Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 12 September 1891 — Page 2
BUSINESS D1 K.fcCTORY.
ATTORN Y.
JOHNSTON & JUHHSTON,
ATTOllNEYb-A T-LAW.
Prompt attention given to collections and settlement of decedents estate.
West SUle of Square Jovor Y**eloy & McClamrock's Shoe Store.
w. B. HUXl'ERSTt
HUMPHREY & REEVES.
ATTOKfiYS-AT
At 7 per cent, annual interest...without commission.
FARM AND CITY PROPERTY ior sale or exchange. HOUSES to rent.
CUMBERLAND & MILLER
is West Main Street
CRAWFORDSVILLE ID
Walter D. Jones,
Insurance and Collecting A(|jnjy,
Should call at our store on Eatt ket Street.
I
of Linden, Ind.
All Claims for ixille.-iion Tactively prosecuted Will appear a.-! a» attorney in Justices'
loiijlipn Jtoiggs
11: AT MARKET ST:
cecssors to George Long A Co.)
Wo have a fin' line of Sugar, Tobacco and Canned Goods.
HK
W. M. KK8VS0.
I..WV. ,»*"
And Notaries Public. Ornomm Uioek.
MONEY TO LOAN
At 4't and rt per.eeut. (or years on Improved
Farms in Indiana
We Grant yon the privilern of paying tlii-s mpney back to us in.irHwofflOOormoro at any interest payment., C. N. ^^-^'.^VviUe lnd
Money to Loan
fk
Come and Inspect Our Stock.
Farmers desiring to exchange theii produce lor Fresh. Groceries, and alwavs at the
Lowest Current Rote,
.)
Mar-
We have a good trade and expect to ...maintain it by lair treatment of all customers.
Tomliuson & Scaggs.
MOXKY TO LOAN'.
MONEY LOAN
Abstracts of Title Furnished
From tlie only ('(implete net of Al«t.rtct boolin of Montgomery rntinty land.
Houses and Lots for ale. Dwellings lor Rent.
-.DEEDS, Etc., CAKKKl'l.liY EXECUTED BY
Albert 0. Jeimison,
fflce ovur 12-' U. Main St., Cra'Afordsvllle. luri.
E, W. REAM, Dentist.
Moil^ni iJi.-nlistrv practical in all it* ph/t^cs, UlrhiU" work ornrliflria! U« tli WITHOUT plates inado «fi»T tlm must reocul 1 *v i«* *»^. Ail .stylet* Of nrllMcial turiii with an ospivial caiv to Julnesri aii'l rcstorati«»it ol a natural *\pr( *ion of tho far**. I'or the I'Xtractim of teeth, till 4ho reliable nna^mhetio known to modern dent'istry. both loe ,1 and Lvnerul. are used.
K. \V. KKAM. Dentist.
Oniee over nhill. Iforiwot.Hr A Picket'* jjrocry, Cra\v|i«rdvjll'. Indian.
JJOTK'K TO JNON-ltBijlOKNTy. Stale ol Jnill.iin. Mont.i "meiy County: In tlio Montgoiiuiry Circuit Court. .September toini.
1891,.lohn
II. liuMier vs. liosa A. liutcbuivom-
riiulnt No. 10.17 I. Now CHHIHH tlie plaintiff by 11111-1'-y A Cloilfeltor, attorneys. and llles his cumpl.iint herein, tOg&Mlcr I
Hi mi allidavit that said deleudant,
Ko.sa A. Untchcr, (residing at l'elton,Santa Cruz, California.! Is not a resident ,,f tlie statu ol Indiana.
Notiee ip tlierelere lieivliy given Html defendant, that unless IU and appi-ar on the '.".till day of the next term if the Montgomery Cirenit Conrt, to le liotden on the Dth day of (letoher. A. 1). !!s'll.a1 the Court House in Cruwlordsville. In Said County and State, and answer or demur tosaifl eomidalnt. the same will In: heuid and deterxuinf'd in lieralisenee. •Witness my name, and the seal of said Court. fllXRl :tt.OrH\rford-vdlo. this st.h day of August.
I), li^l. JIKsHY II. Ill I.K I' 1" Clerk.
Tumors CI'ltKO: no knifi
AiTip.er
,,r,"k fr,'°"
»atl, Ohio.
^Ni."'-
Hs, No. lt'.l Kim street. Cinein-
At Garnett, N. C.. women wash for ir
cnts a day.
REVIEW.
IIY
T. I«tySE.
TERMS 0? SUBSCBirriOli.
One v^ar, In ttw* connn.
FURY
Si
si i* 1 40
lnqnire at Office for A'lverti m* rate*.
SEPT. 12, 1891.
THE "COAT"' EXHIBITION. The exhibition in Treves, Germany, of the "Holy Coat" is still going on. and thousands daily are paying to see it. it is stated. After this exhibition begins to slack up in interest the managers should secure a few nails from the
Holy Cross" to add to the interest of the show. These nails are said to be plenty in Europe and it will probably be no trouble to obtain them, and they are all genuine, of course, the same as the
Holy Coat." Truly the exhibition of this "or that "holy" article, looks contemptible and almost sacriligious, regardless of which religious denomination may countenance it. This "coat is probably a fraud, yet religious zealots do not seem to question this, and some of the fools even consider if they can touch the hem of the garment" they will be healed of disease. It would seem, however, to be a mental disease that is ailing most of these people who are crowding in to see the show, and a treatment for insanity is what is most necessary. These people exhibit no more fanaticism in Europe than would he shown here in America were the "Holy Coat." placed on exhibition in this country. They would crowd in droves and immense multitudes to see it, and there would be just as many to believe that it was worn by Christ. The coat is a source of much pecuniary profit to the church, although it wpuld seem that for the viewing of the garment. like religion, it should be "without money and without price,' but it is not. but like a fair, circus or menagerie, you must pay for looking at it directly or indirectly. It is no trouble to establish any religious belief in this country, and the order of the "Holy Coat" may be expected in time. We have had Millerites.Mormons.Spiritualists.Feet ushers. etc., and it would be no trouble to found a belief on the "coat. Let some one set about ami organize. It will pay. or at least there will be more money 1 han religion.
I'SON.
of Kansas, is a close
observer and a very logical reasoner if he does go sockless. Speaking for the farmers recently lie said: "We are in earnest and we think that the peogle of America have been greatly wronged. 1 go to the Republican party and ask them for its remedy. It replies. 'Put up the tariff.' And yet you have been putting up the tariff for thirty-two years. I ask ed Mr. Mclvinlev: If tariffs raise wages, why is it that Great Britain, a free trade country, pays twice the wages protected
Italy does why is it that Great Britain pays double to her wage-earners what she paid in 1317. when she became a free trade country? Why is it that Great Britain pays her laborers one-third more than the laborers receive in the protected countries of Europe? My idea is that the freedom to trade with others is a primal right. What have the republicans done? They have shut us off from the markets of the world. Oh. yes. they put wheat and corn and oats in the duty list. We have a surplus of them. Was there anv need of nrotection there? What we need is a chance to trade with all the world."
POPULATION OF INDIANA.
The Census Bureau has issued a »u 1
let in giving the population of Indiana in detail, by counties, cities, wards of cities towns and townships. taUen its of dune 1. 1V.M). The population of the slate 'J.I'.i'J. 101. an increase of 21 1.101! or 10.S" per cent.. over that, of 1SM». when it was I.HT^.IiOl. Of the ninety-two counties in the state, twenty'live show decreases, but in only four of these aretlie decreases mor than 10 per rent. In l.«SS() there were wentseven cities in the state having a population of four thousand or more, the aggregate population of which was .'S'JT.'ilS. In lS'.iO the number of cities having that population was thirtyseven, with an aggregate population of •"07.1.".'!. This showsan increase in population in cities of this size of I'JI'.SSo. or ii-I.OT per cent. The most considerable increase in urban population in number are found in Indianapolis and I'vansvilli-. Indianapolis shows an increase of :50.:iS0, or 10.I8 per cent., while Kvansville shows an increase of •J'J.ITii. or 7.'!..'!.") percent. Ft. Wayne and South Bend also show large proportionate increase. The largest percentages of increases are found in Hammond. Marion. Anderson.
Muncie. Frankfort and Kokomo. lnonlv two cities are decreases shown.
TIIK
THEY FIND IT CHEAPER TO PAY TAXES THAU TO FIGHT THEIR I COLLECTION.
Auditor Dunkle, of Carroll county, continues to place omitted property' be-
ted, and the Bowen heirs will have to pay taxes on that sum in additton to some two million dollars' worth that he had previously found and placed on the dupileate. A report comes from Delphi that the heirs are tired of paying attorney fees, and will settle the amount of back taxes that have been found due the county. It is reported that they have already paid, in attorney fees, a sum larger than would have been rejuired to pay their back taxes.
on
Journal of this city has issued
all this week uvery morning a very creditable sheet on account of the fair. Full reports of everything relating to the annual gathering of the people have been furnished by that sheet, and strangers glancing at its columns will be satisfied that Crawfordsville is decidedly a city of business and enterprise.
Jan.
8.
4
INCOME TAX.
With characteristic perverseness and cussedness the democrats, who are howling loudest against "war tax," are the very individuals who are doing the shouting in favor of the resurrection of the worst of all these imposts, the income tax.—Crawfordsville Journal.
If there can be a better plan for raising taxes for both national and state than by the and income plan we should be pleased to hear of it. The man with an income of ?100 and the other with an income of $10,000, each pay by it their proportionate, equal and just share of taxation, and this certainly should be the aim of the law. Instead of a tariff to protect rich men. as at present, they would be compelled to pay their just proportion and no more. As now executed the middle and poorer classes pay much the most taxes in this country. Special laws to prevent the wealthy from paying their just proportion have been enacted in the past by republican congresses and approved by presidents, of which the present tariff law is one.
Tin Democratic State Centra! Com met at Indianapolis, on Tuesday last, and acted wisely in adopting a new plan for the selection of State Central Commit teemen. the result of which will bearlier ami more thorough organization in tHis State in campaign years. The new plan of organization is as follows: On Saturday. Jan. 2.1SOO. mass conventions will be held at the court house of each eoun try, for the purpose of selecting dele gates to a district convention to be held
for the election of a district,
committeemen. The county mass con vention will be called to order b\ the county chairman and the district convention by the outgoing district chair man. The number of delegates to th district convention shall lie one for every 'J00 votes cast for Secretary of State Matthews and one additional delegate fir fractions over fifty.
Now don't go oil and curse the fair managers because you did not get first premium oil your horse, potatoes, chickens or jelly, and swear they are dishonest and you will never come again. Remember judges or committees to award premiums may have just as good sense, judgement and hoiiestv as \on and maybe more, and it you had been on the committee you would have created just as much dissat isfaclioti by our decision. If you can't stand defeat or bear disap pointment then stop the exhibiting of your goods altogether. member, however, the fair will go on just the same whether you attend or not. and if \ou are not there there will be some oilier person to lake your place.
THE OHIO CAMPAIGN.
Gov. Campbell, who was about to en or the campaign in Ohio, has been compelled. by order of his physicians, to desist from all labor of any kind for a time and take a change of climate for his health. This is decidedly discouraging, but it is hoped that thisgallent democrat may sufficiently recover in time to make a thorough canvass of the slate,
It is an important campaign in which he is entering, a leading political issue, the tariff, is to be thoroughly discussed, and the issue settled, so far ax Ohio is concerned. in November next. Campbell is well equipped with brains and energy, and the justice of the cause, to back his party. The old adage. "A bad beginning has a good ending", may. and we hope will, prove 1 rue in this case.
TIIK prospect, for burning natural gas in Crawfordsville this winter, is now. judging from assertions of those connected with the company, quite favorable. Work toward digging the trenches and, laying the pipes will begin within a week from this time.
N0 MUSIC THIS YEAR. By a somewhat ridiculous law the teacher of music at our city schools is compelled to pass an examination before the county superintendent the same as
longing to the Bowen estate on the tax other instructors. Instead of being exduplicate. He found $l.Ti,10- worth of imiined in music as he should be to indiproperty this week that had been omit- cate his qualifications for teaching .that
branch, that is not used at all, but arith metic, geography and other studies in place of it. Prof. Alam Moore is a good instructor in music, has created a taste among large numbers of scholars for it, but is now disbared from teaching it because he failed to pass an examination in certain educational branches with which he has no more to do than a railway conductor. Heretofore he has not been compelled to pass an examination, and has taught music in our schools for five years past with satisfaction. The programme is changed now. He is out of a job through a very foolish quibble over the law relating to it.
FURNISH THE FIGURES. The electric light plant having been finished and now in working order, the city council should at once furnish the figures as to its cost. The tax-pay-ers would like to know, you know, just what they are expected to pay for it Councilman Scott, who has been instrumental in securing the plant for the city, should see to it that a systematic and itemized account is published for the inspection of those interested. Give us the cost of engine, boiler, smoke stack, ground, poles, wires, men employed in erecting, etc. There is nothing impertinent in this, whatever. The people who are to pay for it have a right to know all about it. and it is the duty of the citv council to see that they do.
A
can be no doubt that the svspensioning many ex-soldiers of
Then
tem of the late war and the establishing of Soldiers homes, by the government, has had a very demoralizing effect with large numbers of them. Only last week at the Milwaukee Soldiers' Home hundreds of ex-soldiers were present, who had taken up their permanent abode there abandoned labor, but who were stout, healthy, and suffering with no physical mtirmaties whatever. They seemed to labor under the impression that the government was bound to feed and clothe them the rest of their days whether they were in good health or not. They were at once ordered away and told to go out in the world and make their own living An investigation is to be made at all the other "Homes." and men found there who are able to earn their living will be compelled to remove to other quarters.
MAN
named Wyeth. of the Confed
erate army, who was a prisoner in Camp Morton in 1864. has made the assertion the Century magazine that rebel prisoners wertf starved in great numbers in that prison and also numbers frozen to death. He is answered by Wm. R. Holloway. of Indianapolis, who proves by figures and facts that the charges are false. Holloway has the "bulge" on Wyeth in the discussion without question, as the story that any prisoners at Indianapolis during the war were starved is undoubtedly false.
New York will yet obtain the'"honor of containing the largest business build ing in the world. Chicago has outrival led the eastern metropolis in this respect for some years, but the only two struct ures which will surpass the proposed building in height are the Eiffel Tower aii'd the Washington Monument. It will stand on the west side of lower Broad way. near Bowling Green extending to Greenwich street, and will be 5S0 fee high, containing '20 stories, constructed mainly of steel, the estimated cost being almost *1.000.01)0.
SO.MI:
of the scheming republican
politicians of Ohio arc' getting ready
to
have the new Australian
ballot system of voting in that state dt elared unconstitutional It must be done before the November election it will be then
no
tion
TIIK
v^
good. An honestelei
law. such as the Australian, is ter rifyingto republicans. It defeated them in Indiana last year, and in spite of their majority in Ohio, bids fair to the saint thing, hence the necessity if cripplin its operation before the election.
main attraction of fairs is that
they are a meeting ground of the peopl where old acquaintances are renewed and matters of the present and future discussed. So far as an exhibition is concerned there is little in it any more. There are no better races, no better display of horses anil cattle, no better exhibition of art and mechanism, no larger crowds now. than there were eight and ten vears
ago.
A r'lT.i: the government has made the business of producing rain and stopping drouths a success it should turn its attention to heading off the destructive cvclonesthat every spring and summer appear so suddenly and with such destructive energy. Next to the need of rams at certain periods of the year, is something that will prevent the terrilV ing cyclones, which, for ten years past, have proven uncommonly frequent.
TIIK Rising Sun Recorder's suggestion that thi'books of every county in the state be examined every two years, by experts, is a I one.
Kate Kield says one trip to tJii coast is worth three to Europe.
I 'acilic
Harvest K\cursion.s.
The Morion Route will sell harvest ex cursion tickets on A ug. Sept. l.i and "ill to all points south, at one fare for the round trip, anil to all western and northwestern points at very low rates. Tickets good to return 150 days from date of sale, for rates and full information. call at L.. N. A. i\: C. ticket office.
JJJThis country consumes about„?1.000.000 cans of tomatoes vearly.
The worst cases of scrofula, salt rheum and other diseases of the blood, are cured by 1 food's Sarsaparilla.
George Beard, of Whitehall. Mich has been in a trance for seven weeks.
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Castoria.
SANTA CLAU5 SOAPi
piniuuuLjiJimijf
There's banks of violets, Banks of njoss,
Arjd b&rjKs w^ere miners grope
And bar Ks l^dle golden coin*
A,,lVlUIlieibe
INIM.WA IVUNT
FAIRBANK nt.ke.THE BEST SOAP.
SAMIAClaiisSOAC^K^1
Us
ALBERT MUHL.EISEN
WIT (JC..
•ijrA
JANW. P?,OV\?-TV(
It you want a thoroughly good
SEWING MACHINE
Remember The
WHITE
Remember that in several hundred families of Montgomery county you will find they
Is theone you are looking for if you desire a machine thatfitted for all kinds of sew-'' ingbuv the Whiie
use the White Sewing Machine.
W. E. NICHOLSON
AGENT, WEST MAIN STREET.
usiness UniversitY
OLD BRYANT tz STRATTON, IIORTH PENNSYLVANIA. ST.. WHEN BLOCK. OPPOSITB POST-OFFICB. THE. HIGHEST CRADE BUSINESS |A ND SHORT HAND "SCHOO L. listablisheil 18o0 open all the year enterany time individual instruction lectures largo faculty timcshort: expenses low no fee for Diploma antrictly Business School in an unrivaled commercial center endorsed and patronized by railroad, industrial, professional and businessmen who employ skilled help no charge for positions unequaied in the success of its graduates.
SEND FOR ELEGANT CATALOGUE. HEEB & OSBORN, Proprietors.
Pure Wines land Liuuors
FOR FAMILY USE.
A "M"n Vi 1 dnri 108 Green Street, Craw-
1U
Has now in stock a most, carefully selected lot of TL'RE IMPORTED WINKS. RR AN DIES and GINS Also the very best grades of California SHERRY, ANGELICA, MUSCATEL, MADERIA and CLARETS which are. offered at prices below Cincinnati and Chicago, '.qualitv considered.) The many brands we. have in stock have a national reputation' for puritv and excellence in quality, and are being prescribed now constantly bv our highest local Medical Authorities in this city, for their Medical qualities and as a PURE WHOLESOME dinner or table dessert Wines. A large line of Imported KEY WEST and Domestic Cigars.5
CLIPPERS ALOON.
RUBBER ROOFING AND SLATE PAINT
Cheap, ornamental. Durable, l'lre and Water Proof ready for.use and easily applied. All kinds of Hoofing Materials. Wendy Hooting Torred Felt
I"2
N
THE POSITIVE CURE.
SLY BROTHKHS. 66 Warren SU New York- Price 00 eta.
THC ORIGINAL ANO GENUINE. Thf •*ly B«fo» Sure, reliable PMl tor tale. Ltdlea* uk DrnrrUt for Chiekuter'e Mi%gU»h Diamond Brand inKed and Gold mettlUo bexw «e*1*d vlth blae rifcttto. Take •ther kind. Befute 8ub»t*vHom and Imitation**
All pills in pMtetoard boi«i, pl&k wT*pper«, are dancer*a* eoaattrfelU. At Drvggtita. orf«*a 4e*ta tump* for partioaUn, MaUBonUls, and "BeHef for Ladle*," Utter, by jretvn
CH,CH"TER
l'itch
Tar for s.-ile. Write for circular and samples.
PITCH
ail
Tomi. SU Imli
and.
GRAVEL ROOFS SCLSRW.'
IIUIPSLIS, LIUL.
gSSfosp!
fit
CHt ,c
fo^'0^Sfl£ Kr'
