Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 11 January 1896 — Page 7
THE OLDEST ANO THE BEST
Cough-cure, the most prompt and effective remedy for diseases of the throat and lungs, is Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. As an emergency medicine, for the cure of
1st Day.
Croup, Sore Throat, Lung Fever and Whooping Cough,
AYER'S
Cherry Pectoral cannot be equaled. E. M. BEAWLEY, D. D., Dis. Sec. of the American Bap
tist Publishing Society, Petersburg, Va,, endorses it, as a cure for violent colds, bronchitis, etc. Dr. Brawley also adds: To all ministers suffering from throat troubles, I recommend
AYER'S
Cherry Pectoral
Awarded Medal at World's Fair.
AYER'S PILLS Cure Liver and Stomach Troubles
Pufltnffrfcphf'l from life.
REVIVO
RESTORES VITALITY.
Made a
i\Well Man of Me.
15th Day.
THE GREAT 30th I)av. FREKrCH HEMIEDY produces the al)ove results in 30 days. It arts powerfully and quickly, Curcb whnn all other* fail Youngmcu will regain their lost manhood, and old men will recover their youthful vi«or hy usins .1112 VIVO* It quickly and surely restorer Nervousness. Lost Vitality, Irapotency, Nightly Kmi^ionfi, vLoflt Power. Failing Memory, Wo^Hul' Disrasf .s ami vail effects of self-abuse orexce. sand iiidiMTruon. which unfits one for sMidy, fonsinrss or TiiKrriuy.-. Il ..not only cures by starting at the .v {v.*- -. V.t is a great nerve tonic and blood huihtrr. tirii ing back the pink plow to pair «'h«' 11-.-6toring the fire of youth. It «v.v o' and Consumption. Insist on havs: K, J"\ ,r other. It can b:.» rt«ricd in van
1
F.OYAL MEDICIHL CO,
..ii.
81.00 per package, or six for w\: .1 par.: tlve written guarantee to our--* 1: .Ti'jr.. .the monev. Circular fre% Addr -s
Nye .t Uooe,Crawfordsville,Iudlaua.
Corn is King!
Buy a Farm while land is cheap. "We have a large number of Improved farms for sale. Some decided bargains.
City Property
On easy terms. Also money to loan
at Low Interest.
E. E. BRYAiNT,
Joel Block.
When In Doubt
CONSULT THE BEST.
Hcatlli IN the (Jrcntcat I.iixiiry of Llfii—If
YOII
Want to Enjoy'tlicfrjiixiirica of I.ife Commit
Dr. E. "Walsh
Formerly President of the Modi-nl and Surgical staff of St. A uUiuiiy's Hospital, late of C'hcago.
Acknowledged by ail as the world's greatest aud most successful Specialist in all chronic and nervous diseases of both sexes.
Permanently located in Indianapolis, Iud. Consultation free! Prompt and permanent euros.
CATAWHII. all throat aud lung troubles, Dyspepsia, lllnod and Skin Diseases as well as all affections of the Heart, Liver, Kidneys ad Bladder.
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ONLY CUKAHLB CASKS TAKEN, iiest of reference- aud r-red^ntiatf If y»u can not cali write All 'it'ors must be addi eased to DU. \VAI.Jrll, 1M1IANAPOLIS, INDIANA.
Ollle»2!t |-5 Wost Ohio Street. Piel Block, near Illinois street. I tour J:0 to 12 a. in. L' top. in. te S p. m.
Com. eariy. Delay is fatal.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
OIMUCJ
and betatiflei the bur.
Promote* laxurimt growth. Never Tails to Restore Gray Hatr to lta youthful Color. Con* »c*lp dUtuu & hair felling. ^^^WCjandJUjOOa^Dtuglit^^
AQTUIIJI BR* TACT'S ASTHXALENE HO I nmH-P|IDCn"everfalls «md ueyour •ddress, wo will uUnCUmailtrlalbotUer|JPr' The DRVTAFT BROS. M. Co.. Rochester, N.Y.f 11IX
CONVENTION LAST SATURDAY, T.iai »r the
Delegates to the Frankfort Coiiven-
tion Selected and Committeemen Chosen-
In accordance with publisher] call democrats from various parte of the county wet at the Court House on Saturday last to select delegates lo the Frankfort convention ail also county central committee. Cinsiderii.^ the very ioclemeut state of tie weather the attendance wa6 a very good indication of the interest the tii'tnocracy of this county expect to tak- in the campaign this \*ar had the wea''ier have been favoral le, Mr. Mills in I ling the convention lo order made somu remarks pertinent to the occasion, c: joining harmony, sincerity and that ttis party follow out strictty the doctrines «.f Monroe, Jefferson ard Jackson, in their actions throughout the comitig political warfare.
James M. Sellur presided' and Jerre We6t acted as secretary. Jauies Wright was chairman of the Union township delegation, Claude Thompson secretary. The committee will meet on the 18th to organize.
The following resolution was offered by M. E. Clodfelter which the chair announced everybody could vote for as it covered all the ground. It was passed.
RESOLVED, That it is the sense of this Convention that Silver should be restored to the position, in our monetary system which it occupied prior to the Demonetization Act of 1873, and we instruct our delegates to the Frankfort Convention to use every reasonable effort to secure this object.
Below are the committeemen and delegates: Franklin—-J. A. Booher, li. B. Lynch, c.
Scott—N. G. Kcssler, d. S. C. Graybill, c. —Walnut—W. T. Kise, d., T. W. Sutton, c.
Ooal Creek—M. E. Foley, d. Foster Fletcher, Ben Swank, c. Wayne—B. F. Merrill,d. D. C.Moore, d.: Geo. Bratton, c. A. Thompson and Jno. Hendereon. alt.
Ripley—James Galloway, d. Frank Dunltle, alt. James Largent, c. Clark—Geo. Harney, d. Marion Rhoades. M. M. Batcheldor, c.
Brown—H. A. Foster, d. M. Chtnault, c. Sugar Creek—Jno. Buskirk, and c.
Union—Chas. Bowers, c. DelegatesPat Slattery, Wallace Sparks, J. C. Hutton, J. A. Booe, Asher Wert. Jero West.
The committee are requested to meet at Jerre West's office, next' Saturday, January 18th.
The Farmer Candidate. A gathering ot the forces of J. A. Mount of Montgomery county will be held in the city during the coming week for the purpose of advancirg his interests in the gubernatorial race. Mr. Mount is coming out as the farmer candidate and expects to gather his followers this week and make an impression upon the farmers who will be gathered here at the meetings of the industrial assoeiations.
This meeting has been made known to the other candidates and a number of them will be here to offset the movement upon the part of the Mount people. Major Doxey will hold a meeting of his followers here this week and will have his agents mingling with the farmers for the purpose of picking out a few veterans. Of course, Mr. Cumback will scent business and be down with his little greased bag and a copy of his book which ''he v/ill reduce to the price of $2 to a few of his farmer friends. See? The farmers will not be allowed to hold their consultations without being sandwiched by politicians.—Indianapolis Sentinel.
K. .1. Cloilfelter ct al. arc Sued. A complaint was tiled in Grant County Circuit Court by Thomas C. Day of Indianapolis against Noah J. Clodfeller et alfto collect a note given by the latter for 82,000. Clodfelter was at the head of the Phoenix construction company, the object of which was the building of the interurban electric railroad between Marion aud Anderson, and stock in the company was given to secure Day at Uie time ho advanced money to the outfit
The Phoenix was recently sued for S6,000 by M. A. Painter of Alexandria.
Iial iich lo Alfery. The heading factory of Henry Alfrey at Poplar HIuif, Mo., was destroyed by fire last Friday night. A large 'ot of furnished material together with the machinery was destroyed. The loss is quite heavy with but little insurance.
I.ocnted A School. Upon his 3000 aero ranch near Momence Illinois, John L. Gobin has succeeded in hiving a high school or college located, lie donates 10 acres of land for the use of the institution, and material for its erection will soon bb taken to it.
.'nn^Karlc to lie Married. Gus Karle and Miss Tobin, of Rockville are to be married on January 29th. The young couple are well-known in this city. It will be quite a surprise to Gus' many acqua ntances.
[n Middle Smithfield, Penn., there iBa chestnut tree that measures 19feet in circumference 4 feet above the ground.
Keii.r».
The date of the trial of the three Kellars—Daniel, hiB wife, Nannie, and sister, Maggie—for the murder of Clara Shanks has been reset for Monday, January 27, at Terre Haute. The change from the 20th inst., which was the date originally fixed, was made Saturday to accommodate Judge C.McCabe, of Covington, who will b? chief counsel for the defense. Associated with him will be Lamb£ & |Beaaley, of Terre Haute, Duncan S. Puett and Howard Maxwell, of Rockville. Daniel W. Simms, of Co7ington, and Sam M. Huston, of Terre Haute, will conduct the prosecution.£ Judge Taylor has ordered a special venire of fifty talesmen for the jury. It is expected that at least two weeks will be consumed in the hearing. One hundred and sixty-seven witnesses have been subpoenaed for the trial, and every indication is that the tight will be one of the most bitter in the legal annals of western Indiana. The three defendants when seen this week at the county jail wen pictures of health and are apparently untroubled. They expressed themselves as anxious to have the trial as soon as possible, and said they were confident there could be but one result —acquittal. Daniel Kellar -ventured the opinion that "the public would be treated to a surprise when all the truth was told," but declined to talk further upoD the advice of his attorney. Vigo county, which is really foreign to the scene of the Shanks murder, has acquired a great interest in t&e case, since the removal ot the JKellars there from Rockville.'1
Will Subscribe 825,000
The New York World telegraphed the following to the Citizens National Bank on Monday:
NEW YORK, Jan. 5. 1896.—Citizens National Bank, Crawfordsville, Ind.— .We to-day ask all National Banks whether if the President makes a call to replenish the gold reserve they will conbider it their patriotic duty to take bonds on a three perct. basis will you invest and to what extent? Reply prepaid. THE WORLD.
REPLY.
CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDm Jan. 6.—To the World, New York.—We are Republicans and Americans. Will 6tand by the President as long as we have a dol lar to preserve the credit of the country Have §25,000gold which will turn in. Will go into the market and get more if need be to help the President and the country. Wo approve the stand the World has taken.
CITIZENS' NATIONAL BANK. A. F. Ramsey. President,
The reply of President Ramsey is all right and patriotic enough, but as for "republicans" doubtless ^Cashier Goltra and Silas Peterson and others, think he might have modified that word a little.
Vandalia Cliauge*. Some of the employes of the Vandalia who have been with the road for many years are wondering if there will be many changes when the new men take hold.rjThey are afraid that the line will be filled up with employes ol the Pennsylvania, and some have applied for poitions elsewhere. Pennsylvania officials are of the opinion that there will be no changes except in the heads of. departments, as has been already mentioned. There is no intention, it is announced, to interfere with the train or the station force. General Freight Agent Taylor, it is reported, will retire from that position, but not from the company's employ. The freight and passenger department will be in charge of the Pennyslvauia. The ticket receiver system will also be extended to the Vandalia.
An Organized Labor Movement.
The labor unions of Terre Haute have arrauged for a mass meeting to be held January 30, at which time a strong central federation will be formed, Eugene V. Debs and others prominent in the labor movement will make ad dresses. The review of the past year shows that organized labor has fared well here, although some of the important mills and factories have been closed a considerable portion of the time. The outlook is particularly encouraging just now. The iron mills have resumed, giving six hundred man employment, and the car shops will furnish work for as many more.
No Salary for tlic County Treasurer, The now salary law governing the I pay to many county officials 13 going to be decidedly inconvenient to mnny of them. It will prove so to count} treasurer Johnson, tit last. After a prolonged discussion cster.di
-.•*
A lecture A»*nHntion.
for s'»m days
days over the matter the county commissioners determined to allow him no salary. His recompense for servicer must first be collected before any money is paid him, and not through the county-
For four tiv-? years Wavohind and the surrounding country has Maintained lecturej association. Fifty residents ot the town and township constitute a guarantee membership though the losses, if any, are nominal. They have had several good lecturers to visit them, and next mouth will be entertained by Temple Graves of the Atlanta Constitution. ',*
A gardener in Bath (Maine) raised 47 pumpkins this year, and the boys made jack o'lanteros out of only 46 of 'em,
A CLEVER POLItlCAL POEM."
It
WM
Written by an Irishman Dnrlnf the Rebellion of 1708. What is spoken of as "one of the cleverest political poems ever composed" has recently come under the notice of a contributor to a northern contemporary, the Dundee Advertiser. It was written by Arthur Connor (or O'Connor), the friend of Lord Edward Fitzgerald, and, like him, a prominent figure iu the Irish rebellion of 1798. He was arrested at Margate that year, when on his way to France on a secret mission. After being detained in Kilmaiuham jail for some time, he was at length removed, with other political prisoners, to Fort George in Scotland. It was whilo on his way thither that he distributed copies of the following poem, which was regarded as a proof of his return to loyalty:
The pomp of courts and priilo of kings I prize above nil earthly'things. I lovo my country, Imt the king, Above all men his praise I sing. Tho royal lutnncrs are displayed And may success the standard aid.
I fain would banish far from henco Tho "Rights of JIan" and common senso. Confusion to his odious reign, That foo to princes, Thomas Paine! Defeat and ruin seize tho cause Of Franco, its liberties and lawsl
HEARD EIGHTEEN MILES.
Human Voice Carried From One Knd of a Canyon to the Other. Eighteen miles is the longest distance
011
record at which a man's voice has been heard. This occurred in the Grand canyon of the Colorado, where one man shouting the name of Bob at one end, his \oiue was plainly heard at the other end, which is 18 miles away.
Lieutenant Foster, on Peary's third arctic expedition, found that he could converse with a man across thD harbor of Port Boweu, a distance of 6,090 feet, or about
14
miles, and Sir John Frank
lin said that ho conversed with ease at a distance more than a mile. Dr. Young records that at Gibraltar the human voice has been heard at a distance of ten miles
Sound has remarkable force in water. Colladou, by experiments made in the lake of Geneva, estimated that bell submerged in tho sea might be heard at a distance of more than 00 niiles. Franklin says that he heard the striking together of two stones in the water half a mile away. Over water
t.f
Persons in a balloon can hear voices from the earth a long time after they themselves are inaudible to people be-low.—-Chicago Times-Herald.
7 An Cnaeasonabl9 Request. A gentleman -was hurrying down th) street in a biting frost. His topcoat was buttoned right up to his ears, and the very thought of unbuttoning it made him shudder. Still he would have liked to know how late it was, but as for consulting the watch that nestled in his waistcoat pocket—ugh! Just then another gentleman came into view. The two gradually approached each other, and the first gentleman who wanted to know how late it was hazarded the question: "Sir, do you happen to know what time it is?"
The stranger stood still, pulled off his right glove, unbuttoned his overcoat from chin to waist and drew out his watch as the piercing wind played about his unprotected chest. He held it up to the dim light of the street lamp and carefully examined the dial plate and said: "Yes, Iknownow." Wilh thenowords ha replaced his watch and made tracks without satisfying the curiosity of his interlocutor. —Kattowitzer Zeitung.
Illooms Once Every Fifty Tears. There are many curious and remarkable species of the palm tree, but the wonder of the entire family is Browuia ariza. It is a native of central Africa and is regarded as a curiosity because of its peculiar habit of blooming but once in 50 years. There are but throe specimens of ariza in the conservatories of Europe—one at Kew gardens, London one in the conservatory of tho Duke of "Norfolk, nt Chiswick, fntl one in the Imperial Bt um-:i| garden at Berlin. Norfolk's pnJi:i I'l'nimed in Jnn 1851. land tliitt in liui B'TIMI collection jn •. June, 1 '•«!. Ti blow. are vorv fragrant suvl last Imr 4* hours.—St. Louis
Republic.
Ileal Misery.
I "What the dickens do ycu know about misery?" asked tho baldheaded man of tho younger one. "Wait till you get married and come home late and have your wifo lecture you for three I hours in a whisper for fear of waking the baby, and then you will have some 1 Idea of what is misery."—Indianapolis
Journal.
:.£S
r,
If the above lines he read continuously, they seem to express very loyal sentiments. But if yon read the first lino of tho first verse, and then the first line of the second verse, you will fiud that, they breathe the spirit of rampuut rebellion
The pomp of euurts and pride of king3 I fain would banish far from lieneo. I prize above all earthly things
Tho "Rights of Man" and common sense. I love my country, but. tho king— Confusion to his odious reign!
Above all men his praise I sing, That foo to princes, Thomas Paine! The royal banners are displayed.
Defeat and ruin seize the cause! Ami may success tho standard aid Of France, its liberties and laws. Arthur O'Connor ultimately made his way to France, where, in 1S07, ho married the daughter of the Marquis de Condorcet. He entered the French army and pise to the rank of general. His death took place in April, 1852, when he was S7 years of age.
Call at the Old Reliable
Our stock of
Cut
a surface of
ice sound is propagated with greater clearness aud strength. Dr. Hutton relates that on a quiet part of the Thames, near Chelsea, he could hear a person read distinctly at the distance of 140 feet, while away from tho water the same could only be heard at 70 feet. Professor Tyndall, when on Mont Blanc, found the report of a pistol shot no louder than the pop of a champagne bottle.
WHILE AT NEW YORK
AKl
For sale
A
\Y(
CLIPPER
A. MUHLEISON. PROP.
D. C. BARNHILL,.
Graduate of the United States College of Embalminc in New
the nitod S?itefca83': t-Mark College, Springfield, Ohio. They are
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111 South Washington Street.
Watches, Pine Clocks,
GlaBS, fine sterling and silver plated
Art Metal Ware, Umbrellas and Canes
variety to select from. Remember our prices are always the lowest.
•'HE THAT WORKS EASILY WORKS SUC
CESSFULLY'TIS VERY EASY TO
CLEAN HOUSE WITH
SAPOLIO
MANHOOD
ATlfcU
Mens' Arctics $1.00. Women's Arctics 75c.
Scott-Rinard Shoe Co.
I H. W. ARCHIBALD, Manager. Repairing
Street, Crawfordsville, Ind.
1
ork-
Funeral: Director: and Embalmer
Every grade of supplies kept in stock, from the cheapest to tho most espenslvo-
WHITE AND BLA.CK FUNERAL CARS PRICES ALWAYS REASONABLE.
I am also agent for the Boyd Burglnr Proof Grave Vault. Office In now Blnfor '..lo south ashiugtou street. Hesicieuce, 415 south Washington street. JOIIX U. SWANK, Assistant.
tho oriental Coltho three best in
CHRISTMAS PRESENTS
L. W. OTTO Jewelry Store
Fancy and useful pieces
I purchased the Finest Line of Gold. Silver and Leather Novelties, Watches,
Cut Glass and Art Ware
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in
Table Ware, Novelties*
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O S
RESTORS&,S&8S2S'n™iii.-,nrr.IV)B»ofi*lo.ilVV•asdiseases,sucli
puarauleuil tociire all nervous er.Ileadacho. Wakefulness, Lost Manhood, hi ,. !v Liiil»&OBriS»TOtt2 iibrs, all drains and 1 oss of powerln Generative Owuis" either sex caused us- overexertion, youth!ulerrom, escessh'o use oi Inbucco,opium orstlmulniiu. which lead toInllrmlty.Consumption or In.sanlty. Can be carrledln .j, vest pocket. pcrbox.Ofor85, by niall prepaid. WlthaSS order wo Striven written Kuarnntee to.cure or refund (hu money. Sold by all iWiirngglHts. Ask fortt, take no other. Write for free Medlcul Hook sent sealed "uTsiMi. in plain wrapper. Address NEKVE
SEED 0., Ma«oilica'e^le.CMc!iatt
In Crnwfin Svillo, Ind., by STAN KKUNY.and by T. I). BllOWN &SON, UruggUts.
Closing Out.
)L
