Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 29 October 1892 — Page 4
Ask your doctor what happens to cod-liver oil when it gets inside of you.
He will say it is shaken and broken up into tiny drops,becomes an emulsion there are other changes, but this is the first.
He will tell you also that it is economy to take the oil broken up, as it is in Scott's Emulsion, rather than burden yourself with this work. You skip the taste too.
Let us send you an interesting book on CAREFUL
ING free.
SCOTT
&
WEEKLY JOURNAL.
PRINTED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING By T. H. B. McCAIN.
Entered lit. the Postofhce at t-riuv tonlsville Indiana, us second-class matter,
WEEKLY—
Jnc year in advance Sli months 7f Three months 40 One month 15
DAILV-
One year in advance $5.00 Blx months -.50 Three months 1.25 Per week delivered or bv mail 10
SATURDAY, OCT. 29, 1892.
This Date in History—Oct, 29.
ll'.i'-J Columbus landed on the fourili inland,of which est* lie said: "There came' thence a fragrance so pood anil soft ofT the flowers or trees of the land that, it was the sweetest thing in the world I believe there are here many herbs and trees which would be of (treat jirice in Spain for tinctures, medicines and
Wilmington. Del.
clothing cheaper when he has to pay 34cents per pound Again he says that "the price of cotton this year is perhaps lower than it has ever been the I'nited States"— "that before the Mclvinley bill passed,
wheat was selling at Si.02 and now it is selling at 7« cents per bushel." And
now listen to his reason for these prices. He says: "These prices have been ruducd by vhe Mclvinley bill which tends to iluxhiiij cumme ret hetireen our coiiiitr// and the hl worliiy There is no tariff on cotton and a tariff of 25 cents per bushel on wheat, and yet Mr. Brookshire says that the absence and presence of a tariff works the same hardship. lie and Mr. Cleveland have always contended that the tariff is a/trays added to the price, from which we infer that if it were not for the tariff on wheal it would be selling for 78 cent6 less 25 cents, or 53 cents per bushel, in \ew York. As to the destruction of our foreign trade by the Mclvin
ley bill, what tire the facts': In the year since the passage of the Mclvinley bill our imports have exceeded those of any year before its passage by S72,U00,000, and in the same year our exports have exceeded those of any other vear 170,000.000. Did Urookshire U11 the truth when he said that the McKinlev bill had cestroyed our foreign trade"'
THF.KK are no less than thirty-five States which have now on their statute books unrepealed laws providing for the organization of State banks of issue. Indiana is in that list. Do the people want such statesmen as Mulberry Seller or Dave McAlister to legislate as what kind of currency they shall have':1 The very idea of returning to wild cat money is repngnant to every voter,. And to
say that
the
LIV-
BOWNB,Chemists,13A South 5th Avenue,
New York. Your druggist keeps Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver •il—all druggists everywhere do. $1. ^6
EI.I.KT.
Bpices, but 1 know nothing of them, which gives mo groat concern there are Hocks of parrots which obscuro the sun, and other birds of so many kinds that it is wonderful he did not, however, find the gold or the great king he had been led to expect. 1618—Sir Walter Haleigh was beheaded born 1552. 1656—Edmund Kalley, astronomer, born died 1742. 1740—James Boswcll, noted for his biography of I Jr. Johnson, born died 1795. 1796—John Keats, poet, born iu London died in Home, 1N"1. 1838—Thomas F. Hayard, statesman, born in
1862—Charles Hi vers Ellet, young naval hero, died in Hunker Hill of exhaustion by arduous services in front, of Vicksburg born 1R41 son of the inventor of steam rams. 1863—General (icorgc Hiinton McClellan died at Orange. X. .1. r™rn l.s-U.
AN AWFOL MUDDLE.
If there is ever time when the Democracy is muddled it is in their etl'ors in trying to fix causes for the prices ol the necessaries of life. No two of them ever
give the same reasons, and not one of them ever gives a correct reason. They
all make different speeches and assign different crises to different classes of people and when they tire all brought face to face, a more complete jumblo cannot be imagined.
.Mr. Brookshire tells the farmers at lirazil that the highest price ever paid for wool was U4.J cents —during the period when it had a very low tariff on it. He wants to return to that low duty, or free wool, in order that the manufacturer may be enabled to make clothing cheaper, and that the farmer may get higher price for his wool. If the price of clothing is too high with wool selling at 23 cents per pound, how does Mr. Brookshire expect the manufacturer to sell
2%ikC.!
Democratic platform doesn't
mean what it declares is to admit that its authors are dishonest. We have a higher opinion of the man who made the platform than to make such a serious change.
KANSAS advices report that the State is no longer doubtful, bat will cast its vote for Harrison. The fusion of ^the Democrats with the People's party has disgusted a number of Democrats and they will vote the Republican ticket, and has driven former Republicans by the thousand from the Farmers' Alliance back to the old party. It is said that Jerry Simpson has abandoned his district thoroughly discouraged and has gone out over the'State looking after the Legislative ticket with a view to the Senatorship.
THE New Berne,North Carolina, Journal, a Southern Democratic organ, in lauding Cleveland's pension vetoes, breaks forth into a wild rebel yawp as follows:
Three hundred thousand Yankees A still in Southern dust got three b.indred thousand
Iteiore they conquered us. Tliej died of Southern lever. Anil Southern steel anil shot: I l^li tl.ere were three million.
Instead of what we got.
DruiNG
the first seven months of
18-91 the I'nited States exported 38,084 sacks of corn to Havana. In 1892 during the Corresponding period under Republican reciprocity our exports of corn to the same port amounted to 145,991 sacks. And yet Mr. Brookshire denounces reciprocity a sham and a fraud.
MAUK M. I'O.M
Know
THE supreme court Tuesday afternoon declared the registration requirement of the State election law unconstitutional on the grounds that it is class legislation. The court affirms the decision of Judge Hadley made few weeks since in Hendricks county.
DURING President Harrison's administration the treasury has paid $259,093,650 of the publio debt and saved over $86,000,000 in interest. There is where a big slice of "the depleted treasury" which Democratic orators are howling about has gone.
IF Democrats don't mean freo trade and wild eat money they should haul in their platform.
Strayed or Stolen.
A black mare 15 hands high, 5 years old, hitched to a new top buggy. She either was stolen or broke loose from a hitching post in front of Alvin Breaks', seven miles northwest of Grawfordsvillo, I last Sunday night. The animal belongs to my livery barn at Xew Richmond. I Any information that may lead to her recovery will be thankfully received and the information suitably and liberally rewarded. \V. ALSTON,
0
generally known
as "Brick" Pomeroy, has declared himself heartily in favor of the reelection of President Harrison. "Brick's" conversion will more than compensate for loss of Judge Baldwin. Whatever may be said of Pomeroy's anti-war record it cannot be charged that he is a fool.
New Richmond. I nil.
I*®*) fSgfe,
-v"
,s
Mr. Wai'roi I). Wentz of Geneva, X. Y.,
Tells of His Fearful Sufferings After Gastric Fever and His Cure bv
All who know Mr. W.
D.
Wentz
give him the best of recommendations for honesty and integrity. For many years he has worked for Mr. D. P. Wilson, the harness maker and member of the Geneva Voard of Health. He says:
I was taken s-ielc last October with gastric fever and my chance for recovery was considered almost hopeless. After 7 weeks tho fe\ei slov. ly left ine, but I could not eat tho simplest food without terriblo distress. It seemed tli.it I ,'»ad recovered from tho fever to
Die of Starvation
I took pepsin compounds, bismuth, charcoal, cod liver oil and malt until my physician confessed that Ins skill was about exhausted and lie did not know what else to tl J. L\er\thl!i 1 took seemed Ij'tc pour.
UK lcnl into mv stomach- 1 b:upfiied to think I had part of a bottle of Hood's Sais.ipaulia thathad been in the house for two or three years, that 1 found had benellt-d me previously for dyspepsia. I be^an takiui it and soon began to feel better. 1 h::vo now taken a litlle over two bottles and cantruthf[ill s.i 1 feel well anam and can eat anything without distressing me, even to
Pie and Cheese
which I have been unable to touch tor years. The English language docs not contain words enough to permit mo to express the praiso I would h! t:) give f!o:: i's S'srsaparilh W. D. WKNTZ, la} Castle .St., Geneva, X. Y.
A Good Vowchcr 1 have known Mr. Warren D. Wei:'.:: for many years ami can vouch for him as a man ol \eiacily and one well known about here. 1 have sold bun sevetal bottles of
Heed's Sae*saparS8Sa'
ciunn? the past few months." M. II.
luixu Druggist, Geneva, N. Y.
Hood's
1'AHT-
Piica Cuio Liver His
n-ILLIAM
11.
0
JOHN C. ROBINSON
District Electors.:'
First District,
I—I
I DEM. I
THOMAS DUNCAN.
Second District,
EPH. INMAN.
Third District,
GEORGE H. VOIGT.
tlllllP
0
|dem|
Fonrth District,
JACOB L. BENHAM.
E3
Fifth District, .«
3 LUTHER SHORT.
Sixth District,
THOMAS 11A GOT.
Seventh District,
i—i
I DEM.J
ALBERT LIEBER.
Eighth District,
DEM.
AUSTIN W. KNICUITJ
frS- Ninth Ihstrict,
SAMUKL M. K.\LSTON
'VJ-.. Tenth District,
DEM.
111 RAM I). 11ATTF.NY.
vts Eleventh District,
DANIEL W. Ki: ISHF.R.
DEM.
Twelfth District,»!
OTIS L. r.A LI.OU.
Tlnrteenili District,
PRESTON 1\ 11, liS.
roi (lo\ ei noi,
I DEM.I
CLAL'DH MATTHKWS.
0 0 0
For Lieutenant-Governor
MORTIMER NYE,
For Secretary of State,
WILLIAM R. MYERS.
For Auditor of State,
JOHN OSCAR HENDERSON.
For Treasurer of State,
J^emJ
ALBERT GALL,
For Attorney General,
DEM.
ALONZO G. SMITH.
DEMOCRATIC TICKET, REPUBLICAN TICKET. PROHIBITION TICKET.
For Presidential Elector at Large, J™"™""1 Eor Presidential Elector at Large, For Prc*Id
____
For Presidential Elector at Large, I I
ELECTION NOTICE)
^otice is hereby given that the following is a true and complete list of the Nominations to Office as certified to me by the Governor of the State of Indiana, to be voted foi at the general election, to beheld on the Sth day of November 1892, to-wit:
National and State Ballot.
liRACKKN. ROBERT II. F. PEIRCE. Pf°h'" SYLV
For Presidential Elector at Larpe.
REP
JOHN MORRIS.
El
District Electors.
First District,
0 0 0 0 0
JAMES S. WRIGHT.
4-
Second District,
JOHN H. WEATHERS.'
Third District,
MARTIN V. MALLORY.
Fourth District,
GEORGE F. O'BVRNE.
Fifth District,
GEORGE W. HANNA.
Sixth District,
JAMES E. WATSON.
Seventh District,
ALFRIZI) R. HOVEY.
Eighth District,
HENRY DANIELS.
0
Ninth District, :i
j^rohij
0 0
~T
:WILLIAM R. lllNES.^.
Teni Disti n. t,
REP.
MAN M. 11R A KETT.
4
"S
s9® Eleventh District, ilfiiS
JF.SSE J. M. I.AFOLLETTE.
Twelfth District,
REP.
0 0 0 0 0 0 0
5
AM OS K. WALTER.
Thirteenth District,
WILLIAM M. KKNDAI.L.
sFor Governor,
IRA J. CHASE.
For Lieutenant-Governor,
THEODORE SIIOCKNEY,
For Secretary of State,:
AARON JONES.
For Auditor of State,
JOHN W. COONS.
For Treasurer of State,
FREDERICK J. SCHOLZ.
For Attorney General,
JOSEPH D. FERUALL.
identml Elector at Large.
ESTER JOHNSON. .-4
For Presidentinl Elector at Largo,
MIFFLIN W. HAHXINS.
District Electors.
Firit DiEtrict,
Prehl.
ELI J. ItOBB.
ins
Second District,
ENOCH G. LONGWORTII.
Third district.
WILLIAM 8. FERRIER.
Fourth District,
|PMMJ
GEORGE W. HAGAKS.
Fifth District,
WILLIAM H. JONES,
JTROHI^
Sixth District,
WILLIAM F. MAN LEY.
1*
Seventh District,
P"hi.
Eighth District,
LEWIM KADLEY.
1
PEOPLE'S TICKET.
0
ELI IU" 'I EU (,
I
Ninth District,
DAVID F. MAISO. ?C
Tenth District,
DANIEL L. OVKKHOLSEK-
E!
Eknenth D.pfict,
GEUK'IL
'I welitli Di'-trn.t.
Pi\ hi.
JAHFD PRESTON.
0 0
Thirteenth District,
ELI MILLER
For Governor,
AARON WORTH.
For Lieutenant-Governor,
CHARLES W. CULBERTSON.
For Secretary of State,
|prohl^|
JAJIES McCORMICK,
For Auditor of Steto,*
FRANK TAGGART.
jprollj
CONTINUES ON FIFTH FACE.
For Presidcutinl Elector nt Large,
sap Cl-rUllERT VINCENT.
PEO.
For Presidentinl Electoral Large,
IU:N.JA\IIN F. STKLET.
9
District Electors.
J"ir«-t District,
HI NRY JOHNSON.
Second District,
THOMAS W. WADSWORTH.
3 Third District,
THOMAS J. LINDLEY.
0
Fourth Dietrict,
RICHARD GREGG.
Fifth District,
JAMES MAULINV
Sixth District,
WILLIAM C. JEFFERIS.
Seventh District,
CIIAKLES A. JOHNSON.
0
Eighth District,
SmiILT JO\L3.
Ninth District,
CHAKLFs I{. I'l.NCE.
Tenth DiEtrict,
0 0
For Treasurer of State,
HENRY U. MOORE.
For Attorney General,
CUTLERS. DOBBINS.
LLIJA1I HUNTER.
^Eleventh District,
PEO.
'I HKHHltK.
.WILLIAM CAKKOLL.
••wm
hi
Twelfth District,
WILLIAM F. C. FRANCIS.
"Thirteenth District,
PEO.
ORLANDO W. MARKEL.
For Governor,
LEROY TOIPLETON.
,5
1
.J,
For Lieutenant-Governor,
THOMAS S. EAST.
For Secretary of State,
PEO,
JESSE L. IIOBSON,
S 0 0
For Auditor of State,
LEWIS C. KASTE5.
For Treasurer of State,
TOWNSEKD COPE.
For Attorney General, a
DANIEL 11. FERNANDES.
