Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 1 October 1898 — Page 6
Sour Stomach
"After I wan lutluced to try ('ASCI* RETS, I will never be without them in the house. My liver was In a very bad shape, ami my head ached aud 1 had stomach trouble. Now. since taklug Cascurets. I feel line. My wife has also used them with beneficial results for sour stomach."
Jos. Khkhling, 1U21 Congress St.. St. Louis, Mo.
CANDY
CATHARTIC
l&Ud&afeg&ci
TRADE MARK RIOISTIBED
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 2ic,oOc. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Rpnfd Company, fhleago, SSOntrr.l, New York. SI!
MTA
rrrr.
Dip Sold and guaranteed by all drug-
I U'DAW
gists to Cl'KE Tobacco Habit.
Abstracts of Title
Furnished at Reasonable Rates.
Money to Loan
"On Real Estate Deeds and Mortgages carefully seemed.
"Webster & Serpent.
Recorder's Office.
We Have Moved.
We are now finely equipped to re pair any kind of machinery from a wheel to a type writer. Came and see us. Miller block, right north of Court House.
Francis & Gould.
It rest® with you whether yon continue the lierve-klJliiig tobacco habit. NO»TO-l»J removes tlio desire for tobacco, out nervous distress, expels nico tine, purities the blood, stores lost manhood. makes you strong In health, and jx book.
boxes
4OO.C0O
rases cared.
NOTOBAC from
your own drugrjrist, who will vouch for us. Take it with will, patiently, persistently. One $1. usually cures 3 boxes, $2.50, aranteea to cure, or we refund money. ficMdjCo., Chicago, Dootroal, Hew Ton*
When
Dr. Bull's Pills
good,
purgative, family meclizine is needed, you can always rely on Dr. John W. Bull's l'ills. For constipation and heada:he tliey have no equal.
EVERY WOMAN
Sometimes needs a reliable monthly regulating medicine. DR. PEAL'S
PENNYROYAL piLLS,
Are prompt, safe and certain In result. The genu* fne (\Dr.PeaTB) never disappoint. Sent anywhere.
Sold at N. W.flyer's New Central Drug Store, Crawford sville, Ind.
1 PEACE!
We are at the old stand and are at peace with all clhBf-e-. Our goods are second to none our prices are right, quality guaranteed in every particular. L. A. W. and order at our store at all times. Give us your patronage and we will give you value received.
I
CHARLES 0. HUNT,
.DEAI.Elt IN.
New Second Goods
Highest Price Paid for SecondHand Goods. Stove Repairing and Gas Fitting A Specialty. A Handmade crayon portrait, size 16x20, given away with each
$5
worth of
goods. Call and get a card:
131 S. Washington St.
What do the Children Drink? Don't give them tea or coffee. Have you tried the new food drink called Grain-o? It is delicious and nourishing and takes the place of coffee. The more Grain-o you give the children the more health you distribute through their eystems. Grain-o is made of nure grains, and when properly prepared taste like the choice grades of coffee but costs about as much All grocers sell it Ibc. and 25o.
O
Sean the Slgnatue of
TOHIA. yTha Kind Yuu Have Always Bought
To Care Conntlp&tion Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. 11 C. C. C. tail to cure, druggists refund money.
Why not get 15fine cabinetsfor $1,50? Guaranteed at Willis Gallery.
OUR NEW YORK LETTER.
A Commonplace Affair at Battery Park. Knocked Him Oat In One Round.
[Special Correspondence.]
"A happening in Battery park was of a commonplace enough sort, but to the close observer was terribly impressive, said oiu' of the out of town newspaper men to :i crowd of tho boys on Newspaper row. "Having to wait in that vicinity for a halt' hour. I joined the folks who idled thero for the sake of the shade of its trt.es and tho fresh breeze that blew np across the bay. Thero is hartliy an hour of the day or night that this park's benches are not more or less occupied, and the iron fenco along the sea wall is always well lined with human beings in the daytime. The bay at this time was alive with shipping and made a spectacle of interest in itself. I joined the crowd at tho sea wall aud stood looking on. Suddenly there was a commotion near the barge office, a stone building jutting out into the water at the very point of the city. Around it there is a narrow stone platform whose level is a few feet above high water mark. Revenue cutters and sometimes other craft tie up there. There were no boats thero at this time, and until an instant before the commotion there was nobody on the narrow dock. "The first intimation anybody had of the occurrence of anything unusual was the sight of a woman running from the park to the side of the barge office and out along the narrow stone platform to the end. There was that in her movements that suggested extreme agitation, if not impending tragedy, though I doubt if ouo in a hundred observers dreamed of tho seriousness of her intent. The realization came quickly, however, for she did not pause at the end of the platform and ran rather than jumped off into the water. A few screams went up from women who were watching, and a number of men began to shout frantically. Most of those along the sea wall stood still, craning their necks and straining their eyes to watch tho outcome. The woman had hardly disappeared beneath the surface of the water before hundreds came rushing from the benches in the park to join tho spectators.
HigMtins to the Rescue.
"The current is very strong off the Battery. Tho woman disappeared from view for a short space, and when she came to the surface again she was several feot from the spot where she went in. Several men had run excitedly to the end of tho stone platform, but she was away out of their reach. It was evident, too, that if they could have thrown her a line she would not have availed herself of it. It often happens that a would be suicido's desperation is overcome by tho shock of the water, but it was nofc BO in this case. That woman wanted to drown. Her clothes buoyed her up somewhat, but she deliberately held her head under the water as well as she could. One or two tugs were passing not far from the wall, and the crowd began to shout to attract the at tention of their captains. Before this had been accomplished a rowpoat was seen putting away from the other end of the wall and making toward tho wo man. A single man was in it, and he pulled as if ho me»nt business. When the woman went under again, a hundred voices yelled to him to tell him where she was. He paid not the slight est attention. He knew exactly what he was about, and presently proved it by swinging his boat around directly boside the unfortunate. Then, with strength and skill that were altogether admirable, he pulled her aboard. She was then too exhausted to resist his efforts if that was her desire, and he lauded her at the police precinct dock at the western border of the park. He was Joseph Higgins, and this was something like the tenth suicide he has prevented off tho Battery sea wall in the past three years."
Knocked Out In One Round. It was one of tho prettiest, one round, Manila knockouts ever seen. All ovei in ono minuto by the watch. A Third avenue cable car was going north, and mado the usual stop at Grand street. There wasn't any spare space to speak of, but a slender looking man of about 35 thought he could edgo in on a seat where thero were only four, only one of the number being broader than tho law allows. The three were courteous enough to contribute each a few inches of space, but the big, overfed, summer street car hog, growled like a bear and made remarks about folks who never know when a car is full. Then he grew more personal and insulting, but the newcomer said never a word. Possibly enraged at tho cool reception of his oratory, he drew back and landed a blow sideways on the small man's face.
Then the fun began. Leaping to his feet, the little man lot out with right and left on the ruffian's two cheek bones with such foroe that he keeled over and lay on the floor almost paralyzed. The women screamed, and the men said, "Bully boy!" The car hog had run foul of an active member of the athletic club who hadn't missed the bars and the sand bags a single day for ten years. His arm was a bar of iron. Detective Hickey, who happened to be aboard, walked off the ruffian on a
provoked assault charge. War Souvenir Spoons.The souvenir spoon craze has been revived with a vengeance. Trays in the jewelry Bhops and in the department stores are now heaped with gold and silver spoons, both solid and plated, named for the naval and army officers who have gained fame by fighting. There is a rough rider spoon also, which is selling' well. Tiny gold or silver spoons with Dewey, Hohson or rough rider imprints are very popular with young women, who wear them as pins. Fitz-Hugh Lee and General Wheeler have not been forgotten, and the girls from the south are not overlooking this brand. JOSKPH RUSSELL.
The Kidneys
are the seat or the starting point of nany maladies, all of them serious, .11 more or less painful, and all of tfeem tending, unless cured, to a fetal end. No organs of the body are more delicate or more sensitive than the kidneys. When symptoms of disease appear in them not a moment is to be lost if health is to be restored. The best way to treat the kidneys is through the blood, cleansing it from the poisonous matter which is usually at the bottom of kidney complaints. For this purpose there is no remedy equal to
For many years I have been a constant sufferer from kidney trouble, and have tried a number of largely advertised kidney cures without benefit. At last a friend advised me to try Ayer's Sarsaparilla. The use of eight bottles of this remedy entirely cured my malady."—MARY MILLER, 1238 Hancock Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.
THE SPORTING WORLD.
Tho bicycle dealers of New England have struck a new and effective device to attract tho attention of tho public to their wares. A mouse cage with a floorless extension and a couple of mice, together with a bicycle, form the properties for tho act that is performed daily in the show window? of several bicycle stores iu Connecticut and Massachusetts towns. The bicycle is either raised on a stand which holds the machine at tho bottom bracket or suspended fiom the ceiling by ropes attached to tho saddle and handle bar. In either case the front wheel is clear from tho ground and is free to revolve easilv. The mouse
BICYCLE RUN BY MOUSE POWER.
cntge is fastened to the steering head of the machine at a point just over the front wheel and so arranged that the extension fits over the tire close enough to prevent the mouse from getting away, but not so olose as to rub against the tire. Two ordinary mice are put into the cage. Their natural foraging and exploring tendencies load them to creep out of the hole which loads to the extension. The tiro of the front wheel constitutes the floor of that extension. Tho weight of the mouse causes it to start revolving, and the mouse tries to run back to the hole. But the faster he runs tho quicker the tiro spins. Usually both mice get on the tiro.—Popular Science News.
WIVES OF GREAT MEN.
Ben Jonson had a shrew for a wife, who used to go to the aleroom after him and bring him home, scolding all the way.
Boswcll, Johnson's biographer, married a scold, and in his "Uxoriaim" recorded faithfully nil ber snappish sayings and his own answers.
Rohault, tho philosopher, had a wife whose opinion of him was so high that she sat at the door of his lecture room and refused to admit any but well dressed persons.
The great Dr. Cadogan married a lady several years older than himself. She was jealous, and in company accused him of poisoning her, whereupon he told tho company they were welcome to open her at once and show her mistake.
The famous Rev. Andrew Bell had a virago wife, who left him and then devoted hor timo to abusing him by mail. She once addressed a lettor to him, "To that supremest of rogues, who looks the hangdog that he is, Dr. Andrew Bell."
THE PACIFIC CZAR.
The czar's proposal of a general disarmament of tho nations is timely and will lia ve great force if he sets an example. His army is tho largest in Europe and is largely the cause of the great size of the armies of other powers.—Baltimore Sun.
Thero are reasons in plenty for suspecting that tho proposal is not sincere, but there are some very strong ones for thinking that it is wholly so. Tho strongest is that the real and lasting interests of Russia will bo served, not by war, but by peace.—New York Timos.
It is doubtful whether our children's children will see a complete realization of the peace programme, but a mighty stride has been taken toward its realization with the conversion of the czar to tho belief that by international agreement sonic other means of settling differences oan be found than war.—Philadelphia Public Ledger.
,*
v.<p></p>Rebuilding
4
1
$
50 pes new style fleece back materials, and very warm for winter wrappers worth 10c yd, choice in this sale Njc yd 15 pes extra heavy double faced materials in all shades for tea gowns, dressing sacques, etc., worth
15c
lie yd
5O pes regular i2}^ and 10c percales, light and dark styles, choice 7}c yd Good dress style prints, light and dark styles, regular price cents, at 3c yd 100 styles regular 5c and 6c p.xints, bept cloth and colors, choice 3£c yd 2,000 yds extra r.eavy canton flannel in short lengths, wth 8Jc, at.... yd Good unbleached muslin, one yd wide, in this sale 2^Cjd Regular 5c quality unbleached muslin, yard wide Iji^cyd
THE BIG STORE.
Temporary Quarters Y. M. *C. A. Block, West Main St.. and 122 West Main Street.
You can't go astray on your tall purchases if you trade with us. Our stock is larger and more complete than ever before and every item is being offered at special prices. We are determined to increase our business, even if we are in temporary quarters, and realize Wje must sell goods cheap to do so. We don't expect our regular profit, but hope to sell more goods at a smaller margin and so come out whole in the end.
SPECIAL PRICES on Cloaks, Graperies, Dress Good?, Silks, Linens. Underwear, Hosiery, Ladies' Furnishings, Fancy Goods, Domestics and every article in our store in the great
Don?t|buy a dollar's worth of merchandise in our line without visiting our store and inspecting our stock.
You'll Save Money By It!
Here area few items you can buy with Profit. The store is full of just such Bargains.
Extra fine bleached muslin, one yd wide, wth
7
a
1-2C, only... .5c yd
Lonsdale, Masonville, Fruit of Loom and other best brands bleached muslin, worth 8Jc, choice GJc yd Best quality apron ginghams, 4 1-20 Regular
5c
shirting checks in
20
different styles .'5c yd 5o pes good heavy shirting, all fast colors aud well worth 7 1-2C at 6cyd Outing cloths in good shirting styles that usually sell for
7c,
5 yd
PL0AK8. CLOAKS.
Our line of cloaks ia ready for your inspection and includes all the styles that are thought to be good for the coming season. The goods were all made to our order and are
It Pays To Trade at The Big Store
Temporary Quarters, Y. M. C. A. Block, West Main St. and 122 West Main Street.
Sale
1
tailored throughout in a manner much better than are usually found in ready-made goods. The Special Rebuilding Sale Prices apply on these goods which make them great' bargains.
WiJAPPERb.
We are proud -of our li no of Wrap pers for-fall. The materials re good and heavy, the printings are beautiful and styles are correct. Every garment is wide skirt, full hips, and fitted with separate waist lining. But tho best part of the story is the Rst of prices: Regular $1.00 wrapper for *.•.$ .80 Regular $1.25 1.00' Regular $1.50 ... l.20 Regular $1.75 1.40-
See them before you buy materials for making wrappers.
