Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 25 June 1894 — Page 2

The Journal

Combination Coupon

.1 rxv: 25, 1S94.

Three of those coupons of different dates and 10 cents are {rood for any number of the

World's Fair

Art Portfolio.

Three of these coupons of different .dates ami ir cents are •rood for any series of

Art Gems.

Throe of those coupons of different dates ami lo cents. are good for any number of Frank Leslies

Scenes and Portraits Of the Civil War.

FOK OVT OF TOWN KKADKllS. When arderitijr any of the above works be sure to state what number on want, onclose In addition the coupons and proper amount of monoy, two cents tor postage. lv not linclude any other business in your letter.

THE DAILY JOURNAL.

Kstahmshkk IS 1*

Printed Every Afternoon Except Sunday.

THE JOURNAL COMPANY. T.H. U. McCA IN President. J. A. tiUKENE. Secretary.

_____

•gTHK

A. A. MCCAIN, Treasurer.

One year 15.00 8Ix uiouths "'.SO Three montlis l-'-o Per week carrier or 10

WEEKLYOne year II .00 Six months 50 Three months -5

Payable tn advance. Sample copies I ree.

Entered at the Vostotflee at Crawfordsville Indiana, as second-class matter.

MONDAY, .1UXE sr., 1S94.

TIIK I.IM.VX 1)1' AVAIil IIV. The news that startles the world this morning' is the assassination of SaiiiCarnot. President of France, last night at Lyons ly an Italian anarchist. The dangers of anarchism are not confined to a republican form of government. They are to be encountered in monarchies as well as republics. The assassination of a czar, or of a president or of a mayor, should admonish the world that anarchy in whatever form should be speedily crushed or governments themselves will be stamped out. Mankind must unite for the preservation of civilization. The spirit of anarchy seems to Vie growing in the United .States. Have we not had sufficient warning in the assassination of two Presidents and the Mayor of a great city to adopt vigorous measures and give it no quarter. The cowardly place seekers who pander to this murderous element in this country should be relegated to the rear by the united voice of the lovers of law and order. What we need are a few less Governor Alt-gelds and Governor Waites, and a few more Governor Matthewses and Governor McKinle'vs.

NEXT I.KtilSLATTltK.

Hi inibliran

The Columbus

has been

figuring on the probable complexion of the next Legislature, and is unite hopeful that the Republicans will have a majority in both branches. Of the twenty-five .Senators, who hold over, eleven arc Republicans and fourteen Democrats. of the twenty-live districts in which Senators are to be elected six were carried by the Republicans iu 1S91'. while the Democrats carried nineteen. Seven of the Democratic districts were carried by less than 5U0 plurality. The Democrats admit that there are eight doubtful districts which were carried by their party in Is'.i'J. Should the Republicans succeed in carrying these, with the sixdistricts they carried in Wi2. they will have with the eleven holdovers twentyfive members in that body. While an entire new House of Representatives must be elected, the gerrymander will give the Democrats some advantage. The Republicans carried thirty-three of the representative districts in 1 s!i:j while the Democrats carried si.\tvseven. Political experts, who have been figuring on the vote of that year, ,say twenty-nine of the sixty-seven

Democratic districts arc doubtful this year. Should the Republicans carrv two-thirds of these doubtful districts, with the districts they carried in ls'.r •they will have a majority in the .House of Representatives.*

SKNATOK 1III.1/S II. One of tlie most readable speeches that has been delivered in the Senate recently is the speech of Senator Hill in opposition to the income lax. He flayed those Democrats who for the last twenty-five years have clamored aginst war taxes and who now for the first time since war have been intrusted the full control of the Government^ are attempting to restore the most odious, inquisitorial, and offensive war taxes with which a free people were ever attticted. In repudiating such spurious Democracy Mr. Hill said:

I repudiate the spurious Democracy of these modern apostles and prophets, who are part Mugwump, part Populist, and the least part Democratic, who seek to lead us astray after false gods, false theories and false methods. 1 object to our restoring a war tax which the Republicans themselves rejected years ago, with our approbation. I protest against the lack ot foresight and judgment upon the part of some professed Democrats who always seem anxious to adopt whatever the Republicans and the people have repudiated. There were those who vigorously opposed the issue of greenbacks during the war. but when the Republicans after the war sought to curtail and restrict their former issue, these men became the earnest champions of a greenback currency ant) sought to merge the Democratic party into a greenback party. They opposed the policy of a return to specie payments, and when specie payments became an accomplished fact they clamored for paper money.

They are the same shortsighted nie.i who four years ago made the air of the

capitol resound with their denunciations of ex-Speaker Keed's rules, and recently turned round and adopted the substantial principle involved iu those very rules, amid the laughter and ridicule of the whole country. I cannot follow such leadership, which shifts and turns and temporizes upon every public question: which compromises every well-established Democratic principle for which the party contended when out of power which stands ready to adopt every passing "ism" of the hour which surrenders principle for expediency and pursues no consistent course from one year to another. If political success of my party is only to be purchased by such methods and such saeritiees 1 prefer defeat and the preservation of my self respect.

Mr. Hill then entered upon-an able and exhaustive argument against the imposition of the incomeatax, but his protests and his arguments were in vain as the contract with the Populists made it. necessary for-'very Democratic Senator to go back on the record of his party. Mr. Hill, however, had the satisfaction of showing up their inconsistencv.

SOME SOUND ECONOMICS.

.\ Plea For Keturn to the Momentary os of in Heading I'or Kwrjlxwly.

To the Editor Journal. Whilst that once grand old party, that has long since lived out its days of usefulness, is suffering the agonies of an articulo mortis, and the political sea is being lashed into fury by the generic forces, that is soon to evolve a new political party, yet unnamed, I wish to discuss through the columns of The .lot'itsai. some of the political heresies that are being promulgated by the discordant elements that will in the n'i'ir future be put into order at the full birth of the new party.

First, 1 wish to notice the proposed change of relation between the people and the government, advocated by many of them in the placing of railroads. telegraphs, telephones, public highways, and banks in the hands of the general government.

Second. 1 wish to notice the fallacy of the government issuing untold millions. and loaning it to the citizen at at an unprecedented low interest.

First, then. I would say, that it is an American idea, that the government belongs to the people. Fnder the proposed change, however, the people would belong to the government, which principle would be incompatible with the cherished elementary principles of our institutions.

If we add to the hundred and eighty thousand present incumbents of the civil service, the hundreds of thousands of railroad, telegraph, telephone public highways and banking em" ployes, the administration in possession of such a patronage would be as firmly seated as is the Czar of Russia— nothing but death or revolution could remove such an administration from power/

Second, it would largely increase the expenditures of the government. Every observant tax-payer knows that the transfer of any enterprise from individual supervision, when the stockholder is directly interested in the loss or gain,-to the hands of government oflicials increases greatly the expense, in most instances it doubles the expense.

It is not necessary for me to cite cases in which this would be the case as the tax payer lias frequent demonstrations of the fact. The people of this State are building good gravel roads by private donations for less than one-half what it costs them under the gravel road laws of the State.

My third objection is: It would materially weaken the financial and executive ability uf the masses, so that in a very few generations the masses would not be capable of self government.

It is a well settled fact that upon the judicious exercise of an organ, or faculty of the human economy, depends its development or strength. Webster defines education to contest of not only the acquisition of knowledge but the development of intellectua strength. Upon the exercise of faculty depends its strength or growth. If we retire a set of muscles for a sufiicicnt time they become athophied ami weakened so as to deprive them of muscular strength. A number of hu man organs have, by long disuse, be come rudimentary. 10veil the eye, deprived of use and the stimulus of light, becomes more and more rudimentary until it is of no use. Fishes, confined in dark caverns, where no ray of light ever penetrates, in the course of ages, become eyeless. The mole that burrows in darkness has but a rudimentary eye. So with the cerebral organs and the intellectual faculties belonging thereto.

To release man from the cares and responsibilities of the accumulation of a competency for old age, would, in a few years put every old man and woman. after t.oo old for labor, upon the government, as a pensioner or pauper. Then who would pay the tax necessary to the support of a nation of pensioners? Establish the principle of rearing every person from birth to maturity, in nurseries, managed by officials paid by the government, and in a fewgenerations the material and paternal ability wovld be so weakened that in a few generations the sources from which the ollicials obtain their ability would be so weakened that the human family would soon degenerate into perpetual decline and extinction.

In proportion as you lessen individual responsibility in any social state, in that proportion yon lower the collective force. For illustration, in the matter of railroads. It requires great executive ability, backed by long experience in large financial enterprises, to fit a man for conducting successfully a system of railroads. Our legislators and executive ollicers, as a rule,

A YOUNG GIRL'S FORTUNE.

AN INTERESTING SKETCH.

Nothing appeals so strongly to a mother's affection as her daughter just budding into womanhood. Following la an instance: "Our daughter, Blanche, now 15 years of age, had been terribly aflliclod with nervousness, and bad lost the eutiro uro of her right arm. Sho was iu such a condition that we bad to keep her from school aud abandon her music lessons. In fact, wo feared St. Vitus dance, and are positive but for an Invaluable remedy sho would have had that terrible affliction. Wo had employed physicians, but phe received no beneiit from them. Tho first of last August sho weighed but 75 pounds, and although she has taken only three bottles of Nerviue sho now weighs lOo pounds her nervousness and symptoms of St Vitus oanco are entirely gone, sho atteuds school regularly, and studies with comfort and ease, she hits recovered complete use of herann, her appetlto is splendid, and no money could procurc for our daughter the health Dr. Miles' Nervine has brought her.

When mv brother recommended the remedy I had no faith in patent medicines, and would not listen to him, but as a last resort he sent us a bottle, we began giving it to Blanche, aud tho effect was almost immediate."-Mrs. K. K. Bullock, Brighton, N. Y.

Dr. Miles' Restorative Kervlne !s sold by all druggists on a positive guarantee, or sent direct by the Pr. Miles Medical Co., Klkhart, Ind., on receipt of price. SI per bottle, six bottles for 85, express prepaid, it is jositively free from opiates or dangerous drugs.

So by all drugeists.

retlcct the intellectual and moral status of their constituency. If their constituency are inexperienced and ignorant of tlie work for which tho^e ollicers are selected, nine times out of ten they will be incompetent,.

.Minion Kxeursions.

On account of the Fourth of .inly holidays .the Monon route will seil tickets to points within a distance of 200 miles at rate of one fare for the round trip. Resides selling to points on our lines we will also sell at same rate to points on C. 11. D. R. A O. S. W. Rig Four 1. 1). W.: L. E. A W.: T. St. L. .t K. C. and Vandalia lines. Tickets sold on 3d and 4th. good returning until and including July 5. Trains will stop at all stations on July 4. Full information at depot.

Fourth of -111!)' Kxrursinus via Viiinl:ili:t I.ilull Halt' Fare. Tickets will be sold on July 3d and 4tli, good to return until July iitli.M S'.i I. inclusive, between all stations within two hundred miles of initial point. Tickets will also be sold to stations on connecting lines on same basis as above. For full particulars call on nearest Vandalia Line Ticket agent or address J. M. Ciircsnuori,u.

Ass't.Gcn'l Pass'r Agent. St. Louis. Mo.

.WtMliriiuil 1iisI.y. £1.••!.•» Ouurl. A pure old whisky is always free from fusil oil, which is a poison, and should not be taken into the system. Age eliminates it from the spirit by oxidation, and it is converted into fragrant ethers which give the boquct to whisky, such is Royal Ruby Rye. Received direct from distillery, "and sold by Nye,A Booe, druggists.

Ilucklen's Arnira Salve,

The best salve in the world for Cuts P.ruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or ney refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale InCotton & Rife's, the Progress Pharm acy.

TirtKMK ,V

W.\inku

housands

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WEBSTER' S INTERNA TIOXA s4brtattc/ !ie Timer.

0-211

I!i

i-:win'i

Cos

llohemian Export licer in wood and glass. The finest of all table beer in the market, delivered to al! parts of the city. Telephone your order to the City Mottling Works. ai ohan' & askv,

Propr's.

of new patrons have

taken Hood's Sarsaparilla this season and realized its benefit in lilijpd purified and strength restored.

A Small llorlor Kill.

Fity cents is a small doctor bill, but that is all it will cost you to cure any ordinary case of rheumatism if you use Chamberlain's Pain Malm. Try it and you will be surprised at the prompt relief it affords. The first application will quiet the pain. 5i) cent bottles for sale by Nye- A. Roo. Ill North Washington street, opposite court house.

Fou 25 cents we offer ladies' night dresses trimmed with torchon lace or ruffle skirts with live inch rullle.drawers tucked, trimmed with torchon I acts or Hamburg lace: corset covers and backs trimmed with lace or embroidery chemise, lace and embroidery trimmed. N'o such values ever before offered in this city. L. P.iscnoK, lv!7 12'.» E. Main street.

Feed siniiie.

Frank Spitzer has leased the Rink barn, 208-210 N. Green-st., opposite Nutt hotel, and will have a nice clean feed stable. All buggies left with Mr. Spitzer will be kept in the dry. (i-20tf

A (irHiitl Feature

Of Hood's Sarsaparilla is that while it purifies the blood and sends it coursing through the veins full of richness and health, it also imparts new life and vigor to every function of the body. Ilence the expression so often heard: "Hood's Sarsaparilla made a new person of me." It overcomes that tired feeling so common now.

Hood's Pills are purely vegetable, perfectly harmless, always reliable and beneficial.

DICTIONARY

A iSraHetiiautatfir.

•-~Muro/thr

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Next to TUN .T

ClTI/.KN.

K\rticKKshrKrt', ,Tithe 0 i. l-^t.

Yaiuhtlln Uno—rlmjiro of Time iunl Tlirnuch

Taking cfleet .1 ntie •.'Mb and continuing until Sept. '-':.'d. 1 •!»•». Vandalia fast trains Xn. 5." and No. ."mi. between Terre Haute aud St. Joseph, will run on about the same schedule as iu former years. Trains No. 51 and Xn. r.t. heretofore run only to and from South Rend, will run to and from St. Joseph. On train No. fiC there will be through Pullman sleeping car. daily except Sunday, to Grand Rapids, Charlevoix, Petoske.v and liay View, running via St. Joseph. This sleeper returns on train No. 51. thus providing, daily except Sunday, a through Pullman line without change of cars from St. Joseph. South ltend, Logansport and all points on Michigan division to St. Louis. Apply to agent of Vandalia Line at nearest point from time card.

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corn in?r nonv.H'V ml places translating iu iauoiuons. It ia invaluable !-0 {hre, study, and sehoolr'H/jn. •*.

'itluirity.

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Hon. !). J. iiv-tt'.-r, ef I'.S. Supremo Court, \vnt«'-5: inH-riimional liU-tjonnry ts tho jM-nVi'tmu i.'f cs, uiiiniriHl ll to all as the ono prvat sims'lnnl authority."

Sohlhij Jii P.no!,-.(\U rs.

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C. Mcrri.im Co. J'ttOlislunt, Sprintjjlchl, Mtt.-at.

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WEBSTER'S

i-^-n -,i—r \ivrERX.-vnomj not b\\\ clump photo. rwrifwxw graphic reprints of ancient JUluliUAnixI cdiuons. forfnvpro'peotua.

Promptness In Plumbing-

Is a rare virtue,

But we have it.

WILLIAMS BROS.,

121 South Green Street.

oi hxai

P.uilding

C. M. SCOTT.

Fire, Life and Accident

INSURANCE,

Agent for the l'.artlett Rinderv. Any weekly newspapes dsired. Agent for the State Rtiilding and Loan Association of Indiana. Special rates on binding Art Portfolios and World's Fair Views. Call on me for rubber stamps, stencils, seals, house numbers, accident tickets. City Clerk's otlice, city building, north *Green street, Crawfordsville, Ind.

Notice of Gravel Road Letting.

Notice is hereby given that bids will be received at the oiliee of Kennedy AKennedy, in Crawfordsville, Ind., up to Thursday, July 5tli, l-S'.U. at ten o'clock in the morning for eonstructin one-third of a mile of gravel road in Union township near the iron bridge over Otliel's Creek on the Terre Haute gravel road. l'.idders will find plans and specifications on file at the Auditor's otlice. The right is reserved to reject all bids.

P. S. KENNEDY.

June 11. '94. Superintendent,

Notice to Contractors.

Rids for the construction of fine or more school houses in Union township. Montgomery county, will be received at Township Trustee's office in Crawfordsville until 2 o'clock, June 2,'t. is'.'i. Plans and specifications can be seen at said office on and after June Hi. The right to reject any and all bids is reserved.

"l).

W. Hahtma.v,

Trustee.

D. W. ROUNTREE,

FIRE INSURANCE.

Represents Old Reliable Insurance Companies. Office with Indiana and Ohio Live Stock Tn suranee Companies. Patronage Rollolted.

The comparativevalue ofthese twocarda Ir known to most persons. They illustrate that greater quantity Is

Not always most to be desired,

These cards express the beneficial quai* Ity of

Ripans Tabules

As compared with any previously known

DYSPEPSIA CURB.

Ripans Tabules: Price, 50 cents a bor, Of druggists, or by mail.

RIPANS CHEMICAL CO., 10 Spruc« St., N.Y.

Not a Luxury But a Necessity—

That is old newspapers in house-cleaning time. Call at Till- Jouk.sai, otlice and buy them dirt cheap,but 110 liiKT on the papers. We •, throw the soiled ones away and sell only those that are

NICE AND CLEAN. ABSTRACT BOOKS,

A. C. JennlBon'B iilislrnct books contain t:op of every deed of record to every tract of hind tn the county, a% well »s to every unsntislied morlKUtfeorlien. His twenty yours experience. aided by these unrivaled facilities In triielnir titles enable him to elului Unit his ortlce is tho best pluee to have Deeds, Mort|rii(i:ep I-cuses and Contracts prepared, as well as re iiulile Abstracts of Title. MONEY TO LOAN URAL ESTATE AND 1N3UHANCK AOHNT.

HOHTn MOIOH ROQTB. "J 18a.rn Night Express 1:00p.tn P)isf"nger 2:50 p.m.

sART

8:14

a.nt

5:02 p. 1:50 a. 1:15 p. in

south 0 44 a .... 5:20 .. 8:10pm...

*outh

1:50 a.m l:25p.m

Loca' Freight 9:15 a.m

BIG 4-

-Peoila Division.

f):50p.m

b:2!l^a. 1:15 p.m.

VAHDAL1A.

NORTH

8:10 am 6:10 2:2:3 ob

In June

There will be many

Wedding Bells

The 5ilks Suit Them.

Young Housekeepers

This is the Time

25c

Summer Sweetness In Silks.

Wash Goods Delights.

Now, Your Attention

New Line of

/RAKERS

This Store

Ma'iy wedding" Hollos in Juno have placed so much confidence in this store tha they have purchased their entire outfits of us.

The (iray and Tan Woolen Stall's suit tliein the Fails. Ciloves, Handkerchiefs, Hosiery, Underwear and little things all suit them, anilare here in plenty. No need to go farther awav to find what is wanted.

Are knowing people. They know what suits a new home. They know of our lace curtains, our fine draperies, our silkolincs and Madras Cloths, our bed spreads, table cloths, napkins and towels, our rugs and portiers, our sheetings, tickings, etc., and all at lower prices than our competitors sell these goods.

To give some thought to replenishing- your stock of muslin underwear. This is the place hest adapted to your needs. We can help you wonderfully, and surprise you by our priecs. This is the greatest help we otter you. We help you Lo make a small amount of money buy all your needs. This is a sample of the wonderful bargains we olVer:

50C

Have you noticed how old and quaint the. greater part of our printed silk tiesigns are? They are exclusive with us. No other store in this eity can show you anything resembling them. A few examples may be seen in our east window. Knough to convince you we speak the truth about tliem.

'1 he ladies appreciate our eiVorts to please them in wash goods, and we are glad to know we have succeeded so well. We are constantly receiving new things in this line. So soon as the manufacturer produces a new article we show it in all its odducss and prettiness. We have had the handsomest swivel silks: we have had the sheerest Organdies: we have had the silkiest satins: we have hail the latest of everything in

wash goods.

Infants' Caps

50C

We have the latest.

Is called to our lir.e of summer necessities. We have them for you in all quail" ties. Silk iloves and Mitts. Kibhons, Laces. Hosiery, Kans. Shirt Studs, Link I'uttons for Shirt Waists, latest in Ties, ladies' Shirt Waists in Silks, Lawns. Percales, etc.

Just Received/

Is known outside of Crawfordsville as a "truth-telling store. It has taken some years and some loss to gain this end. Do you like merchants who will tell you when goods will fade or spot easily. This is the way our business is carried on here. If any article bought of us is not as represented your money goes back. It goes back without hard feelings. A pleasure with this dry goods store is lo please people. The prices are lowest and the goods are the best the. world can produce. ^v- .. :.

LOUIS BISCHOF.

127-129

EAST MAIN STREET.

IT PAYS TO TRADE AT THE BIG STORE

Parasol Talk.

Have you noticed the display of parasols in our window. It is worth a trip down town. We have just received some very handsome things in this line.