Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 10 June 1899 — Page 6
Eureka Harness Oil is the be6t preservative of new leather and the best renovator of old leather. It oils, softens, blackens and protects. Use
Eureka
Harness Oil
*on your best harness, your old harness, and your carriage top, and they wili not only look better but wear longer. Sold everywhere in cans—all •izea from half pints to Ave gallons.
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Abstracts of Title
furnished at Reasonable Rates.
Money to Loan
On Real Estate. Deeds and Mortgages carefully executed.
Webster
&
Serpent.
'Recorder6 Office.
E W O O A re id
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1
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tor
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we
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it
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HE PAYS THE FREIGHT' "PERFECT1'
tfACOH
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DRS.
KENNED Y«-K£RGAN
FOURTH MNNATi 4
122 W. CINCII
ST.,
CAREER OF COGHLAN.
ft"? ffS-
Naval Record of the Raleigh's Commander..
BOMB OF HIS CHARACTERISTICS.
Be la a Rigid Disciplinarian Who la I'nlTersally Loved and Supported by Him Comrades—How He Gained the Friendship of an Enemr by His
Kindness.
Captain Coghlan, whose recent after dinner utterances are said to have embarrassed the authorities at Washington, is one of those men so full of human impulse as to be very difficult to portray on paper. He is a native of Kentucky, but at an early age his family moved to Illinois, and it was from that state that he received his appointment to the Naval academy. He was recognized as one cf the best men in his class. One of his classmates and best friends is Captain Wilde, who commanded the Boston at the Manila fight
Coghlan left the Naval academy in 1863. In May of that year he was made an ensign and attached to the steam sloop Sacramento. Two years later he was elevated to the rank of master, now unused, and assigned to the old Brooklyn, the flagship of the south Atlantic squadron. In November, 1866, he was commissioned lieutenant in March, 1868, lieutenant commander, and became a full commander in Febru, ary, 1882. Qoing back, he was executive officer of the Pawnee in 1867, and of the steam frigate Querriere in 1868. In the year following he went to the sailing sloop Portsmouth, from which he was later transferred to the Richmond on the European station. He commanded the Saugus for one year and the Colorado for another cruise. For two years he was in command of the Monongahela on the Asiatic station. When he was made a full commander, he was first assigned to the Adams, on which he remained from 1883 to 1886. The next two years found him in command of the Pacific navy yard at Mare island, California. Then, after two years on the Mohican, he was made inspector of ordnance at League island, Philadelphia. In 189G be was made a captain and placed iu command of the Raleigh. Captain Coghlan was tried by a court martial in 1890 at Mare island for having criticised the conduct of the navy department in a letter to the Vallejo (Cal.) Chronicle. He pleaded not guilty and was acquitted. He was recommended for a promotion of six points in the list of captains for his gallant work under Dewey at Manila.
That is bis record its the navy, told in the naval register—brief and statistical It gives little idea of the man's real characteristics. In stature he is quite short, hardly over 5 feet 5. Hi3 hair and rather heavy mustache are white. His eyes, quick and sparkling, are covered with large spectacles. He is a bundle of energy, sometimes remaining two nights and three days without sleep, especially when his ship is under stress of heavy weather at sea. In bringing the Raleigh from the Azores to Bermuda he did not sleep for 72 hours.
A man of splendid physical endurance, he is also a rigid disciplinarian. There is a great element of kindness in his make up, however, and the bluff, straightforward uianner ill conceals a sympathetic heart. He is universally loved and supported by those who have served with him or under him,_and in this particular instance every officer on his ship was eager the other day to come to "the c!d man's17 defense?"
One_instance of Captain Coghlan's largeness of heart, an incident which has never been told before, will serve to illustrate the type of man he is. On the day after the battle of Manila, with bloodjiiid_ conquest still uppermost in his thoughts, be^was sent by Admiral Dewey to Curregiilor island to force its surrender. Upon demanding the capitulation, he learned that the wife of the Spanish commandant, a woman of position and refinement, was in very delicate health. He not only shewed the commandant every consideration, even permitting him to go to Manila on his own parole, but sent to the sick, starving and frightened wife reassurances of safety, together with a case of champagne and other delicacies from his private stores.
Captain Coghlan *has a wife and one child—a son, who has just reached his majority. Mrs. Coghlan, who is now at the Waldorf-Astoria, is a woman of great pergonal charm and clevernessBefore her marriage she was Miss Jnlia Barbour of Terre Haute, Ind., where Captain Coghlan, then a young officer, met her while she was still attending school at a convent. Their son, Graham Coghlan, is in the employ of the Pacific Mail Steamship company and is now cruising between San Francisco and Panama.
At the Army and Navy club in New York the other day Captain Coghlan's utterances and the importance that had been attached to them were the one subject of conversation. There was a unanimous appeal iu behalf of the Raleigh's commander. General W. Whipple said in speaking of the matter: "I see no impropriety in what Captain Coghlan has done. When it is remembered that he was at a private dinner, among old friends, it is easy to understand that he would tell stories of the campaign at Manila which he did not expect to reach the newspapers. It was a most natural thing for any man to do, and I do not believe he will be made to suffer for it."—New York Journal.
A Timely Gift.
Now that the rainy season is about due, somebody might make a hit by presenting Dewey with a handsome am-breHa.-^Pittsburg N«w*
1
THE FLAG OF STARS
Oh, not alone the eager southAlone the steadfast north— Bavr with wet eyes beneath spring tides
Our flag of stars go forth 1 Oh, not alone the elder eadt,
Nor the young hearted west, Smiled high with pride where side by aid* The nation's children pressedl
Bnt north and south and cast and waat The mountain and the plain, The prairie and the desert.
Yielded their flower again. East and tvest and south and north The flowei of the land. Bearing the mother's call, went forth
To
Btand
at her right hand.
Wt, be many hands in labor, But one arm for the right One blood to shed, one heart till dead.
One good sword for the fight We be many tongued and minded, But one mind and one tongue When once wide sent through a continent
The nation's word has rung I
The a northern tongues sing "Dixie" Beneath the ancient flag, And the southerner dies to rebaptize
His own the "Yankee ragl" Brothers—to keep for freedom's sake The flag of starE unfurled Beneath the stars of heaven—to make
The starlight of the world! -Grace Ellerly Channing in Youth's panion.
A LESSON IN COOKING.
Ilow a at Dish »t
Hobo Served Up Roast Chicken.
"The first time I ran away from home I learned a trick or two that was Worth the while," said a well known business man. "I started out on several unauthorized tours of adventure before I reached years of discretion, but the first is most vividly impressed upon my memory. Three of us kids caught a freight train and got some 60 or 70 miles away from home before the first nigbtfalL Then we didn't know where to spend the night. Several attempts to quarter ourselves in empty box cars on the side track of a little village only resulted in our being chased away and threatened with arrest, so we went to the outskirts of the place and built a fire on the bank of a little creek. Here we made ourselves as comfortable as possible and one or two of us had actually dozed off for short naps when a regular hobo, a good specimen of the real article, happened along and wanted to know if we had anything to eat. Of sourse we hadn't. 'Well,' he said, 'if you fellers'll ketch a chicken I'll show you a trick that'll be useful to you.' "It didn't take us long to catch the chicken and bring it back. The veteran member of the nomadic fraternity wrung its neck, jerked off its head, cleaned it and going down to the creek wadded it up, feathers, feet and all. in a big ball of yellow clay. This he rolled into the fire and scraped the burning embers up around it. The clay soon hardened, and we could see it among the wood coals gradually becoming a bright cherry red. When it did so. the cook rolled it out again, let it tool a little and then broke it open with a stone. The feathers had stuck to the bakAl clay and a clean, inviting chicken was ready to be served. All the moisture that in ordinary baking is lost had been kept in by the bricklike inclosure, and the morsel that fell to my lot was the juiciest and sweetest I have ever eaten."—Cincinnati Enquirer.
Hit) Absent Companions.
At a banquet given in Rochester two jf the expected guests were unable to be present. The order of seating happened to bo such that a particularly jovial and companionable gentleman sat wi£h one of the vacant chairs on each side of him. The* empty chairs and firat course of oysters were left in place for some time in case the expected guests arrived. The solitary gentleman therefore could_ move neither to the right nor to the left, but amiably beamed throughout the repast, seemingly none the worse for his enforced isolation. After the banquet some one innocently asked him: "How did yon enjoy yourself, old chap?" ..ww— "JTifst rate." he replied briskly enough. "I sat next to a couple of fel lows who weren't there."—Rochest€i Herald.
The Managed Husband Is Worthless.
Helen Watterson Moody believes that llie husband who can be managed is not worth managing, "and there is no better principle," she adds, in The Ladies' Home Journal, "for both husband and wife to adopt in adjusting them selves to the new relation than that of trying to do each by the other what men are accustomed to call 'the square thing.' Many a woman understands 'managing' a husband better than skt does doing the square thing by him, and many a man understands and practices doing the square thing by otbei men who would be afironted if he were to be told that, judged by his own business standards, he habitually dealt us fairly with his own wife."
Mrs. Watkina' Club Inheritance.
"I don't see." said Mr. Mulberry "why you women have that Mrs. Wat kins in your literary club. The rest of you are bright enough, but she's as dul es dull can be." "It's this way," answered Mrs. Mu! berry. '"Mrs. Watkins' great-grand mother's half sister's second cousin by marriage could trace her descent from Chaucer. So, you see, after all, with such literary claims, we couldn't very well leave Mrs. Watkins out."—Har per's Bazar.
A Candid Suitor.
"What do you think? Papa asked Jack if he expected to get any money in marrying me." "Was Jack insulted?" "Insulted? He told pop that a good home was more of an object to him than wages."—Detroit Free Press.
'Calcined seed pearls are considered a medicine of great potency by the Chinese, and beautiful art work in mother cf pearl has long been executed both in China and Japan. *r am m-
Seasonable flerchandise
•i
Our line of Spring Goods merited the attention of eveiy one and, judging by the volume of trade The Big
Store has been favored with, our friends were not slow in finding it out. "We are pleased to
announce the arrival of our second spring purchases in many of the seasonable lines.
"Wash Stuffs.
Among the late arrivals in this department we wish to call particular attention to upward of one hundred pat
terns in real Irish Dimities and pure Linen Lawns. The range includes the popular and striking
stripes in all colors as well as small figures suitable for children's wear. Piques and
Ginghams are not less in popularity than in the early part of the season
and we have some very pretty new arrivals.
Parasols....
And ...Shirt "Waists.
Every Parasol in our stock is of the newest design and coloring, and were made to order.
Our beautiful line of Shirt "Waists includes the nobbiest things in Piques. Lawns, Madras, PercaleeJ and Silks.
Tailor-made Suits.
We desire to close out our stock of Tailor-made suits and Skirts at once'andj will give one-fourth off tie
usually low prices. It mr-ans much when you can buy suits in the height of the season at prices like these.
7.50 tor Suits Worth $10 00 9.00 12.00 11.00 15.00 15.00 20.00 18.00
I'.
Special prices on ladies1, misses' and children's Jackets and all fancy trimmed Dress Skirts.
New Arrivals.
We have just received thrjnew assortment of Ladies'Wrappers in percales, lawns and dimities and childrea*
Dresses in percales and g'nghams. Also new seperate Skirts in cotton, covert, pique and linens.
25.00
Don't forget that every item in our stock is offered at special prices during the
Great Rebuilding- Sale
IT PAYS TO TRADE AT THE BIG ST0EE.
IiOTTIIB BISOHOI1
Temporary Quarters Y. M. C. A. Building and 128 W. Main.
Vf
