Democratic Sentinel, Volume 2, Number 37, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 October 1878 — THE LEGISLATURE. [ARTICLE]
THE LEGISLATURE.
Classified List of Members Elect and Holding O»erThe SenateDEMOCRATS HOLDING OVER. Scott, Jennings ond Decatur—Wliliam F. Riley. Vl"o—lsaiah liouham. Owen mid Clay—lnman IT. Fowler. Mnrshiill. Fulton * I’lilaaki—Chailes H. Reeves. Montgomery—Silas Peterson. Jackson and Washington—Bartholomew 11. Burrell. Johnson and Shelby—Caleb B. Tarlton. Adams, Allen mid Wells—John D. Sarnighausen. Boone and Clinton—James V. Kent. Laporta John 11. Winterbothmn.—lo. republicans holding over. Hendricks mid Putnam—W. 11. R>i>ran. Monroe mid Lawrence—Win. B. F. Trent. Fayette, Union and Rush—Miltoil Trusler. Marion -Addison C. Harris. Abel D. Slreight. Randolph—Nathan Cudwallader. Kosciusko and Whiiley—Walter C. Olds. Decatur ami Rush—W. A. Moore. Lagrange and Noble—Elijah W. Weir. Steuben and De Kalb—William M. Mercer. . Henry an Hancock—Benjamin Shirk. Warren and Fountain- Francis M Dice. Hamilton and Tipton—Samuel L. Taylor. Vanderburg—W iiliain Heilm-.n. —14. DEMOCRATS ELECTED. Allen—Thomas J. Foster. Brown mid Bartholomew —R. L. Coffee. Dearborn mid Franklin—S. K. Urmstan. Gibson mid Posey—G. V. Menzies. Pike and Warrick—T. S. Hart. Spencer mid Perry—Henry Kramer. Knox mid Sullivan—F. W", Vielie. d art in, Dubois and Orange—William A. TrayCrawford mid Harrison—John Benz. Switzerland, Ohio rnd Ripley—L. J. Woollen. Lake and Porter Thomas J Wood. St. Joseph and Starke—David R. Leeper. Grant, Blackford and Jay—Thomas S. Briscoe. Daviess mid Green—D. S. Heffren.—l4. REPUBLICANS ELECTED. Cass ahd Carroll—Charles Kahlo. Tippecanoe— B. W. Langdon. Wabash and Huntington—Abner H. Shafter. Howard mid Miami -Milton Garrigus. Wayne—Daniel W. Comstock. Marion and Morgan—G. W. Grubbs. Elkhart—B. L. Davenport. Jetlerson—E. R. Wilson. Madison and Delaware—M C. Smith.—9. NATIONALS ELECTED. Benton. Jasper. Newton and White—George Major.* e lurks mid Floyd—Moses Poindexter.+ Parke and Vermillion—O. P. Davis,*
♦ludorxed by democrats. tlndorwed by republicans. House of Representatives. DEMOCRATS ELECTED. Allen—E. Rcicheldcrfer, 0. E. Fleming. Adams and Wells—Joseph 8. Daily. Brown and Bartholomew—A. 1). Galbraith. Boone —Joseph Davis. Carroll—Charles E. Scholl. Clay—l. M. Compton. Crawford and Orange —James F. Stacker. Clinton—F. D. Caldwell. Daviess—Samuel 11. Taylor. Dearborn— \. Alden. Dubois and Mart in—Thomas Hart. DeKalb—Samuel Shutt. Elkhart—i. S. Osborn. Floyd—J-.H. Willard, Fountain—J. Shannon Nave. Frankliu—B. 11. Flodder. Gibson—Norm.in Davidson. Green—A. Humphries. Hancock—A. C. Handy. Harrison—D. A. Cunningham. Huntington—Henry Drover. Jackson- J.'l'. Shields. Johnson —Charles O. Lehman. Knox—Henry S. Cauthorne. Lake—Thomas Wood. Laporte—H. A. Hossler. Lawrence—Lycurgus Dalton. Madison—S. W. Edwins. Madison andllenrv —Exum Saint. Marion and Shelby—W. E. English. Marsh; 11—James Confer, Monroe—R. W. Mjers. Montgomery—J. Maurice Thompson. Noble —Jacob Schnuck. Noble and Elkhart —J. D. Osborne. Owen —B, Schweetzer. Putnam—Hassell Allen. Perry—G ustav Huthsteincr. Pike—Joseph D. Barker. Posev—Russell Blackley. Ripley—J. 11. Drake. Ripley. Rush und Decatur—C. R. Faulkner. Spencer—J H. Bryant. Sullivan—John C." Briggs, Bhe 1 by—' 8 qil ire Van pel t. Starke, Fulton and Pulaski—William Perry. St. Joseph Henry Giuz. St. Joseph and Marshall—T. J. Garrotte. Vigo—J. N. Kester and R. Vanvalzah. Warrick—John L. Thvlor. Washington—S. H. Mitchell. Whitley—James B. Tully.—s 3. REPUBLICANS ELECTED. Cass—Benjamin F. Campbell. Decatur-John S. Donnell. Delaware—Waiter March. Delaware and Jay—J. P. C. Shanks. Fayetleaud Liiion—J. W. Coitnoway. Grant—O. 11. P. Carey. Grayland Blackford—James T. Arnold. Hamilton—T. J. Lindley. Hendricks —G. W. Snoddy. Henry—C. 8. Hubbard. ’ Howard—Thomas M. Kirkpatrick. Huntington and Wabash—Aiex. Hess. JeHerson—John M Golden. Jefferson, Jenniugs and Scott—Smith Vawier. Jennings—John Ovormeycr. Kosciusko—E. M. Thayer. Kosciusko and Fulton—Arthur C. Copeland. Lagrange—O. I>. Tay'or. Marion —W. W. Herod, J. B. Conner, C. B. Robinson. J. W. Gordon. Miami—Albert C. Bearss. Miami and Howard—G. I. Reed. Newton and Benton —James M. Rodman. Pa ke—Robert Kelly. Porter— S. S. Skinner. Rumlolph—Enos L. Watson. Rush veorge B. Sleeth. Steuben—Ezckia) Brown. Tippecanoe—Eciward Robinson. Vanderburgh—John S. Hopkins, J. W. Messick Wabash Jesse Arnold. Wayne—Nathaniel Harlan, John A. Thornburg. Warren—A. R.Owen, — 38, NATIONALS ELECTED. Clarke—W. B. Carter,! Hendricks and Putnam—W. Wimmer,* and White—Georgs 11, Brown * Eontgomery and Psrke—Archibald Johnson,* Morgan—N. 8. Ma'ors.* Ohio und Switzerland—J. B. Works.* Tipton and Hamilton—Wm. W. Rooker.* Tippecanoe—Clark Baker.* \ erniilliou—Janies Osborne.*—ti. * Indorsed by democrats, t I ndorsed by RECAI’ITULATIO^t. Dem. Rep.. Nat. Semite 21 23 4 House 53 38 9 Total 77 BI 12 Democratic majority oyer all- -L
Rev. Gilbert Small is exnected to preach in the Presbyterion Church, at this, place, Ist Sunday of Norember. A cordial invitation is ex-, tended the public to attend. There will be preaching .at the M. E. Church next Sabbath morning and evening. Subject in the morning: Conformity to departed saints. In the evening the subject: Christ a friend of publicans and sinners. All invited to attend, W. G. Vessels, Pastor. R. S. Dwi gins will lecture in the Cbristain church Sunday Oct 27th, a* 10:30 a. m. Subject: The authenticity of the Bible considered from a legal standpoint. All are invited to attend. H. B. Miller, one of the workme engaged in rebuilding the Pan Han die bridge over the river at this point, fell from the top of the bridge last Tuesday afternoon and was instantly killed. No one witnessed the acci dent, but it ts supposed that in climbing the ladder over a Dier. about the center of the bridge, one of the rungs gave way near the top and precipitated him below, when he firststruck the pier and then the ground, a dis tance of perhaps fifty feet. His neck was broken and bis body badly bruised. The missing piece from the ladder and the workman’s hammer lay beside him when feund. A coroner’s jury was empaneled and rendered a verdict in accordance with the foregoing. The home of deceased was at Richmond, Ind, and he leaves a family to mourn his untimely death. —Monticello Herald.
The programme for the regular monthly meeting of the Jasper Temperance Union, which will be held in the Presbyterian church, Monday night, October 28th, has Deen arranged as follows: 1. Music by the Ladies’ Orchestra. 2. Prayer by Mr. Joseph H. Willey. 3. Instrumental Music by Miss Mell Wright. 4, Select reading by Miss Lillie Boroughs. 5. Dialouge by Masters Charles and John Wibert. 6. Song by eight little girls, 7. Intermission. 8. Music by Ladies’ Orchestra. 9. Lecture by Rev. G. W. Vessels. 10. Singing and signing the pledge. Delphi Journal; Col. Yeoman says ha will have the track of the I. D. & C. railroad laid to the Wabash by the 20th oi 25. h of Novembea. In the Circuit Court, on yesterday, Albert Wilson plead guilty to a charge of petit larceny, and was sentenced to 18 months in the State Prison at Michigan City. He was taken there this moruing ly Deputy Sheriff Erustus Peacock. Fine clothing a specialty, at the Narrow Gauge One Price Clothing Store. Leslie Grant now occupies the Terhune shop, and constitutes a firm in hlmseh. The books of the late firm fiill remain in his hands for a few weeks. The Narrow Gauge One Price Clothing Store gives rare inducements to buyers of ready made clothing. If you want to buy clothing cheap don’t purchase before yov see their goods and learn prices. “P. S. for a fact. The Union has more than double the circulation of any other paper in Jasper county.” Union. Y-a-a-s. Its package of ready print this week weighs several pounds less than that of the Sentinel. The consul has a first-rate reputation for truth-telling? Out* and all treated alike at The Narrow Gauge One Price Clothing Store. Nijne Novgorod Fair. The great market of the eastern world has been held at this junction of the Volga and Olga Rivers, in Russia, every summer for hundreds of years. Here the nations oi Rurope and Asia meet with their products for trade. Cossack, Chinese Turk, and Persian meet the German and the Greek with every variety of merchandise that mankind employs, from sapphires to grindstones, tea, opium, fur, food, toolsand fabrics, and last but not least, medicines. J. C. Ayer & Co.’s celebrated remedies from America were displayed in an elegant Bazaar, where the Doctor hitnself might sometimes be seec. They are known and taken on steppes of Asia as well as the prairies of the West, and are an effectual antidote for the diseases that prevail In the yaourts of tee North as well as the huts and cabins of the Western contincjt.—Lincoln [I I.) Times.
