU LU'IiNSE.
Notice is hereby given to tho citizens of the -eeowl wril of tbecity of Craw for'lsvillo. Union township. .Montgomery county, Indiana, that I, •John Drury, ihe undoi signed. a wlilio mule inhabitant of the Stale of Indiana, and .nv and tor more than ninetv, HO. days limo prior to tho date ot this notice of application, a continuous resident .if said township, and over tho age of 'wenty-one years, will apply at tho regular •June session, IHns, of the board of Commissioners of saHl county, commencing on tho llr.it Monday of lune, ls'JN. for a license to sell all kinks of spirituous, vinous, malt and other intoxicating liquors in a los quantity than a quart at a time, and allow tho tamo to be drnnk on the premises whore sold. My place of business and the premises whereon and wherein said intoxicating liquors are to be sold an:! drank ave described as follows, to-wlt
Parts of lots numbor soventy-one. VI. and seventy-two, i'i, as the samo are known and dosigna'od on the original plat of the town (now city)of Crawfordsville, in Montgomery county, in the State of Indiana, bounded as follow-:
Beginning at the south-east corner of a parcel of land owned by Wills L. May, occupied by Nye A: Co. with a drug store, and running tho?'ce south along tho west margin of Washington street, in said citv, to the north-eai-t co n-r of a lot or parcel of land owned by Bcnjun'n Crane and Albert IS. A nderson, thence west one hundred and -sixty-five (105) feet to ^n alloy, thence north to tlio south-west corner of the taid Willis L. May lot. and thenco east one hundred alio sixty-five (105) teet to the pla'e of beginning, in tho ground floor Of ihe three -tory brick building situated 011 the e.ist end of said real estate, Number 10!t North Washington street lu said city, said room being sixteen (10 feet wide and seventy-two (72) feet deep, and fronting east on North Washington street. And I shall also state in my said application, that I desire to carry on in the same room above deecrllwd other and different business as foliows, running one pool table, and tor the permission to soil Lunch and all kinds of non-intoxicating 'verages, tobacco and igars.
JOHN UNCUT.
My passion, Sylvia, to prove, Yon bid me tell how much I love. I love thee, then—but language fail*— lUore than bees lovo flowery vales, Jloro thiin turtle loves hie dove, More than warblers love the grove, More than nature loves the spring. More than linnet loves to ring, More than insects sunny licnma, More than poets airy dreams, More than fishes love the flood, More than patriots public good, Morn than flocks the gisasf-y plains, More than hinds increasing rains, Mn:o than lords theif pedigree, J!ore than Yankees to bo free, Mire than heirs love twenty-one, M-ire than heroe.s iaurels won, JJ re tlian elv's the moonlight shade, re than ancient maids to wed, Mure than hermit loves his cell, More than bo.aftty to excel, tli.'.n 7n'(A:r loves his store,
11-
•re than myself. Can I do more? mon (i. Fay in New York Ledger.
A "WOMAN'S WAY.
Thu hoproom at Port MoKibben was gay with flags the floor was lihe a burnished mirror nearly all the married officers were there with their wives and daughters, and of course not a bachelor was impsiug tho gold dace on ih« uniforms glittered in the blaze of many lights women who In the daytime were inertly ordinary mortals had taken on with their evening gowns an air of spirituelle beauty a waltz bad just ended, and tho dancers were collected in groups, talking and laughing Ihe cornetist of the band was playing a Bolo, when Captain and Mrs. Kingsley came into the room.
The cornetist caught his breath and lost a note, but no one noticed. The talking and laughing ceased. Every one knew that Mrs. Kingsley was the most beautiful woman tin the army, but no one had ever seen her as beautiful as she wns that nirrht.
She was very tall, with a full yet slender liguro of surpassing grace. Iier hair and eya were dark. Her skin was creamy white, with a real rose tiuge in her cheeks. She wore a black gown, and her shoulders gleamed above tho chiffon that draped the bodice.
Tho simib is haekneyed, but her eyes were indeed as bright as tho diamonds in her hair. A great red rose burned over her heart, and as she stood in tho doorway beside her husband she made a picture that could not bo ignored.
Every one looked at her, but Ghe looked at Captain Howard only, who was standing alone, and who, after gazing at her a moment as if spellbound, went toward her.
Her eyes were solemn, fcer mouth unsmiling, as she gave him her hand. "Well, Howard," said Captain Kingsley cordially, laying his hand on Captain Howard's shoulder. They had been roommates at West Point and firm friends from that time on. ''How are you, Bob?" said Captain Howard constrainedly. "Why, whac's the matter?" said Captain Kingsley. "You look as solemn as an owl." "I feel just as I look," said Captain Howard. "Mrs. Kingsley, may I have the next dance?" "I hope it isn't the thought of dancing with mo that depresses you," Mrs. Kingsley said, making an effort to speak lightly. "I need not answer that," said Captain Howard.
The music began, and Mrs. Kingsley nodded and smiled to her husband as sho danced away with Captain Howard.
For a few moments neither spoke. Then his arm grow tense around her, but ho did not draw her closer. "Great heavens' This is terrible I" Mrs. Kingf'ey whispered. "I wonder if you can imagine how like a traitor I feel?" said Captain Howard. "I am devoted to Rob, yet hero I am, trying to steal his wife." "But you cannot feel as much liko & traitor as I do, for after all bis goodness to me—his unfailing love—I want to be stolen."
He stopped dancing and offered her his arm. They went out on to the porcb. At tho farther end of it he turned toward ber, and fho stepped back from him a little way. ""This cannot goon forever," he said. "Do you really love me?" she asked. "You know it." "And do you know how I love you?" .".Yes." ./
Fbr hiomenfc she looked into his eyes, then she held out her hands to his. "No^' he said firmly, taking them, but holding her away from him, "I still have some sense of honor. If Itob were not my friend, it would be differ ent, bat as it is you must either go away with me and bo mine altogether or you must stay here and bo only his "But if I go away with you it will break Rob's heart." "I can break his heart without com punction, but I cannot kiss his wife out horo in tho dark anl then go back into the hoproom and speak to him as trusted friend."
She looked at him scrutinizingly. "What a curious thing a man is, she said. "My sense of honor would bfe satisfied if I could keep him from knowing, for I would hate to hurt bis feel ings." "Then I am afraid that you have no sense of honor," he said smiling. "Yes, I have," sho said, without the slightest resentment in her voice. "I wouldn't do anything if he were away, but when ho is here to take care of me and to defend his own honor I roally don't think that it is very wrong for me to do anything I can without bis finding out."
What a curious thing a woman is," he said mockingly, but leniently. "However, it is eaBy for a man ts overlook a great many weaknesses and shortcomings in the woman bo loves." "And when a woman loves a man she overlooks nothing," said Mrs. Kingsley. "It would grieve me to death if you were willing to deceive Rob. I am happy in my love for you because 1 believe that if I did run away with you you would be as true to me ai you aTe to him."
THE OLD CIRCUS MM
HIS TALK ABOUT THE FIRST SOUVENIRS GIVEN BY SHOW PEOPLE.
They Were Distributed by the Great Gl« raffe A Thrilling Incident Which Attended One Performance—How the People Stood on the Giraffe's Shadow.
"Tho first souvenirs I ever knew of being given out in the show business," said the old circus man, "we gave away in cur show at the time Ve had the big 18 foot giraffe. We never had an attract'on that beat the big giraffe. The people were just carried away with him. There wasn't anything about him but what interested them, everi the slightest little things. On clear days, when wo were where we could do it and the sun was right for us, w^ used to get the giraffe oqt in front of the entrance of the raniti tout and have him stand there like a gre#t sentry, t'eop'le used to stop and look up at him, and then the first thing you know somebody'd discover his shadder. Anybody'd cast a long shadder at that hour of the day, of course, but thegiraffe'B shadder reached as far as you could see. And as soon as one man begun to look at it 40 others did, and then you'd see 'em. I've seen 1,000 people at a timeline up long that shadder and just stand along the edge of it down past the main tent and the jideshow tents, just standing there )ookin nt it. The giraffe was great, but bis shadder fairly staggered 'em. And thore they'd stand till the sun dropped down under the edge ti the earth, and the first thing they knew there wasn't any shadder. Then they'd stare at each other for a minute, and then all bunch up together again and look at tho giraffe till we took him in.
Wo used to have a line on tho programme saying that sit o'clock and at 9 o'clock the great giraffe would hanrl around k.-s watf-r. That's whero tho sou venirs co in. Wo used to give away the glu'H'js tii'.) water was in. The glasses were marked, Souvenir of the Great Giraffe.' and whoever got 'em could keep 'em. The seats in our circus were divided into four sections. Wo used to give away four dozen tumblers at every performance, one in each section. When tho time come, we'd march the giraffe around the edge of tho ring, and in front of each section his keeper would hand him a wire holder holding a dozen glasses, which he would take by tho handl-! in his mouth. Tall as he was, he could ivach easy to the highest back seats. "It's astonishing how people used to grab for those glasses. It seems as though the v. holo section would stand upon tbo as and all grab for the holder when ir, come near 'em. They'd spill the water aiul get wet and have greatest time you ever heard of, but nobody got hurt, and so we just let her buzz along. But- finally something did
Happen. "At one evening entertainment when ho was serving out tho souvenirs, when wo cometoonoof the sections, therowas ti man sitting on the fourth tier from tho top who picked up his boy, a bright looking youngster about 10 years old, who •was sitting alongside of him, and sat him up on his shoulder. The giraffo lilted the holder up and swept it along the seats with the people grabbing, and when it come near this man with the boj* on his shoulder the man just lifted him up so that tho boy could stand on his shoulders. He was going to get one anyway, and when the bolder came along the boy made a grab for it. Thero was only ono glass left in it then, but the bay got it. Ho upset it lifting it out of tho holder ::nd scattered the water all over ev :ry!ody, but that didn't count. He KCD tho glass and was coming down it when Lis father, instead of fcriiogliim jounco down on his shoulder, felt his weight growing lighter. Kud the next minute ho and everybody eiso saw tbo boy suspended in the air. V.'].i the giraffo saw the.l^st glass go, h:. li fed the holder, the way ho always di:*, to clj ir the people before swinging it around and down to the keeper. This time when he lifted it the buttons on the outside of the cull of tho boy's jacket got caught in the wires. They were sewed on the way mothers
Bew on buttons, and they held tho youngster's weight easily, and when the giraffe lifted tho holder up he lifted tho b6y with it. "Then there was a scene. We knew the giraffe wouldn't hurt a fly, but it looked to tho people as though he had the boy in his teeth and was going to 6ling him through the other end of "nowhere. The whole audience rose up and stood leaning forrard, watchin and never sayin boo, but the giraffe swung his neck around as gentle and easy as the arm of a crane and lowored the holdor and the boy hanging to it safe into the arms of the keeper in tho ring. Tho boy hadn't even dropped the tum-
Then the people did holler, aid the giraffo walked olT as stately as you please, tho boy climbed back up to his pop, and the show went on. Nobody hurt, but when we run out of the tumblers we had on hand we adopted another style of souvenir."—New York Bun.
Unapprec iativo.
"Palette felt disappointed because you didn't attend his exhibition of j.ain tings." "I was detained." "But ho kept the gallery open very late." "Yes, that's what detained me until a little later."—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Tetricus, the barbarian, was the first man to wear trousers, the two part garment having been forced upon him by bis captor, Aurelian, with the intention of making Tetricus appear ridiculous. The costume, however, seems, after several centuries of usage, to have made a hit.
A state lunch in Ghina contains 146 dishes.
Mrs.
was in Brocton, 111., this
M. J. Lee week.
C. X. Williams and wife, of Indianapolis, spent Sunday in tho city. The monthly examination of teachers Beeking school license will be held to-day
Walter Scott has gone to Attica to accep a position on the Ledger of that place.
S. P. fcSmith has been appointed administrator of the estate of Elias M. Smith.
Arch Martin attended the
funeral of Judge Mack at Terre Haute Monday.
Rev. "W. W. Hicke, of Bluffton, occupied the pulpit of the Missionary Baptist church Sunday,
Rev. Wallace Tharp, of Augusta, Ga., will occupy the pulpit of the Christian church to-night and to-norrow.
into British cent, are of
Of the shoes imported colonies more than 45 per American manufacture.
The cloak on which Wolf breathed his last, at the capture of Quebec, is one of the curiosities in the British Museum.
America's greatest medicine is Hood's Sarsaparilla, which cures when all other preparations fail to do any good whatever.
J. W. Nicely, a graduate of Wabash College, now located as missionary at Beirut, Syria, visited friends here this week.
Henry Seits died at tho poor house Sunday, aged about 28 years. The body was shipped to Waveland on Monday for interment.
The passing south on the Monon of the 2d Iowa regiment to Tampa, Florida, on Mo .day evening drew a largo crowd to tile Monon depot,
Gforge Griflith the architect.is draw ing up plans for brick school houses, one to be erected in Franklin and the other in Sugar Creek townships
Mr. Abraham Huff, a well known citizen living on east Franklin street, has been dangerously ill for several weeks past, and it is thought cannot recover.
Within the last ten days ninety carloads of array wagons and ambulances have beer shipped south over the .Monon main line from the South Bend w.tgou works.
Crawfordsville merchants are paying two cents more on the pound for wool than surrounding towns. As a result large ijuantu ics of., wool is being brought to this market.
A team belonging to Martin & Son ran off from in front of the ice company's olllco Sa urday. The frightened horses were stopped on south Washingt'lii street and no damage was done.
A iool hardy young man named McBride made a monkey of himself last Sunday by riding over the Big Four trertle over Dry Branch, west of the city, oii a bicycle. The fool killer c-in find employment here.
J. Quincy Hoover, a razor back of th" rarest. typ». snea':ed down from Lafayette to spend Sunday. Quincy is the uuliest mail on the Leader forc^ and they tell us none of the others ever Ciptured prizes at a beauty show.
Sunday mornii over 100 carrier pigions shipped here from South Bend were liberated from their cages. After sailing around town for a moment or two they shot nut in a north-east direct ion ar in a little more than too hours were back to their old quarters.
The current number of the Railroad Gazette has illustrations and a complete description of a new gram-weighing and transfer car that the Monon has just put io service. With a carload of corn, wheat or rye can be transferred from one car to another in twelve minutes, and a carload of oats in t.wentv minuses.
There is too little preaching of the gospel of health. It the last thing that an in teaching, either to a man child or won anchild. It is one oi the most important branches of an education.
Without health, a wan will be a business, and a woman a social failure. When the body of either a man or a woman is properly nourished, the result is the enjoyment of good health. Almost all ill-health due to improper or insufficient nourishment. If the stomach is right and the liver is right, the hlood will
receive its normal supply of the life-giving elements of the food and the body will be properly nourished. I)r. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery acts directly upon the stomach and liver. It purifies and enriches the blood. It is the great blood-maker, flesh-builder, nerve tonic and restorative. It promotes the natural activity of the entire nutritive organinm. It puts an end to the slow starvation that is at the base of many diseases. It does not make flabby fat like cod liver oil, but firm, muscular tissues. It does not make corpulent people more corpulent but builds up the system to the normal standard.
I was run down with nervous prostration and female weakness and kidney trouble," writes Mrs. Maranda Ramsey, of Sinartt, Warren Co., Tenn. "My lxnvels were constipated. My whole system was wrecked. My friends thought I would die. 1 had read of Dr. Pierce's medicines and sent for the flolden Medical Dicovery,' Favorite Prescription' and Pleasnut Pellets.' In one week's time I began to sit up. In two weeks I could sit up all day, afler being so bad that I had to be helped in and out of bed. I have taken four bottles of Golden Mcdical Discovery and two of' Favorite Prescription and am in better health than I have been for years."
Constipation is the father of all manner of maladies. If it did not exist, or was in all cases promptly relieved, the majority of medical books could be safely destroyed. It is the easiest sickness to neglect and the simplest to cure. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure constipation every time. They cufe it promptly, completely and permanently. They never gripe. They don't get you out 'o nights. One "Pellet" is a gentle laxative, and two a mild cathartic. Druggists keep nothing eise "just as good."
iiWIIHlWHJI
Reparation for As
similaUrig toCToodandRegutating tteStomachs andBowels of
lNl'AMb H1LDKKN
EroinotesT)igfcstton,CiieerfultoessattllfestContafns neither Opium,Morphine nor Mineral,
WotNarcotic.
Hecipe ofOldJOrSAKVELPtTCIlER
Pumplan See£~ j4Ix.Smna JiockeUt Salts Anut Seed Jippemxnt
ariimtiMt
Him Seed (Suao-. fUmr.
Apcrfect Remedy for Constipation. Sour. Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverishncss and LOSS OF SLEEP.
Tac Simile Signature of
"NEW "YORK.
EXACT coprof WRAFPER.
No. TT. Sarrty Harness. Price, 910.00. As good ai Mils for |26.
ELKHART
CUSTOM),
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have I Always Bought
is?
Aft'
WE HAVE NO AGENTS
Always Bought.
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITV.
Where You 'All Want to Go
PURE
California Wine
The Clipper
No. 108 South Green Street.* Crawfordsville, Indiana
HARTLEY & PRIDE
Crawfordsville, Ind No 214- S. Walnut Street.
but h&vo sold direct to the consumer for 25 years at wholeSAIO prices, saving him the dealor's profits. Ship anywhere for examination. Everything warranted. 118 styles of Vehicles, 55 styles of Harness. Top Baggies, $36 to $70.
.•J li i*-' •j
50c 3Bottle
——AT-
Surrejfl, $60 to 8125. Carriages, Fhaotons, Traps, Wagon* ettes, SpringKoad and Milk Wagons. Send for large, free No.60SBarrey. Price, with curtains, lamps, SQA« Catalogso of ail our styles, shade, apron and fenders, $60. As good as sells ftr|M.
CABIUAeS AND BABNESS UFO. CO. W. B. I'JiATT, See, SLEOUT, IND.
WHEN YOU WANT TO LOOK ON THE BBIG-HT SIDE OF THINGS, USE
SAPOLIO
.va:
*.V
X. -Ejf-I. Vh
i-3
t4-
M:
