Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 9 July 1892 — Page 7
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Fall term betrina Tuesday Sept. 13. Superior facilities are afforded students. The college maintains a full corps of competent instructors umi oirers prnduatc and undertrraduate "ourscs of study in Science. Philosophy, Theoloirv, Laniniape. Literature and Music. Klocution and »vmnastics without extra charge. Irrinpton is a suburb of Indianapolis with which it is connected by two railroads and an electric street-car line. From'this point any part of the Mate may be reached in a few hours travel. Catalogue lurnUhinjf full information, sent free. Address SCOT BUTLER. l*re»i(lrnt, or SIMEON FRAllERt Secretary.
rs
THE PEOPLE'S REMEDY. PRICE 25G
Salvation Oil S^iSy
Walters' Metalic
are made from the best brands of rooting Tin plate, and steel sheets galvanized Von enn buy tbcin painted or not.
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Removes and Prevents Dandruff.
AMERICAN FAMILY SOAP.
Best for Genera j[Household Use
si
WON BY WEAVER.
He
is Named as Leader by the People's Party.
NOMINATED ON THE FIRST BALLOT.
U011. .Tames G. FieUl, of Virginia, Chosen as t.ho Candidate for VicePresident— Proceedings of the Convention.
NAMED THEUl MEN.
OMA.UA, Neb., July 5.—Gen. James B. Weaver, of Iowa, is the candidate of the people's party for president of the
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11.
United States. POT the last five days it has been manifest that, of all the leaders of the newparty, Gen. Weaver was the choiee of the vast majority, but the peculiar availability of Judge Gresham overshadowed his
WKAvKK. personality, and it
was not until the distinguished jurist positively declined to be a candidate that the delegates turned to their own ranks and with almost one accord selected the veteran
greenbaeker as their standard-barer. There were some who feared his greenback pri'dileetions mijcht aiFcct his availability, and it was these gentlemen who brought. Senator Kyle, of South Dakota, to the front, Out the sentiment that one of the "old guard" bhould be selected to lead the party was overwhelming1 and Weaver's triumph was finally most complete.
Naming tlie Candidates.
When the moment arrived for placing in nomination the names of the various candidates J. S. Manning, when Alabama was called, named Gen. James B. Weaver, of Iowa. Gen. Weaver's nomination was seconded by delegates from California, Florida, Indiana, Iowa, Oregon, Virginia, West Virginia. New York, Mississippi, Georgia, Pennsylvania and Oklahoma.
S. F. Norton, of Illinois, placed in nomination the name of Senator Kyle, of South Dakota. Georgia seconded Senator Kyle's nomination, afterwards withdrawing her support in favor of Gen. Weaver. Other states seconding Senator Kyle's nomination were Indiana, Minnesota and Wisconsin.
A Connecticut delegate nominated Gen. James Field, of Virginia, and ex Senator Van Wyck, of Nebraska, was placed in nomination by an Illinois delegate. Mr. Van Wyck's name was afterward withdrawn.
The ISallot.
From the very beginning of the rollcall Weaver led all his competitors and so overwhelming was the vote cast for him that his nomination was practically assured before the ballot was half completed. The Weaver infection seemed to spread and as state after state cast its vote almost unanimously for the Iowa man the Weaver people grew wildly enthusiastic, culmination coining when the result was announced, the cheering being loud and long continued. The first ballot for president resulted as follows, only one ballot necessary. Weaver being successful beyond a cavil:
Weaver. Kyle.\ Weaver. Kyle.
43
li
Alabama Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky
•Vj," Jill
wmmm
..(Nevada... 20jNew Jersey 4 .. New Ha'psbire. .. lOiNew Vork 59 2 N'rth Carolina.. 20
6 6 1
10 13 l'J 41
North Dakota.. 11 ..'Ohio 30 3a|Oregon 10 .. (Pennsylvania.... 29 42 Hhode Island n'South Dakota.. ..'South Carolina ..Tennessee .. Texas .Vermont 2i Virginia .. \Vashington ... ISiV.'est Virginia.. 17 .. Wisconsin 7 9 Wyoming 9 .. D'rict Columbia 8 7 Oklahoma 8
ft'J 40 40 32
Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts.. .Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska 23
01
1 IS
48 00
46 16
'fl 5S
8| Totals 9ilo
hall order was finally restored. The demonstration lasted thirty minutes.
*rtkNhnm
205
Norton, of Illinois, moved to make the nomination unanimous, and Schilling of Wisconsin, Wasburn of Massachusetts, and the delegates from South Dakota, Montana and Massachusetts seconded the motion. It was curried with a hurrah and loud cheering-, ending with calls for "Weaver."' The general was not present and a committee was appointed to escort him to the hall. It was now after 1 a. in.
For Vice President. -*4
For the office of vice president tlie following were placed in nomination: Benjamin Terrill, of Texas Mann Page, of Virginia IgDatius Donnelly, of Minnesota, and James G. Field, of Virginia. Gen. Field was nominated on the first ballot.
1
Other Proceedings. -V
OMAHA. Neb., July 5.—When the convention met Monday morning the committee on permanent organization presented the name of M. 1). Loucks, of South Dakota, as chairman. Mr. Loucks was elected and addressed the convention at considerable length. The report of the committee on rules was adopted, and the convention took a recess for a short time in order to witness the Fourth of July parade.
Knthusiastie Over the Platform. On reassembling the committee on resolutions made its report. A supplemental report was also made. Both were adopted. [The platform in full appears elsewhere in these columns.]
A wild scene of enthusiasm ensued over the adoption of the platform. Husky farmers lifted Chairman Branch of the resolutions committee down from the platform and carried him about the hall on their shoulders. Delegates climbed upon their seats and, tearing up the state banners, waved them on high and the band played, and the glee clubs sang—no one could tell what. A woman's bonnet, of that large pattern that is so frequently howled down at public gatherings, was mounted on a pole and carried about in the rear of a fife and drum corps from Abilene, Ivan., and no one howled that bonnet down. All the states fell in with their banners. Then the women began to march too. After marching all around the
WM. 4.
ISS
H® lifiiti
Henr«l From.
Mr. Tauheneck then read a telegram from a committee which had gone to Chicago to persuade Judge Gresham to accept a nomination for the presidency. It stated that Judge Gresham would not decline if nominated unanimously. In a moment about twothirds of the convention was on its feet, and lusty cheering for about ten minutes followed.
The opponents of Gresham demanded the regular order of business, and Mrs. Lease, a Kansas delegate, in a fit of sarcasm dramatically announced that she had received a telegram from Benjamin Harrison announcing his willingness to accept a nomination if unanimously tendered. Cries came up from among the delegates opposed to Gresham of "Trick," "Trick," and Gen. Vandevoort. of Nebraska, moved a recess until it could be ascertained if the telegram was authentic. It was finally agreed to take a recess until 8 p. in.
He Decline").
At the evening ses*ion the Gresham movement received its coup de grace by the following dispatch from Judge Gresham himself: "CHICAGO, July J.— J. B. Weaver. Ignatius Donnelly, Hen Terrell ami John W. lluyes: have just relumed uul find your dispatch of the 1st. I must stand by my dispatch to Mr. Orr of the id. Accept my crratcful acknowledgments. W. (1. (!I1MI
AM.'
Immediately upon the receipt of this I the Gresham boomers accepted the in-| e.vituble.
Ski-teh of the Nominee.
James IS. Weaver was horn in Dayton. O., June li. INU, was graduated at the law school of the Ohio university at Cincinnati in IsM. enlisted as a private at the beginning of the war, and advanced in rank with a rapidity equalled in very few cases. Me was elected lirst lieutenant of Company O of the Second Iowa infantry, attained the rank of major Oct. lsOi. and as both his colonel and lieutenant
were killed at the battle of Corinth he was mnde colonel. Finally he was brevetted briga-dier-general "for gallantry on the field, to date from March 13, 1S63."
In lf-66 he was elected district attorney of the Second judicial district of Iowa, ami in 1M57 was appointed assessor of internal revenue for the Fifth district of the state, an office he held for six years. He then edited the Iowa Tribune, of Des Moines, and tvas elected as an independent republican to the Forty-sixth congress. Men of his way of thinking, however, were even then organizing a new party, and in 18S0 he became the greenbackers- candidate for president. Excluding doubtful and fusion tickets he received 307,740 I votes. He then resumed private life and professional duties for a time, but in 1884-'g0 was reelected to congress.
No man in the Fiftieth congress was better 1 informed on parliamentary rules, as he conclusively proved by holding the house in a deadlook for several de.ys on a Question regarding I
Oklahoma reservation. (B1688 ha waa again a oaodldata tar ooogmfe on ym oaiMfed&t tigLasgaou Mobu*
THE GREATEST SHIPS.
The first steam vessels to reach New York from Great Britain were theSirius and the Great Western.
The largest floating elevator in the world was launched on Jan. 14,1S92, in Brooklyn. Its tower rises 74 feet above its deck.
The first steam vessel to cross the Atlantic ocean was the Savannah, which crossed from Savannah to Liverpool in 1819.
The longest sailing craft afloat is the British ship Lancing. She is a four masted iron ship of 2,000 tons and 356 feet in length.
Norman L. Munro's steam launch Norwood, with her record of a mile in 2:12, made on Nov. 7, 1891, may be considered "the fastest boat afloat."
The biggest steam ferryboat in the world is the Cincinnati, built by the Pennsylvania Railroad company to ply between New York and Jersey City.
The greatest steam vessel ever built, in size, was the Great Eastern, which was 692 feet in length and S3 feet in breadth. The Teutonic is 5S2 feet in length.
The three biggest four masted ships in the world are said to be the Palgrave, the Liverpool and the Puritan. The Palgrave measures 3,031 tons, the Liverpool, 3,330 tons.
The fastest passenger steamboat plying In the waters of the United States is the Mary Powell, running from New York city to Albany. Nobody knows just how fast she could go if put to her mettle.
The biggest fore-and-aft schooner in the latest government list is the Golden Age, 1,763 tons, built at Abbot's bridge, Ohio, in 1SS3. The Governor Ames, buiit at Waldoboro, Me., in 1SS9, registers 1,6S9 tons, and is the largest schooner in salt water.
One of the fastest voyages from China to New York was made in the summer of 1890 by the steamship Glen Ogle, of the Glen line, of Glasgow, which arrived from Amoy in forty-six days. The fastest time was by the Glenshiel, of the same line, forty-three days.
The first whaleback steamship built was the Charles W. Wotmore, which made the voyage to Liverpool in the summer of 1891. The first whaleback of any importance was the yacht Llvadia, designed by Admiral Popoff for the Emperor Alexander I of Russia. She is 240 feet in length.
The greatest fleet of passenger vessels owned by any one company is that of the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation company. In the fleet are seventytwo steamships, of 199,270 tons and 189,000 horse power. The Peninsular and Oriental steamships steamed 2,500,000 miles in 1890 without an accident.
The three biggest American sailing ships in existence last year were the Rappahannock, the Shenandoah and the Susquehanna. The Rappahannock was burned on the south Pacific. Nov. h, fho largest sailing vessel in the world, says the skipper of the Shenandoah, who rates his craft next, is the five masted French steel ship La France.—New Vork Sun.
EYE,
enr and throat diseases only, Dr.
Greene, Joel Blc ck. Fitting of glasses a pecialty. TIIE following item, clipped from the Fort Madison, (Iowa,)
Democrat,
con
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Children Cry for
Pitcher's Castorla.
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DR. MAN-O-WA is one of the greatest, diagonast ie of disease in America. He can locale your siase and describe a patient's ailments without even a hint l'rom the sullcrerto guide him in his conclusions.
AU Druggists
r^ozzsoiNrrs Fancy Btorcn.
Granite and Marble Monuments Lower than ever before. Don't ouy from peddlers, but come and get thein at first cost. 1 also have in stock a line lot of Slate ]\lantels
YV hicli wiil be sold away down. (Jail and see tlieni and trices.
mM
a
Corner of Green andPike Streets, Crawfordsville,
I
Such Rejoicing!
^llnrSANDSnr PEOPLE from nil parts JL oi lie irlobe at singing lie praises of Prof. Ridley's Stomach Renovator, 1 or it the mily Wood I'wrlller on the market that 111 carry oil the Impurities ot the blood through the proper channels, and not. out through the pores oi the skin as others do.
It cleanses, purities, tones and builds up the system andJmakcR the weak strong. It Is a positive cute lor
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Chronic .Stomach Trouble, Kidney Trouble and
Bnght's Disease (in first stage),
Catarrh and Neuralgia of the Stomach, Liver Complaint and Heart Trouble, Loss of Appetite and Sleeplessness.
It is palatable as milk. For sale by NVK & CO.. Druggists, Crawfordsville, 1ml. Who will wholesale and retail this inodicln—l'rof. ('., Wellington Itldlev, proprietor am manufacturer, Hi College street, Danville,
Illinois. May 1-1,
M1SSIOX HUS A1.1 O 11K A I, ES'l'A E.
Not Ice Is hereby given will sell
Big 4
TiNTS
WMSA
sag
that, oil iiml after
July. 1S!I'-, will sell at private sale lots No. .1-in \V m, ,1. lnlow's second addition to the town id' New ltoss in Montgomery county, Indiana.
TKH.MS:—One-thlril cash, one-third In six anil one-third In twelve months. Notes to lie given with percent Interest lor deterred payments to be secured by mortgage on the premises sold.
JOHN 1NI.OW,
June lh. I omniissioncr.
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ED VORIS.
.I doors N. ol "ourl house. Agent. $
VANDALIA LINE
I I TIM±J TABLE
In Effect February I, 1892.
Trains Leave Crawlordsvillc Ind, FOHTIIK NORTH No. .VJ, Kx. Sun, H:ltl a.m. for St. Joseph. No. :•!, Kx. Sun, 0:18 p. in. lor South llenil. No. ."11, Kx. 2.3:! for St,. Joseph.
VOKTUB SOUTH.
No.
"1 Ex. Sun. 11:44 a. m. for Terre No, ":t Ex. Sun. f:20 p. in. lor Torre Haute No. 5ft, Ex., 8.11 p.m ,io!
Ttuuto Haute
'or points west, south.
I'"or complete time card, giving all trains and stations, and lor full Information as l'cr rates, through ears, etc., mldrens
J. C, HUTCHINSON, Agent, Crawl'ordsvillo, Intl., OK i' •J. M. CHESBKOU iI,
Ass't General Passenger Agent. ST. LOUIS.
a]
-^LLPIUOY11LE,'ITWIBAI.YA 'JHICAC.0 KR.TO-
DIBECT LINE To all points
North and South—Chicago and Louisville. 'Ih/ough Route to Western Points. Solid Pullman Vestibule Train Service
BKTWISISN
Chicago-Louisville. Chicago-Cincinnati. Crawfordsville Tinie-Tuble: NOHTII— SOUTH la 1 :2,r a 1 :.'!0 1 :10 11. S. WATSON, Agent.
Cleveland, Cin
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cinnati, Chicago
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At Indianapolis. Cincinnati, Sprlngllold and Columbus to anil v: iu Hie Eastern and son board cities.
TRAINH AT OHAWFOJIDBVITJIJE, OOINO WEST. No.Oinali 0:27 a. in '/No.7 mall ul.. 12:2i a. -i
No. 17 mail 1:40 No. 3 Expresp
fi:4Kp
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Ol' I NO ICAST.
/No. 12 Mail iii l»:Ollam
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No. 2 Express :.' 10am No. 1H Mall 1 12 pin No.K it!'- ,ri OH pin
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IHsSii
