Democratic Sentinel, Volume 20, Number 23, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 June 1896 — GENERAL WARNER. [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

GENERAL WARNER.

Man Who Inspired the Bolt in the Prohibition Convention, Adoniram Judson Warner, the president of the Bimetallic League, who inspired the bolt of the silver men in the Prohibition natiotyil convention, has written a few books on the financial problem. In 1882 he published “Sources and Value of Money,” and in 1887 "Appreciation of Money.” He is an all-round man. He was a captain at the beginning of the war in a regiment from Pennsylvania and was rapidly promoted to lieutenant colonel, colonel, and finally brevet briga-

diet general. He took part in most of the engagements of the Army of the Potomac and was wounded at Antietam. After the war he read law and was admitted to the Indianapolis bar. He moved to Ohio to conserve his coal and railroad interests, and it was from that State that he went to serve his country in Congress. He sat, as a Democrat, in the Forty-sixth, Fortyeighth and Forty-ninth Congresses and was appointed on many important committees of these Congresses. Gen. Warner is a Virginian by birth, and is 02 years old. He graduated from Beloit, and was at one time principal of the Lewiston, Pa., Academy.

ADONIRAM J. WARNER.