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Mount Vernon Banner Historic Newspaper 1888

3-29-1888

Mount Vernon Democratic Banner March 29, 1888

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Recommended Citation "Mount Vernon Democratic Banner March 29, 1888" (1888). Mount Vernon Banner Historic Newspaper 1888. 22. https://digital.kenyon.edu/banner1888/22

This Book is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange. It has been accepted for inclusion in Mount Vernon Banner Historic Newspaper 1888 by an authorized administrator of Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange. For more information, please contact [email protected]. L. HARPER. EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR A FAMILY NEWSPAPER—DEVOTED TO NEWS, POLITICS, AGRICULTURE, LITERATURE, THE ARTS AND SCIENCES, EDUCATION, THE MARKETS, Ac. $2.00 PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE. VOLUME LT. MOUNT VERNON, OHIO: THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 1888. NUMBER 46.

SOME PRESIDENTIAL TALK. Badly Frightened. Something About Presidents. BILL WE 0Y HIS TRAVELS. and cool brains can go from his farm IATBRESTIAG VARIETY. The Newark American comes out in New York AVorld.] to the senate and congress and the The Philadelphia Times supposes is the only clergy­ white house—he is the man that gets a double-leaded literary malformation He Encounters a Hard-Fisted Farmer left at last to run his farm, with no­ This is truly an age of iconoclasm. that Ohio is now so solid for Sherman man’s son who has ever been elected Alabama is a Democratic State and intended for an appeal, begging and body to help him but a hired man and A cold-blooded scientist now conies OF- that its delegation will doubtless give on a Railway Train. has $400,000 in the Treasury. Ohio is pleading for votes for the Republican President, though Aithur’s father was a high protective tariff The farms in forward to say that the old oaken buck­ him one vote before it breaks. candidate for Judge in the most de­ a clergyman. He was not, however, our state is mortgaged for over $700,- et, celebrated in song and story, is sim­ a Republican State and is in debt over IBuw (lie Granger Depicted 000,000. Ten of our western states- With forty-six delegates like Jerry ploring manner. This double-leaded elected President. The fathers of the ply an iron-hound death dealer, a con­ REGULATOR $700,000, Bliss from Ohio, Senator Sherman Presidents—Washington, Jef­ His Ufe. see by the papers—has got about $3,- densed mass of nitro-genous and plios- appeal has a double meaning. It ferson, Aladison and Alonroe—were On board the western train the other 500,000,000 mortgages on their farms phatic filthiness, and the home of the E. S Norton, proprietor of the Hart­ could rely on the delegation being Unfailing Specific for Liver Disease. means that the American and its party planters. John Tyler’s father was a day, I held in my bosom for over and that don’t count the chattel mort­ microbe and bacteria. ford Hotel, at Canton, has made an unanimously for—J. B. Foraker. So gages filed with the town clerks on Masonic Temple-Second Floor, ' " 13TniSU|(£» Bitter or bad taste i: bosses have found out and become and statesman, and John seventy-five miles the elbow of a large John L. Sullivan onye drove a street MONUMENT SQUARE. : oiriUlnwi mouth; tongue eonti, assignment. Liabilities about $19,000; says the Lancaster Eagle. Adams, the father of John Quincy farm machinery, stock, waggins, and v, ;.ite or covered with a brown fur; pain i frightened over two very important Adams, was by profession a lawyer. man whose name I do not know, says even crops, by gosh! that ain’t two car in Boston for the paltry sum of $2 ihe back, sides, or joints—often mistake! assets, $22,(XX). The Kansas City Times says that the facts, viz: First, that Mr. James E. Law- in Rheumatism; sour stomach; loss «»: unanimous voire of Missouri and Kan­ Grant’s father was a tanner, Hayes’ Bill Nye in the World. He was not a inches high under the snow. That’s per day. It was while engaged in this u petite; sometimes nausea and water head is a very popular candidate; and father a merchant, and the fathers of what the prospects is for farmers now. ina'h, or indigestion; flatulency and acio L. S. Norton, a leading member of sas is for Cleveland’s renomination. railroad hog or I would have resented ocoupation that he-was discovered by < r ictations; .bowels alternately eostivi second, that he is not only going to re­ Garfield, Lincoln, Pierce, Fillmore, The government is rich, but the men John B. AIcCormick, then sporting edi­ and lax; headache; loss of memory, with the Erie, Pa., bar, became violently in­ it. He was built wide and he couldiFt The same here in Ohio, and every­ ceive the solid support of the Democ­ Polk, Van Buren and Jackson were that made it, the men that fought tor of the Cincinnati Enquirer, by a | ainful sensation of having failed to do sane while arguing a case in court. He farmers. The chances for the presi­ help it, so I forgave him. perarie fires and perarie wolves and In­ whom lie was introduced to the pugil­ ■ nncthlng which ought to have been done : where else, lor that matter. racy of the county and district, but i bility; low spirits; a thick, yellow a]>- was arrested and sent to an asylum. The Chicago Tribune (Rep.) thinks dency in the past have thus been with He had a large, gentle, kindly eye, juns and potato-bugs and blizzards, and istic world in which he has since made earance of the skin and eyes; a