Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 26 May 1866 — Page 2
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CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND Saturday, May 26 1866. WM
Printcilnud Published crerySumrdnT "Tlorntog, by A E S O W E N Washington Street, 2| Story, Lra't New
Brick.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION':—$2,00 IX ADVANCfi.
I A I O N
LARGER THAN ANY PAPER PUBLISHED IN CrnvrforilnTille Advertisers, call up and examine our List of :rT8KB8CBIBKK8!.rir
Louisville, New Albany fc Chicago Railroad.
Time Tabic which took cffect June HHh, 18(15. GOING N0UT17. Accommodation 10.M) a. in Through Freight 2,4ft n/m! Express g.oa
OOISG SOUTH.
Express........ fl.23 a. m. Through I-reight H..5a Aooommodation o,n p,
ln
Good connections mnde with nil other roads. U. F. MASTIN, Superintendent. June 24th. JPC5.
DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET.
(SECRETARY OK STATE.
lien. MAHLOX 1). MAN SON. of Montgomery.
AUDITOR OK ST.VTK,
CHRISTIAN G. BADGER, of Clnrk.
TREASURER OF STATE. JAMES B. RYAN, of Marion. ATTORNEY GKNEKA JOHN R. COFFROTII, of Huntington.
SlTERINTENIlENT OP I'l'ni.IC IN'STltt'CTlON', R. M. CHAPMAN, tf Knox.
§h( ffiotulctiMv. fg
The President has pardoned Leon Smith, of the rebel liftry.
The pencil trees in Kast Tennessee are overburdened with fvuit.
Gen. I.ogan, in a card, declines being a candidate for Congress.
The cattle plague has disappeared from South America.
Beast. Butler has been elected by the Massachusetts Senate, major general of the State militia.
The President lias appointed a son of General Grant's to a cadetslnp at West Point Military Academy. if
Juilge Hug lias, of Indiana, lias lieen appointed General Agent of the Treasury, in place of W. P. Miller.
The House Military Committee are maturing a bill to increase the regular army in accordance with the views of General Grant.
John C. Fremont has purchased the Southwest Pacific Railroad, in Missouri, for.$1,300,00a
9%C
The rumoi that Gen. Howard is about to resign his position at the head of the Frcedincn's Bureau, is still current in Washington.
Lewis D. Campbell, of Ohio, the newly confirmed Minister to Mexico, has arrived in Washington to receive his final instructions from the Secretary of State.
Over two thousand bodies have been disinterred and placed in the National Cemetery at Seven Pines, one thousand two hundred of whom are unknown. Hie work still goes on.
Three hundred thousand dollars in fractional currency will bc"i3sned by the department this week, to take the place of the same amount of mutilated returned. jr-fc,
The Academy of Music, destroyed in Xow ork Monday night, was valued at 8350,000. There was an insurance of 8130,000. The entire property lost will amount to $500,000
The Washington special dispatclics says the Senate Military Committee have increased the total pay and emolument on the bill creating the grade of General to near $20,000
The railroad bridge over the Wisconsin River, at Kilbourn City, Wisconsin, the finest in the State, was burned oil Sunday. It cost $25,000, and fifty or sixty days will be required to rcplaco it. fts /•,.
A dispatch from Eric, Pennsylvinia, that eighty-seven cases of arms belonging to the New York Fenian Senate, have been seized in that city. They wero consigned lo J. F. Cronin, Head Center of that count v.
The Spanish fleet-, under Admiral Nunez., lias been badly worsted in an attempt to bombard the Peruvian port of Callao. The vessels wore compelled to back out. of the fi-ht. the batteries proving f„
0
much for them. The
damage done to the town is trifling. Admiral Nunez is reported among the killed. ..
The steamship Cuba arrived at New York, on Monday, with European advices to the 13th. The severest financial panic since 1852 has visited England, though at latest advices the public mind was more calm. For several days a perfect tumult existed in London, and the minor cities were hardly less excited. Runs •were mado on a large number of banks, but nearly all were equal to the emergency. Several immense failures occurred. The news of the suspension of the firm of which Sir Morton Peto is the senior member, will be received in this country with equal surprise and rogret. flis assets ftre estimated -t $25 000
000, and it is confidently expected thatTii presont trouble will be temporary. Parliament restored some measure of tranquility to the financial world by suspending the Bank Charter Act. There was also a great panic in the cotton Market. No hostilities have occurred on the Continent, but tho news is very warlike. The exoiteraent in Italy is at feverheat. Prusia and Italy have their entire armies mobilized, and Rusia and Turkey are placing thorts on "^war-footing- '.
The President has nominated to the Senate the father of General John A. Logan as United States marshal for the southern district of Illinois. There is no probability of his confirmation.
The following is the text of Napoleon's speech at Auxerre, to wliioh is attributed the cause for the financial panic in England and Europe: "I see with pleasure that the memory ot the first hmpire has not been effaced from your n.inds. Believe mo, for ray own part, I have inherited the feelings entertained by the chief of my family for this energetic mid patriotic population, who sustained the Emperor in good as in evil fortune. 1 have a debt of grat itudc to discharge toward you. This department was tho first to give me its suffrages in lbl.s, because it knew, with the majority of the French people, that its interests were my interests, and tli.it I detested, equally with them, those treaties of 18 lo, which it is now sought to make the sole buses of our foreign policy. I thank you for the sentiments you have expressed toward me. Among you breathe freely for it is among tho working population, both in town and country, that find the real genuine friends of Fiance."
Wailing and Cursing in the Journal Office. Wo understand that a number of tho radicals gathered in the disunion den, Inst ight, known as tho JoritXAi. office, to take counsel and comfort each other. The desertion from the party of Seward, Stanton. Wells and MeCulloeh. is a blow they little expected. The result uf their deliberations is said to have been entertaining. At lirst they spoke in half whispers nnd bated breath, their feelings beins too full forutterance. In time they became more composed nnd broke out in the usual billingsgate style of radical denunciation—they cursed tho above gentlemen as traitor.-', copperheads, disloyal butternuts, Ac., Ac. One uf the speakers advocated tho policy of making the temperance question the main issue in this county and lotting the negro suffrage issue go to hell, while another pitched fiercely into Jim AVilson and Dr. Sluun its the cause of all their troubles. Peter Konned.v. the chairman of tho meeting. at this jiinetnrc took a big cry—he wept muchly and frequently and cursed the day that he ever left the runic village of Danville, where he asserted with broken sobs, there were more saints than ever dwelt in Heaven,
Tho distress of IVter caused another long silence, when on motion a resolution was offered by Rill lvrugg and seconded by Peter, that
WHEREAS, The future prospects of tho Republican party being extremely ELICMTY, m.lilicrs evincing a determination not to be cajoled ordriv into the support of any party that advocates nes suffrage, now therefore be it
KESUI.VEP, That in order to insure our success in the full elections, l'oter Kennedy be requested to deliver his Fourth of July Address of last year, at all cross roads in our county, and that Joseph Addison Gilkey deliver at the same time his Tornado poem and Valedictory address.
Tho resolution was carried without debate and after more weeping by Peter the meeting adjourned.
Coor., premeditated nnd malicious lying, seems (o be the tactics adopted by the Journal. It styles the thief, KETCIUM, now in the penitentiary in New.York, as a copperhead, and says lie was in attendance nt tho Democratic National Convention, at Chicago, in 1804. It is .m old dodge of the radicals, whenever any of their leaders commit a crime and get into the penitentiary, to desert them and swear they never belonged to their party, and charge that they were members of the Democratic party. KTrui M, at the time of his arrest, was Vice President of the New York Loyal League Club, and was noted for liis blatant loyalty, always urging the mobbing of Democrats and the destruction of their printing ofliccs. llis conviction would never have occurred had not the victims of his rascality been members of the League. Had they been Democrats, the criino would have been justified and' an effort made by the Loyal League to shield him from punishment:
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liiiilast. number of the Journal, (disunion) in its anxiety to save the sinking fortunes of the negro equality party in this county, refers to the discharge, from prison, at Louisville, of the brutal murderer, Rev. Col. Jnquess, who was arrested last winter for murdering a woman whom be bad seduced. It says the jury leturned a verdict ot not guilty, in the case. Ilns is simply false, the jury made 110 such decision whatever. The case was nolle proneijmcd bv the Prosecuting Attorney, who, lrke J.icqucss, was n-loyal man. and knew it would never do to let a shining light of the Republican party run the hazard of bis life by standing trial before a jury of honest men. Tho Journal and Chicago Tribune are the only papers that have yet had the hardihood and check to defend this murderer, or to express a disbelief of bis crime. s"'] 7,
THE Republican wire-workers in (own. have selected the ticket to be nominated on the 0th of next, month. They have held two sccrct meetings during the last week, and from what we can learn from a gentleman who is posted and who is supposed to be rill viyht oil thi iifgvo suffrage quf?ti,n, a certain candidate for sheriff will be astonished at the clever manuer in which lie will bo chiseled out of the nomination. There is fun ahead, boys. Wait and see tlie jeretnydidling of the republican town clique.
J*.! CI
To be Hurled.
We understand that the Republican Cenlral Committee, have, after mature deliberation, concluded to bury the Journal editor's loyalty! Its stench has become so unendurable that many of the party, irrespective of color, have been seized with violent vomitings. The committee, in their report, say—it. is the double distilled quintessence of all stinks—it ivould drive a dog out of a tan yard, and turn ?i4,
ou
the stoniaclio of a buzzard.
a E a
F. B: GUTHRIE & BROTHER keep as fine a market as can be found in any western city. Their meats are of the best quality and sold at the lowest rates. They have recontly purchased a lot of fine young cattle which they intend slaughtering during the t«ason.
HARPER. This magazine for June is upon our table. It contains oeveral interestine articles. ,f„.
For the Roview.
A Sccrct Circular—Exposed by a Conservatlvc Republican. FBEDERIOKSBURO, May 24,1866.
MR. EDITOR:—I send you tho following seorot
cir
cular sent mo by a fellow calling himself P. S. Kennedy. who styles himself Chairman Central Committee. Who this Kennedy waj and wliero he enmo from was fora timo a mystery to mo, but upon dilligent inquiry I learned from gentleman who formerly resided in Hendricks county that the said P. S, K. formerly resided in Danville, in that county, whero he was generally known to the villagers under tho sobriquet of "'Weeping Peter"—a ono horse lawyer and a dlseiplo, in a small way, of God nnd humanity. My long connection with tho Republican party and tho supposition that I supported tho policy of tho disunion Rump Congress nnd opposed that of President Johnson, no doubt led thigclown ol the legal profession to presume that I was all right on the nig—that I might safely bo counted on to assist in aiding tho circulation of a disunion paper, which advocates negro suffrago and equality, and opposes the noble nnd patriotic policy of our President and his Cabinet in seeking to restore the union of tho States nnd give lis back again the glorious old nion as the fathers made it. In the future. Weeping Peter should be more careful as to who lie sends hissecret circulars to, there is a great change going on. The people want pr-ace—tliey want a restored Union, and with the help of our noble President they mean to have them.
A JOHNSON REITIILR'AS.
"Mr. DEAR Silt:—No weapon is more effective in a roi.LTICAI. CONTEST than a well conducted County '"Pcr- Mr. Kecney. the proprietor of tho "Crawfordsville Journal," proposes to enlarge his paper about tho middle of June, and has made arrongoinentsfor a thorough and vigorous prosecution of the contcst against Treason and Coppcrlieadism. I urge upon you the necessity of aiding in its circulation. •Make a thorough canvass of your township and get every subseriberpossible especially make it a point to see those who take no paper at all. We must not suffer "Loyalty to be made a stench in the nostrils of the people." Hut we must make "Treason odious.
Respectfully
P. S. KENNEDY,
Chairman Central Committo."
For the Itcvicw,
A Letter from a Soldier. WAVIXAXD, May 10,180G.
Mil. EDITOR:—I notice in the Montgomery Journal a great deal of fulsome praise and soft soap bestowed upon the soldiers. I presume the object is to induce us to vote for men, this fall, who favor negro suffrage, and oppose the reconstruction policy of Andv Johnson. If this is the game, the fool who edifs the paper will find himself grievously mistaken this fall. The soldiers, at least a large majority of them in this county, have no notion being made dujicn of iny political party, especially by that party which boldly announces ltseU in favor of negro voting. Having served three years in the Federal armies, ami assisted in my humble way rs a private, in putting down the rebellion, 1 can assure you that, not only myself, but my comrades generally, arc disgusted with the lick-spittle fawning of tiiis stay-at-home cowardly creature, who, during the war, shirked from his duty as a patiiot and a man by constantly exhibiting his rotton grinders lo Provost Marshals as a plea to escape the honorable duties of a soldier.
CHICAMAUGA.
Crawfordsville Lager.
The fame of the Lager of our brewer, HEXRY LOR EX/., is co'cxtcnsive with the State. We are informed that some gentlemen were here a day or two since and proposed to form a joint, stock company, capital one hundred and eighty thousand dollars, and ci ect a magnificent brewery, and place HENRY I.ORKNZ at the head. This will be a good move and add greatly to the wealth of our city.
At.. RAMKY, an old veteran, who played the role of Provost Marshal for this county during the war with the snug sum of ono hundred nnd thirty dollars a month, has gracefully declined the office of County Treasurer. Magnanimous Ax.. Verily the grapes hang high and are exceedingly sour.
MIJ.I.KR & Co., on Market street, have now, in their warerooms, splendid assortment of carriages and buggies, which for elegance and beauty of .finish, will compare with the best pastern work.
THE new agricultural warehouse, on Washington street, is finished, and its spacious dimensions filled with agricultural machinery nnd implements of every description.^?^'
GOPEY roit JrNi:.—This excellent magazine, for the coining month, lias been received It is a splendid number.
THE month of May for 1800 will long be remembered ns the coldest experienced in the memory of the oldest inhabitant. Uptopresent writing, there have been but. three «r four warm days during the month.
THERE will be a meeting of the German Evangelical Synod, at Evansville, May 31 All delegates returning from the meeting, who present a certificate from the Secretary, will be passed free, over all railroads.
WHAT EVERYBODY SAYS
Must 1)0 true, is an old proverb. And it isafnet beyond dispute that all toll one story about tho almost miraculous cures performed by Coo's Dyspepsia Curo. Chronio and obstinate cases tof Dyspepsia of long standing will surely givo way to its curative powers. Indigestion, sick headache, heartburn cramps, pains and colic, in either stomach or bowols souring and rising of food, constipation, general debility, flatulency, cannot exist, when Coo's Dyspepsia Curo is used, A\ beg of the afflicted to make the experiment itcanbe found at all drugstores.
A Ilnrrisburg paper tolls of a man who has failed in business four times, been upset in a stago coach, and thrown down nn embankincntjef sixty feet fallen hoadforomost through a hatchway in a sto'ro in Reading has been married thrco timos, and is the father of twenty one ehildron. "Ho still lives," j? in business at Ilarrisburg. and kocps Roback's Rittors nnd Blood Pills constantly in his family.
THE radical press call President Johnson •'A. Johnson." He is the definito article The Johnson, not. tho one who killed Tecumseh, but tho ono. who has,knocked tho party of the radicals in-the head.
TnE Journal, in speaking of its disunion convention, says: "It will bo full of men who took up arms and marched southward to defend the Union." Will they go with you on negro suffrage Ah! there's the rub.
WE'LL STAND BY AXDY JOHNSON.
We'll standby Attdy Johnson, Though tho hoavy night hangs dark. And a thousand foos assail him
A* ho guides our shattered burquo. Safe or tho bounding breakers, O'er Destruction's rolling wavos And with sinewy arms and nerves of steel 1 ho threatening danger braves. We'll stand by Andy Johnson, .. nir chieftain of our land, "-\A know that ho'll protoct us,
And we pledgo hjm heart and hand. lie with an oyo of justice socs Tho fearful coining end, And oh his country's glory writes S.I. UlS naiuo^-the wbito man's friend.
We'll stnnd by Andy Johnson. Theuinnof Liberty, Ho treads the Northern trnitors down.
And tunko tho white man free. lie holds that same old banner up,
1
With Freedom's hands to tu'ine, A wreath of love around its folds. Where cyery star shall'shine.
We'll stand by Andy Johnson, For the night has passed away. And the dark thick olouds are vanishing
Hefore the porfoct day. Soon! the sun. in all its beauty bright. And glory from aboyo, Will Hood the land with Joy and Peace,
The land that freemen love.
What it Means—Whither Drifting. The Xa lion a! Tiilvlhi/ciiccr saVs that a suit lias been instituted by a negro against the Baltimore ami Ohio Hail road Company, for refusing to sell him a ticket for passage in a first-class car. It also says that Forney, the editor of the ashington City Chronicle, ''lias set the social example of rcciving negroes at his mansion, where he entertained them in the Btylc of luxuriance Usual with him."
We have already noted the fact that the House ot Congress has passed a bill to Amend the organic acts of the Territories of Nebraska, Colorado, Dakotah, Montana, Washington, Idaho, Arizona. I.'tali and Mexico, which contains the following as its ninth section, viz: hut tri/h it the Territories aforesaid there shall he no denial of the elect ice franchise, to citizens of the Cuited States because of race or color, and all persons shall, be equal before the law and all acts and parts of acts either of Congress or the leyishttire assemblies of the Territories aforesaid inconsistent irith the proitsions of this act are hereby declared null and roidf'
A motion was made by LeBlond, of Ohio, to strike out this section of the bill, but his motion was lost by a strict party vote—the Hadieals voting to retain the uegro suffrage section, and the Democrats voting against it.
It may lie asked what all this means. Wendell Phillips in a recent speech tells US. He 833 "4f
,. 1 5
•iNegro suilrnge meant a score, of n-yro Congressmen sittimj in the House r/ Representatives. It means colored merchants in New Orleans and colored Senators in Columbia. It means negro- representatives sharing in making railroad laws and other laws. It means toctal equality, and that was where the Southern met the question. Social equality follows hard ou the heel of the ballot-box. and the South knows it, and she resists ncuro suffrage for what must follow it."
We suppose social equality of whites and blacks at the North will follow negro suffrage, as well as the South.
And, we suppose, that is really what (he Radicals of Congress arc working for.
IT will be full of men who took up arms and marched southward to defend tho Union, while thousands of the cowardly faction represented by tho RKVIKW were fleeing like frightened sheep, for the borders of Canada,—JornSAL
WILL the negro equality disunion editor, inform us if Goo. Ilolloway, formerly of this city was one of those frightened slieep. George always voted your ticket and like yourself, was a loud, mouth loyalists
BEADLE.—This favorite monthly magazine for June has comc to hand. This is one of the best periodicals published in the country
MR. A.J, SNYPEII, of Younlsville. subscribed one thousand dollars for the new railroad, on last Wednesday. ,''
THE weather continues cold ami dry.
A naiiy was discovered in a wood pile in the north part of the city a few days since.
A ItKiM-nMOAN in Maine, wluPhad served out his time of thirty days in the Augusta jail, was asked, when lie came out, how he liked it. "I had a bully" time, said lie: "There were seventy-six inmates of the jail, and not a d—d Demo crat among the lot."
SomK of tho citizens of Philadelphia arc taking action for the purpose of properly providing for and educating Willie peering, the only survivor of the Deering family so inhumanly butchered. The poor desolate little boy is left entirely without means.
GENERAL
M. S. IJASCALI, was last
week defeated for couneilman in the Fourth Ward by C. F. Butterfield, a good Democrat, by a majority of twenty-two votes. Poor Rascal—he's played out: he's a D. D. He couldn't be elected supervisor in a respectable road district he's cut and dried and d—d.—Blu/fton Banner.
•r The Saints.
At a recent, meeting of the Radicals at Ilagerstown, Md., a resolution was adopted that "none but loyal men should govern a State, even if their number should be less than five thousand." They consider none loyal but themselves, and though they number but one in a hundred of the white population, they declare to be the only ones entitled to rule the nrncty-nme hundreths. They are like the Puritans who resolved that the earth belonged to the Saints of God, and then resolved that they were the Saints-.-
An Opinion as to Indiana under Radical Legislation. Wc judge from the following, the Radicals intend to ^opeu their howl updn the Secretary of the Treasury. The Washington correspondent of the Rochestor, N. Democrat (Radical) says: "There is a growing feeling of distrust agaiust Secretary McCullougli. Politically the Secretary of the Troasuvy is, next to Mr. Seward, the bitterest enemy of the loyal majority of Congress iu the cabinet. He takes occasion to parade these opinions before the Radical members. To a-Massacliusetts Representative, some days since, the Secretary declared that not two Republicans could be re-elected in Indiana, if the joint Committee's report was adopted. There are nianyjstrange rumors ailoat as to financial matters, with the general conviction that the work is rather mote than the Secretary can stagger under. He is considered more money-changer than banker more banker than statesman."
The admission of Mr. McCullough, who knows the people of Indiana intimately, that if the proposition that passed the Hoitse the other day to amend the Constitution shall be adopted, not (wo Republicans could he re-elcc/cd in Indiana., was enough to take the starch out of tho blatant Radicals, and make them regard the Secretary of the Treasury as an enemy. He told them the truth, however..^.,.
TMK city editor of the Richmond (Ind) Telegraph heralds the advent of a new
fangled bonnet in that place thusly: TIIK LATEST.—The latest Eastern fashion tor a bonnet-appeared ou Main street yesterday. It consisted of two ryestraws, tied together with a blue ribbon on the top of tlie head, and red tassels suspended at each of the iour ends of the straws. It was a "love of a bonnet:" price only $19. Vv"^
DOES the Journal endorse President JOHNSON'S reconstruction policy?
SPECIAL NOTICES.
Thompson's l'carl Drop Flour. This. Miporiur brand of (lour for family uso, manufactured from oid wheat, will bepromptly delivered by lenving orders at Shuc Hughes' grocery on Main street. ui2-»-3in
HOMKTIIIXfi THAT KVRKVIIODY SHOULD HAVK. Dr. Chase's Recipe's. The most valuable book for information published in the last century.
Cheap John, the ngc-nt for Montgomery county, will call inj cvcij one during tho present summer. inalUmO.
srKCTACLKS.
The best Sptfctnclos ever offered to tho public, silver and steel frame.--, sold ut tho lowest rates by ^malOmO. CHKAP JOHN.
TABLE LIWKV.
A magnificent assortment of Tablo Linnen, consisting of towels, napkins, handkerchiefs, Ac., of all sires, blenched and unbleached, will be offered for Bale to the lndii-a of Montgomery county during the present season CHKAP JOHN. maWmG.
NOTIO.NS OF F.VKltV KIM),
Consisting of Razors, Pocket Kmi'i'S, itc., can be hftdof .. CHKAP JOHN. malOni'V -.V,,
Lyon's Periodical Drops!
THE GREAT FEMALE REMEDY FOR IRREGULARITIES. These Drops are a scientifically compound fluid preparation, and better than any Pills, Powders or Nostrums. Being liquid, their action is direct and positive, rendering thorn a reliable, speedy and certain specific for the curo of all obstructions and suppressions of nature. Their popularity is indicated bl I be faot that over 100,000 bottlos aro annunllysold and consumed by tho ladies of the I'nited Statos. every ono of whom spoak in the strongost terms of prab'c of their great merits, They lire rapidly taking the place of every other Female Remedy, and are considered by all who know nught of them, as tho surest, safest, and most infallible preparation In the world, for the curo of all fomalo coniplnints. tho removal of all obstructions of nature, and tho promotion of health, regularity nnd strength. Explicit directions stating when they may be used, nnd explaining when and why they should not, nor could not bo used without producing effects eontrary to naturo's choson laws, will bo found carefully folded nround each bottle,.with the written signature of JOHN* L. IJ\ ON, without which none are gennino.
Prepared by Dr. JOHN' L. LYOX, in.'. Chapel Street, New Haven, Conn., who can lie consulted either personally, or by mail, (enclosing stnmp.) concerning all private diseases and female weaknc:
Price $1,5(1 per bottle. Sold by Druggists everywhere.
C. G. CLARC.tCO
.inng.yCfisn. Gen'l Agentsfor II. S.and Canada*.
'RELIEF IX TEN MIXTTES. 4
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Ot liiiMOI(, AH0KS," in this or anv other foiu ^l
t,
Pulmonic Wafers aro eounter-
mf'u'•
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bo known by the name
JJKl A Is being on ouch WAFER. •n .•
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Kciicvo Coughs, Colds, Horo Throat, Hoarseness.
T)
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BRYAN'S PULMONIC WAVERS in his pocket.
1
LIFE-HEALTH-STRENGTH. LIFE-HEALTH-STRENGTH. HFE-HEALl]jjSTRENGTH. The Great French Remedy
DR. JUAN DELAMARRK'S VV I
Celebrated Specific
Prepared Trcm a prescription of Dr. Juan Dolamarre. Chief Physician of tho Hospital du Nord ou Lnriboisicro of Paris. medicine is no imposition, but ia
I cure of Sporirifttdrniiu or Seminn] kvery specie*«»!' (icnitnl or Urinary lrTntibility, Involuntary or Nightly Seminal Emittions from whatever cause produced, or however HCvore, will be speedily releived and the organs restore ed to healthy action.
Rtutd the following opinions of eminent French physicians: We havo used tho Specific Pills prepared by Gnraneierett Uupont, No. iS14 Hue Lumbard, from tho prescription of Dr. Juan Delamarre, in our private practice with uniform success, and wo believe there is no other medicine so well calculated lo cure all persons suffering frain Involuntary Emissions or any other weakness of the Sexual Organs, whetherenused by a sedentary mode of living, excesses, or abfisf.
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Paris, May 5th, 1H03. BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS^ The Ucnuino Pills are sold by all the nrincipal Diuggists throughout the World, Price One Dollar per Box, or bix Boxes fur Five Dollars.
GARAXCIERE PRI'ONT, Sole Proprietors, «o. 214, l!uc Lombard. Paris. One Dollar enclosed to any authorized Agent, will insure a box by retgrn mai securely sealed from all observation, six boxes for live dollaVs."
Sole General Agents for America, OSCAS u. MOSES A to., -7 Courtlamlt St.i i. N.B.—French. Herman, Spanish nnd English Pamphlets, containing full particulars and directions Tor use. sent tree to every address. (dce3tl'05-tadCC.
Agents for Crawfordsxiilo and vicinity
.notn ef & stooe,
d30'«3.
iVo. •!, SCuipire lllocli..
Till5 EAT ENGLISH REMISDY.
SIR .JAMES CLARKE'S
Celebrated Female I^ills
Prepai edjrom a prescription of Sir J. .Clur/c. M. 1). Physician Extraordinary to the .Queen,.
This invaluable medicine i3 unfailing in the euro of all those paiuful and unngerous diseases to '.which the female constitution is subject. It moderates all excess nnd removes al 1 obstructions, and speedy cure may be relied on.
TO ^AKHIi:n l.ABJIKM
it is peculiarly suited. It. will, in a short timo, brine 011 the monthly.period with regularity. Each bottle, price One Dollar, beats the Cnvernincnt .Stamp of Great Britain, to prCTelit out: fruits
CAUTION.
These Pilis should not be tnken by Femalesduring the FIRST THREE MONTHS of Pregnancy, ns they arc sure to bring on Miscarriage, but at any other imo they lire safe.
In all Cases of Xervous and Spinal Affections, Pains in tho Back and Limbs, Fatigue oil slight exertion, Palpitation of tho Heart, Hysterics, nnd bites, these Pills will effect a cure when all oth«r means have failed and although a powerful remedy, do not contain iron, calomel, antimony, or anything hurtful to tho constitution.
Full directions in tho pamphlet, around each package, which should bo carefully preserved,
SOLI) BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
Sold Agent for tho United States and Canada, JOB MOSES, 27 Cortlandi St., Xow York. N. B.—SI.00 and postage stamps enclosed to any authorized Agent, will insure a bottle, containing .5(1 Pills, by return mail. dcc30-18C5.)!'
Dr. MARSHALIS'
v*v
Catarrh Snuff*.
This Snuff" has thoroughly proved itself to bo tho best articlc known for curing the Catarrh, Cold in llii! MB*ml and llriMlache. It lias been found an excellent remedy in many cases yf Sore OcnfiM-Av has been removed by it. and IlcarSiip" has often been greatly improved by its use.
It is fragrant and agrocable, and
Gives Immediate Relief
To tho dull heavy pains caused by diseases of tho Head. Tho sensations aftor using it aro dolightful and invigorating. It opens nnd purges out all obstructions, strengthens tho glands, and gives a healthy actio" to tho parts aO'ccted.
More Than Thirty Years'
Of Sale and uso of Ir. IVInrHlinll's Cntnrrli find llcndnchc Hiniir, has proved its great valua for all tho common diseases of the Head, and at this moment itstands higher than ever before.
It is rceoinmendod by innny of the best ph.vsiciansand is used with great success and satisfaction everywhere.
Read the Certificate of Wholesale Druggists in 1854.
The undersigned, having for many years been acquainted with Mr. ITIarmiinll'N t'nliiirh nnd P!11 clnthe gtiutr, and sold it in our wholesale trade, ehcorfully state, that we believe it. to hoeijuaL in every respect, to the rceomnicndat ions given or it for the cure of Catarrhal Affections, nud thai it is decidedly the best article we have ever known, fur all common diseases of the Head.
Ilurr it Perry, Boston. Reed, Austin it co.. Brown. Lainson Co., Reed. Cutler it Co.. Scth W. Fowle, Wilson,Fnirbankitco., llenshaw, Edmonds co.. II. H. II11 y, Portlnnd, Me.,
April 21. 18(115—Jni,
').
——-Ko^arwjkjirill^erojbjoetto. BRYAN'S PULMONIC WAVERS Twenty-five Cents. .Sold by all Drussrffis. Sola ^oPrjetor.JOli decSQ-BJ MOSES. 37 Cortland St. N^w
rk.
Barnes it Park. N York. A. 1). it 1). Sands, Stephen J'anl.t. co., Israel Minor co., McKesson Robbins. A. L. Seovill & co,, M.Ward.Closo A co..' Bush ,t Gale.
For sale by all Druggists December 3(1-1605-1 y.
Try il.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
ENGLISH GERMAN AND ENGLISH FRENCH
SCHOOL.
r^spoctfuHy announce to
l,n l' "f rawfordsville and vicinity, that lie has permanently located in the city for the purposeof .cachnig the Gorman and French languagesand will open course ol studios on the first Monday in May next, in the Public School House. For par.Vr "rsrn,prly ,':y
ctt0l''
0r
calling ot tho rca
dence of John Brukor. corner of Pykoraod Water treeis, whero the undersigned is stopping fir Aho present. 0130. 5 BAlVfll
Notice of Application Tor Liquor License.
virel?y
eivon to lho
th a
ci'iznns of Union
Ti n. W'i?' eounty. State of Jiidiiwia. n,,i i- \J G.iludson. a white ibald.inhfeBitantof Montgomery county, in tho State of Indiana, ol tho age of twenty-one years, will apply to tho noard of Commissioner# of Montgomery county, in tho htato of Indiana, at their next romilnr Wsimi commencing on tho 4th dny of June, A. I). mr for a license to retail intoxicating liquor?in a less crauns ,y
Law of 1850, for tho term of one year. My place of nuinoss and the preinisM whereon said liquors aro to be sold and drank iJ situated on parts of Loti number ninety (90) nnd ninety-two (0-2) in the origi-.t mil pint of the town of Crawfordsville. Union town-' ship, Montgomery county, Stalo of Indiana. mayl2'(iiiw3. WJLLIAM G. IHJDSOX.
Notice of Application for Llpuor License. "VTOTICE is hereby given to 'the citiieni or I'nion tvnii
lp
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§11
a-«»der-th* T%rip.nriio?
\Ionl«"inery county. Stato of Indiana.
I hat I, lioury Lorenz, o- whito male inhabitanl of Montgomery comity, in tho Stato of Indiana, of tho age of twenty.ono yettM, will nppJy jto the Board of/ l.ommiss'qn.ers of Montgomory County, in. tho Statu or 'nQiana.nt their next regular session .Mtnm'bnc-\" ing on tho 4th day of June. A. D. 1800. for a liccnso". to retail malt'liquor, bcor. ate and-ligor. in a lo
.. ... v..u.Uvoo iu« wncreon saia''! W
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is it at pa
?ir (W) on the cornero^ifarket and fWwfiJiff«?i'i n1mon'to^nship,vLnt
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Crawfora^villo, M^ntgouiery co\mty» .... msyi^tHJwn. IIEXRY LOREXZ.'.
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