Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 25 November 1899 — Page 8
CORRESPONDENCE.
BROWNS VALLEY.
Mrs. Annie Seybold ie on the sick lish. Ray Todd is on the sick list this week.
Wallie Wilson called on Robeit Goff Monday.
AlT!HeFs have had nice weather
for gathering corn. Mr. Tennant, of Dana, was here on business this week.
Fannie Goff and daughter were in Crawfordsville Saturday. Mr. Matthews and wife are visiting their daughter, Mrs. Galey.
Bertha Goff is out of school this week on account of sickness. Mrs. Mosley and Fannie Goff visited Robert Goff and wife Wednesday.
There will be a supper at the school house Tuesday night, November '28. Refreshments for everybody. Come an^ have a good time.
tATTON'S CORNER.
Back again at my old post. Mud is plentiful here at present. The farmers are all busy husking corn.
Murl McWilliams is husking corn for C. A. Paiton. The wheat and rye are looking fine in our community.
Winton Utterback is delivering corn at New Richmond. Joseph Brown and wife were the guests of Mrs. Murl McWilliams, Monday.
Most everyone attended the dedication of the M. E. church at Elmdale, Sunday.
Mike Lynch is husking corn for Willis Walker while the latter helps his father plaster.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Allen spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mrand Mrs. J. Allen.
Henry Long's family are all again aple to be around af^er a long and tedious illness of typhoid fever.
Several of our young people were present at the masquerade party given by Samuel and Hattie Jones, at their home near New Richmond, on Thursday night. All report a good time.
Following are the names of those who visited William Walker and family last Sunday: Thomas Berkshire anp wife, Mrs. Nancy Boraker, Daniel and Milla Long, Misses Nancy and Mahala Jackson, Daisy Abbot and Master Hugh Bunnel.
WIDE AWAKE.
James Kincade and wife Sundayed in Brown's Valley. Henry Walters and wife visited Grant Agnew and wife last Sunday.
Grant Agnew is booming things for the NEW REVIEW. Give him your
Misses Hattie and May Edwards spent Sunday with their uncle Vint Smith, three miles east of town.
Charley White and wife, of Pig Par dise, and William Lee and wife, of the city, spent Sunday with Spencer Lee and wife.
Elias Francis and John Pullman are progressing nicely with Spencer Lee's new house. They have it ready for inclosing,
Elias Francis bjught a gross of Polly Pacer's white walnut pills, last week. He will experiment on dogs and cats before taking them himself.
I see that my old friend, Grant Agnew, is invited to a stag party in Pig Paradise. Grant will be the biggest duck in the puddle at the party. He can make as good a speech or tell as good a yarn as any of them.
Wide Awake is not blessed with many old maids and bachelors. We have only two of each. The old maids live in the north end and the bachelors in the south end. We have it from good authority that one of the old maids will soon be united in matrimony and her troubles will be at an end.
On Monday night Milt Lofland and Lew Tomlinson drove an old widow's cow to Thomas McClamrock's. The good supervisor told Milt and Lew to go home. When they had gone he returned the cow to the woman. For this charitable act Mr. McClamrock deserves praise. If he don't receive his reward in this world, he will in the next.
Somabody was saying, the other day, that they intended to present a play down in the Paradise. I don't believe it. They have gone to sleep down there, especially "Old Sandy." If Polly will only come up here, we'll show them how to get up a play.
We have the talent and the energy. Those Paradisers are very windy people, and are always blowing about what they intend to do.
\N IMMTE.
Plenty of Iain and nusdy roads Health good. Doctors at home, Isaac William*, of West Point, is visiting friends at this place.
Log Birdie will iroyp soon to his
new store, just across liie str'oh Several from here attended the show at Crawfordsville last Saturday night.
Our rail road agent, J. A. Long, furnished the lights for the new church at Elmdale.
John Reeder has rented the store now occupied by Biddle and will
ruD
a restaurant. Mrs Effie Vaucleave has moved to her new home that she purchased from Lilly Royalty.
Miss Oney Berry, of Wiugate, is visiting her grandfather and grandmother Hixoti of this place.
Several from this place went to Elmdale last Sunday to atteud the dedication of the new church.
Rev. Frank Morrow, of Monticello, will address the people at the Christian church 011 nest Friday night, on the subject of the Christian Religion. Come out and hear him.
Any oue wanting to buy a house and half acre of land should call on James Wainscott. Good dwelling house and barn, and other out buildings good well 50 feet deep. The property being in the east part of town. Will sell cheap for cash.
Mrs. St. Clair has sold her house and lot, on the corner of Walnut and Main street, to Ralph Vaucleave for $250 cash, and has bought a lot on Wabash avenue and is now preparing to build.
LINDEN.
There are seven new dwellings under course of construction iu Linden. J. P. McClure has a position of messenger on the Monon railroad.
It is said the fodder factory will begin taking in corn stalks the first of December.
The schools convened again on Monday after a few days vacation on account of sore throat.
A strawberry patch is in bloom at this place, and gooseberry bushes are putting out new leaves.
Linden is to have a new brass band with new instruments. The instruments will be here this week.
The Marsden Company has hired Charley Rutledge and his partner to paint all their frame buildings.
The track scales to weigh car load stuff have arrived at the cellulose factory, put are not yet in position.
I Babies and cMdren ne^d I proper food, rareiy ever mcdi* I cine. If they do not thrive on their food something is I wrong. They need a little help to get their digestive machinery working properly.
COD LIVER OIL
WfTH HYPOPHOSPH/TES
OFUME S
SODA
will generally correct this difficulty. if**1* If you will put from one.fourth to half a teaspoonful in baby's bottle three or four times a day you wHI soon see a marked improvement. For larger children, from half to a teaspoonful, according to age, dissolved in their milk, if you so desire, will very soon show its great nourishing power. If the mother's milk does not nourish the baby, she needs the emulsion. It will show an effect at once both upon mother and child.
50c. and $1.00, all druggists.
SCOTT & BOWNE, Chtmisls. New York. ,H H—H II II H-
The excavation for the big cistern at the cellulose factory is progressing nicely. It is to be 30x100 feet and 11 feet deep.
The grand lodge of the Odd Fellows held their meeting this week in Indianapolis. Albeit Layton repre-1 sented Linden lodge.
Our long talked of bank will be in operation it] a few davs, as they have
Sunday hunters, beware! Your panje§ have been secured. The oyster supper at the church, last week, netted about $13.
Prospects are bright for a first-class steel bridge at the Endeen ford Five Kentucky ''Colonels" called on Mrs. D. S. Morris, one day last week.
Charley hite is now chief gutter and sausage grinder for Charley Elrod.
Well, how about a play? Samuel Demoret, Edwin Fruits, and myself are waiting to hear from you.
That fruit tree and insurance agent was only playing 'possum iu ordei to kidnap you two girls. You had a narrow escape.
There is no occasion fur a girl to ride around with an old widower when there are so many young men iu the Paradise.
Eb Britton is complaining about his premises beiug used as a dumping ground for the offskum of Beecher's poultry house.
Mrs. Mollie Snyd'*r is the best trader in these parts. She is a hustling, energetic woman and knows 1: \v to manage a farm.
Dr. Waddle and James Blankenship, after an extended visit here, returned to Palaski county, Ken., last week. They were accompanied by John Gilleu and John Starus.
William Cook, who lives on the John Shauklin place, is looking for a hired girl. There are just two in the family, and a girl would have a snap, there being nothing to do but cook and eat—a winter's job and good wages.
Ellis Gray raised an enormous crop of pumpkins this fall, and some of us girls have talked him in to giving a big pumpkin party. It will be given at the residence of his brother, Wiliiam, within a week or so. This golden autumn fruit will be served iu every conceivable style. There will be pumpkin pie, pumpkin butter, pumpkin dumplings, pumpkin bread, stewed pumpkin, sliced pumpkin, cow pumpkin, and—pumpkins, also a few pumpkin heads.
Some persons are wondering who that long lank fellow is that goes down the Attica road so much. Why, la me, folks, don't you know that fellow He comes out here to court my little sorrel-top sister. He is a nice fellow—not a bit stuck up, being a common gardener. He wheels manure and wields the hoe and sprinkler at George Steele's flower house. I hear the bnys intend to nab him some of these dark nights and ride him 011 a rail.
Vinee Miller and Sarah Waldon were welded in wedlock, last week, by Rev. Elmer Mater. They are spending their honey-moon at the home of the groom's parents where they were treated to a charivari 011 Monday night by Verna, Florence, Alice, and your humble servant, and the music of sleigh bells and tin horns could be heard for two miles. Vince came out in a long-tailed shirt and a broad grin and passed around the turnips. We all wish this newlywedded pair unbounded prosperity. May their sorrows cease, their joys increase, and all their paths be paths of peace.
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received their safe which weighs four fons. It will hi 111 aged by Linden lileii,
Tht? Christian church ladies will have a big supper in the basement of the church 011 Thanksgiving night, The ladies always have a good supper and should have a good crowd, as the money will be used iu paying off some church debts.
PIG PARADISE.
Look out^for another wedding soon. Miss Luella Snyder is studying Spanish.
Lillie and Martha are both after the same Balhincher. The Faii view hill house is now occupied by Tom Ivelsey.
Jim Stout, of the city, visited his brother Will, last week. I asked Jim if he was still a member of the Salvation Army. He said the Army had excommunicated him. One of the members happened to see him sweeping out the Sherman House on Sunday and another one caught him taking a chew of tobacco, and they decided to give him the cold shoulder. I consider the Salvation Army a burlesque 011 religion. It is made up of fanatical freaks, benighted beggars, and boisterous bigots. Occasionally I hear some jackass bray about these halleluiah harpers doing good. What good to they do? They make fanatics of illiterate individuals and cause women to neglect their household duties they preach fifteenth century doctrines, and scare ignorant and weak-minded creatures into joining their bauds. None but those with the creeds and calibers of cranks can see any good in their methods. If a person can't become a Christian without being a lunatic he is past redemption.
an
Story of A Slave.
To be bound hand and toot for years by the chains of disease is the worst! form of slavery. George D. Williams «f Manchester, Mich, tells how 6uch slave was niacin free. He says: "My wife has been so helpless for five years that she* could not turn over in bed alone. After using iwo bottles of Elfc trie Bitters.'she in wonderfully improved aud ablejto do hur owy work." This supreme remedy for female die aso quickly cures nervousness, sleeples1 -ess melancholy, headache, backache, anting and dizzy spells. This miracle working medicine is a godssmd to weak, sickly, rundown people. Every bottle gusirnnteed. Only 50 cents. Sold by Xye & Booe Druggist.
WANTED-SEVEKAL
First Prize
PaDel-,
iU JTT
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POLLT PACEK.
December oth
Is the time we have set to
BKIGIIT AN'D HON-
KST persons to represent us as Mangers I in this and close -y counties. Salary f-'OO a year and expensoB. Strait, bona-flde no more. no less salary. Position permanent. Our ref-| erences, any bank in any town. It Is mainly offlc". work conducted at home. Keferenee. Enclose 8"lf-addressed stamped envelope. I
THE DOMINION COMPANY, Dept. Chicago.
opvn llp f)Vll. new store
1
Pictures,
I11 order to induce an early fall trade befoie the usual Holiday rush, we will make a General Reduction on all first prize carbonette work until the first day of December at the following lo.v prices. No reduction in quality, but in pi ice onl}: 1 dozen Swiss-
regular price
81.50, now S1.00 1 dozen Trilby Panels, regular p'ice S2.00, 1.50 1 dozi'u Miniature Ovale, regular price S-.row 2.00 dozen MantflloH, regular piice 83.00, now 2.50 1 doznn Cabinets, regular price !?3u0, uow 2 50 1 dozen Dewey Panels, tegular price 83.50, now 2.75 1 dozen London Rossele, regular price 84.00, now 3.50 1 dozen German Panels, regular price 85.00, now 1.00 1 dozen Paris Panels, regulur price 88,00, now 7.00 1 dozen Paris Pot-tors, regular price 87.09, now G.C0 1 dozen Miniature Posters, regular price 84.00, now 3.50 1 dozen Glossy Cabinets, tegular price 82.00, now ...
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Gregg & Sen have been very kind to us in remodeling the rooms from the cellar to the roof. Wlun coni]' ted we will have nice rooms to remove our stock to and pleasant rooms to sell goods in We thanlc our patrons and friends who have traded with us so long at the old cn.« r, and ask them to continue with us at our new place, and it will always be our aim to treat our customers with the best of satisfaction, and we ask our customers if anything is wrong to come to the firm with their complaint and we will right it. After December 8th we will adopt the cash business 111 the grocery. Every art cle will be sold for cash in the grocery line rid we will give prices that will conv.ncc the customei that it pays to buy for cash We cannot give low prices and sell groeeiies on credit, and this is the reason we adorn the cash system in groceries. We want to say that we are selling a great mauv n* tides at le,s than we can buy them to-day, as we do not want to move them "Wo will continue part of our store at the old stand until aftei the first of Januaiv to close out a great many articles that we do not want to move. It is
buy goods in our line now as everything has advanced from 20 to 30 per cent Yon will find that we are selling goods much cheaper in Furniture, Stoves, Queenswar* and Glassware than they can be bought later. Thankiug you all for past favors w* remain Yours Respectfully,
BARNHILL, HORNADAY & PICKETT
1
OPTICAL GOODS
For Real Enjoyment
of life, whether iit the play or .-• ..•in business, the eyes must receive the first consideration.
To really live, yon must see
properly.
VVe
^ave
.. 1.50
Nicholson's Sons,
U8J4 E. Main t.
IU
Some
$] ,:-0 Sailors.... 98c 75c Sailors 39c $1.25 Fedoras.... .7")c
Latest shapes and colors in all Hats.
Very
Fine
Opera Glasses
At From $1.50 to$io.oo.
We grind lenses for eye-glasses to suit your eyes. No charges A W for examination.
ROST.
The Corner Jeweler
Cancer Cured
7#
-fj10 Muhornev rooms. Messrs
9 *0od
WITH
•Soothing Oils. A bHorpiion
Cancer ot the nose, lip,ear, nuet, breast, sto rn a or in faci all intei-
IJr. R. F. Bye's Sanitarium, nal and exN. Illinois St. turnai organe or tissues. Cut this out and send it for an illustr a lei) book on tlie above diseases, llome treat mentsent in some cases.) 1)11. IS F. IIYE, Iiilianfi|oi», InI.
or ManSE«S
LADY
appoint agent-*. *(50 a month salary and expenses. Ziegler Co 710 Mouon HIdg, Chicago.
EVERY DAY'S W DELAY
....Means Something Now....
Buy now in order to get choice of our pretty street hats at greatly reduced figures. Also a fine line of patterns at your own prices.
FOR THIS WEEK:
Remember, Ail Trimmed Hats Go at Your Price.
The wholesale prices on Cloaks are constantly advancing. Our new orders will cause a rise in retail prices Take advantage of the present stock. $12 Jackets in all wool kersey, black, blue and brown, now $*.98 $10 Jackets in same shades, latest cut and irake $7.4!) $7.50 garments in light shades, velv collar, are going very fast at $4.98. Wo also have a full line ot misses' and children's long and short cloaks at popular prices. Buy while this sale is on.
time tn
1
fa'
*e
FINE ARNESS
If you want to have a hot time, buy one of our Lap Robes.
•est Fur Lhp Robes for 8(5.00 and 87.00. Ci^od Plush Hohes worth 83.00 and SG00' for 82.00 and 85.00.
B. L. Oni baim's
HARNESS STORE
Hurley & Vaucleave Attorneys-At-Law
Office over First National Bank.
We invite the public to call at our olfice and be advised from the books. Over 200 new volumes. We give safe advice, and will keep you out of & law suit, or get you out if your ar sued.
5 Per Cent.
O N E
J.oans made on farms of Western money §1,0(10 and upward at per coot. Horrowe h:iprivllego of paying $100or.any multiple (lie..-ci entire loan ai any Interest paying time. li pay you to investigate ilils.
EL AM T. MURPHY & CO. Kooms 4 and 6 Campbell Block, rawfordsvill
98c. Sailors 4(.)c SI 50 Fedoras !)Sc Also a very pretty hat for 98c and 81.25
That have been selling for Si.75
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