Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 2 July 1892 — Page 2

Tlx* tmallogt Pill In tho World!

Provided the great Organs

I of tho body are not irreparably Injured, there aro few diseases that

.Tiny Liver PiUs.

•will not cnro. By their action tbe __ Liver, tho Spleen, the Heart and the A Kidneys are brought into harmonious action, and health, vigor of mind and body follow thoir uso. Doso small. Price, 25 c. Office, 301'ark Place, N.

WEEKLY JOURNAL.

PRINTED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING By T. H. B. McCAIN.

Entered nt the Postoftico at Crawlordsville Indiana, as second-class mutter,

WEEKLY—

One year in advance 11.25 8ix months 75 Three months 40 One month 15

DAILY—

One year In advance J5.00 Six months 2.50 Three months 1.2") Per week delivered or bv mall 10

SATURDAY, JULY 2, 1892.

WAHASII college does Dot need pastor but r. president.

RECirisoeiTY will probably be the most prominent political issue tliis year. The longer it is tried, tho more apparent are its benefits.

ISAAC PCSEY GKAY will not be compelled to call on Col. Maynard to write bis letter of acceptance. Ten dollars saved is ten dollars made. .w,.a.

Yocu uncle Isaac is not in it to any great extent. Like the frail Uower he is cut down and withereth away, while the mourners goeth about the streets. Yea, verily, there is hope of a tree if it be cut down that the tender branches thereof may sprout up, but Isaac goeth down like the stick of rocket and where is he?

an exhausted

UNDER the new apportionment Oregon has two representatives in Congr&ss instead of one, and the majorities at the recent elections are BB follows: Her-

mann, Repre&entativo in Congress for the First district, 4,000 majority Ellis,

Representative for the Second district, 3,000 majority Moore, Supreme Judge, 6,000 majority Webster, Attorney General, 1,500 majority. The Republicans have a majority of 20 in the legislature. This is a splendid beginning for tho Republican campaign.

IT will be seen by a careful reading of the proceedings of the Chicago convention that the speakers and resolution builders in their attacks upon tho JIcKinley tariff law, their only argument was calamity. They pointed with 2ride 10 the depressed condition of labor and the calamities surrounding the farm, both of which are more prosperous than at any period in the history of the country under Democratic rule. Poor old Democratic party! Creeping through shadow for a century, they only §66 gloom,

COL. "WATTEHSON should have been warned by an incident in the history of his own State, from his bold movement for a free trade platform. At the battle of Blue Lick, while the Kentuckians jwerj hesitating whether tp qrosg the tiicking river and attack tho Indians in their ambuscade, Col. Geary drew his sword and exclaimed in a loud voice. "Let all who are not cowards follow me," and immediately spurred hiB horse into the river. All followed only to meet a bloody repulse on the other side. In all human probability Col. Watterson's rashnesB will have a similar outcome.

AVliy will tho gallant Colonel take no warning from history?

AAHON JONES, the great organizer and hustltr of Northern Indiana, will be a candidate for Secretary of State before the Republican nominating convention next week. That Mr. Jones would be a power in a campaign goes without saying. Although a practical farmer from earliest boyhood, as he is to day, he self educated, a good speaker, and thoroughly at home on the stump, and perfectly conversant with the issues of the duy. The Democracy have honored the northern tier of counties with the lieu tenant governorship nomination, and the Republican party should do no less than to give the same tier a place on its State ticket. The place is Secretary of State and the man is Aaron Jones, St. Joseph county.

of

GEN. JOHN W. FOSTER said recently that the published account of what is purported to have occurred at the conference with the Canadian Commissioners, held at the department of State on the 4th of June, the date of the resignation of Mr. Blaine as Secretary of State, in which it was alleged that a divergence of views was developed between Mr. Blaine and Gen. Foster and which resulted in an abrupt adjournment of the conference, was without the slightest foundation in fact. Gen. Foster stated that there was complete harmony of views between Mr. Blaine and himself, that tho conference WBB conducted in the most pleasant tpirit by all who participated in it, and that it was not adjourned until all the business which occasioned the meeting had been entirely dispatched.

CONFEDERATE CONSTITUTION IN THE DEMOCRATIC PLATFORM AT LAST. In order to curry favor with England and induce that great nation to recognize their independence, the Confederate States, when they seceded in 1861, adopted the following as one of the provisions of their constitution: "Nor shall any duties nor taxes on importations from foreign nations be laid to promote or foster any branch of industry."

This was notice to Great Britain that she could forever have tho boon of free trade with the Southern Confederacy if she would only recognize it as a nation and help, in that way, to secure its in dependence. No manufactures were to be encouraged—England was to have the privilege of furnishing the Confederacy all the goods it might need, in exchange for raw cotton. This had long been the idea of the Southern planters. The scheme, however, did not succeed at that time, and now it is to be tried again. The Confederate constitution iB buried forever among the rubbish of an unsuccessful attempt at revolution. But the Democratic platform is a thing that still exists, and may be made and fashioned to suit any emergency. The Southern Confederacy is still for free trade. It still believes that no tariff should be levied to foster or promote any kind of industries and having full control of the Democratic machine, it forces into the Demcratic platform the following provision: "Wo declare it to bo a fundamental principle of the Democratic party that tho Federal government has no constitutional power to impose and collect duties except for the purpose of revenue only," etc.

That is to say that the Federal government has no constitutional power to impose a tariff for the purpose of promoting or fostering any branch of industry. Tho Confederate constitution on this subject, it is urged, is already a part of the National constitution by judicial construction. "A tariff for for revenue only," is a tariff so levied as purposely not to 'promote or foster any branch of industry," and we are now told that this is already the proper in

(4i

V. ,•

1

terpretation of the constitution and that

Washington, Hamilton, Madison, Jeffer son, Jackson, Clay, Webster and John Marshall were all in error in holding that duties might be levied in such a way as to "promote and foster" manufactures in this country. Are the principles of the confederacy to be established after all Is Grover Cleveland to accomplish, peacefully, what Jefferson Davis failed to accomplish in a bloody war of four years? Are tho American people prepared to drag from the debris of the lost cause, its old constitution and make it a fundamental guide for our statesmen, our judiciary, and overthrow an interpretation of the constitution that has stood for a century, and been approved by all the groat jurists of the country, as well as by the very men who mado the constitution? Evidently the Chicago convention, at the dictation of Col. WatLerson, has undertaken a job that cannot be performed in a single year and this truth will be made manifost on the 7th of next November,

BOLTS THE TICKET.

The Rocky Mountain News, the editor of which is Thomas M. Patterson, formerly of this city, and who was a dolegate to the Chicago convention, has bolted the ticket thore nominated. Mr, Patterson was a member of tho committee on resolutions and submitted a minority report on tho silver plank, which was voted down amidst a storm of applause. This, together with tho nomination of Cleveland, who is an inveterate enemy of free silver, was more than our Tom could endure and hence in a lengthy editorial repudiates both the platform and the ticket. The ar ticie closes by saving: "Tho News unhesitatingly elects to sustain tho people and industries of the section to which it has been so long wedded and refuses to betray those interests by supporting Grover Cleveland for the presidency, thus becoming a party to a financial conspiracy, the culmination of which would involve certain and ruinous disaster to all who are concerned in silver mining, and would as surely prove calamitous to the producing population of the United States." The News will probably support the ticket that will be nominated by the Peoples' Party. The signs are favorable for a rocky path for Grover.

TIIE Frankfort Crescent, enraged at the treachery to Gray and the cold blooded way in which he was Bold out at Chicago, gives notice that it proposes to carry a knife in its belt. It says:

The Democrats of Indiana owe a debt which is not due now, but which will fall due and become payable in the future. It is owing to tho Morses, Shanklins, Kerns, Wilsons, Englishes and that crowd of selfish marplots, who have subordinated Democratic success in Indiana to their jealous desire to destroy and humiliate Gov. Gray as the Mascot leader of the Indiana Democracy. Opposing Gov. Gray as a Presidential can-

ctidate, they have hypocritically posed as advocates of his nomination for the Vice Presidency, only to secretly stab him at Chicago, as they did at St. Louis four years ago.

The harmony that exists among the brethren is like unto that of a cage of hungry hyenas.

GEN. JOHN M. PALMER.

To the Editor The Journal. To settle a bet will you please state whether or not Gen. John M. Palmer, of Illinois, was ever at any time a Republican. W. L.

Gen. John M. Palmer was a Democrat until 1854 when he left that party on the slavery issue. He became a Republican and was a delegate to tho first National Republican convention and voted for Abraham Lincoln. He formed a regiment at the out break of the war was promoted to Colonel, Brigadier General and Major General. He wae elected Governor of Illinois in 18G9 as a Republican and served until 1873. He left the Republican party in the Greeley campaign of 1872.

IT is almost at the beginning of a new fiscal year, and hardly any of the regular appropriation bills, all of which should be available on the fiist of July, have become laws. As a do-nothing body the present House has never been excelled, and its record alone should be suilicient not only to elect the Republican Presidential ticket, but to restore tho control of the House of Representatives to the Republican party. It is only when the House is Republican tuat the public business is promptly and properly attended to.

TIIE local organs of free trade which support the National Democratic platform will naturally bo opposed to the ordinance which the business men demand as a protection to themselves. The free traders must be consistent and carry the "cheap" idea out to its logical conclusion. By letting outside hawkers and peddlers work the town a few people may be

renabled

to buy a little

cheaper but it is to the detriment of the whole community.

•IT was surprising that Stevenson should have been put on the ticket with Cleveland as it is well known that the feelings between them was anything but cordial during the last year or two of Mr. Cleveland's administration. Stevenson's favorite method of speaking of Mr. Cleveland among his intimates was "that mugwump in the White House." The fact is commented on that Mr. Cleveland sent no congratulations to Stevenson.

1

TIIE movement of the business men to suppress the travelling peddlars and hawkers is in direct line with the Republican policy of protection. The license is the tariff, the peddlars who pay no rent or taxes correspond to the European manufacturers who pay less for labor than Americans do. Favoring protection THE JOUIINAI, cannot but favor this proposed ordinance which will protect our business interests.

THE proposed ordinance to raise the license fee on fakirs will meet with the general approbation. Mullet-headed citizens are constantly being gulled by the patent medicine fiends on the court house corner, and the poor things need protection. B1

TIIE nomination of "Cleve and Steve" is being cheered more vociferously in London than it is in Now York and Crawfordsville.

out VMsitlDMLS.

Kor President,

11KNJAM1N HAKUISOV, of Indiana. Kor Vice-President, Wurn LAW KIS1D. of New York. 1'or Prosecuting Attorney

WILI.IA.M M, HELVES. Kor Keprc-entativo, NATHAN U. COl'l.EULY.

Kor Clerk.

HLXItV 15 II1"LETT. For Treasurer, JAMK? U. McCORMlCK.

Kor Kecorder.

THOMAS T. UN HALL. Kor Slierill CHARLES E. DAVIS.

Kor Coroner,

1

DU. RICH AUDI'. KING. Kor Surveyor,

WILLIAM F.SilAKPE. Kor Assessor. CHARLES W. ELIMORE. For Commissioner, 1st Dist.,

JOHN PETERSON.

For Commissioner, .'id I) 1st, ALBERT 110RNUAKER.

The True Laxative Principle. Of the plants used in manufacturing the pleasant remedy, Syrup of Figs, has a permanently beneficial effect on the human system, while the cheap vegetable extracts and mineral solutions, usually sold as medicines, are permanently injurious. Being well informed, you will use the true remedy only. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co.

Miles' Serve & Liver Pills. Act on anew principle—regulating the tver stomtche and bowels through the nerves. A new discovery. Dr .Miles' Pills speedily cure billouness. bad taste, torpid iver pileB, constipation. Unequaled for men, women, children. Smallest, mildest urest. 80 doses 26 cents.

Coughing leads to Consumptions Kemp'sBalsam will stop the cough at once. -i-'Si

Children Cry for

Pitcher's Castoria.

OUR NATIONAL FLAG.

Iho Modifications It Has Undergone Since Its Adoption In 1777. bo many questions liave been asked regarding the American llag that the quartermaster general of the army has issued a bulletin on the subject. The title of the bulletin is "The Stars and Stripes." It follows:

The American congress, in session at Philadelphia, established by its resolution of Juue 14, 1777, a national ilag for the United States of America. The resolution was as follows:

Resolved, That the Hag of the thirteen United States be thirteen stripes, alternate red and white that the union be thirteen stars, white in a blue lield, representing a new eoustellation.

Although nearly a year previous. July 1, 1770, these thirteen United States had been declared independent, this resolution is the first legislative action roaorded relating to a national Hag for the new sovereignty.

The use of thirteen stripes was not a now feature, as they had been introduced (in alternate white and blue) on the upper left hand corner of a standard presented to the Philadelphia Light Horse by its captain in the early part Df 1775, and moreover the Union flag of the thirteen united colonies raised at Washington's headquarters, at Cambridge, January 2. 177(i. had the thirteen stripes just as they are this day, but it also had the crosses of St. (.reorge and St. Andrew on a blue ground in the corner. There is no satisfactory evidence, however, that any Hag bearing the union of the star?, had been in publie use before the resolution of June,1777.

It ib not known to whom the credit of designing the stars and stripes is duo. It is claimed that a Mrs. John Ross, an upholsterer who resided on Arch street. Philadelphia, was the maker of the first Mag combining the stars and stripes. Mer descendants assert that a committee of congress, accompanied by (.ten. Washington, who was in Philadelphia in June, 1770, called upon Mrs. Ross and engaged her to make the ilag from a rough drawing, which, at her suggestion, was redrawn by Gen. Washington with pencil in her back parlor, and the flag thus designed was adopted by congress.

Although the resolution establishing the Hag was not officially promulgated by the secretary of congress until September }, 1777, it seems well authenticated that the stars and stripes wore carried at the battle of the I5randywine September 11, 1777, and thenceforward during all the battles of tho revolution.

Soon after its adoption the new flag was hoisted on the naval vessels of the United States. The ship Ranger, bearing the stars and stripes and commanded by Capt. Paul Jones, arrived at a French port, December 1, 1777, and her flag received on February 14. 1778, the first salute ever paid to the American flag by foreign naval vessels.

The f!ag remained unchanged for about eighteen years after its adoption. liy this time two more states Vermont and Kentucky) had been admitted to the Union, and on January 1:5, 1794, congress enacted that from and after the first day of May, 1795, the flag of the United States be fifteen stripes, alternate red and white, and that the Union be fifteen stars, white in a blue field.

This flag was the national banner from 1795 to lblS, during which period occurred the war of 1812 with Great Britain. 15y ISIS five additional states, (Tennessee, Ohio, Louisiana, Indiana and Mississippi) had been admitted into the Union, and therefore a further change in the flag seemed to be required. After considerable discussion in congress on the subject, the act of Apri} 4, 1S13, was passed, which provided:

Fil'st—"That from and after the 4th day of July next the flag of the United States be thirteen horizontal stripes, alternate red and white that the union have twenty stars, white in a blue field."

Second—"That on the admission of every new state into the Union one star be added to the union of the flag, and that such addition shall take effect on the 4th of July next succeeding such admission."

The return to the thirteen stripes of the 1777 Ilag was due in a measure to a reverence for the standard of the revolution, but it was also due to the fact that a further increase of tho number of stripes would have made tho width of tho Hag out of proportion to its length unless the stripes were narrowed, and this would have impaired thoir distinctness when seen from a distance. A newspaper of the time said: '•(5y this regulation the thirteen stripes will represent the number of states whose valor and resources originally etfected American independence, and the additional stars will mark the increase of the states since the present constitution."

No act has since been passed by congress altering this feature of the flag, and it is the same as originallj' adopted, except as to the number of stars in its union. In the war with Mexico tho national flag bore twenty-nine stars in its union, during the late civil war thirty-flvc, and sincc July 4, 1891, fortyfour stars. In none of the acts of congress relating to the flag has the manner o^, arranging the stars been prescribed, and in consequence there has been a lack of uniformity in tho matter, and flags in use of tho public generally may be seen with the stars arranged in various ways.

The early custom was to insert the stars in parallel rows across the blue field, and this custom has, it is believed, been observed, in the navy, at least, since 1818, at which time the president ordered the stars to be arranged in such manner on the national flag used in tho navy. In the army, toe, it is believed the stars have always been arranged in horizontal rows across the blue field, but not always in vertical rows the effect, however, being about the same as in the naval flag.

Hereafter, there will be difference in the arrangement bot .veen the army and the navy, as an agreement has been arrived at between tho war and navy departments on the subject.

Since July 4,1891, the number of stars has been forty-four, arranged in seven horizontal lines, the top and bottom each containing eight stars and the intermediate lines each seven stars.

The national flags hoisted at camps or forts are made of bunting of American manufacture. They are of the following three sizes: The storm and recruiting flag, eight feet in length by four feet two inches in width the post flag, measuring twenty feet in length by ten feet in width the garrison flag, measuring thirty-six feet in length by twenty feet in width (this Hag is hoisted only on holidays and great occasions.) The union is one-third of the length of the flag, and extends to the lower edge of the fourth red stripe from the top.

The national colors carried by regiments of infantry and artillery and tho battadion of engineers, on parade or in battle, are made of silk and are six feet six inches long and six feet wide, and mounted on stalls. The field of the colors is thirty-one inches in length and extends to the lower edge of the fourth red stripe from the top. The sizes of the flags used in the army and navy are not fi.xed by law, but are prescribed by army and navy regulations.—Albany Argus.

I Have Taken Several

Bottles of Bradfield's Female Regulator for falling of the womb and other diseases combined, of 16 years standing, and I really believe I am cured entirely, for which please accept my thanks

MRS. W. E. STEBBJNS, Ilid'ge, Ga.

To Thoao Who Wish to Invest or liorroir Money. The Indiana Mutual Muilding and Loan Association holds o'.it greater inducements than liny oti.or association of like character. I'irst, there is no membership foe charged to become a member ol this Association. Second, its in forest and premium is less and its earnings arc as groat, it not greater than hose of other associations.

ILLUSTRATION TO liORROWER.&iiK MIAHKIIOt.DKH HORliOW J] ,000. WS'-S Monthly dues at^S per month tor 72 mouths $

Interest and premium fS-'ilJ'-j per mo. lor 72 months Attorney lee

ILLUSTRATION TO 1MVESTOR. The investor receives at maturity 91,000 00 Total cost to investor f8 per month for 72 months 570 00

l'rollt in tiyears $ 4^4 00 If the earnings continue to be as good in the future a they have in the past two years, we wiil be able to mature the stock in 7-J months. Compare the above Illustrations with those of other Associations before invest ing. It will be seen that the borrower can, In a few years, secure a home at an outlay of but little more than his rent would have been. While the borrower can thus secure a heme with his little sa\ ings-, Uit idivcan also realize a ha ndsome proilt 011 his stock, thus tlemonstrat it"-r that imestmeuts in Ini lding associaiions aro more profitable ami secure than in any other legitimate business. .1 his will be seen by reading the Prospectus and by-laws which will be furnished and lul iulormatiou given to any one by calling011

CUMMCRLANI) M1LLKR, '11 us West Main St.

N0]{FVjEWET1N0

Ul''C0UNTV

1

HUARDOF

All tax payers of Moi.tgoiiierv Count v, Indiana will take notice that the County iioard ol Review will meet, at the county Auditor's olllceon the 11th day of July, 1H!):2, to heacomplaints and equalize the assessments of Montgomery county.

The Hoard will hear complaints from all persons residing outside ol Inion township on July 1-,', lh!»-,', and all persons residing in l.nion township and Crawfordsville July 1U, IS!):!, 'l'ax payers who have complaints to make will please make them on the dates above fixed lor their parted the county.

JOHN L.GOHEN, Auditor M. C.

*he ccssea 01Q economyr I THe surest raaJjta wcaltk JL WittiW.ro G&uzaDoora •conoo]^' Seems too tKc path cp health. For as with tkem tho Juices

Remain within the meafc»

.. Rore food and much the bottziN ta tcFt fc? us Co cab* Meats roasted in tlieir own juices by using the

WiRE

GAUZE OVEN DOOR

POUND EXCLUSIVELY OI? TUB IJITIVS

CHARTER OAK STOVES and RAKQES.

There la cot a cooklnft apparatus made using the Bolld Oven Door but that tho loss In weight of meat Is from to 40 per cent, of the meat roasted. In other words, a rib of beef welching ten pounds, 11 roasted medium to well done v/lll looe three pounds

The fiamo roastod in the CHARTER OAK RANGE using tho WIRE! GACZE OVJ£N DOOR, loses about one pound.

To allow meat to shrink Is to lose a large portion ol lta Juices and flavor. The llbres do not separatOi tud It becomes tough, tasteless and unpalatable.

Sold bv Zack Mahornev & Sons.

O. H. Erganbright, V. S.,

GRADUATE OF

Ontario VeternaryCollege,Torontf aa

DISEASES OF DOMESTIC ANIMALS?

—Surgery a Specialty.—

Your patronage solicited. Calls by mail or telegram promptly answerad. Office with Merrick'& Darnell, Livery Stable. 112, 114 and 110 East Market Street, Crawfordsville, Indiana.

The Old Sperry Mill.

We have 111 it selling' Hour to the merchants of Crawfordsville and propose to give the consumers the henellt ol the large protlt mado heretofore on our Hour by the merchants

The reason wo do this is the merchants ol' Crawiordsville have not treated us fairly. When you waut to buy Hour or exchange your wheat for it call at the Old Spcrrv Mill, north of the city. We will make it to your interest to do so. Hespcctlvely yours

T. L. Thurston

$100000 TO LOAN'

7 per cent» Annual Interest,

b.

it

aCt

?°i,

Commission

NO HUMBUG.

Cumberland & Miller,8

ABSTRACTFORITLESt.MainWest118

Hster,

aving secured tho services of Wm. Wob late of the firm of Johnson & Webster, abstractors of title, am prepared to lurnish on short notice, full and complete

tltlet0

"U

1,lnds In

n'V.*'e^I1

Montgomery

countj, Indiana, at reasonable prices. Deed* the^ScSrKSoffleefUlly

executud- Cll»

octovl THOS. T. MUNHALL. Recorder.

MONEY to LOAN. CSS ft

1

payment

fT this money back to

0r

more'

at

Write to 01 call on

ani'

interest

C.N. WILLIAMS & CO.,

Crawfordsville, Indiana.

O. W. PAUL. M. w. nitUNEK.

PAUL & BRUNER,

Attorneys-at-Law,

Ollicc over Mahorney's Store, a or vi In All business entrusted to their euro u-m receive prom pi attention. CHIC will

Kennedy & Kennedv, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW

CRA I*0 KDSVIIiR 1\TTII A

OfUcoin OrnbuuH block North Washington St

E. W. REAM, Dentist.

the e\tm't

'7,n"tooth.

grocery.

:',n •Jwi't&ry'w u'rTlor

tlie CAtruc'tion oi G.W, HK\M

0V°'

570 00

(00

00 00

Total payment to the Association 51,181 00 Ton shares are worth at maturity 1,000 00 Total cost, ol £1,000 lor (J years $ 1S1 00

Hornaday & l'&

THEOMcMECHAig" DENTIST,

CKAWFOKDSVILLE, INDIANA lenders his fccrvico to tho good work and moderate nrices." Motto

M- D-Wi,ite'

IV v.M. lu™ ", R. HLMPHHEY,

White, Hnmphrey & Reeves.

ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,

Crawfordsville, Inc.

Ollice 10S -a Main street.

Money to Loan.

Houses aud Lois for Sale also Dwellings to Rent.

Abstracts or Title and Deeds aud Mortifag-es Carclully Prppared.

AL.BERT C. JENNI^ON

Loan and Insurance agent, and abstractor a Conveyancer.

122 East

chittx

TREATS ALL e-

Main St., Crawfordsville

Morgan. & Lee

AJJSTIlACTOIiis, LOAN AM)

INSURANCE AGENTS

itel

Money to Loan at per cent interest.

Farms ami City Property For Sale.

Life, Fire and Accident Insurance. Oflice North Washington st., OrnbanEBloclc, Crawfordsville, lnd.

FIRST MORTGAGE

LOAN,

AT 4 PER CENT Interest payable Annnally

APPLY TO

G. W.WRIGHT

Fisher Block, Kocm 8, Crawfordsville,

IIH^

||FOR SALE

"At, the Gold Kidfto Herd Poland China •jfyhogs. of both sexes,

I armors' prices.

»W„sir.iU.'ii- Also Haried and White Plymouth lut chicks. KRKS in season C'ou and Inspect, .t.y stock before purchasing Also. I have the celebrated Pacing Mjillmn. Hill Hull man, mark ol 2::tOl4, out of Daniel Uoone, 1st dam bydieen Mountain Morgan. (iKOKlilJ W. I't 1,1,I'll. miles north ol Crawiordsville. lnd. Mention Till: JOUHNAl/

To ConsumitIves.

The undersigned having been restored to health by simple means, after fullering lor several years with a severe lung ullection, and that dread disease COJIKHniptton. Is anxious to make known to his fellow sullererers tho means of cure. To those who desiie it, he will cheerfully send (free of charge) a copy of the prescription used, which they 'will llnd a sure euro for

Convumptiun, Axthma, Catarrh, Unm

and all tnroat and lung

Maladies.

Ho

hopes all sufferers will try his remedy, as It is invaluable. Those desiring tbe prescription, which will cost them nothing, and may prove a blessing, will please address KEV. EDWARD A. WILSON Brooklyn. New York

Co-opoiatiYs Industrial Onion

124, East Market St.

FRANK CORNELL,

Local Manager & Purchasing Agent.

Also agent for the Wholesale Dealers' Association. We buy for cash only and therefore we have to sell for cash. No toleration of willful misrepresentation in business. No antagonism to any reputable business or business firm.

We furnish Gents' Suits to order, Machine mado carpets, Hinding twine, Notions, Sewing Machines, etc. Old machines taken in exchange for netv ones. More lines of goods to follow. Eating apples a specialty. Call and examine our samples and give us a sbare of your patronage, and we will strive to merit a continuance of the same.