Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 8 November 1892 — Page 2
TVJore«Co1d«.Cou*h».SoreTlir©atCr©op,Xnfluen i*.Whooping Cough,Bronehiui *n«i Asthma, a c*r Ui& cor* tor Consumption »o 6r«i •»**. ™d *»u« to adraneed stage*. V'K- »t one*. You will see the •xoellnttt effect after Ukiajt ib« s«*» |j jt.u»«T(r7*b«r». Lire* WiU»«. 50
DAILY
c«i« cad fl.lN.
JouRKnL.
THK .101'HNAL COMI'AN\ T. H. MiM'Al N. ProsMent. A.liUKKNK. Secretary.
A. A. cCA 1 N. Tre&su rcr.
TUESDAY, NOV. S, 1892
This Date in History—rlov. 8.
1 (.'oliiiiibns, now confident that he h*ui found Opamro, muj«HI westward alons ihc coa?t of Cuba, visiting everal villages which ho fuuni! well built and containing furniture ami ornaments that. showed much skill: th« Indiaus tolil him of a place called Ctihanaran- -mean-
ki
WHIT.
inu of Cuba"—where there wnfc much cold, but he believed it k» be their lu'onnnetauon of Kublal Khun. the irreat sovereign visited by Mnrro l'ojr. liVU—Kduard Pocock. oriental wrholar. bwn. 1G74—John Mdron, author »f "Paradise I.oM," died: Iwirn ltf**. 1723—John Bj ron, Knclih sailor, horn died 17M5. 17TJ-William Wtrt. eminent l» *.vyer n.nd nu•'nor, born in Hlndcn^burt Mil.: died in
Wifhiiivrton. 1 U. I'olsnd giuHoiined. VsS— ()5r. »*r »)». Howard, trencral, l»orn in iwi-.. M»».
JN»1-• MN*'n
and SUdell. Confederate envoys,
taken from the Hritish *teatm-r Tr#nt bv Captain Charles Wilkes, of the United .States steamer an JaHnto. lc71 Captain 'barle- Krancis Hall, noted explorer, died in the nrrtir regions born 1?2L 1SSA—Frederick Archer, famous Knglish jockey, died. -1800—Public aquation beyan in Belgium for an eiuht hour feorkin£ tiny nnd universal suffrage. Major David P». MrKibbin, L*.S. A.t died tn Washington city, ayed 59,
\r?,l
11011. Josiiih jni!ii-v, cliairiuaii "f the natinnnl ii' im cr.uic cuiiiuiitt-O'in camui^ii iili-ratuie, is a ion of the famous l.tj.iiiv w.iicli has been contributing greiil: men in Massachusetts and the nation fur nearly two centuries. He was born ill was graduated from Harvard in l-so and admitted to the bar in 1
SSJl, and has represented the his
tone town of (^uincy four terms in the Massachusetts legislature. He is now a member of congr'-s.
JAMES P. SANDERS.
Among American Odd Fellows Past Grand Sire James P. Sanders, of Yonkers, N. Y., is known as the Grand Old Man. He has been present at forty-six consecutive annual sessions of the New York state grand lodge and at thirty three sessions of tlio sovereign grand lodge of the w«,rld. He was Iwrn in New York city April 5, lHit). He prac ticw law in Yonkurs.
JOHN B. SMirn.
The Republican state convention of New Hampshire, without a ballot, unanimously nominated Hon. John B. Smith, of Hillsboro, for governor. He was born Ajril 12, 1838, at Saxton'n River, Vt., and after several years service as laborer and clerk engaged in the manufacture of woolens in 1800 at Hillaboro. He has built up a vory fine property, known as the Contoocook mills, and is oho of the wealthy men of the state. His wife was a daughter of Stephen Cullender, of Boston, and they have two children living.
^rt'ju'hor ami ougroMnun.
h£ Ss5=-
M"? .J?k
I10
,s®»
•v s-WM''
LUTiint F. M'KI.VNEY.
Hon. ljiiilicr Franklin McKiiuiey, Deinocranc candidate for governor of New Hampshire, was bom nenr Newark, 0., April 25, 1S41, anil wns reared on farm. In August, 1S01, ho L'nli.sted in tlio First Ohio cavalry, in which ho sorvcil as sergeant till Fe\ruarv, when he was discharged for disability. After two years in Nebraska ho studied for the ministry and after a pastoral in Maine located in New Hampshire. In 1SS4 he was a candidate for congress and was defeated. He was elected in 18S0, nefrated in 1SSS, re-elected in ISILO and now represents the First district in tlio Fifty-seeoud congress,
1 oeiali*t Candidate.
wmsm
Mm
WW,'
mi:?..
S1MI IN WINC,.
There tirf now live candidates in the
field for president, the hist man out be- philus ing Mr. Simon Wing, standard bearer of lie socialists. lie is a manufacturer of hofographic snpplios in Boston, and also onducts a large general book and job printing business. He was born at St. Albans, Me.. Aug. 29, 1S2G, and was nominated 011
his tiftieth birthday. He
is a wealth}- widower with three children.
Nearly Nominated for Governor.
tm
W
^VN
I. BAUD. MUS.
HAMILTON,
Mrs. Bard and Mrs. Hamilton were delegates from Laramie and Uinta counties to the recent Democratic state convention of Wyoming, in which tlio latter received the complimentary vote 01
BROKE THROUGH A TRESTLE.
her
comity for governor, and Mrs. Bard was almost nominated for that otlice. There was a triangular contest and a dead lock, and on the thirty-sixth ballot a gailant delegate', to vary the monotony, put Mrs. 13ard in nomination. Hervotes soon readied thirty-six: only forty-eight wore inquired to nominate, and there was a panic. The other delegates consulted and united on a man, much to Mrs. Bard's relief.
A MIrhlsan Democrat governor of Michigan the Demomuninated Judge Allan B,
nave
Morse, whose career is a l'resh illustration of the curiosities of politics. He has the honor of bein the first Democrat to carry Michigan on a a a ''vote since the war, although
Greenback-Den* at had previously elected a govern-
JIRIKIK A. II. M"KSII. or. In ISfjo. when acomparativoly unknown lawyer, he was put up against the eminent Chief Justice Thomas B. (,'ooley and defeated him by about S'.O.ilOO. Chief JuMice Morse is a small, ijuict man. and wears an empty sleeve as a mute reminder of his sacrifice to the Union cause when a soldier
lie Manage* the Spellbiiidem. Hon. William M. Hahn, manager of the speakers' bureau of the Republican national committee. was born in Carlisle. Pa., and was taken to northern Ohio at an early age. At ix tored tht iinnv as drnmmer bov in S ix fourth Ohio, but soon became a regular so 1 and made a good record. I11 180'J
u-
HAHN.
located at Mansfield, O., where he has been very successful in business and is a manager for his party.
To iuung Mother*
who nre for the first time to undergo woman's severest trial, we offer yon, not the stupor caused by chloroform, with risk of death for yourself or your dearly loved and longed-for offspring, but "Mother's Friend," a remedy which will, if need ae directed, invariably alleviate tlio pains, horrors and risks of labor,and often entirely do away wittfthom. Sold by Nye ,fc Booe, druggists.
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Castoria.
I
Unit M*r Klllml *ml Srrrral Itijurril In Train AcoUldil. HAZLETON", IV, Nov. 8.—A terrible accident occurred at Uonevbrook Mon(l iv by which one man was instantly killed, two fatally injured and four? others dangerously wounded. The. men were employed by Crawford it Llugan and were engaged on the "strip-: ping" at No. 10 colliery. At noon the men left their work, intending to eat dinner. A train of loaded ears was passing an.1 they boarded it- The road runs over a trestle which spans a deep ravine, and when the train, reached the middle of it the timbers guve way, precipitating the cars and men to the bottom, The loud roaring noise of cracking timbers attracted the attention of other workmen, who set to work rescuing the unfortunate men. Michael Korko was dead when found. llis body had been terribly crushed and every bone was broken. The other victims were wedged between the cars and debris, but after hard work all wore extricated.
GEN. MILES EXPECTS WAR.
lie Fear* nn Outbreak TltU Winter Auionf? Chcy*mueb nud Arapahoe#, KA.VSAS CITY, MO., NOV, 8.—Gen. Miles, of the army, is in the city on his annual tour of inspection. The general has just come up from the Iiuliau territory, whore the Cheyeuues and Arupahoen have been allotted grouud and placed on quarter ratious. The general says that it will not be possible for the Indians to farm this winter and that it will be folly for them to Le expected to live ou the rations alloted. 13c fears trouble. "There can b© no doubt about the desperate character of the situation," said the general. "War may be looked for this winter.'* The general inspected Fort Leavenworth Monday and declared that the army of the southwest is in readiness for the expected outbreak.
Few l)c**rtrr* ar Homestead. PITT3BCEGH, Xov. fe. It was reported Saturday that there would be wholesale desertions from the Jlomestead strikers* ranks, but it failed to materialize, some four or five striker* only returning: to work. The great strike is now over four months old and an authority asserted that only sixty-four strikers have so fur accepted company terms. In the meantime, though, the mill management hns secured about 2,700 workmen elsewhere who are sticking. Altogether the company must have hired 5,000 men, but for quite awhile nearly as many left or were discharged as came in.
Death of Or. Thoophilu* C. Abbott. IAN9tN»», Mich., Nov. 8.—Dr. TheoAbbott, ex-president
Majority In the Next House. WASHINGTON, Nov. 9. —Two years ngo the secretary of the democratic congressional campaign committee gave out the day before election as his prediction a majority of 38 for the democrats in the. house. The tidal wave struck the couutry and the majority rose up to I.TiS. Profiting by that experience Mr. Lawrence Uardncr, the present secretary, dccliues to give any prediction further than to claim that the majority of the democrats in the Fifty-third congress will be more than 40.
Mra. THrnetl In Bankruptcy. LONDON, NOV. 8.— Mrs. C. S. l'arnell has claimed the protection of the Kuglish bankruptcy court and a receiver appointed at her own Instance to take charge of her affairs. The effect of tlio order will be to place another obstacle in the way of the release of the Paris fund, as. while her alYairs are in bankruptcy, no money in which she is interested, whether as trustee or otherwise, can be dealt with except by leave of the court.
Indian l.andH i'urrhu.nd.
SALKM, Ore., Nov. 8.—Judge R. H. Boiso has just returned from the Siletz reservation, where he had been orie of the commissioners for the purchase of lands from the Indian*. Tlio ooramigsion effected a contract for the purchase of 180,000 acres for 8142,600. or about SO cents per acre. A great deal of this is lino timber land, the farming lands already having been allotted.
Pnwncd the Kevciitius of tlio State. CHIHUAHUA, Mexico, Nov. 8.—A sensation has been crcatcd in the state government circles over the discovery by Gov. Juan Ahumada, the new executive of the state of Chihuahua, that Gov. Koderquois, his predecessor, has pawned the revenues of the state to the amount of $110,000. and that he had also contracted a floating indebtedness of SI 18,000.
Denth of Join. •*. Iwvlor.
Cl.RVKl.AKD. O., Nov. 8.—John L. Taylor, the hoad of the dry goods firm of William Taylor, Son Co., died suddenly at his home at a. m. Ho was somewhat of an invalid, and pneumonia set in, causing death very suddenly. He was for three years president of the Yonng Men's Christian association.
Killed by the Cam.
INDIAN ATOMS. Ind., Nov. A special to the News from New Albany, Ind., says: Eliza Elliott, a young lady, was struck by an Ohio A Mississippi train at 8 a. m. Monday in this city and died an hour later. She was deaf and while walking down the track was run down. Uoth legs were severed at the hipa.
HcliJ Her Itoiea Kr»n In Dentil. CHATTANOOGA, 1'enn., Nov. 8.—The incoming Nashville train killed an old woman who was crossing the track at Lookout. A bunch of roses that she he in an a on that could be found near the body. No one could identify the remains.
$100 Jteward,
$100.
The readers of this paper will lie pleased to learn that there is at least one disease that science has been able to cure in an its stages and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, it requires a consti tutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood 'vnd mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying tlio foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that tliey offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that they cannot cure. Send for list of Testimonials.
Addross, F. J. Chenoy & Co.. Toledo. O. Sold bv nil Orugijists. 7.1c.
ONE ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is tnken it ia plensant
and refreshing to the taste, and acta
uently yet promptly ou the Kidneys,
y-iver
and Bowels, cleanses the sys-
"in effectually, dispels colds, head-
Kites and fevers and cures habitual
•vDnslipalion. Syrup of Figs is the
.inly remedy of its kiud ever pro
iticcd, pleasing to the taste and »e-
to the stomach, prompt ii:
ite action and truly beiietici.il in it:
afl'ccts, prepared only from tlio mot.
ileal thy and agreeable substances, its
tentiy excellent qualifies conrnend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
of the
state agricultural college, died Monday after an illness of six years. For the last year ho had been confined to his bed. The immediate cause of his death was pneumonia. lie. was a native of Maiue and a graduate of C'olby university, where he was at one time an instructor. In 1S0S he was elected president of the agricultural eolleg and resigned in 1S85 because of failing health. He was 70 years old.
Svrup of Fig? :3 for sale in 50c
iiul ?.l boillc-3 by all leading drug
^ists. Any reliable druggist win,
uii\ not have it 011 hand will pro
ov./e it promptly for ai one
V.IIL
wislu's to try if- Do itot accept anj
snl.stitutc.
CALIFORNIA F!G SYRUP CG Si* CHZOUlSVUlf. ATW yOfi*
Kl RK S
DUSKY
IAM0N
Healthful, Agreeable, Cleansing.
Cures
Chapped Hands, WoundB, Burns, Etc Bemove* and Prevontc Dandruff.
AMERICAN P&W SOAP.
East fo' General Household Use
Noo«
CONDENSED
^eat
Makes an every-day convenience of an old-time luxury. Pure and wholesome. Prepared with scrupulous care. Highest awrrd at all Pure Food Expositions. Each p: rk.igc makes two large pies. Avoid imitations—and insist on having the
NONE SUCH brand 1. .V SntH.F. Syracuse. N. Y.
Newspapers Unaorse.
"Educators are certainly the greatest benefactors of the race, and I, after reading Dr. Franklin Miles' popular works, cannot help declaring him to be among the most entertaining and educating authors." He is not a stranger to our readers, aa his advertisements appear in our columns in every issue, calling attention to the fact that the elegant work on Nervous nnd Heart Diseases is distributed free by our enterprising druggists Nye & Co. Trial Bottles of Dr. Miles' Nervine nre given nway, also Book of Testimonials showing that it is unequalled for Nervons Prostration, Headache, Poor Memory, Dizziness, Sleeplessness, Neuralgia, Hysteria, Fits, Eoilepsy
When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she had Children, shoeave them Castoria.
I Hove. Taken several
Bottles of Bradfield's Female Regulator for falling of the womb and other diseases combined, of 16 years standing, and really believe I am cured entirely. for which please accept my thanks
Mas. W. E. STKBWNH, Kidge, GB. Ilucklen'H Arnica Salve Thebest salve in the world ftr ents bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, ohilapinb, oorns nnd all skin eruptions, and loss tively cures piles, or no pay required It is guaranteed to give perfeot satisfaction, or inouey refund™!. Fricfl 15 oents per boT. For sale by Nye & Booe, druggists.
Strong frit hchsck.
Among the thousands of testimonials of cures by Dr. Miles's New Heart Cure, is that of Nathan Allisons, a well known citizen at Glen Rock, Pa., who for years had shortness of breath, sleeplessness, pain in left side, shouldors, smothering spells, stc. one bottle of Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure and one box of Nerve and Liver Pills, cured him. Peter Jnquet, Salem, N. J., is mint her witness. For twenty years suffered with Heu. Disease, was turned away by physician., as ncurable, death stared him in the face, could not lay down for fear of smothering to death. Immediately after using New Cure he felt better and could lay down and sleep all night, and is now a well man. The New Cure i« sold, also free book, by Nye & Booe..
to match.
SS& BISCHOFS
mnm
business of our experience
in
with the
of this city, both in
^UNDERWEAR
NCAV
127, 129 East Main St.
127, 129 East Main Street.
Special Sales and Cut Prices have not been necessary to give us the largest
WHY?
best quality.
selected. We always t\_ just what the people want and need, the latest and 11.
Novelties and Staples. And 0111 prices arc always the lowest, consists 1
Our Stock in this Department is unusually large and complete. Cotton Wool and Merino, Union Suits, Seperate Garments: White, Natural Grey Scarlet
tnd Black. We are
Ypsilanti
Underwear.
^Housekeepers' Linens.
We always have special things to offer in
designs in stamped and embroidered
line Hemstitched and Knotted
receiv ed. They are suitable
Aii the Latest shades and color combinations in piain and
promise a rare treat
Tickings. Dcmins,
Storm Serges, Imperial French Serges, Drap d' alma, Whipcords. We
We have constantly any cjunlitv or brand vou may want in 131cached 01* l^rown
Cariton Flannels, Prints, etc., at lowest
CURTAINS AND UPHOLSTERY,
Special designs in Lace and Chenille Curtains, Dotted Swisses, Embroidered
printed Can tens and Silkalencs, Satin Russe for Draperies in great
varities. Plain and good effects in curtuin poles.
SEASONABLE BARGAINS.
Our Flannel and Blanket Depart
Offer the following: 10-4 white blankets, 83c per pair 10-4 all wool
good heavy comfortables, 75c each. Large satin comfortables, 99c.
"Home Made" comfortables in all qualities. Having made
We know they are Good and Clean.
LOUIS BISCHOFS
store-
Hecause our stock is the largest uid best
We are the recognized leaders of merchandising
Large Assortment and Low Prices.
sole agents for this county for
Fast Black Cotton and Wool Hosiery.
STORE.
w^»
this Department. Beautiful new
center pieces with, doileys and side board scarfs
fring Towels have just been
for wedding or birthday presents.
novelty
to all who favor us with a call. ,*
DOMESTICS#
weaves.
Muslins.
market
prices.
scarlet
blankets.
)9C'
Large
assortment
them outsell
Crawfordsville I11^'
