Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 27 February 1892 — Page 4
Is more especially than'any other a hereditary disease, and for this simple reason: Arising from impure and insufficient Wood, the disease locates itself in the lymphatics, which are composed of white tissues there is a period of fo-lnl life when the whole body con-
Hood'S
s'sls w',"°
... dreadful disease. Hut there rllla is a potent remedy for scrofula, whether hereditary or acquired. It is Hood's Sarsaparilla, which expels every trace of the disease and gives to the blood the quality and color of health. Get Mood's.
When my boy was two years old lie-was attacked and suf-
WEHKI,Y—
One year in advance $] 25 btx months Three months -10 One month 1
DAILY—
One year in udruncc 00 Six months 50 Three months Per week delivered or by mail 10
SATURDAY, FEB. 27, 1892.
This Date in History—Feb. 27,
212—The Homan Emperor Oeta, murdered by his brother Caracal In. 1795— Brigadier General Francis Marion died at I'oad Hlull', S. C. born 1732. 1807 Henry adswortU Longfellow, poet born in Portland, le. died 1SS82. 18-1 Knd oi the lon^ fi^ht over tho admission of Missouri and acceptance of tho last compromise measure thereon. 1883—Joseph Krnest Kenan, critical writer on
Scripture, etc., born at Treiiuier, Drittany. 1830— Elias Hicl.s, founder of tho Hicksito Quakers, died at Jericho, N. Y. born 17+8. 185U--Pliilip Burton Key, sou of the author of "Star Spangled Hauner," killed in Washington by Daniel K. Sickles. 1872—Kill passed congress making the Yellowstone region a national park. 1888—Avalanche buried the villugeof Vallaubc.
Italy 1J5 lives lost.
1890—Bismarck peremptorily forbade tho sale of any (ierman territory in Africa, causing I with him. uravo complications.
THE TARIFF.
In opposing the tariff Democrats, both orators and newspapers, work themselves up to white heat because, ts thov claim, tho robber tariff taxes ninety-nine for tho benefit of one that the manufacturers are amassing millions at the expense of the masses and that the tariff beneiits only the manufacturers of protected articles. They seldom mention the beneiits arising from protection of farm products and never compare the wages of American workers with those of foreign workers. Thov attempt to hide the fact that, while the manufacturer is benefitted, his employes are also benefitted, Comparing the •wages of operatives now with taritf-for-revenue times, all other considerations allpw^dj and we see that wage earners /We doing twenty-five per cent, better, at least, than ever before in the history of the country and from 50 to 75 per cent, better than tho wage-workers any other country. These facts the
Democrats attempt to obscure and raise the howl of robber tariff and kick their boots off in frenzy because some manufacturers are making money. They offer no objection to English monopolies making fortunes at our expense. They seem to have the rabies if one of their fellow citizens makes a fortune and rave about tariff barons yet they would rather Bee the whole working class of America reduced to the level of the pauper labor of Europe and build up manufacturing there than see one of their neighbors prosper. But this principle is English, you know, and anything that smacks of English warms the heart of the average Democrat. But the McKinley law will live and rebuke the defatr.ers while it will glorify its authors.
THE
Democrats have faltered, dodge
and disagreed on every one of the questions whick they professed before tho elections to be burning with a desire to meet, while the Republicans, on the other hand, stand solidly and courageously by every word and letter of their national and State platforms. The American people never have indorsed a cowardly policy and never will.
OKTII STEIN,
LAST
the journalist, forger and
all-around confidence man, formerly of Lafayette, is engaged in the newspaper business at Atlanta, (}«., and is not the train robber in jail in Rochester, N. V. as was supposed.
December there was a decrease
of 42,000,000 pounds of imported tin. compared with the imports of December, 1890. This decrease was due to the manufacture of American tin, which .Democrats said could not be made in his country.
AH MR. BLAINE
tersely says:
do not win it is our own fault."
SECRETARY
tissues, and
therefore the unborn child is
Sarsapa-
especially susceptible to this
tnrlre
'y
tered a long time with scrofula Cured sores. The physician at length told us to give him Hood's Sar- My Boy saparilla, which we did. Two bottles cured him. He is now lo years old and has not had uny sign of scrofula since. AVc recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla to all our friends." MRS. B. C. CLIPPER, 8 Kidder St., Cleveland, O.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
fold l»y all druggists. gl six for $5. Prepared only FCY C. I. HOOD «fc CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
WEEKLY JOURNAL
PRINTED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING By T. H. B. McCAIN.
Entered at tlie Poslollico at (_ run l'onl.svilli1 Indiana, as second-class mutter,
'if we
Br
AIM:sent
a letter to the
Michigan Republicans which was read at Detroit on Monday evening. It is stronger in its prophecy of coming victory than the lines in his recent letter of withdrawal from the Presidential field, and in this respect it may bo said to reflect the increasing degreo of confidence which Republicans all over the nation feel at the approaching election. Mr. Blaine sums up the whole situation in these few lines: ''But I cannot refrain from sending a word of good cheer on the prospects of the Republican party. On all leading measures relating to the industrial and financial interests of the people we are strong and growing stronger. On the contrary, our opponents are weak and growing weaker. They are divided we are united. If wo do not win it is our own fault. We will bo justly censurable if with such great measures involved every Republican does not feel that he is appealed to personally and that victory in the election depends on him."
Turc appearance of typhus fever among the immigrants of New York is another good reason why more restrictive immigration laws should be passed.
SHORT SPECIALS.
From New York Tuesday 51,000,000 in g-old was shipped to Europe. Three new railroads are likely to be built into Ottumwa, la., during1 next summer.
Unless rain falls iu Arizona within the next three weeks the losses to cattle owners will be immense, it is said.
Theodore Graham, a crippled crossing watchman at Nevada, O., has been informed of a legacy of $200,000 from a relative in Ireland.
John II. VVilderman, a bachelor farmer of Turkey Hill,
111.,
died on Mon
day, leaving- an estate valued at £500,000 to two brothers. An appeal for funds is made by the executive of the Irish National league to Irish nationalists and friends of home rule in America.
David Gallagher was drowned while crossing the river on the ice at Dubuque. His companion, Henry Grippey, was saved after a struggle.
Eastern capitalists are said to be plotting to secure most of the mining lands at Creede, Col., where rich discoveries of gold were made recently.
At Pittsburgh, Pa., Tuesday Charles Rodrus shot and probably fatally wounded his wife because she refused to share a recently inherited fortune
Cirover Cleveland held a reception at
the Hotel Cadillac in Detroit Tuesday evening. It is estimated tnat 15,000 grasped tho hand of the ex-
persons president. Washington's birthday was celebrated in Paris by a banquet and a reception by the wife of Minister Reid. American flags were freely displayed throughout the city.
The annual meeting of the Michigan Patrons of Industry opened at Grand Rapids '1 uesdiiy. Fifteen thousand members were represented by the delegates present, against. 50,000 last year.
Charcoal burners at Emerson, Mich., thrust a dissolute woman into a charcoal kiln and left her there five hours. 'I hough the fire was not hot enough to burn her, the woman was overcome by smoke and never regained ness after being taken out-
conscious-
Burlington joined the Illinois-Iowa Baseball league Wednesday. Rt. Rev. William J. Frost. D. D., LL. I)., died at Carlyle, 111., Wednesday, aged 62 years.
Maj. A. M. Sevier, formerly railroad commissioner of Missouri, died Wednesday at N eoslio, Mo.
Gen. Ivory Pike is a candidate for the republican nomination for lieutenant governor of Illinois, it is said.
Tuesday night a negro outlaw at Sedalia, Mo., assaulted two women, plundered a house and committed highway robbery within two hours. A reward of §1,500 is offered for his arrest
In the penitentiary at Fort Madison, la., Tuesday night Clem Zumbragel, foreman in one of the shops, was fatally wouuded by a convict named Pollard.
I he Kenosha. Watch Case Company of Kenosha, Wis., and the Rockford Watch Case Company of Rockford, 111., have consolidated, with headquarters at the latter place.
Col R. G. Ingereoll will begin suit against Rev. A. C. Dixon, of Rrooklyn, for slander, the latter having said that Ingersoll advocated the dissemination of obscene literature.
In the Delameter trial at Meadville, Pa., Wednesday, .ludge Henderson instructed the jury to acquit G. 13. and T. A. Delameter. George Wallace Delameter, the other defendant, is likely to be acquitted.
LOST $200,000 IN THE MAIL.
Package of Valuable Tapera (Joes Astray Itetwucn .Minneapolis. Miun., and West Superior, Wis.
WEST SITPEIUOK, Wis., Feb. 25.—Two hundred thousand dollars' worth of mortgages and notes have been lost in the mails between Minneapolis and Superior. It is now more than a month ago that the package containing the valuable documents was shipped, though the discovery of the loss was only made Tuesday. Postal inspectors have been notified and are now diligently at work. January 14 the papers were shipped from the oflice of W. W. Townsend, a wealthy Minneapolis capitalist, by the Superior bank of commerce for collection. No notice was reeoived regardiif^- the papers. Mr. Townsend arrived in the city Tuesday and went lo the hank. He was astonished to learn that the package had not been received and the authorities were at once notified. Townsend is confident that the package was put in the Minneapolis post oflice.
ANOTHER PARTY.
A New tolitical Combination Formed at St. Louis.
UESULT OF THE BIG COSFEIIESCE.
II Will iopoi'uto with tli«: J'coplc'H Tarty ill Nomiiiiitiiif Ciimlidiit for the Presidency on the Fourth oT July.
WKDXF.SIUV'S SESSION-.
ST. LOUIS, Feb. 25. —A mammoth new political combination is in existence for the coming presidential campaign. So at least the delegates to the big^ national industrial conference which ended here Wednesday night believe. So stormy a convention probably never before ended so quickly and in seeming harmony that, too, after virtually slamming the doors in the face of a national party claiming a million voters and vainly seeking a union with the organizatiod acting so summarily. All the efforts off Miss Frances Willard for a juncture with the prohibitionists were snuffed out by the convention at the last moment-
Kesult of the Convention.
The net result of the convention as figured by the people's-party men, who are chiefly from the northern tiers of states, is that they have by magnificent strategy effected a complete capture of the political strength of the Farmers' Alliance in the south. On the other hand the southern alliance men, under the plea of having' acted as individuals without in any way binding their organization, say that they have not altered one iota the position they have consistently held. After the coii-
vention was over and a so-called "mass-meeting'' attended by the delegates, at, which the most important action of the day was taken, was at end, "Hen" Terrill, of Texas, said that the alliance men in the south have all along been in favor of independent action, but would not and have not committed this organization in a 113- way.
J*or jv National Convention. •Inly 4 was tho date finally agreed upon for holding a national' convention. 1 his was decided by a committee from the convention having full authority to act with the national committee of the people's party. The place for holding the convention was left to be chosen by a sub-committee of ten to be appointed by Mr. Taubeneek, of Illinois. Omaha and Kansas City. Kan., were favorably mentioned. Hy delaying the convention until July 4 the parties interested will be given an opportunity to see what the conventions of the republican and democratic parties are disposed to do.
HuryliiK Sectional Strife.
Monday morning a "blue and gray" mass-meeting, into which the convention resolved itself before grappling with the platform temporarily, was a pretty feature of the conference. Commodore Vandevoort, of Nebraska, for the union veterans present in the. convention, pledged President Polk, for the old confederate soldiers in attendance, that they would join hands to bury sectional hate, and the treaty, if such it might be termed, was ratified in speeches bj' ex-Senator an Wyck, of Nebraska, and Jen Terrill, of Texas.
A resolution offered by llraneh, of Georgia, to hold the democratic and republican parties responsible for the present condition of the poor people, was laid on the table.
The platform committee's report was read by Ignatius Donnelly, of Minnesota. It starts out with a lengthy address to the people.
The ArirircsH.
It declares that "the nation has been brought to the verse of moral, political and material ruin Corruption dominates the ballot box, th, legislatures, the congress, and touchc-s even the ermine of th» bench. The people are demoralized. M-ny of the states have been compelled to isolate the voters at the polling pUices, in order to prevent universal intimidation or bribery. The newspapers are subsidized or muzzled public opinion sflcnced buslm ss pivs lifted: our homes covered with mortgages labor impoverished, and the land concentrating in the hands of capitalists. The urban workmen ure denied the light of organization for self-protection imported pauperized labor beats down their wages a hireling standing army, unrecognized by our laws, is established to shoot tlicm down ami they are rapidly degenerating to European conditions. "In this crisis of human affairs, the intelligent working people and producers of tlie. United States have come together in the name of peace, order and society, to defend liberty, prosperity and justice. "We declare our union and independence. We assert our purpose to vote with that political organization which represents our principles. "We assert that a political organization, representing the principles herein stated, is necessary to redress the grievances of which we complain. "We charge that the controlling influences dominating the old political parties have allowed the existing dreadful conditions to develop without serious effort to restrain or prevent them. Neither do they now intend to accomplish reform. They have agreed together to ignore, in tho coming campaign, every issue but one. They propose to drown the outcries of a plundered people with the uproar of a sham-battle over the tariff: so that corporations, national banks, rings, trusts, 'watered stocks,' tho demonetization of silver and the oppressions of usurers, may all be lost sight of. They propose to sacrifice our homes and children upon tho altar of mammon to destroy the hopes of the multitude in order to secure corruption funds from the great lords of plunder. "In order to restrain the extortions of aggregated capital, to drive the money chargers out of tho temple, to form a perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquillity, provide for the common defense, promote tho general •welfar and secure the blessings of liberty for ourselves and our posterity, we do ordain and establish the following platform of principles:
Tlie riiitform.
"1. We declare that the union of labor forces of the United States, this day accomplished, permanent and perpetual. May its spirit enter into all hearts for the salvation of the republic and the uplifting of mankind. "2. Wealth belongs to him who creates it. Every dollar taken from industry without an equivalent is robbery. If any win not work, neither shall he eat. The interests of rural and urban labor are the same their enemies are identical. "3. We demand a national currency, safe, sound I'l .l flexible, issued by the general government only, a full legal tender for all debts, public an-.l private, and that without the use of banking corporations, a just, equitable means of circul.i':.m, at a tax not to exceed per cent, as set forth in the sub-treasury plan of the Farmers' Alliance, or some better system: also by payments discharge of its obligation for public improvements.
'J*.'
"4. We demand free ana imi,.,iited coinage of Bilver. "5. AYe demand that the amount of circulating medium be speedily increased to tiot less than $50 per capita. "C. YVe demand a greater income tax. I '. AYe believe that tlie money of the country I alionkl be kept as much as possible in the hands of the people, and hence, we demand that all national and state revenues shall be limited to I the necessary expenses of the government ecoI comically and honestly administered. "8. YVe demand that postal savings banks bo established by the government for the safe deposit of the earnings of (he people, and to facilitate exchange. "9. Your sub-committee upon land plank beg to submit to your approval the following:
The land, including all the natural resources of wealth, is the heritage of all the people, and should not be monopolized for speculative purposes, and alien ownership of lands should be prohibited. All lands now held by railroads and other corporations in excess of their actual needs, and all lands now* owned by aliens should be reclaimed by the government, and held for actual scalers only. 10. Transportation being a means of exchange and a public necessity, the government should own and operate the railroads in the interest of the people. "11. The telegraph and telephone, liko tho post office system, being a necessity for the transmission of news, should be owned and operated by the government iu the interest of tho people. "I-'. Y\ demand that the government issue legal tender notes and pay the union soldiers the difference between the price of the depreciated money in which he was paid and gold.
Uesolved, That we hail this conference as the consummation of the perfect union of the hearts and hands of all sections of our common country the men who wore the gray and the men who wore the blue meet here to extinguish the last smouldering embers of civil war in tho tears of joy of a united and happy people, and we agree to carry the Stars and Stripes forward forever to the highest point of national greatness."
On motion of Mr. gates, without
Powderly, the deleking a vote on the platform, adjourned I
ta
adoption of tlie for two hours. Woniiiii smlrajro and Prohibition.
A fight for the recognition of the prohibition issue in the platform was started immediately upon the reassembling of the convention. Miss J* ranees Willard presented a minority report which she moved be adopted immediately as an amendment to the majority report. The minority report favored woman suff rage and demanded the suppression of the liquor traffic. Attempts to head Miss illard off were ineffectual.
In the prohibition controversy Miss Willard was opposed and the compromise plan! inserted. It was urged by opponents that the lady was not a delegate, but when it eatne to a vote the opposition was overwhelmingly dedefeated. Mr. Powderly, of the Knights of Labor, offered votes in favor of universal suffrage, but without avail. The count was disputed and protests were made against the Pow-derly-Hayes domination in the platform. After a recess of thirty minutes, during which Weaver, Iowa, announced himself opposed, the majority report was adopted amidst the wildest enthusiasm. The woman's suffrage amendment was finally carried .is a resolution.
Other Indorsements.
for- I the ,'hts
The convention indorsed laws bidding option dealing, indorsed stand of the Rochester (X. V. Kni of Labor against a clothing combine and tineatened a boycott it necessary and indorsed till goods learinr the Knights of Labor label. The woman suffrage resolution again came up and Acting Chairman Terrill announced that it had nothing to do with prohibition. Washburn, of Massachusetts, insisted that the resolution was a substitute for both of Miss Willard's minority planks, prohibition and woman suffrage, the idea being that wherever throughout the nation woman suffrage was secured prohibition would soon follow. The previous question was called and Miss Curtis' resolution to submit the question of universal suffrage to the legislatures of the different states and territories for favorable action, now thoroughly separated from the platform, was adopted without further opposition.
Aet Willi the People'8 I'lirfy.
Numerous efforts to have the convention proceed to appoint the committee suggested by Donnelly to act with the people's party national committee were wholly ineffectual under the rulings of Acting Chairman Terrill and the insistence of National Lecturer Willets, of the Farmers' Alliance, upon a motion to adjourn sine die. Mcf'une, of the tanners' Alliance, announced, however, that all the delegates would hold a mass meeting in their individual capacity immediately alter adjournment.
To Call a Convention.
Without stirring from their seats the delegates, after Ten-ill's gavel fell, ostensibly adjourning the convention, went right 011 with (Jen. Weaver in the chair, and appointed a committee to act with the national committee of the people's party to call a national convention to nominate a president and vice president of the United States, as follows: (Jen. Van Wyck. of Nebraska: C. \V. MeCune, of Texas: M. I. Branch, of Ceorgia .1. 11. Powers, of Nebraska: T. H. Maguire, of New "Nork L. I.,. Polk, of North ("arolina: J. H. Willetts, of Kansas: President Humphreys, of the National Colored Alliance Pierce Hackett, of Missouri N. M. Harnett, of the Illinois Mutual lienetlt association: I,. P. Morrill, of Louisiana John Seits, of Ohio: Mrs. Mary K. Leese, of Kansas Mrs. Dr. Dabbs, of Texas, and Benjamin Terrill, of Texas.
Wants a Monument lor l.oivcll.
LONDON,
l'eb. '25.—Leslie Stephen,
M. A., the editor and author, has written a letter to the Times in which he proposes that a fund be raised for the purpose of erecting a monument to .lames Russell Lowell, the noted American author and former minister to the court of St. James, in Westminster Abbey.
Kloctml I'rotesHors.
RIXCKTOX,
X. J., Feb. 25.—Rev.
Oerhardus Vos, of (Jrand Rapids, Mich., and Rev. Dr. (Jeorgc T. Purves, of Pittsburgh. Pa., have been elected to professorships in the Princeton Theological seminary.
Working for l-'lvo Cents 11 IJuv-" Muxicir, Feb. 25.—At a libel trial held in this city the fact was reveal that an embroidery manufacturer has in his employ women who, under the "sweating" system, receive only live cents a day.
TRADE
Sprains,
The Surgical institute Verdict. IxniAXAi-ous, Ind., Feb. 25.—The verdict of Coroner Manlier in the surgical institute inquiry has led to the resignation of Deputy Coroner Dunn, and the latter event has caused an endless amount of comment about the verdict. The conclusion that the management was in no way responsible for the burning of the nineteen people is not warranted by the facts, which the coroner himself says were proved, and the whole, verdict is such a mass of contradictions and such a labored effort to exculpate the management that few, if any, regard it as an unbiased judgment. The verdict is worth thousands of dollars to the surgical institute management, for it not ordy relieves it from tho legal consequences of nineteen deaths, but advertises it as absolutely blameless iu connection with the terrible catastrophe.
A New .'Mniiufnctiiriiig Town. VAI.I'AHAISO, Ind.. Feb. 25.—A
Strikers Stnnil Firm.
LVDIAXAPOMS, Ind., Feb. 25. —Earlv Wednesday morning a half-dozen road ollieers drove a car out on the tracks at the Louisiana street stables, and ten minutes later it was pushed back into the barn by half a hundred strikers. The road ollieers resisted at first, but were soon overpowered and forced to yield. During the melee President Frenzel telephoned to the police station for assistance, but received a reply that the police would not interfere.
Humeri I'p the Horses.
Wiirrixo, Ind., Feb. 25.—Twentytwo of the most valuable horses of the Standard Oil Company were burned early Wednesday morning at the refinery at this place. The night watchman turned in an alarm immediately and brought out tho whole available refinery force to fight the flames. Hy the prompt and heroic action of the firemen the fire was checked before reaching the oi] stills and the superintendent's oflice. thus saving from destruction the largest refinery in the world.
Ixm.\
WITHOUT AN EQUAL.
MARK
EWfeAlN
deed
has been placed on record at Crown Point from ,1. II. Collett to Edgar A. Lyon conveying
8S:I
acres of land for
the consideration of 8220,750. This is the largest sale of real estate made this vicinity this year and comprising a tract of 'nearly 2 miles frontage on (Jrand Calumet river and lies near the Michigan Central railroad and about 2 miles from Hammond. It is understood that Lyon bought the property for a Massachusetts syndicate, which will erect a large manufacturing plant and start a town similar to Pullman, 111.
Cassiulay SiiMi-red iijustly. I.MMANAI'OI.IS, Ind., Feb. 2.V— Executive clemency was Wednesday extended to George Cassaday, of Morgan county. Cassaday wa*s convicted of robbery in .June. 1800, and sent to the southern prison for three and onehalf years. The principal evidence against him was given by a man who was implicated in the robbery and who subsequently, in order to save himself, swore that his testimony against C.assady was false. It is now believed that an innocent man has suffered and the governor has him a parole.
Cloned Sunday.
NAI-OI.IS,
Ind.. Feb. 2.V l!ev.
D. U. Lucas, chairman of the executive committee of the State Sabbath association, has issued an address "to the oflice rs and members of all the churches of Indiana. of all denominations." asking them to adopt and forward to their representatives in congress a resolution declaring that they are opposed to appropriations for the fair unless it is provided that it shall be closed on Sunda v.
I lie Ice liiirncil l.iku it Torch. LLAKTKOKN CITY, Intl.. Feb.
25.—A
Resident, of Mill Grove found a gas pipe frozen. lie detached a joint and got out of it a cylinder of solid ice about 2 feet in length. The idea occurred to I him to light the ice. He succeeded, the
ice cylinder burning just like a torch, It may be that the solution of natural gas transportation will be found by freezing.
^-There is~nothing that may not happen to a thin baby. There is nothing- that may not happen to a man who is losing his healthy weight.
We say they are They are first suspect
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