Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 2 September 1893 — Page 5
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MASCULINITIES.
Fussy Old Gentleman—There's ally •on your nose,mum. Irascible Old Lady —Well, he ain't yours, is he? "What is a house without a baby?" asked a lady writer, and an old bachelor replied: "It is comparatively quiet."
An old man was never as young when he committed the follies of youth as he says he was when he recalls them.
Dobbs—There is just one way to get waiters who will not consider it a hardship to do without whiskers. Bobbs—What? "Hire girls."
Maud—How do you like the new way I do my hair? Frank, wanting to say something particularly nice— Why you look at least thirty years younger.
Mulligan—Take some of the medicine, Mary Ann. The doctor said it would ayther kill or cure without faiL Mrs. Mulligan—Arrah, but which will it do fii-st?
Deputy Marshal Gorder, of Waterville, Me., is 38 8*ud his wife is 34. T?hey have a family of nine children, six boys and three girls, the oldest 17 years of age.
Two men had a fight at St. Matthews, South Carolina, over the ownership of a hen, a few days ago, which resulted in the death of one of the contestants. "Oh, Tommy," said the little girl in awesome tones, "I know something awful about our Sunday school superintendent." "Tell me," said Tommy. "Don't you never tell—but I saw him —I saw him laughing to-day."
A Buffalo amateur photographer saw two boys tipped over in a boat. So devoted to his art was he that during the rescue of the lads by some laborers the kodak fiend got five plates of the incident in its various phases.
The emperor of Austria is opposed., to capital punishment On one occasion he was called upon to sign a fleath warrant, when an unbidden tear fell and marred the signature. "See, I cannot sign it," said lie, and tore the document to pieces.
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Castorla.
LOOK SHARPI
Our Fall and Winter Goods ore now in and we have a great many exclusive Styles of fine
Tailor Made Suits
We Have an elegant line of styles in light, medium weight Fall Overcoats.
School will soon begin you want your boys to look nice, come ana get one of our
$2, $3, or $4 "SCHOOL SUITS.
They are beauties in Style and Workmanship.
We still pay 7c per bushel more for wheat and 3c more for oats than any firm in the city.
mmwmwm
THE ONE PRICE CLOTHIER, HATTER AND FURNISHER.
Warner
Crawforclsville, Indiana.
WILL BE A NON-UNION MILL.
Oliver Steel Works Will Start This Morning—Other Mills to Resume. PITTSHUHG. Pa., Aug. 31.—The Oliver Iron .fc Steel company has definitely decided to attempt to operate without the amalgamated associated agree* ment. Notices have been posted at the Soutli Tenth street mill that it will start this morning, non-union, and ordering all men to report or their positions will be taken. There is much excitement on the south side,and the nu say the}- will not go to work unless the scale is signed. 'The Oliver Iron & Steel company is the third largest iron firm in Pittsburg, employing men. It has here tofore been staunchly union, but tha management claims it has been constantly discriminated against in favor of other mills, and proposes to make its own scale future. Five furnaces at the ^National tube works were put in operation this morning, giving employment to 500 men. .The company expects to have the entire plant in operation within a week, when 8,000 men will be given employment. Chess, Cook ifc Co.'s expanded metal and wire works at Rankin will resume in all departments next week, the employes accepting a reduction of from 10 to 16 per cent in their wages. Th« plant has been closed a month.
BlK Four Salaries Cut Down. iNDiANAroT.is, Ind., Aug. VI.—The employes of the liig Four system of railroads are an unhappy set of men on account of the order that salaries are to be cut The reduction will go into effect Friday. The order will save the road several hundred thousand dollars annually. The out does not apply to engineers. firemen, switchmen, trainmen or to the shop, track or station laborers, but reaches the otticia sand the office men. All salaries of ?5.000 or over will be reduced 20 per cent, and all under and over $(id0 per annum will be reduced 10 per cent, but no salary will be reduced below St00 a year. President Ingalls cuts his own salary SIi).000 a yeitr. Vice-President Oscar Murray is reduced 84,000 and E. 0. McCormii-k will have 82,000 chopped off.
Death of Bad Johnson.
Bud Johnson. of Shacnondale, one of the best known men in the county, died Monday evening of typhoid fever. He was forty-four yearB old and unmarried. The funeral occurred Tuesday and was Urgely attended. Interment at Mount Pisgah.
DRPRICE'S
Powder
The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder.—No Ammonia No Alum.
Used in Millions of Homes—40 Years the Standard.
SUCCESSOR TO J. A. AND EPH JOEL.
9
Teachers Take Aotion.
The Montgomery county teachers have adopted the following resolutions regarding the State Normal school at Terre Haute:
Having at heart the educational interests of the state, we, as teachers and citizens of the state, feel that a conflict exists in the State normal school which is detrimental to the furtherance of its purpose therefore.
Be it resolved, that we earnestly ask that a thorough investigation of the conflict be made and the existing wrong be made right.
And whereas, we belive that no school organization can be conducted successfully unless a part of the board of trustees be educational men, and men who have had Borne chance to know the working of such institution:
Be it resolved by the teachers of Montgomery county that wo use all our influence and sincerely request the governor to appoint two educational men to succeed Messrs. Briggs and Royse as trustees of the State normal school.
Resolved. That we heartily indorse the sentiment of the statement made by the state committee of State normal students at Indianapolis, Aug. 19,1893. viz., that the present conflict can only be met by the removal of the present board and president.
Adopted by the Montgomery county Btudents and graduates of the State normal. E. N. CANINE, Chairman.
Yandalia Line.
Grand harvest excursion to the south and west including the famous Cherokee strip Sept. 12th good to return 20 days. One fare plus $2.00 for the round trip.
A chance of a lifetime to get a splendid steamboat ride free, on our Chicago route, On all rail routeB, you pay $5,05 for your fare, get into Chicago too late in the evening to see anything, hunt a hotel after dark, and pay a dollar or more for you night's lodging. We give you a berth on steamer, a tine night's rest, and you awake in Chicago at 7 a. all for $6.00. Returning you leave Chicago on 7 a. m. boat, have as fine a four hours lake ride as there is in America. Three hours, of which is "out of sight" of land—arrive at St. Joe at 1 p. m., have an hour for dinner, come home on our flyer, all clean and rested. Dozens are now going this way every week and they all pronounce it a glorious trip.
J. C. HUTCHINSON, agent.
Dr. A. P. Fitch recently received, unsolicited, from Gov. Matthews, the appointment as one of the Indiana delegates to the Pan-American Medical Congress which convenes in Washington this month. While the doctor heartily appreciates the honor conferred upon him, previous engagements made it impossible for him to attend the congress, and he has declined the appointment.—Lebanon Pioneer.,
GENERAL STATE NEWS.
Much gold is circulating in Terre Hauto.
Samuel Carthwaith, of FraDkfort, was killed by a passing train. The American tin-plate factory at Elwood has resumed operations.
Farmers in Jefferson county report good results from feeding wheat to hogs. Grasshoppers are causing serious damage to the corn crop in Hancock county
The corner-stone of the new courthouse at Tipton will be laid September 12.
The Baptist Tabernacle, of Terre Haute has extended a pastoral call to the Rev. E. G. Strouse, of Marion.
The Ft. Wayne railway telegrabhers anticipate that a demand will soon be made for a decrease of salaries.
President Smart, of PerdueUniversity reported ill at Charlevoix, Mich., where he is Bummering, is slowly recovering.
ExpertB overhauling the accounts of ex-Treasurer Armstrong, of Tipton county, report the official shortage to be $43,320,73.
The American strawboard-works at Noblesville have closed down indefinitely because of the general depression in bnBiness.
The determination of the Ministerial Association to prosecute Sunday ballplayers has rebutted in breaking up Sunday ball at Muncie.
The North Judson News criticised a trustee as too drunk to transact business, and now it wonders because the trustee stopped his paper-
The Greentown Reporter threatens to publish a list of patrons of the "quart shop" in that village, and there is a clamorous condition of affairs.
H. E. Bucklin has completed his railway between Mishawaka and Elkhart and the first train passed over the line on Saturday. It is called the Western & Elkhart railway.
Charles Bender, of Portland, losing faith in banks, checked out 1585, to which he added $200 in negotiable notes and left for Celina, O. While there he was robbed of his money.
While the son of George Inco, of Grandview, was in the barn saddling a horse, lightning struck the barn and killed the horse. The lad was uninjured. The barn was consumed. Loss $2,0C0.
Jack Conley, posing as champion mid-dle-weight pugilist of Indiana, and Pat Murray, of Detroit, met in an open field near Pendletoa Saturday night, and Murray was knocked out in the fourth round by a blow OL\ the neck,
Charles R. Dryer has resigned as chemist for the Electric Light Company of Ft. Wayne to accept the chair of geography offered to him by the State Normal School at Terre Hauto.
The American Wire Nail Company of Anderson offered to start its works September 1st if the Amalgamated Association would accept a reduction of 10 per cent, iu wages. The offer was declined, and the shut-down continues.
Peter J. Clark, of Lafayette, uader sentence to prison for his participation in the Rudolph riot, and who fled beyond jurisdiction of the court, returned to Lafayette one night last week to arrangs his business and settle with his bonds-
George Kriete, a farmer near Aurora, was bitten by a mad dog. Altogether the dog visited six farms, bitting live stock right and left, and inflicting much damage. Mr. Kriete was taken to CleveBj O., whore a mad-stone was applied,
The health officers of Muncie and the mayor have joined in a statement to the effect that no necessity for alarm exists because of the presence of smallpox in one of the outlying suburbs, as all the cases have been rigidly quarantined and the disease is under control.
Alfred Hirt, of Greencastle, while in Eurone, contracted to furnish material for the largest wine cask in the world. The staves will be thirty feet long, ten incheB thick and from ten to twelve incheB wide the heading, twenty-five feet long, nine incheB thick, and from twenty to twenty-five inches wide.
David Morris, of Starke county, after rounding off a straw stack, undertook to slide down, pitchfork in hand. He was unable to slacken his speed, and the lower end of the pitchfork striking the ground, the end of the handle was driven upward into his shoulder for severa' inches. Mr. Morris fainted from loss of blood, and his recovery is problematical.
James Eldridge, of Indianapolis, engaged in decorating the opera-house at Lafayette, fell off the scaffolding while touching up one of the galleiy sections and struck on hie left side on the pointed seat-backs of the parquet below. A piece of timber, which he was trying to lift when the scaffolding fell also dropped upon him. His arm was broken and he was internally injured.
The State Normal School trouble was considered during the meeting of the Carroll County Institute, and resolutions were passed in effect that the best interests of the common schools "demand a change in the administration of the State Normal School to the extent of the removal of President Parsons, the entire board of trustees and the inefficient members of the faculty."
LADOGA.
the 11 I'H FU
U. C. Stover was at this week. Mrs. Vanda Venard Fail* this week.
is at World's I
Mrs. Thomas Scott is at t!.«- World's Fair this week.
S F. Kyle, wife and son, Wnli.tr are visiting the World's Faia. George Lidikey, of KansHs, with relatives and friends here tins v'«k.
Houses to rent in Ladoga m- scarce. At this time there are no vau.m house Isaac Williams and wife, ..f Frankfort, have been on a visit here furBeveraj days.
Harvey Anderson, of Texas, is visiting his parents, at this place, f.ir a tow week.
Nina, daughter of George Anderson, is some better. She has had Ivphoid fever.
The Harehbarger reunion at J. M. Harshbarger's last Friday, was quite a success.
Lewie Otterman death's door with trouble.
is lying very near old age and kidney
George Reed moved from A nderson to Ladoga last week, and occupies Mrs. Parker's house.
The District Convention of the society of Christain Endeavor, for this district will be held at Ladoga in October.
Some boys ran a freight car off the end of an open switch on the Midland, Friday night. Here is a grand jury case.
Lucky Hostetter, one of our old citizens, now of Franklin county, KansaB, is spending a couple of weeks with old neighbors.
Dow Stringer thrashed one hun Ired and twenty bushels of clover seed, off of 30 acres of land. His clover will pay for one half of his farm.
Depew Hightower's child died last week and was taken to Hebron Graveyard near Russelville for interment, Rev. L. E. Murray officiating.
Rev. Faulk and James Bartlett, had a runaway. Both were hurt, and the bu^gy smashed to pieces, on Monday last. Mr. Bartlett was taken to Ma home in a hack on Tuesday.
Will Oliver, one of the old Ladoga boys, is spending a few days with his old friends. He is now living at Tacotna, Washington, and speaks very highly of that country.
It takes more partyism than honesty to accuse Cleveland's administration with the financial panic. If Republican misrule did not bring it on who made the panic of ,1873? Shame on Buch stu pid dishonesty.
Rev. Fyffe officiated at the funeral of Mrs. France Myers, on last Monday. Interment at Oak Hill cemetery, Crawfordsville. The funeral was largely attended. Her demise in the midst of her usefulness] is much regretted by her numerous friends.
Marriage Licenses. N. Cording and Viola Ar-
Richard
heart. Joseph E. Bannon and Clarisa B. Livingston.
Wheeler A. Linn and Ella P. W^rd. Thomas T. Northcut and Ella Epperson.
Calvin B. Herod and Minnie B. Black John H. Fletcher and Lida Fletcher. John D.Patton and Cora B, Shepherd, Wilbur. Y. Smith and Louie B. Eggleston.
Elza L. Doyel and Cynthia V. Whiteaero. Wesley Blacketer and Nora Weir.
COPYRIGHT 1691
ti
There's a wide difference
between the help that's talked of and the help that's guaranteed. Which do you want, when you're buying medicine?
If you're satisfied with words, you get them with every blood-purifier but one. That one is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. With that, you get a guarantee. If it doesn't help you, you have your money back. On this plan, a medicine that promises help is pretty sure to give it.
But it's became the medicine is different, that it's1 sold differently. It's not like the sarsaparillas, which are said to be good for the blood in March, April, and May. At all seasons and in all cases, it cures permanently, as nothing else can, all the diseases arising from a torpid liver or from impure blood.
It's the best blood purifier, and it's the cheapest, no matter how many doses are offered for a dollar.
With this, you pay only for the good you get. Can you ask more?
Hon, Dexter Curtis
Of Madison, Wis., a reliable business mas, states that he had a bad cough for two years. After the Crip. I got a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparllla and It gave mo relict at ones. I have taken six bottles and
Hood'ssaPw Cures
know I am much better In every way." Hood's Pills cure all liver ills, biliousness, aundlce, Indigestion, sick headache. 25a.
NEWS 0E THE CAPITAL
THE DEBATE A TEXT OF PHYSICAL STRENGTH.
Senators Vrtpirad to Talk Till Spring —Majority of Free-Coinage D«m«» orats Will Stand Against Filibustering—Senator Sherman to Speak.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 3 .—The silver debate in the senate is to be made a test of physical endurance. This, at least is the program which the senators from the silver states announce. Mr. Teller of Colorado says that he has brought his winter clothes with him and will wear them before unconditional repeal shall pass. The senators from the silver states stand alone in this determination. They will not be aided to any great extent by the free coinage democrats, unless Mr. Morgan of Alabama should take a hand, and according to the standing senate joke, "set his mouth going and walk away and leave it." In that event Mr. Morgan would prove a powerful ally, for his resistless flow of talk could be relied upon to lust for mauy days. But most of the free-coinage democrats, it is believed, agree with Mr. Hill that to filibuster on this question would be to lower the character of the senate and diminish public respect for its deliberations.
With the retirement of Mr. Edmunds from the senate the most influential opponent of a change of the rules was withdrawn. Mr. Sherman and other prominent senators who agreed with the Vermont senator on this point only have since changed their views, and it would not require much provocation to induce the senate to take up in earnest a proposition to impose soinp other limitation beside senatorial courtesy on endless and profitless debate.
The tone of bitterness infused in the debate in the house yesterday on the adoption of the rules seems to render it doubtful whether the new coJe can be adopted to-day, as there are many amendments to be offered. As soon as the rules that are to' govern proceedings are agreed upon introduction of bills will be in order.
It has been assumed in certain quarters that after the Voorhees repeal bill passes the senate as a substitute for the Wilson bill it must be, upon its return to the house, referred to a committee. The proper reference in this case would undoubtedly be the coinage committee, but as this committee is known to be bitterly hostile to the repeal bill, it has been presumed that the house will Bend the bill to the banking and currency or even the ways and means committee. The antisilver men think, however, they have found a shorter road to the desired end. This would be found in a motion, made as soon as the bill is returned by the senate, to concur in the senate and end it. It happens that under the new rules the bill may be disposed of in this way at the pleasure of the house, pi ovided it is not in such shape as to secure consideration in a conamittee of the whole. The bill as originally introduced and as reported in amended form from the senate finance committee, does not contain any paragraph involving expenditures of money therefore it will not fall under the terms of the proviso requiring consideration of committee of the whol«.
SENATOR SHERMAN ON SILVER.
Free Coinage, He Declares, Only Another Name for Silver Monometallism. WASHINGTON, Aug. 31.—After the routine morning business the bill for the repeal of the Sherman act was taken up and Senator Sherman proceeded to address the senate He said that if the repeal of the purchasing clauses of the act of July, 1890, were the only reason for the extraordinary session, it would seem to him insufficient It was, however, justified by the existing financial stringency. On one thing congress and the people agreed, and that was that both gold ana silver should be continued in use as money. Monometallism pure and simple had never gained a foothold in the United States. If senators wanted cheap money and an advance in prices free coinage of silver was the way to do it but they should not call it bimetallism.
Senator Sherman then proceeded to discuss the history of the act that bears his name, tie waa not in favor of the free coinage of silver, and regarded it as but another name for the monometallism of silver, and was only in favor of the purchase of silver for purposes of coining. The conferrees of the two houses agreed upon their differences, and in that agreement seoured the repeal of Bland-Allison act. Senator Sherman reminded senators that when they criticised the law that, was misnami-d after him they should remember that this law now on the statute books was far better than either the house bill or that paused by the senate. The President had set forth the decline in the value of silver, bnt had failed to give the nausea of that decliue-
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