Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 13 August 1898 — Page 6

^TPLICATIONIFOR LIQUOR LICENSK.

Notice Is herofcy given to the citizen-* ami voters of Franklin township, Montgomery county, Indiana, that I, iho underslgn«vi, a mnlo inliauitaut of said county and State, ovtv tue ago "t twonty-ono (81) yearf, of gooil moral character ami a centluuous resident of sa il township tor more than ninety v'J)) days immi'iliau-ly procoding the giving of this notice aii'l in "J"1*". Of my application, will apply to iho Hoard Commissioners of said county, at their ptomfoor session, 18118, to be begun and ucljl on the first Monday of September. 18!is, for a license to Bell q.11 kinds of spirituoiiK, vinous and »la" liquors In a loss quanti'y than a quart at. a time, and allow tlio Mime to t?« drank ou the promises where sold.

ily placo of business and the P1'01'1 on and wherein said liquors are to be soul an aranil ?re

s'tuat0 all,l

speoid'.'a"yiJ' ^cnbeu !i~

fOllOvVS! ,, fti! 11 i'Ue one story frame building ^1! |,,t following desor'bed real estate. I nuinbor one (I, in block mini J9r th ynniOriginal plat of the town of gomery county, Indiana. Beginning tuirt}—1.\ t80) feet north of the south-east corner of sanj Jot and funniug tlieuce north twelve find oight iS) inchef, thenoe west

six

V't ,m, 'Iri

feet, thence south twelve ili) feet and crJit. (Ri inches, tlieuce east sixty-sis [i"] f«*"t

tQ

(l1-

place 01 beginning. Said room fronts Wist on Madison etreot In said town and arnwigeu With gin** doors and windows that tht whole or

tho Interior of

the same can ho viewed from tne

'Sidewalk and street during the days i"1*

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onrs

*when it is unlawful to^eil uiuh tne Notice is also given that I will fit th* sam«» linn* apply for pool table privileges and for per* mission to soli mineral water, lunch and all kinds of non-lntoxleatitig beverages.

WALLACE M1KLES, Applicant.

Sour Stomach

"After I wits Induced to cry CASCA* SETNi 1 will never ie without ilium in the house. My liver was in a very bad shape, and my head acbed aud I had stomach trouble. Now. since taking Cascarets. 1 feel tlue. My wife bus also used them with beneficial results fur sour stomach."

Jos. Kuehlinu. Congress St., St. Louis. Mo.

CANDY

m. CATHARTIC

TRADE MARK REGISTERED

Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. ToMe Good, Do Good, Never Mcken. Weaken, or Cirij e. 10c. 'idc.SOc. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...

Stirling KeQiedy (umpiwn. Hitmen. Mo»ilrenl, New York.

Hn.Tn.RAP ®°'d

Money

n18

a,1('

tl,:iran,('"0fl In- all tlrug-

•W" I U'DAw mists fVltr. Tobacco lluL-it.

Abstracts-ol Title

Furnished at l' a.suiiabk- Rates.

to Loan

On Real Estate. Deeds and Mortgages carefully executed.v.

Webster &

Serpent,

•..4.

Recorder's Office.

FREE TO EVERYBODY

If we don't make your watch run and keep time its KHEE—flochargH. Main Springe, warranted, $1.00. Clonilng $1.00. An experienced Joweler in charge.

New Central Drug Store

Corner C'ollogo ami Water Streets.

Itreata with

you whether yon ciMinuo

nerve-killing tobacco habit. N«.STt.l» removes the dcBire for tobaero, wjt out nerTouB distress, exneltt nico-^ d»

tine, purifies the blooi •tores lost manhood makes TOU

strong

n. nerve

inhealt and. book.

sold. 400.000 seurul litif

SfQ TO BA«' i'roin

jour own drufcrtftet. who ... vouch foru?. Take it with

a will, patiently, pet ruu*i»tl v. One bo*, ft, usually cures 3 boxee, ?2.», ar&nteea to cure, or we refunrt money.

8M^Uc

BeeedyCo,| Chleico« UoaUval, Ke«r fork.

Dr. Bull's Pills

When a

good,

purgative, lamily medicine is needed, yon can always rely on Dr. John W. Bull's Pills. For constipation and headachc they have no equal.

EVERY WOMAN

Sometimes needs a reliable monthly regulating medicine.

DR. PEAL'S

it, safe and certain in result. Tho genu:aTs) neverdisappoint. Sent anywhere,

Sold at N. W. Myer's New Central Drug Slorr, Crawford^vllle, Ind.

Qi!n'r\JLnri)liVrotnfuGuOCH^CTf\]inrij[JTrOt7ff\IGTf\]C7irflt/mJUii

It's No Wonder

That peo])le usk why Dick-' ersou & Truitt have such an immense business.

HI

Why? Simply because they attend strictly to business and give their pntrous entire satisfacion

Send in your order. 'Phone

69.

DICKERSON & TRUITT.

BflGTnlinnJiflrutfw3in^GS5^GTfDGT'itlGirgCTfD[ng

For Hale.

My farm of 80 acres laying two miles south of Mace station and two miles eadt of Wbiteevillc, I nil., is for sale at a bargain. For information address,

•JH

J. N. COULTER,

jyl-3m Pawnee, Oklahoma Territory.

Fine Monument?.

Robeit"McMains has just received a car load of fine ninnunientP and has them for sale^at 714 South Walnut street. If you want a bargain call and get prices. tf.

No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 60c, 81- All druggists.

THE BLACK DEATH.

THAT FEARFUL PLAGUE THAT FOLLOWS IN THE WAKE OF WAR.

In tlie Fourteenth Century It Swept the Whole of Knrope, Killing Twenty-five

Millions of People lu Three Years —^The

Pestilence In London.

Tin1 plapuo, or pestilence, that mysterious and fearful visitation which has piovetl its hosts in the wake of tinjyea to slay more thim war itself, is supposed to have first originated among tho dense jiuifwvs of people who crowded together in the great cities of Asia aud Egypt, or who formed the eucampment yf Xerxes, Cyrus and Tamerlane the Tartar, ft probabiy sprang from tho impurity 1 *which_miist have existed, jn the midst I of such vast gatherings and in "part also from leaviuR tho imburied dead upon tho field of battle. At any rate tho germs of this fearful human poison have always been most active 1ftre condjtious similar to those have prevailed. It has always been war and the march of armies that has spread it broadcast over the world from time to time, and as war became less frequent and less worldwide the frequency and extent of these ravages have lessened also.

The first recorded outbreak of the plague in Europe occurred in the sixteenth century. It came from lower Egypt. This was the first lapping of the wave that reached into the east again, there to stay its movement so far as the

west was concerned until 544 A. D., when the returning legions of the Emperor Justinian brought it again into the western world from the battlefields of Persia. Constantinople was the first place it attacked. Here in a single day as many as 10,000 jjersons are .said to have fallen victims to it. But the plaguo did not stop with Constantinople. It had found a too congenial soil in Europe, which is little else than one great battlefield at the time. It was carried into Haul, where it followed close in the wake of the Frankish armies, and from Gaul it moved into Italy, with the Lombards, and so devastated the country as to leave it entirely at the mercy of the invaders.

The various crusades, which extended over a space of about 200 years, 1x0 doubt did much to hold the pestilence in Europe, for they served to keep open the channels of intercourse between the east and the west. Periodic epidemics were common during their continuance, and these seem to have culminated in the fourteenth century with what is known in history as tho black death. The black death was more fatal to human life than any other single cause since the world began. The havoc of war was nothing in comparison to it. It swept the whole of Europe, leaving in its path such misery and destitution as the world had never known. It killed in three years some 25,000,000 of people. Such figures stagger the comprehension, but the records of the time cannot be doubted. Tho entire'popvdation cf Europe is estimated to have been about 100,000,000—kept down as it was by the constant warfare—and of these 100,000,000 at least a fourth perished.

Tho ravages of tho plague in Italy, where it came in tho track of tho war of the Guelphs and Gliibellines, was particularly inastrous to mankind. It raged with terrible fury in Naples where 60,000 persons are said to have died. It fell upon Pisa and seven out of every ten perished. It utterly and forever destroyed the prosperity of Siena Florence also suffered severely, while 100,000 of the inhabitants of Venice were literalh* wiped off the faoe of the I earth. From Italy it moved into France, where the mortality was almost as great in Paris alone 50,000 people died from it One of the worst features pre-

Bented by the history of tho black death was tho cruel persecution it aroused I against the Jews. They were supposed to have infected tho air in some mysterious manner, and they wore accused of having poisoned the wells and

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PENNYROYAL piLLS,

springs. In Straasburg 2,000 of them y.-ere buritad alive in their own burial, ground.

The order of the Flagellanto arose at this time, coming from the belief that the sins of the world had at last brought down tho wrath of heaven. It was the beginning of the so caJlod Hundred Years' war that carried tho black death into England, where in London its vie- 1 tims numbered 100,000. When at last the plague had worked its ravages, it

doubled back over its coarse, to disappear in tho east. In 1845 it appeared again in England, first acnong the soldiers of Richmond after tho battle of

Dyspepsia Degrades

its victims. It puts them in

the power of the weakest organ of the body and makes them its slaves. They must eat to suit it, drink to suit it, and live a lenten life of self-denial.

AYER'S PILLS

I

have cured many bad cases of

dyspepsia—they will cure you, if you are suffering from that disease. Mrs. H. B. Anderson, 15 Williams Street, Grand Rapids, Mich., writes

Ayer's Pills cured me of dyspepsia -from which I had suffered for three years. They beat every other medicine."

AYER'S PILLS Cure Dyspepsia

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RARE OLD DISHES. I

Fried Grasshoppers and SeorpionH Delicacies of the Arabs Long As*

An erudite Egyptian writes 111 The Revue ties Revues of the diet of the ancient Aral is. Dog meat, it appears, was one of their favorite dishes, and yonug dogs were as precious in old times among the Arabs as spring chickens are among the people of today. Tiny were also fond of cat meat. The (iesh of a black cat had the virtues of cuvjng them of the effects of a hoodoo and the evil eye.

Fried grasshoppers aud scorpions also formed a very choice dish. The naturalist, Al-Djahey, who lived in the tenth century, speaks: of his visit to tho Arabian tribes of Bassorah and of his surprise

011

discovering that they did not

eat grasshoppers. "Nevertheless," says he, '"there is nothing more delicious.'" He also says that win he went to seo his friend, the poet Roobah, he found him seated

011

the ground eujoj'ing a re­

past of roast rat. Afterward ho had fried lizunis. Notwithstanding the almost religious worship which the Arabs profess for tin1 horse, they ato horseflesh, but only the flesh of draft horses, never that of saddle horses. They ate all sorts of inollusks and insects. The Arabs wero also very fond of black snakes, and they hunted them at the time when the reptiles were about to change their skins, the flesh in that season being extremely tender.

AViiy He Didn't Finish.

Fred Rusk irk was born at Portsmouth. O.. aud lived thero until he was a young man. Fred naturally thinks Portsmouth is one of the nicest places in the state of Ohio. Fred said: Everybody evidently doesn't think as well nt Portsmouth as I do. "Not long ago I went over the Ches apeake aud Ohio road and when the train reached South Portsmouth, which is across the river from my native place, quite a long stop was made. Most of the male passengers got off the train and walked up and down the platform. It was after dark, and the many lights of Portsmouth were plainly visible. I stood looking across the river at the city, thinking what a fine place Portsmouth was, when a fellow passenger on the train came alongside of me and said. 'Can you tell 1110 what place that is across the river?' Of course I could tell him, and I threw out my chest and with considerable pride said: 'That is Portsmouth, O. Have you over been there?' My fellow traveler in a very weary voico, replied: 'Yes, I havo been there. I spent about two weeks there one afternoon. I had intended telling that man about what a charming place Portsmouth is, but after his rudeness I concluded not to.''—Cincinnati Enquirer.

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Bosworth Field, and when tho victo- I rious army marchod to Loudon tho plague went with them to work its havoc there. As long as it lasted the mortality was as great as that oaused by the black death half a century before. Five thousand people died in five weeks, and then the plaguo left London as suddenly as it had appeared there, to sweep over the rest of England.

In Scotland the plaguo of 1568 came immediately after the battle of Langside, when Queen Mary waa dethroned, but no records of tho mortality it occasioned seem to have been preserved. The plague visited London in 1075. talis follo^d after the civil war which ended with the death of Charles II, but so many years intervened that it is impossible to traoe any connection between the two events. In modern ware danger from the plague seems gradually to have lessened, perhaps as a result, of better sanitary conditions maintained by the armies of today.—Philadelphia Press.

Polities by the Forelock.

The Denver Post takes time by the forelock and launches tho following: For President,

Teddy Roosevelt of the Texas Terrors. For Vloe President, OcAonel Torvey of tho Wyoming Wildcats.

Platform,

Tighten yer cinchfes, hit 'e«n with tlio hpum at:. and git there I —Dallas Newe.

Didn't Want Much.

Here is au advertisement from an old copy of an English provincial journal: "Wanted, for a sober family, a man of light weight, who fears the Lord and can drive a pair of horses. He must occasionally wait at table, join the household prayer, look after the horses and read a chapter of the Bible. He must, God willing, arise at 7 o'clock in the morning and obey his master and mistress in all lawful commands if he can dress hair, sing psalms and play at cribbage, the more agreeable. Wages, 15 guineas a year."

Hospital FOP Tree*.

There is a hospital for trees on the banks of the Seine in Paris. Trees v^hich g^ow sick along the boulevards are taken here to recover.

The ur-heeu, or Chinese violin, in shape resembles an ordinary hammer with its handle. It has two strings and is played with a bow.

His honor the magistrate is about the only honor to be found among thieves. —Ghicagoi News.

Persons bitten by the tiger snake of Australia die almost instantly, there being no known antidote for the bite of this reptile. ,»•

,sn-

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L,adies'{ [Shirt Waists.

-lo ladies' waists, made of percale that sold for 50c/to 7-r)c, but are soiled, we say choice 75 ladies waists in white and printed lawns, percales and dimities, sold for 75c, 81 ar.d $1.25, choice -10 lodies'waists with detached collars, in beautiful materials, sold for $1 to $1.50, choice. 5O

'".W

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Rebuilding

In Wash Goods.

25 pes thin lawns,- white grounds dots and fancy figures, that many people ask 5c for a.. .'2c yd 70 pes beautiful fast color printlawns in all shades and designs, choice (10. pes dimities, lawns, percales gingham and other choice '•wash goods worth s.'jO, lOc, i2j4cand 1 iic, choicc 5c.vd New style dimities, organdies and othtr handsome wash stuffs worth 1 5c, 2oc and 25c, choice 10c yd Ail our handsome 25c organdies, dimities and several other fine wash labrics at i-lc yd Choice of all genuine French organdies worth -!9c to 5O0. .28c yd

lfc

o'lc

Notice the lots are not largo so you had best come early or you may be disappointed. •:".•

Read These Items.

Ladies wrappers made of good dark colored prints with separate waist lining, for 39c Beautiful light colored lawn 'wrappers, thin and cool for these hot days, sold for 75c.. 49 Choice of .s:» lawn, percale and

Vr.

dimity wrappers, some of them handsomely trimmed, worth S5C, S S I 25 to S 1 .5O jOc JO white pique and ducfe skix-ts made wide and full, of good materials, worth $2 &I.49

Dress Goods-

Half wool cashmeres worth 10c yd, and cotton plaids 5c yd. -3^c Double width plaid dress goods worth 1 Oc yd Fancy and plain wool and worsted dress materials 36 to 40 inch width, worth 25c, 30c, rebuilding price 10 pes black terges and novelty dress goods, good values at 25c Strictly all wool black fancies, worth 5OC 48-inch black gloria silks worth P85c 3d Lot of novelty dress stufls, beautiful styles worth 15c, 50c =md 50c

5fc

2oc

14c

35c

G8c

2SC

f~]We found cur quarters in the Y. M. C. A. armory too

foi nu-rly occupitd by the Carlson

10

afiu r»"

1 1

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Of high pi ices. Tl 0 r.voat Rebuilding Sale cs on'jiit our loiiipornry quarters day

s'.iiih iut old "High Prices." WYtlu not wish to

take back any of thogfods we moved from the old store, so we put good live prices

on all summer stuffs with a vengeance, and all other goods have been louche 1 with

the fever of low prices. j£.Not ai article in ourjstock but is being offered at cut prices.

You will svrely make a mistake if you don't buy your dry goods and notions in the

72 pes novelty dress stuffs, all wool and wide widths worth 50c, 60c, 7")o

:^Gc

pc fine im| orted novelty and plain shade dress stuff sworfc 75c, $1, Si.25 59°

SILKS.

Short length Rhedamers in many shades and fancy India and China silks worth 85ctoSl, 890 yd Plaid satins, Roman stripes, plaid and figured silks worth

Si to Si

5

tOc yd

Fine back rocade silks worth 75c 59c yd Figured novelty and fancy check and plaid silks worth 1 00 and 2.00 75o yd $2 and 2.50 frucy novelty silks, Si yd Plain shades in corduroys woith 5OC Plushes and velvets in several good shades worth up to I.50 vaid 75 yd

-?5c yd

Draperies.

Choice of 27 pcscretors, printed ticking, printed denims, printed mulls and other beautiful and artistic nrapery stuffs all imaginable shades aud designs, worth 20c and 25c. at. ,12^ Curtain poles and trimmings, Sc each Cotton ball and tassel fringe wth 5c 2^c yd Plain and fancy scrims worth 6 1 2c to 10c 4 1-2C 2O pc Silkolines and golden draperies worth 12 l-2c... .1 l-2c 3 pes oG-in printed mulls worth 10c 2 1-2C Large chenille stand covers wth 5oc 33c each Chenille covers 1 1-2 yd worth

SI.5O .89c bO pairs white and ecru lace curtains wth S5C to $1 pr 69

RIBBONS.

All our fancy stripe and plaid ribbons* worth 35c, 40c and f0c 2 5c yd Colored belting and silk gros grain ribbons worth 25c, 3 ')c and 4oc loc yd Lot of wide silk ribbons worth to 20c 5c yd Ribbons woi th up to 10c yd... 3c yd

Toilet Articles.

Cuticura and "Woodbury soap worth 2-ric 17c Pears unscented soap wth

I5C..

10c

Fine 10c toilet soaps 5c Toilet soap, 3 cakes in box, per box Large pieces genuine castile soap

3c

Best tar joap worth fie 4c

The New Annex.

omall

!t Pays TofTrade at The Big Store

Temporary Quarters, Y. M. O. A. Block, West Main St., and 122 West Main Street.

,,

Sale

Vaseline per bottle 3c Bailey's dentifrice per bottle Oc Face powder per box 3c Hoyt's German cologne loc size 5c, 25c size. 10c Large sponges worth loc 4c Japanese tooth picks pei box. 3c Good talcum powder wth 10c.. 5c Good tooth brushes worth loc to 2O cents 7c French beve! plate hand mirrors loc Good ink, per bottle 2c

UNDERWEAR.

Men's jersey ribbed fhirts and drawi rs worth 2 5c 15c each Men's gauze shirts and drawe worth 25c 19c each Ladies' ribbed vests worth 5c, 2 1 2c Ladies' ribbed vests worth 1. 1-2 and 15c 9c eachLadies' fancy gauze vests worth 20c 13c each Children's gauze vests, sleeveless or half sleeves, woith 10c and 12 l-2c ,5c each

NOTIONS.

Hasting cotton lc spool Machine thread 2oo yards.. 2c spool: Linen finish thread lc spool Silk twist 1 spool Crowley's reedles 2c paper Pins, 2 papers for lc liest loc pins 7c paper Mourning pins lc box Darning cotton, 2 cards for lc Dress shields worth 10c 5c Hairpin cabinets 3c each Invisible hair pins 3c paper Safety pins all sizes per_doz 3c Cotton belting 2c yd Curling irons worth 10c lc Silk and cotton elastic garter, 2 l-2cyd Velveteen binding, 24 yd bolts...5c Wire armlets 3c Kant open hooks and eyes. .3c card Common hooks and eyes.... 1 card Silk seam bindings.... .. Re bolt

1100

Challenge!

We again make the offer to pay to any charitable institution the sum of Si00 for any item advertised by us that we do not offer for sale just as advertised. This is open to all searchers. We court investigation.

We positively will not publish untruths in our ads., and yet some people said, e\en alter we had moved from tie old building, that we would not build, but was only using it as an advertising dodge. But the excavating is being done and materials for the new building are being put 011 the ground every day.

for pur entire stock so were have rented the room

cont store, one half square west of court house, north side of Main street,:

where we hnve|installed our cloak ar.d drapery departments. By way of introduction we will offer some raro a

'rJ A-

L* fJf

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