Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 5 April 1890 — Page 2
KIRK'S
AMERICAN FAMILY
SOAR
THE JOURNAL.
PRINTED EVERY SATURDAY. T. H. B. MoCAIN, Kdltor.
TERMS
One Year, In advance $1.25 One Year, outside county.. 1.35 Six Mouths, in advance 75
SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1890.
ltEPUliMCAN TOWNSHIP TICKET For Trustee. DAVID W. HARTMAN.
For Assessor.
FRANK O. MAXWELL. For Justice'of the Peace,1 J. W. CUMBERLAND,
J. W. RAMSEY", J. C. CHUMASERO. FRANK McGILLIARD.
For Constables, LOREN W.MILLER, WM, G. HANNA,
W. P. WINGERT. GEORGE OLIVER.
THE SWIFTEST BUNUEB.
The extraordinary running of young •William Day, of New Jersey, at Morris Park, near New York city, deserves to be remembered. It was at a championship match in which there were a liun dred contestants.
The occasion of the meet was the great ran of the National Cross Country association, in which representatives of over twenty different clubs took part. The day of the race was one of mingled snow and rain, with mud on the track three inches deep. The run was eight miles long.
It was known that young Day was a fleet runner, but nobody expected the extraordinary speed he manifested that day. His most formidable opponent was thought to be a young Englishman named Thomas. AH the runners were very young, most of them under 20. Day and Thomas were a perfect contrast in appearance. The American boy is dark, long limbed and thin as a greyhound. His figure is so slight, as to be girlish. The beholders looked at his slender limbs and said wonderingly: "Where does that boy get his power?"
His chief opponent, Sidney Thomas, is of the English type, rosy and fair, and short and strong built. Thomas is the champion cross country runner of England. In the besting he received at the hands or rather the legs of Day, therefore, America beats England in a running match.
Day's reputation for fleetness was such that he gave odds to all the others, including thirty seconds to Thomas himBelf. At the word he started with a bound. It was a thrilling sight, those hundred bovB, bare limbed and bareheaded, running like a flash of light athwart the gray winter landscape. There were three hurdles on the track to be jumped, and one water leap of seven feet. This water leap was what tried the boys'souls. Those who could not take it tumbled headlong into several feet of icy water.
The first contestants were allowed 7J minutes the start of Day. He speedily distanced those nearest him, caught up with the seven minute men, passed them and trotted in with long easy strides to the winning post, having made on a muddy track, with the wind blowing, the remarkable distancoof eight miles in 63 minutes and 84 seconds. This record reminds one of the stories told of the fleet footed Indian runners of both North and South America. It does not look as though the American was degenerating ph vsically.
HEBOES OF TO-DAY.
Are there no heroes in tilts nard, taoney getting time? One has only to recall that story of the terrible fire in Indianapolis not long since to be convinced otherwise. At tliat fire thirteen as heroic souls as ever inhabited this earth went to heaven in flame and emoke.
A four story building was on fire inside. Without a thought of their own safety twenty-nine firemen climbed to the roof and began work. Suddenly there was an appalling crash. The roof sank to the basement, through the fire, carrying with it the firemen. \4.,
A fireman on an adjoining building Etooubed: "For God's sake pour water into the upper windows. Twenty men are buried there!" Then the effort at xcscue was made. Afire ladder had fallen across the forms of several of the men and pinned them down. Such scenes as this met the rescuers:
Under tho ladder, muto but breathing, appear, ed the upturned face of a man not seen before. The mortar and dust were cleaned from his lips, but he was buried so deeply that no Immediate help could come to him. On all sides blackened end bleeding faces, distorted with agony or dread-
jful In
death, urged the crowd who had scaled the Jieap to assist them to redouble their efforts.
The rescuers themselves took their Jives in their hands when they went into that fiery hole. The burning walls of the Iraildinir threatened at every moment to
fall on them too. But they kept at their task till the last man was carried out, a burnt and blackened corpse, or yet living in agony. Every year in this land brave firemen are killed or disabled while trying to save the lives and property of others. No money can pay for service Buch as this.
Surely those who say there are. no heroes today forget our firemen.
THE UNITED STATES ABUT. Gen. Wesley Merritt writes in Harper about the- present military force of the United States. He describes the little army—twenty-five infantry regiments, ten of cavalry and five of artillery—that has been mostly engaged in keeping the peace between whites and Indians for more than half a century, except during the years of the civil war. Its other duties have been occasionally those of a national police during riots.
Over the little regular army of 25,000 men are three major generals and six brigadier generals. The major general longest in service as such commands the whole army. Within the army is the hospital corps, attached to the medical department permanently. Members of the hospital corps must be single men, and if one marries he is not permitted to re-enlist in the corps when his time expires. There are also the engineer corps and the ordnance department.
Gen. Merritt says some things which will strike dismay to the legions of handsome, pink cheeked members of our national militia:
The militia of the United States will answer well the purpose of a "second line" in case of war with a foreign power, but it is not now, and never has been in the first days of war, fit to take the field. This may not be a popular view to take of our citizen soldiers, but it is a fact that not one single circumstance in all our experience as a nation contradicts. Our civil war was with an enemy as deficient as ourselves in instructed soldiers, and during the first year of the *»ar there was not a battle fought whero half the number of regular soldiers would not have defeated both armies united. In saying this in regard to tho militia It Is not Intended to underrate the material of which It Is composed. In my opinion there is not an army in tho world that could defeat an equally strong American army, prepared with proper drill and discipline. But these take time, and neither ukase or czar, bull of pope nor act of congress can make an army without them.
The fashion of fighting has changed so much that it is now no longer what it was, even during our civil war. The heavy lines of battle have disappeared, Gen. Merritt tells us, and fighting must hereafter be done in dispersed order. The shoulder to shoulder movement under fire will not be known in the successful army of the future, but in its place will be the dispersed order, in which the individual discipline of each soldier will be the main reliance.
SOME ANNEXED WOMEN. A i.. oi'K Tribune cones ponders# writes that the women of southern California towns are doing more for the development of that region than the men. A notable instance is given in the case of. San Diego, which, like many another town, was left high and dry "when the boom busted." •The distressed inhabitants saw their town sliding to the wall. Something must be done to revive prosperity. The chamber of commerce passed resolutions. At this point the correspondent says:
Somebody suggested, perhaps in sport, that the women could do more to revive business than the chamber of commerce, and the first thinb* known was the organization of the "Ladies1 Annex to the Chamber of Commerce." Some of the members wanted it callcd the '"Woman's Annex," but "lady" in the west has a greater dynamic effect than "woman." The affair wus under the auspices of the chamber, but as a matter of fact the most work has been done by the women. They have undertaken the Improvement of teu acres of the present wilderness called the city park, and they will make it a veritable beauty's bower of flowers and vegetation they keep Jp a permanent exhibit of Sau Diego county products, and a wonderfully interesting affair it is they keep tho city authorities up to the mark in making public Improvements they entertained the senate committee on arid lands and the senate committee on Pacifio railroads during their visit to San Diego as the distinguished statesmen had never been entertained before they have taken in hand the raising of the half million dollar subsidy to be offered for anew transcontinental railroad connection. In fact, there Is nothing that comes up whloh will benefit the town that these women do not pitoh in and work for.
The ladies are the wives, mothers and daughters of th« business men of Ban Diego. They have accomplished so much that their example is being imitated. Other towns near, among them Elsinore and Los Angeles, have also formed ladies' annexes to clean the streets and help other public enterprises.
CHEAP NEW FUEL,
For some time the Philadelphia and Reading railroad have used as fuel bricks made from culm, the waste dust of anthracite coal, with good results. Mr. George Newton, of Pittston, Pa., has gone a step further and produced also from culm a fuel which is declared to be superior for domestic use to anything ever burned, except natural gas. We may now expect the huge mountains of culm that marred the landscape and were a waste and nuisance about the mouth of anthracite mines to be transformed into cheap and first class parlor and range fuel.
Mr. Newton takes the dry dust and mixes it with certain chemicals to make a paste of it. The paste is run into molds and subjected to hydraulic pressure. It comes out hardened into small bricks, just the size for a parlor grate or range. It burns cleaner tha® the finest anthracite, gives not a trace of smoke and leaves not a clinker or a cinder.
As to the cost of thus transforming culm to first class fuel, it is insignificant. Mr. Newton says that twenty-five cents a ton will cover the cost of the chemicals. Tho rest of the cost will be that of the labor employed in the mechanical processes of mixing and molding.
The ideal fuel will never be reached till man gets rid of smoke, coal and ashes altogether, but until that stage is reached this new culm product seems as
near the ideal as maD can come at present, in regions where natural gas is not. It will be a godsend to the smoky cities of the west that are now forced to depend on bituminous ooal.
EXPBESSIONS OF THE MONTH. A Frenchman (M. T. Pideret) lias written a curious paper on the physiognomy of the mouth. The varied expressions of the face are the result of evolution. When tho primitive man tasted anything he did not like, instinctively he separated his jaws so as to get the tongue as far away as possible from the palate. He did this when he tasted things bitter or nauseating. In process of the ages tliis physical expression of disgust and aversion came to be used also of feelings that were bitter and unpleasant, as soon as the primitive man was sufficiently developed to know one feeling from another.
Hence the look of the face which M. Pideret calls the bitter expression. Fancy yourself tasting something intensely disagreeable, and your face will instinctively assume it. The sides of the nose and the middle of the upper lip are lifted, and the skin of the forehead is wrinkled vertically. The bitter expression in the diagram M. Pideret gives us is remarkably like that the countenance of Roscoe Conkling wore habitually. If the expression has a dull look, and has become chronic, it indicates bitter suffering, and "is a sign that the peraon is suffering from bitter feelings and trials."
On the other hand is what our writer names the "sweet expression." It has been evolved with the process of the suns in the same way as its opposite, the bitter one. When the prehistoric man tasted something agreeable, he tasted it as long as he could, drawing the corners of the mouth slightly upward and the lips softly back against the teeth. Fancy you are tasting a delicacy you are very fond of, and the face will assume the sweet expression. In course of the ages, this too came to express mental emotions as well as physical ones.
Pideret says the sweet expression is rare. It is almost never found among men, but is occasionally met with among affectionate women. When it is constant In the face, it becomes altogether too much of a good thing, like eating candy all the time, and grows tiresome to the beholder.
Among the present Anglo-Saxon race, however, there does not seem as if the beholder would be wearied out in that way too oftgn.
It is predicted that the labor conference at Berlin, which Emperor William called and from which he expected so much, will not amount to anything, since one side will persietently ask what the other side as persistently refuses to give, and that will be all there is of it. May be so. But the importance of this congress is not what it does or does not do. It consists in the fact that such a conference was called at all, and called by an emperor. That shows the dimensions to which the workingman's cause has grown in a century. When the French revolution broke out the most amazed classes were the royalty and nobility. They could not understand that there was such an element as the common people. Themselves and the clergy were all they had ever taken into account. But now the civilized world over the burning question is the rights of working people. Demagogues proclaim them from the housetops and the church is taking a hand in enlarging them.
A good deal-of newspaper comment is excited by what is said to be the change of heart of Senator Allison, of Iowa, on the tariff question. From being a thorough protectionist, apparently, a year ago, he has now decided that the country has come to a point where tariff revision is necessary. In a general way the senator would follow the Benate tariff bill of last year, but he thinks business changes in the country since that was passed have made changes in it also necessary. Things could go on the frea list now that were not put on that list then, and other articles could be reduced. Mr. Allison is satisfied there should be a deep cut in the duty on sugar, say 45 par cent.
THE township elections will occur on next Monday. The new law regulating eleotions and the manner of voting will not be in force then, but the law against bribery contained an emergency olause and became operative upon its passage. The Bepublioans should familiarize themselves with the law and prosecute every Democrat who violates it.
The Blair education bill was unfinished business in the United States senate for a good many years before it was finally talked to death.
A Lady in South Carolina Writes: My labor was shorter and less painful than on two former occasions physicians astonished I thank you for "Mother's Friend." It is worth its weight in gold. Address The Bradfleld Reg, Co., Atlanta, Ga., for particulars, Sold by Nye & Co.
fry B^CK-DRMtgHT tea for PypnjMta,
To Cure a Bad Cough
Use "Dr. Kilmer's Cough cure (Consumption Oil)" It relieves quickly, stops tickling in the throat, hacking, catarrh-dropping, decline, nlpht-sweat and prevents death from comsumptlou. Price 25c. Pamphlet free. Btnghamptcn, N. Y. Sold, recommended and guaranteed by Lew Fisher.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoriai
('Copyrighted by S. S. S. Co.)
To Cure Kidney Troubles
As the elements that give color to the rose are conveyed in the sap that circulates through the capillaries of the shrub oh which it grows, so does the
blood
Use "Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-root Kidnoy, Liver and Bladder Cure." It relieves quickly and cures the most chronic and complicated cases. Price 50c. and $1.( Pamphlet free. Binghampton. N. Y. Sold, recommended and guaranteed by Lew Fisher.
Backien's Arnica Salve.
The best salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It Is guaranteed to give perfect satlsfac'. Ion, or
money
refunded. Price,
25 oents a box, For sale at Nye & Co. drugstore. Dr. Henley's Hemedy For Ladle*
Dr. Henley's Celery, Beef and Iron, contains greater elements of strength than any known tonic. We believe it has greater merit, and has cured more nervous troubles and weaknesses In humanity than any known remedy. Price $1.00 Sold bv Dr. E. Detchon.
In its treatment of rheumatism and all rheumatic troubles, Hibbard's Rheumatic Syrup stands first and foremost above all others. Bead their medical pamphlet and learn of the great medicinal value of the remedies which enter into Its composition. For sale and highly recommended by Moffett, Morgan & Co.
Pains and weakness of females are alwavs due to want of vital force. Milton's Nerve and Lung Food supplies that force. It is the only true tonic for weak women. It works a cure by building up the whole system. Sample bottle free. Nye & Co.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorlau
Simmon's Liver Regulator is the foe of malaria as it throws off the bile and prevents Its accumulating.
Hibbard's Throat and Lung Balsam. For throat and lung troubles this remedy has no equal. It is guaranteed to cure consumption in its first stages, and even in advanced stages of that disease it relieves coughing and induces sleep. You may have a cough or a cold at any time, therefore no househod, especially with children, should be without it. For all affections of the throat, lungs and chest, croup, whooping cough, hoarseness, spitting of blood and all pulmonary diseases it has no equal.
Prepared only by Rheumatic Syrup Co., Jackson, Eich. Ask your druggist for it. For sale and highly recommended by Moffet, Morgan fc Co.
Cold In the head? or Chilblains? or Chafing? or a Burn? or any Old Sores? The best thing In the world for it is Colmanls Petroleum Balm. Get a free sample at the drug store of Nye & Co.
Merit Wins.
We desire to say to our citizens, that for years we have been selling Dr. King's New Discovery for consumption, Dr. King's New Life Pills, Bucklen's Arnica Salve and Electric Bitters, and have never handled remedies that sell as well, or that have given such unlvorsal satisfaction. We do not hesitate to guarantee them every time, and we stand ready to refund the purchase price, if satisfactory results do not follow their us These remedies have won their great popularity purely on their merits at Nye & Co's. drug store.
DRUNKENNESS LIQUOR HABIT—In all tne World there bnt one cure, Dr. Haines* Golden Speolfic,
It can be given In a cup of tea or coffee, without the knowledge of the person taking it, effecting a speedy and permanent cure, whether the patient is a moderate drinker or an alcoholic wreck. Thousands of drunkards have been cured who have taken the Golden Specific in their coffee without their knowledge, and to-day believe they quit drinking of their own free will. No harmful effect results from its administration. Cures guaranteed. Send for circular and full particulars. Address In confidence, GOLDEN SPECIFIC Co., 125 Race Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. 46
To Nervous, Debilitated Men. If you will send us your address, we will mall you our illustrated pamphlet explaining all about Dr Dye's Celebrated Electro-Voltaic Belt and Appliances, and their oharming effects upon the nervous debilitated system, and how they will quickly restore you to vigor, and manhood. Pamphlet free. If you are thus afflicted, we will send you a Belt and Appliances on atrial.
VOLTAIC BELT CO.,Marshall, Mich.
convey the elements that paint the cheek
of beauty with the ruddy glow of health—"The bloom of opening flowers." But in order that this beautifying process of nature may be in the highest degree successful, it is important that the sanguinary fluid be kept in that pure and wholesome condition so surely and so easily attainable through the use of S. S. S.
I take ulensure in submitting the following statement of facts that you may know the great benefit that has resulted from the use of your Specific in the vears of acc. The child, when two years of age, had a severe attack of scarlet fever, which leit her with ashattered constitution. Among other evidences of impaired nutntion.was what the doctors MllU In her fifth year she happenedto a slight accident which resulted in the dislocation of the hip joint, and, from the iritation thus set up. terrible abscesses of .the hip a pi a re at at a in re a in three years, discharging continuously. At this time, through the influence of friends, 1 put her
°n When this*treatment was commenced the abcess was very large, having six perforations, puss •discharging through them all. During this treatment several spiculae of Ixjne came out. and by the time she had ii nished her fifth bottle the abscess had entireW^tealed, her health had been restored, in short, she was^well^andhgg)^, ana so continues.
out, ana by aud general
was ncu ttliu Urtuuy, auu av «... MRS. J. A. WIEGNEK, Lower Manx St, Slahngton. Pa.
gHERIFF'S SALE. 4
By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from tho Clerk of tho Circuit Court of Montgomery county. State of Indiana, in a cause wherein John C. Brockonbough is plaintiff and Harvey 1\ Wilhite et al are defendants, requiring' me to makethe sum of nine hundred and thirty-two dollars and twenty-five cents, with interest on said decree and costs, 1 will expose at public sale to the highest bidder, on
SATURDAY, APRIL 10, A. D. 1890, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day, at the court house door in the city of Crawfordsville, Montgomery county, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding noven years, the following real estate, to-wlt:
The southwest quarter of tho northeast quarter of section twenty-four (24) in township twenty (20) north, range six (0) west, pontainlng forty (40) acres in Montgomery county, Indiana.
If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, interest and costs, I will, at tho same time and place, expose to public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest a nd costs. Said sale will bo made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement a
EBENEZER P. McCLASKEY, Sheriff Montgomery County.
By E. H. Cox, Deputy. M. w. Bruncr, Attorney for Plaintiff. March 29, A.D., 1890.—p-f $10
N
OTICETO NON-RESIDENTS.
In tho Montgomery Circuit Court, March term, 1890. Emily Most vs. Carl Most. Complaint No. 9,695.
Now comes the plaintiff by Hurley & Clodfelter, her attorneys, and files her complaint for divorce herein, together with an affidavit that said defendant is not a resident of the State of Indiana.
Notice is therefore hereby given said defendant, that unless he be and appear on the first day of the next term of the Montgomery Circult Court, to b« holden on the fifth day of May, A. D. 1890, at the court house in Crawfordsville, in said county and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined In his absence,
Witness my name, and the seal of said court, affixed at Crawfordsville, this 27th day of March, A. D. 1890.
HENRY B. HULETT, Clerk.
March 29,1890.
N
OTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS.
State of Indiana, Montgomery county, in th Montgomery CircuitCourt, March term. 1890 Elizabeth L. Dawson vs. Bailey J. Dawson Complaint No. 9,088.
Now comes tho plaintiff by Humphrey & Reeves, her attorneys, and files her complaint for di^oree herein, together with an affidavit that defendant. Bailey J. Dawson, is not a resident of the State of Indiana.
Notice is therefore hereby given said defendant that unless he be and appear on the 8 th day of the next term of the Montgomery Circuit Court, to be holden on the 13th day of May. A. D. 1890, at the'court housein (Irawforosville, in said county and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in their aosence.
Witness my name, and the seal of said court affixed at Crawfordsville, this 17th day of March, A. D. 1890.
HENRY B. HULETT, Clerk
March 22.1890.
OTICETO NON-RESIDENTS.
IN
State of Indiana, Montgomery County, in tho Montgomery Circuit Court, March term, 1890. William H. Spiuning vs. Elnathan Wert. Complaint No. 9,693.
Now comes the plaintiff by Burford & Whit-ting-ton, his attorneys, and flleB his complaint and proceedings In attachment, together with an affidavit that said defendant is not a resident of the State of Indiana.
Notice is hereby given said defendant that unless he be and appear on the 19th day of the next term of the Montgomery Circuit Court, to bo holden on tho 20th day of May. A. D. 1890, at the court house in Crawfordsville, in said county and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in his absence.
Witness my name, and the seal of said court, affixed at Crawfordsville, this 26th day of March, A. D. 1890.
HENRY B. HULETT, Clerk.
March 29 3.
Estate of Sarah A. McCall, deceased, OTICB OF APPOINTMENT.
N
Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned has been appointed and duly qualified as Executrix of the estate of Sarah A. McCall, late of Montgomery county .Indiana, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent.
MARTHA A. McfiAT.T.
March 26,1890.
Estate of Mahala Griffith, deceased. OTICE OF APPOINTMENT.
N
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, has been appointed and duly qualified as administrator of the estate of Mahala Griffith,
Dated Mar. 25, 1890 Administrator.
MEN WANTED!
To represont our well-known Nursery in this county, for town and country trade. Good pay weekly, A steady position with a Nursery of over thirty years' standing, and a known responsibility. Wo want good, llvoly workers, and will pay woll. Good references required. Apply quick, stating age.
CHASE BROTHEIIS COMPANY, Chicago, III. mar. 1. m2
That hacking cougn can be so quickly cured by Shlloh's Cure. We guarantee it. For sale by Moffett, Morgan & Co.
FIRST MORTGAGE
LOANS,
AT4 PER CENT Interest Payable Annnallj.
APPLY TO
C. W.WRIGHT
Fisher Block, Room 8, Crawfordsville, Ind.
MONEY TO LOAN.
First Mortgage Loqn at per cent Interest, payabl annuay. GOOD NOTES CASHED.
Ezra, O. Voris
122^4, Main street, Crawfordsville, Ind.
C. N. WILLIAMS & CO.,
[Successors to Williams & Wilhite.]
MONEY to LOAN
6 PER CENT.
Farmers are granted the privilege of paying the money ba a to us in dribs of $100 or more atanyinteres payment.
RealEstatee, Insurance Agents.
Southwe orner Main and Washington St.
ABSTRACTS OF TITLE Hster,1secured
aving the services of Wm. H.Wobite of tho firm of Johnson St Webster, abbtraotors of title, I am prepared to furnish on short notice, full and complete abstracts of title to all lands in Montgomery county, Indiana, at reasonable prices. Deeds and mortgages carefully executed. Call at the Rocorder's office. oct5yl THOS. T. MUNHALL. Recorder.
George W. Hall,
Dottier in
All Kinds of Goal and Coke,
Glazed Sewer Pipe,
FIRE BRICK. LIME, CEMENT, ETC
OFFICE
AND YARD—Southwest oorner of Walnut and Market streets
GEO. W. STAFFORD,
ATTORNEY-AT LAW.
No. 10 5 East Main street over Kline & Graham's jewelry store, Crawfordsville. Ind.
W, E. HUMPHREY",
W. M. RSBV
Humphrey & Reeves,
J: ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, and^Noturlcs Public. Ornbaun Block. Crawfordsville, Ind
Burford & Whittington,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA. Practice in Montgomery and adjoining eounj tZes and in tiie Supreme and Federal oourt Are members of the largest and most reliable law associations and make collections throughout the world. Mortgages foreclosed. Estates properly settled. Charges reasonable. Office over 23^4 East Main street.
P. s. KENNEDY, U. S. Commissioner.
8. C. KBNNKDY Notary Publi
Kennedy Kennedy,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW.
CRAW FORDS "VTLLB. INDIANA. Office in Orubaun block Norfcli WushLnsrton St M. H. GALEY B. V. QALBT
GALEY BROTHERS, DENTISTS,
CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA Office Fisher block, Main St.
THEO. McMECHAN,""" DENTIST,
CRAWFORDSVILLE. INDIANA, enders his service to the public. Motto a ood work and moderate nrioes."
For Sale or Trade.
The undersigned has for sale, or trade foi Montgomery county land, 200 acres, ail fenoed with hedge and wire, creek runs through oorrolls and pasture, never falling water, about 100 acres Drake up, balance pasture frame house with 5 rooms, frame chicken house: good well, garden paled in, timber for fuel and frame barn 32x32, room for 10 horoee corn crib and buggy shed gTanary 12xli, 1.000 walnut trees, 600 poplin, 450 apple,pear, plum and cherry trees, sold over 200 busteta of apples last year.
Also 80 acres—New frame house with 6 rooms, frame barn, room for 5 horses, oorn crib, oorrells and an orchard of 95 trees, bear next year. All located In Cowley county, Kansas. WM. G. HUTCHING8. 44—16 Six miles east of CrawfordsviAe
LOOSE'S EXTRMT CLOVERBLOSSOM
LU
o:
Q.
CANCER*'*
Female Weakness, Ulcers, Tnmor?, SoreSi AbscesBes, Blood Poisoning:, Salt Bheoin, Catarrh, Erysipelas, Rheumatism and all Blood and Skin Diseases. PRICE fi. per Pint Bottle, or 6 Bottles for *5. 1 lb can Solid Extract &^R01Jf.l«it0LS.0#.!d?5S«ma.Cft
Sold by Lew Fisher.
