Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 7 November 1891 — Page 1

-K

0

C/3

Top Buggies Jump Seat Snrri.es

THE

BEST GOODS

-AT-

Reasonable: Prices

Is the Mot I of

O O

Repairing a Specially.

a

a

Your patronage .Solicited.

ALBERT S. MILLER.

NORTH OF COURT HOUSE.

YOU WILL

THE BEST ASSORTMENT OF1

Hardware,

'Doors, Sash, Glass.

BUGGi iiA iSUliRlESS und (JAlliS

Birdsell Wagons,

AT BEST PRICES

TINSLEY

A I N S

Dinner Sets, Dishes, Glwssware, Tinware, Jewelry, School Supplies,

Curtain Poles, Oil Paintings, Wall Packets.

N FACT EV E11V TIIIX (I IX

Hotisseliold Goods

A Rolled fioiil Ring for 10 cents a. N)lid Gold Ring lor2" cents. Best line of

GLOVES AND MITTENS,

Cull my Store, on West Main street, where you will ilwtvs .ie welcome. C. 0. CAltLSOX.

All inv own ni.ike. Spi ing Cushions in all Buggies. All kinds of

A

ARTINS

BUY

BOSS Watch Cases

A BOWS

111 SOUTH WASHING TON 1 J- E'l

BLANKETS AND ROBES.

A BIG LINE AT

B. I*. ORNBAUN'S.

WATCHES

51ST YEAR.—NO. 11 CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1891.

ABD

JEWELRY

uraay MM.

ISSUED EVEKY SATURDAY.

XV.

IIKNKKL,

litisiiu'88 Mnnafror

Ten plain drunks were tilled in the mayor's court Monday morning.:

Mrs. Susan Johnston, of Greencastle, is the guest of Mrs. Sarah Johnston. McCarthy's Mishaps," a mirth-pro voking comedy, at Music Hall Tuesday night.

The Citizens' National Bank" has been removed to the elegant new quarter's in the Crawford block.

Hon. E. V. Brookshire leaves for Washington City the latter part of next week, remaining until the 4th of March.

We will publish next week a list of premiums to be paid agents furnishing lists of subscribers to

January '2nd,

!'$100.00 Cash 125.00 Cash

THE REVIEW

by

Wallace Sparks is receiving #150 per month salary in the Clerk"sollice at Denver, Colorado, and will not return to this county to ri si It.

The gay and festive burglar entered the room of Lew Kramer on east College street Saturday and took therefrom the major portion of his wardrobe.

Dan Smith, the young man who was wounded by the accidental discharge of a shot gun at his home near Alamo last week, died of his wounds last Friday.

Dave Thompson's portable hotel, which has been furnishing the gas trenchers with food and lodging during their tour to the gas field, was totally destroyed by fire near Thorn town Wednesday night.

The Natural Gas Company met to tix a schedule of rates Thursday morning but owing to complications arising relative to certain consumers were forced to adjourn without fixing rates. The meeting will convene again sometime next week when a schedule will be made.

Capt. William Marks was thrown from his buggy by a vicious horse running away near his home in Wayne township Wednesday evening and sustained several bad bruises about the head and face, a sprained armed and a badly wrenched fool. The buggy and harness were totally demolished.

The following speakers have been in to make addresses during the Hag presentation to Miss Emma Conners in dill's 1 lall, at Ladoga, next Wednesday evening: Gen. M. I). Hanson. Gen. Lew Wallace, Judge Harney, Hon. E. V. Brookshire, Hon. M. D. White. W. T. Wliittington and E. Y. Comstock. State President 1'. O. S. of A

Anderson's New Enterprise. Another big manufacturing concern was planted in Anderson to-day, and tho work of building it will commence next week.

The name of this new factory is the •'American Coping and Class Cresting Works," and they will manufacture all kinds of coping and cornice ornaments of galvanized iron and various colored lass, the latter cast in all manner of shades, sizes and colors. These will be two very large buildings, the one in which the iron work is done being of wood and the glass factory being of iron. From two to three hundred men will be employed when the factory is in full operation.

The projectors of this enterprise are C. B. Nelson, (president) the patentee?, of Crawfordsville J. M. Zimmerman, of Roanoke, Virginia: Mr. Vance, oL' Craw fordsville: John Sehies (secretary) and Henry Wagner, glass works.

of the Pennsylvania

-Anderson Bulletin.

Death of Mrs. M. H. Galey.

Mrs. Milton 11. Galey died at her home, one half mile west of the city Friday morning, of heart disease. While her death was rather sudden yet it was not unexpected, as she has !oji}? b'sufferer from the complamt: ^1. v" Oalev"s maiden name was Fannie Clintock, and was born and rained in Hillsboro, Ohio. The deceased has for years been a member of and a faiihti earnest worker in the Methodist cliui' and a lady of many noble' traits of "Ivy. acter. She leaves a husband and one Soil.

Purchased the Road,

No New Trial Goes.

Yesterday morning Judge Snyder ruled adverslv on Alice Follick's appeal for a now trial in the celebrated chicken case. The plaintiffs attorneys were granted !K) days to file a bill of exceptions and state they will appeal the case to the Supreme court.

All But Onei

0/ the Great States

1

Go Democratic.

New York, Massachusetts, Iowa, New .Jersey, Maryland, Virginia and

Mississippi.

Give Big Democratic Pluralities and Big Democratic Gains,

WHILE OHIO GOES TO THE ENEMY BY 18,000.

A Great Day For The Democracy.

|. l.NWI'.N's inc. MAJORITY.

N i-.W YIJK-K, Nov. J. Fiower's majority in the state is 40,4 JG. In this city Flower's plurality was 5S,S47, showing a falling off of more than ten thousand votes cast for Hill in 1SS8. The democrats have gained several senators, and it looks as ir Sheelian would have the deciding vote. Complete returns from Kings county give Flower a plurality of 1(1,185. Brooklyn elected Boody (dem.) bv a pluralit.v of 7.S00.

Returns received by the Associated Press up to noon to-day show that the democrats have elected fourteen senators and the republicans fourteen. Pour districts are still in doubt, but the returns so far received indicate that the democrats will carry three of these and the republicans one. The senate will thus have a majority of two.

The same returns indicate that the assembly will stand sixty-one republicans. sixty-four democrats and one county democrat, who was indorsed by the republicans. Of the democratic seats four are still in some doubt and of the republicans one.

DEMOCRATS REJOICINO.

J.)KS MOINES,

la., Nov.

0

I.-

After tho

great battle of yesterday the smoke is clearing away. The republicans find themselves defeated and the democrats are beginning to celebrate their victory. Governor Boies arrived in Des Moines to-night from Waterloo. The streets are packed with excited people shouting for Boies.

At the Register office complete returns from eighty-three counties have been received. Up to S o'clock in these there is a net democratic gain of 80."). If the gain is kept up to-night in the remaining sixteen counties his plurality will lie in the neighborhood of 8.000, a gain of 2.000 over two years ago. The returns on the other slate officers are scattering. If Boies' plurality is S.OOO. as it now promises to be, the rest of the de" or will be elected by

1

iroit-'he-vuti.iui

!'pnbiicaiis have

••''•fiit

:ii

mton. lieutenant-

•.'uvtiiior. who iw running ahead of l.eeler in ^.icts that have reported. claim Sabiti (rep.) r'

of

I

For the past two years a toll gate has been kept suspended over that. sivtv-ri\-hundredths of a mile of gravel ro:td in Walnut township which that township on the purchase of which vot negatively when Union township bought all within her borders, This li.tie st ret eh of road with its toll collector has been such a source of persecution to the fanners along the line that they wen' to work last week and collected the ?.)() necessary to purchase the road. The toll gate has been torn down and all I is once more serene.

:n.

nem clei'-:

-vr' fuller returns than ..•1 I.. .••••I to decide the fate governor. Lu.r.., niucc Boies' plurality at

JO.OOi) iii!'l thus ire democratic state ticket elu.irx Luc republicans will have a i.i ij )vi!y in Urn lov er house arul tho democrats titu.il! majority in the senate. Ti. t. eublic.tns will have a majority on joint baiiot.

GOVERNOR S.IVS THAT IS T11K MKANI.v or TI!K KKSL'L.T. Ho.-vrn: ?«*/,*. I. .Governor Russell (dem.) this iniing claims his election by ab'iuS ion r.!i msarul. iih twenty tow:i« toliem- from Russell ha1' a p!ur.)!i

0

Russell. 153,491 Kimble (pro.), 8,150 Winn (peoples), 1,318 Russell's plurality 5,201. The four missing towns last year gave Russell a plurality of 13S.

CAMPBELL ISKATKN

CINCINNATI, NOV.4—The

first returns

to the board of electors to-night was received after 8 o'clock, and at 9 only eight returns were in. Last year nearly all the returns were in at 10 oelock. These returns showed that in tho precincts heard from in Cincinnati Campbell's vote fell short of tho light democratic vote last fall. They also showed that the vote was less than 93 percent, of the registration, which is a falling off as from the usual percentage. .At midnight the returns received left no rioubt that Campbell's vote in Hamilton county was holding up to that: of Crowley in 1S90, while McKinlev had fallen below tho vote ofRj-an. In 110 precincts in the county, nearly one-lialf, the net democratic gain was 1,333. The same ratio continued would giveM'cKinley a plurality in the county of 5,700. When 423 precincts in Ohio, outside of Cincinnati, had been heard from the re-...hi',-,m net gain was 1.7?" The pro hibition vole in these prec'nets fell below that of last year 705, while the gain of the people's party over last vear'svotewas 1,217.

Later returns place McKinlev's plurality at 18.000 and tho eompleetion or both houses republican.

The feature of the result is the complete drop of the people's party. Its vote in the state will not exceed 11,500, and it claimed before the election at least 75,000. The prohibitionists will lose 7.000 votes from last year's polling.

IN PENNSYLVANIA.

PHILADELPHIA. NOV.

secret."

truction. The

-it whole state ticket

7.j.fG in t.h- state.

Licteuanl-t I'.vernor ilaile and the balance of the republican ticket are elected by ample pluralities. State Auditor Trefey (dem.) is defeated. 1:1.1 a. m. -Returns from all but foi,

owns in tho state gave Allen 148,200

4. Complete

figures from fifty-three to sixty-seven counties in the state, including Philadelphia and Allegheny, and careful estimates for the other fourteen counties show a plurality of 50,608 for Gregg, (rep.) for auditor-general and 53.S8S for Morrison (rep.) for state treasurer.

I ELISEV ALL

lllCllT.

TKENTON, N. J., Nov. 1.—The demo­

TERMS, 81.25 PER YEAR

%UJItiti iJipw iwfojv

Mitivivu i.-

GHKETIXi.

5injuusr

aaii (Jontrl Errors af^rfrarttitn.

Ml. Klino call always bo fouml and will l)o glad to meet all in need of hi^errioes in tho corn.• all errors of Vision ut the Old Reliable .rowclry St wo of

KLINI5 S& GRAHAM

ON MAIN STREET, OPPOSITE COl'HT Hoi'SK.

crats will have a majority in both branches of the legislature. At the political headquarters of the democrats in this cit\ the claim is made that democratic senators have been elected in Hudson, Hunterdon, Middlesex, ailcl Sussex counties. Tho democrats also claims to havo elected forty assomblymen in the state.

Ji:i:sEv CITV, N. J., Nov. 3 Hudson county returns are incomplete, but indicate a sweeping democratic victory. Tho democrats elected R. S. Hudspath state senator by about 8,000. Nino and possibly ten of the assemby districts havo been carried by the democrats, together with all the county officers.

.MARYLAND IN LINE.

BALTIMORE,

Nov.

4.--Frank

RICHMOND,

Brown,

democratic candidate for governor, LLJLS a majority of between 18,000 and 20,000 as figured out at democratic headquarters.

YIKfilNIA.

A., Nov.4—No county

sixtcn senatorial districts havo

in

the state as far as heard from shows

tho

election of,ii, republican or an independent. About three fourtlit of the

sfato

has been heard from, which shows

that

elected

democrats with*four districts to

hoar

from. This, with tho nineteen democrats who hold over, makes the senato stand thirty-live democrats to one republican who holds over.

1:.J0 a. in.—The democrats claim every •senatorial district in the state. Reports received l-.-re indicate that this is tho case, although news from the Sixth and Eighteenth districts is meager. Partial returns show democratic gains in two districts, and there is hardly a doubt that the Eighteenth has boon carried by the democrats. Both of these districtswere republican in ilie last legislature,??'

'MISSISSIPPI'.

Mississippi elected everything straight' out. not a republican getting within hailing distance.

Con Cunningham for children's suits 3 years old to 12 vears.

Cook as Mother Did!

How many a young wife's heart has been saddened

by hearing the above remark And yet how often th'-

vvords are true especially when cake, pastry or biscuit arc

in question The reason is plain, yet it is "like telling a.

0\ir mothers used and are using Dr. Pricc't Cream

Baking Powder. They cannot be misled into using any

of the ammonia or alum powders. No dyspepsia no r.ljow

complexions, when mother did the cooking.

The first symptoms of ammonia poisoning, ways "x

New York paper, which appear among those who work. va:.

ammonia factories, is a discoloration of the nose ^nd

head. This gradually extends over the face until the.fc»sv

plexion has a stained, blotched and unsightly apr».':ar'an

Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder is the only pure--',

cream of tartar powder that contains tho whites of

I^r. Price's Cream Baking" Powder is ported by all authorities as free from Ammom.?,-'-Alum, or any otlier adulterant. In fact the.: purity of this ideal powder lias never been questioned.

I.O: A-