Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 25 April 1891 — Page 4
That
Tired Feeling
Is experienced by almost everyone at this season, and many people resort to Hood's Sarsaparllla to drive away the languor and exhaustion. The blood, laden with impurities which have been accumulating for months, moves sluggishly through the veins, the mind fails to think quioKty, W4 the body Is still elower to respond.
Hood's Sarsaparllla
Is Just what is needed. Bead what is said by Mr. C. Tarmelee, 349 Bridge Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.: "I take Hood's Sarsaparllla as a spring tonic, and I recommend it to all who have that miserable tired feeling."
For years I was sick every spring, but last year took Hood's Sarsaparllla in February and have not seen a sick day since." G. W. SLOA-, Milton, Mass,
That
Tired Feeling
Is a dangerous condition due directly to depleted or impure blood. It should not be allowed to continue, as in its debility the system Is especially liable to serious attacks of illness. It is remarkable how beneficial Hood's Sarsaparllla is in this enervating state.
Possessing just those ele-
liOOCI S ments which the system Sarsapa-
Ilee(,s an1
readily seizes,
... this medicine purifies the
rilia
blood, and imparts a feeling
of serene strength which ts comforting and satisfying. Hood's Sarsaparllla Is the best remedy for that weakness which prevails at change of season, climate or life. "I have been convinced M.1... that Hood's Sarsaparllla is "laKOS one of the greatest medi-
the Weak
cines In the world. I say c+rnnc* this for the benefit of all
®"Orlg
other tired out, run down, hard-working women. Hood's Sarsaparllla is not only excellent as a blood purifier, but for all other female complaints, even if of long standing." MBS. M. A. SCAKLETT, Northville P. O., Mich.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. 81 slxfor$5. Preparedonly by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass*
IOO Doses One Dollar
WEEKLY JOUMAL.
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SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1891.
This Date in History—April 25.
1284—Edward II of England born in Carnarvon: ascended throne in 1307: murdered in a most horrible manner Sept. 21, 132?. 1505—Torquato Tasso, Italian poet, died. 1599—Oliver Cromwell born at Huntington
Dec. 16, 1053: ho was made Lord Protector of Great Britain, etc. died at Whitehall 1 Sept. 3, 1658. 1735—Samuel Wesley, father of John and
Charles, died.
1800--Vv Cowpcr. poet, diei} born Nov. 20, 1731. ]R2d—H». "^trlck Coiquiioun, Scotch author, died born March 14, 1745. 18G1-New York Seventh, second regiment to reach Washington, marched to White
House from depot,
18G2—United States gunboats and General Parke's division assaulted and captured Fort Macon, N. C. 18W—Desperate battle at Marks Mills, Ark..
Federal brigade defeated and captured by Gcnural Pagan (Steele's Arkansas camuaign).
UNITED STATES THEASUKER NEBEKER lias selected J. F. Brooks, cashier of one of the Covington banks, as his private secretary.
THE City Council has abolished the poor man's pig pen in the back yard. Now let the rich man's dish water drain into the front glitter be removed. Both are equally disgusting to the pedestrian and injurious to the health.
NOT one cent of the money that is paid by the people of Montgomery county as taxes goes to the support of the government. The foreigner pays the national taxes for the privilege of selling his goods and wares in the American markets.
WITH wheat at more than $1, corn at 65 to 70 cents, potatoes at SI, oats at ,60 cents, the farmer who has any of them to sell is a lucky man. Take it all around, prices are higher than they have been for twenty years. The farmer who has none of these things to sell may console himself with the assurance of good prices for the coming crops) even thnugh they be bounteous ones.
SOME slight amendments were made to the election law by the last Legisla lature. One of these amendments pro* vides that if you want to vote a straight ticket, stamp the square to the left of the name of your party for whose candidates you wish to vote. If you do not wish to vote a straight ticket, then d6 not stamp the square to the left the name of your party, but stamp the square to the left of the name of each candidate for whom youwishe to vote on whatever list of candidates it may be. In this city there will be but two names on each ballot. The voter therefore should
stamp the square to the left of the Republican candidate. In the First Ward in the square of the left of the name of Jefferson W. Scott in the Second Ward in the square ta the left of the name of William A. Vanarsdall in the Third Ward in the square to the left of the name ofRobert C. Smith.Do not mutilate your ballot, or mark it either by scratching a name off o- writing one one, or in any other way except by the stamping on the square or squares as before mentioned. Otherwise the ballot will not be counted.
A CHEAP "OPINION."
This is the time of year, above all other, that requires industry, diligence, and push on the farm. Half the failures of crops grow out of the neglect to do things at the proper time. How many people, last year, were heard to say, "if I had planted my potatoes earlier I would have had a good crop. The few I did plant early turned out abundantly." A story is told of a young farmer who had heard much about "opinions" of lawyers, and being in town one day concluded that he would find out what the term meant. He went into an old attorney's ollice and asked if he could get an opinion written. "O, yes," said the lawyer. "Upon what question do you want an opinion?" "Why," said the fanner, "I don't caro what anything that would be useful." So the lawyer wrote something on a piece of paper, put it in an envelope, sealed it, and told the farmer to read it when he got home. The farmer went home a short while before night. It was in hay making time and the hands were coming in from the meadow having a large amount of hay on the ground which was ready to put in the barn. Before doing anything else the farmer got out his 'opinion," broke open the seal of the envelope and read: "It is my opinion that a farmer should never put off till tomorrow what he can possibly do to-day.'' "Come boys," Baid the farmer, "I have paid $5 for this 'opinion' and I must follow it—we must go back to the meadow and put in the rest of the hay that is down we must not put off till to-morrow what we can do to-day—that hay must all go into the barn before we eat supper to-night." And so it did. Before morning it commenced raining and continued to rain for a week, during which the farmer often said to himself: "See what I would have lost if it had not been for that opinion I got of the lawyer." And so he continued to follow the lawyer's opinion the rest of his life. He died in old age immensely rich, and he attributed all his success to th* impression made on his mind by the lawyer's "opinion."
THE Indianapolis Sentinel, which is good Democratic authority, in an article on "The Farmer and the New Tax Law," undertakes to extol the benefits and blessings of higher takes on real estate and declares:
Under the new law, in brief, the fanner, the ivaye-eai ner, the small tradesmen, all people of small means, will pay their just proportion of State and local taxes, whereas they have heretofore paiu pi"ch less than their just proportion,
This Is tilfe '.Democratic position In a nutshell,
THE campaign lie which was so successful last Fall against the McKinley tariff is burnt powder. The facts are now to the front. Not one statement made by the Democrats during the campaign has been verified. Except farm products not one item named in the law has increased in price. On the other hand many things are cheaper. The McKinley law is bound to become, and that very soon, the most popular measure ever adopted by any American Congress.
:OK'
LAST week it was announced that E. A. Nye had sold the Attica Ledger to a company to be known as the Ledger Publishing Company. This week it is announced that the Ledger Publishing Company has transferred the plant to A. S. Peacock, who for fifteen years prior to Mr. Nye's control was the manager of the paper. THE JOURNAL welcomes Mr. Peacock back to the journal istic field well knowing that he can edit the Ledger much better than he can edit a lumber yard.
I. N. WALKER, the new Department Commander for Indiana, G. A. R., has announced the appointment of his staff Irvin Robbins is the Assistant General and O. R. Weaver is the Assistant Quarter Master General. Gen. M. D. Manson is appointed on the Board of Visitors to the Soldiers' Orphans' Homo. Gen. Manson and Gen. Lew Wallace are named on the committee to investigate the charges of the Century concerning the treatment of rebel prisoners at Camp Morton.
"THE vote-buyer and the demijohn must and shall be banished from American politics, and bulldozing and 'no count' shall be a thing of the past," was one of Hon. John M. Thurston's sentiments in his speech before the convention of the National Republican League at Cincinnati on Tuesday, and it seemed likewise to be the sentiment of the whole convention, judging from the thundering applause that greeted the expression.
-SANTACLAUS
SfffiMlKMP-
N.K.FAIRBANK&CO. CHICAGO. If mi wish to mate dote as white as the sun And "finish your v/orlf as sootJ as begun.
for
Farmers pronounce tlie wheat to 1)6 too far advanced to be injured by rust. All that can hurt it will be a late frost which may come after it has jointed. —Chief J. J. Weidle went to Chicago Friday to make arrangements for some exhibits to be made here on the 4th of July. A number of enginos and electric companies will probably be represented here on that clay.
Gee Grimes, who served as judge and reader of pedigrees last Saturday, has twenty-eight horses at his stables in Terre Haute. He will go into the coming campaign with a fine string.— Rockville Tribune.
Gregory & Hannagan sold their grey team, the one that ran away with Vine McCormick and Harry Ivi amer, to W. F. Cooley, the "Three Ball King," of Crawfordsviile. He will use them as a private carriage team. —Michael R. Nexins, of south west Missouri, has been in the city visiting his old commander, Gen. Manson, and went to Ladoga on Wednesday to visit friends there. He served through the Mexican war in the 5th Indiana Infantry as a scout and was known as "The babe of the woods." He also served through the late war. He wears long hair and relates many old reminiscences.
I The Races.
The following is the programme for he races at the fair this year: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8. Two-year-old trot or pace $50 Three-year-old trot or pace §50
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9.
Three minute trot $200 Two-fifty pace 8150 Two-twenty-seven trot $250
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10.
Two-thirty-five trot $200 Two-twenty pace $350 Mile and repeat run $150 J-/- .. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11. Two-twenty trot $400 Two-thirty-five pace $200 One-half mile and repeat run $100
The total amount or the purses is $2,100.
The Markets,
Corn, 65 wheat, 95 to $1.06 oats, 45 to 50 hay $8.00 butter, 15 to 18 eggs, 10 bacon, 6 shoulders, 6 country ham,, 8 chickens live, 6 potatoes, $1.00.
3QAP is feting fiat Will ao it,
/nd hti/inf ona fcougfit it you never will rue it.
Infants
law
well
recommend it superior to
CHIPS.
—John McLaughlin is viewing the wonders of Lebanon. —Miss Pauline Goben is home from St. Mary's at Terre Haute. —Rev. A. G. Yount returned to Lafayette Wednesday afternoon. —Frank Duncan, of Wichita Kas., is visiting his mother at this place. —Miss Anna Davidson has gone to Covington to visit Miss Grace Nebeker. —Mrs. Percy Weaver, of Paxton, Ills., is the guest of the family of Dr. D. N. Morgan. —Mrs. T. T. Munhall went to Afton, Iowa, on Monday called by the news that her mother was dying. —Judge Snyder has caught 27 pounds offish this season. —Ambrose Remley is building two houses on his new addition to the city. •The marriage of Van Buskirk, of Bloomington, and Miss Alice Allen is announced. Cards have been received by a number in this city. •The firm of Gonzales Sc Armstrong is now changed to Gonzales & Galey, Mr. Armstrong having sold his interest to Beal Galey last Saturday,
and
adapted
to children
any prescription I
kMWBtoBM." IL A. iMBn,
Children.
th&t I
Caatortft
enna Ootte. OMMttfMttaa,
8oair
Stomach, DiairticM, KructeUoa,
M. D.. I KUtoWonna, tfw* «Uep, K""*"
8* Oxford 81, BroottjB, N. Y. •iillrntlw THK CESTAUR CONPAMT, 77 Murray Street, Jf. T.
Some Children Growing Too Fast
become listless, fretful, without energy, thin and weak. But you can fortify them and build them up, by the 1 use of
SCOTT'S
EMULSION
OF PURE COO LIVER OIL AND 1 HYPO PHOSPHITES Of Lime and Soda.
1 They will take it readily, for it is al- 1 most as palatable as milk. And it ihould be remembered that AS A riu
XPJ-'L'E °JF £DEE
0F
OUGHS OB COLDS. I
IN BOTH THE OLD AND YOUNG, IT IS 1 UNEQUALLED. Avoid substitutions offered.
1
liROWX'S VALLEY.
Mr, J, f-4. TtJtjtl ig slowly recovering from the lagrippe.
W. H. Miles has gone to southern Kentucky to buy lumber. Mr. Champion was down Wednesday to photograph a few more residences.
The young folks give a pie and cake supper here Saturday night, April 25. J. H. Eiicis died at his home at nine o'clock Sunday evening after only one weeks illness of congestion of the stomach. He was a member of the Baptist church here and an incessant worker in the Sunday school and church. He was always at his post as teacher of the young men in Sunday school, when health would permit. He will be missed as no one else would have been both in family and social circles. He was 33 years old and leaves a wife and a son and numerous friends to mourn his loss.
ANew Ingredient in Advertising. "Advertising don't pay. I've tried it and was just $25 out for my pains" growls the sleepy old merchant who is in the habit of closing up during the noon hour while he goe6 to dinner. He illuminates his store with a poor quality of coal oil and was never known to change the display in his show window. "Advertising is the keystone to business success. It made me what I am," said P. T. Barnum as he contemplated the vast fortune ho had accumulated. He was the most liberal newspaper advertiser the world ever knew.
Failure and success. The gap between is large but it can be filled in. Try ideas. Is the filling of this gap worth $2 to you If so we earnestly recommend you to invest that amount in a year's subscription to Printers' Ink,published weekly by Geo. P. Rowell & Co., newspaper advertising u&ents, New York, and devoted, as the name indicates, to newspaper advertising. It has thirty-two pages each page is full of ideas, everyone of them practical too. No fine spun theories go in this publication. Printer's Ink will make you realize what wonderful possibilities there are in advertising, will tell you that advertising is now almost an exact science and will teach you the principles of the science by bright examples rather than by dull precept. Printer's Ink will not bore you, for there is not a dry page in it.
Church Election.
The biennial meeting for the election of three trustees of the Pleasant Hill church will take place on Saturday, May 2, at 2 p.m. J. D. THOMAS.
^"Democratic Ticket.
IDemi
^'Democratic Ticket.
IND Independent Ticket.
Election Notice!
We, the undersigned Election Commissioners of the City of CrawfordJie* hereby certify that the following nominations for Councilmeu for the lstjhd ^ar(^s
sa^
For Councilman—First Ward,
SAMUEL E. VORIS.
^Democratic Ticket.
For Councilman—Second Ward,
ID«a| DEMAS GILBERT.
For Councilman—Third Ward,
IDemi MICHAEL A. O'NEAL.
For Trustee—First Ward.
Ind.f
HUGH H. McMASTERS.
For Trustee—Second Ward.
Ind,
ISRAEL H. BUTLER.
For Treasurer.
Ind.f
STEPHEN G. KERSEY.
For Clerk.
Ind.i
SAMUEL S. MARTIN.
For Marshal
Ind.I
ANTHONY D. RINKER.
DON'T
City to be voted for on May 5th, 1891, has been dulyr-
tmed to us by the Chairmen of the Republican and Democratic parties of§id city, to-wit:
[^'Republican Tick
For Councilman—First Wan
IBepl JEFFERSON W. SCOl
^Republican Tick.
Peo
April 22, 1891. Attest: SAMUEL S. MARTIN, Town Clerk.
IDoxi't
For Gracious Sake Don't.
pay $35 00 for a Bradley stalk cutter when you can buy one of Colioou & Fisher for $20.00 DON'T
pay $23.00 for a sping tooth cultivator when you can buy a better one of Cohoon & Fisherfor $19.00. DON'T
pay $16,00 for an all steel plow when you can buy as good a one of Cohoon & Fisherfor $11.00. DON'T
pay ten dollars for a cheap all steel plow when you can buy as good a one of Cohoou & Fisher for $7.00. DON'T
pay two dollars and 75 cents for one hundred lbs. of steel 8 nails when you can get them of Cohoon & Fisher for two dollars and 5 cents. DON'T
pay two dollars and 50 cents for 100 lbs. of steel twenty nails when you can get them of Cohoon & Fisher for one dollar and 85 cents. DON'T
buy a spring tooth cultivator without large shovel attachments, for a rainy season may come and your spring tooth would be worthless. Remember oar cultivators all have both kind of attachments. DON'T
For Councilman—Second Ward,'
Rep I WILLIAM A. VANARSDAj
^Republican Ticke
v.f MORGAN El©ctionC/onimiBBiotiG] Attest: C. M. Seorr, City Clerk. April 22, 1891.
Election Notice.
I, the undersigned clerk of the town of Darlington, Indiana, hereby certify tha the following nominations for aJTrustee for the First Wardtand a Trustee for the Second Ward of said town, and Treasurer, Clerk and Marshal for said town, tc be voted for on May 4, 1891, have been duly certified to me by the chairman ol the Independent and People's tickets of said town, to-wit:
For Councilman-Third Ward,
Bepj ROBERT C. SMITH.
B. R. RUSSELL, ,.
People's Ticket.
PEOi
For Trustee—First Ward.
PGQ MATHIAS F. GOBEL.
For Trustee—Second Ward.
PE^I WILLIAM B. LYNCH.
ForTreasuscr,
Peol WILLIAM W. CHAMBERS.
For Clerk,
SAMUEL S. MART1N\
For Marshal,
iPeo SYLVANUS M. MILLER.
buy your hardware, stoves, implements, wagons or buggies until you S5e Cohoon & Fisher's large stock.
COHOON & FISHER
