Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 23 April 1892 — Page 2
BUSINESS 1)1 KOTORY.
ATTORN i.\&
JOHNSTON & JOHNSTON,
ATTORNEYS-AT-IjAW.
Prompt attention given to collections and settlement of decedents estate.
West Side of Square over Yeagley & McSlamrock's Shoe Store.
M. WHITE. W. B. HOMPHRET# W. M. RKBVSFL.
WHIT- HUMPHRIES & REEVES.
AOTOKN KYS-ATL AW.
Office, 03^ E. Main Si.
MONEY TO LOAN
At and 6 per cent, lor 5 years on
Improved Farms in Indiana
•We Grant yon the privilege rof paying this money bock to ns In dribs of $100 or more at any iRtoreat payment. „C. N. WILLIAMS & CO.,
Cntwfordsvllle, Ind.
Money to Loan
JLt 7 per cent, annual* interest v,:thout commission.
TARM AND CITY PROPERTY lor sale or exchange. IIO USES to rent.
6UMBERLAN DJ&^MILLER,
118 West Main Street.
CR AWFOHDS VILLE IXO.
113 EAST A RKET ST.
Successors to George Long & Co.)
We have a fine line of Sugar, Coffee Tobacco and Canned Goods.
Come and Inspect Our Stock.
Farmers desiring to exchange theii produce lor Fresh, Groceries, and always at the
Lowest Current Rate.
Should call at our store on Ea^t Marlcet Si eet.
We have a good trade and expect to maintain it by fair treatment of all customers, 7
Tomlinson & Scaggs.
K, W. REAM, Dentist.
Modern dentistry practiced In all its^ phases. Bridge work or artificial tooth WITHOUT plates made after the most recent devices. Ail styles ef artificial teeth with an especial care to usefulness aud the restoration of a natural expression of the facc. For the extraction of tooth, all the reliable anaostlietics known to modern dont•'"'try, both local and general, are used.
E. W. KliAM, Dontist
over Barnhill, Ilornaday & Picket's groery, Crawfordsville, Indian.
"—PLENTY OF— 7
MONEY TO LOAN
On Farm or city Property.
NONE BUT THE
Best Insurance Companies
Are ltepresented by
Morgan & Lee
Ornbaun Block, West of Court House.
G. W. BENEFIEL,
Veterinary, Surgeon
•AND DENTIST.
kOffioo
nt liob Davis' Livery Stable, 125 W. Pike St., Crawfordsviilo, Ind. Calls by mail or telegraph answered promptly.
DR. C. H. ERGANBRIGHT, V, S.
Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College, treats all diseases of domestic animals.
Surgery A Specialty
Calls by mail or telegram promptly answered. Your patronage solicited. Office Merrick & Darnell's livery stable. 112,114 and 11G east Market street. Crawfordsville, Ind.
N
OTIOE TO HEIUS, CREDITORS, ETC,
3n the inattor of the estate ot Michael Lowe, deceased. In the Montgomery Circuit Court, March Term, 1891.
Notice Is hereby givon that Archelaua Bailey, •as Administrator of the estate of Mickael Lowe, •deoeased, has presented and filed his acoounts &nd vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said Circuit Oourt on tho "-39th day of April, 1893, at which time all heirs, oredltors or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said oourt and show cause. If auy 'there be, why said accoants and vouchers should not bo approved, and the heirs or distributees of Bald estate are also notified to be in said Oourt at the time aforesaid and make proof of 'boirahip.
Dated this 7th day of Atprll, 189S. ARCHKLAU8 BAILEY, Administrator.
HK I E
XT. T.
Ttli'MC snnvKIPTtOK
One year, in tho county $1 45 Oneyear.oni ftb« eonnt\. .•••••• 1 4o Inquire at Office for Artvertitns rates.
APRIL 24, 1892.
DEMOOEATIU OITY TiOKET.
For Mayor,
SIDNEY R. SPKED. For Treasurer, W. W. MORGAN.
For Clark,
WILLIAM SIDENER.
J'
For Counolimen.
1st. Ward—JAMES P. WALTER. 2nd Ward—G. W. L. BROWN. 3rd Ward—J. K. KVERSON.
DEMOCRATIC) UOUHTY TIOKET,
CLERK—WALLY SPARKS. TREASURER—JOHN HUTTON. RECORDER—FRANK WREN. SHERIEF—JOHN BIBLE. PROS. ATT'Y—W. S. MOFFET. REPRESENTATIVE—DAVID McCALLIS
TER.
SURVEYOR—W. F. HUNT. FOR ASSESSOR—J. F. ROBBINS. CORONER—D. M. CULVER.
FORJUOMMISSIOHERS.
FIRST DISTRICT—ROBT. DUNBAR. THIRD DISTRICT—ALLEN BYERS. JOINT SENATOR, MONTGOMERY AND PCT-
NA.M COUNTIES, JAMES SELLER.
JOINT RF.PKESENTA FIVE—MONTGOMERY, PUTNAM AND CLAY COUNTIES. FRANK ADER.
THE NEW YORK ELECTORAL VOTE. Whichever candidate of the democratic party that can carry the electoral voto of New York is, for policy sake if nothing else, the one to be nominated. It can bo secured by some candidate outside the state. Can it be socured by Cleveland living in the state? The electoral vote of tho South is 109, which added to New York, 33, will make a total of 20i» electoraal votes, and requiring an addition of but 18 more to secure tho election. We have little faith in the belief that Iowa, Illinois, or Nebraska, all or any of them, will cast their votes for the democratic nominees, notwithstanding what those states may havo done in off years, or tho gradual reduction of their former immense republican majorities. Tho administration will look after thom this year, and see that they are whipped into line. Michigan is the only republican Stato from which the democrats will receive a portion of the electoral voto and this results from its now law relating to such matters. We can count upon but very few additions to tho electoral vote aside from reliable democratic states, while the republicans have the votes of eix now states to draw from since the election of 1888. If, however, three states oast, New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, with Michigan, say 5 votes, can be carried by the democracy, then the victory is ours, or Now York, Indiana, and Michigan's votes also will briug around the satisfactory result. These' are tho facts for tho democracy to consider this year.
THE POSITIVE POLITICIAN. Tho positive politician is never so successful as the negative. To be a grand success generally it is necessary to be all things to all men. It matters not regarding the sincerity of your views, your fixed opinion of men and things politically, your views must always be gauged according to the crowd you are in. Tho fellow that can look sweet in your face, shakes your hand off almost in greeting you,is the one generally that secures the votes of tho unthinking rabble, although he may have all the elements composing a iirst class scoundrel. You forget his meanness by his smiling face, but after it is all over and ho has no further use for you. you begin to estimate him correctly. Why this weakness in human nature is unexplainable yet it is true. The positive man who looks you square in the oyes and tells you the truth and is sincere in everything is not popular with you. Every man, it seems, is susceptiblo of flattery, and tho smooth negative follow always uses it with telling effect. The positive politician don't want it. It is not a weapon he likes, consequently, as stated, that negative man wins most times in politics.
So soon as the republicans nominate their stoito tickot the campaign in Indiana may be considored as under way, although speeches, rallies, etc., will not begin probably until August. It is time now, however, for democrats to stop their petty quarrels and jealousies and get down to business. There have been moro of small internal wrangles through the state in the party than at any other time in a long period. This bodes disaster if continued'and reflection will come when it is too late to do any good. A divided force cannot succeed and the enemy will take advantage of it' If you did not get your man nominated there is no use quarreling over it. Had you succeeded some other man would have been disappointed and so on. Pick your flint and try it again when the next political battle is on, not now. Thia is the time to be united, and if we win in this light we must be.
PRESS LIBERTY.
A Terre Haute editor has been placed in jail for thirty days for contempt of court. He made some charges relating to a judge down there, which ho has been in no hurry about proving, probably cannot. Tho liberty of the press is a big thing in this country, but pubj lishers sometimes take entirely too much liborty. It is all right and proper to denounce a scoundrel at any time, and it is for tho public good, but on the other hand, it is mean and villanous to traduce through malico an upright citizen, and ho who engages in it should be punished tho same as any other criminal. The fact that a man owns a press and typo does not license him to pitch indiscriminately into this or that individual any moro than a policeman carrying a mace should whack every man incurring his displeasure with it. The Terre Haute editor will probably come out of his confinement with enlarged and more liberal ideas concerning tho liberty of the press.
A WORTHY RECORD.
Hon. W. S. Holman was re-nominated for Congress last week by the democracy of the 4th Indiana district, boing, as is stated, the fifteenth time he has received that honor. This is a great, a worthy record in fact we cannot now recall the name of any Congressman, past or present, who has boon so often honored and so often elected as a member of the House of Representatives as Mr. Holman. Ho has served nearly thirty years in the House. Benton served 30 years in tho Senate, and is, we believe, the only man that ever did. The continual nomination every two years of Mr. Holman indicates that ho is worthy of tho position and that his constituents so consider him. He has done a vast deal of good in often preventing through his efforts'extravagant and useless expenditures of tho public funds, and pushing forward legislation that was needed.
WON'T PAY HE AMOUNT. Several railway companies of the State have refused to pay the full amount of tho taxes charged against them, based on the assessment of 1801, under the now law, and will contest the matter in the courts. Railway property should be assessed no higher nor lower than any other whether it may belong to the individual or corporation. The idea of the new law is to equalize taxation as near as possible and compel corporations and individuals to bear their just share of it. The law has worked well thus far. Railway companies in most instances have been assessed too low, aud although they may seek to declare the law unconstitutional, oppression, and all that sort of thing, we believe the courts will sustain it.
WHILE tho availability of Democratic presidential candidates is being discussed with considerable acrimony by the Democratic press of Indiana, all is not serene in the Republican camp. The Ft. Wayne Times, a rock-ribbed republican paper, says of President Harrison:
There are one thousand good republicans in this district alone who would voto for Satan himself in perfenreco to Harrison and there are one thousand more who will Btay away from the polls altogether, and disfranchise themselves tL-j same as tho Auburn convention disfranchised them ten days ago. Harrison has got the Indiana delegation to Minneapolis solid, Rure but where iB he going to get the votes? Just so suro as Harrison gets the Minneapolis nomination, just so sure will Indiana givo a democratic majority in November.
IT may probably safely be said, now that both members of the last legislature from this county who were again this year candidates and were defeated, that thoir defeat to a great extent was brought about by their failure to vote as the people desired upon the fee and salary bill, and numerous other members of the late legislature who again aspired to office in various portions of tho Stato are receiving like treatment. Tho failure to have the law coes into effect at once, but rendering it inapplicable to those at present holding office is what angered tho people. They looked upon it as a trick, tho work of a lobby of county officials in attendance at the legislature, and very generally determined to remember the members of tho legislature favoring it.
THE attempt to implicate Hon. E. V. Brookshire into a corrupt scheme relating to pension matters indicates the desperate schemes which the republican press will engage for the purpose of manufacturing a little political capital. A man, Hersey.who was a clerk to Cooper and to other Congressmen in common, employed by thom to look after pension mail, improved his opportunity to give information to attorneys and get pay for it, using the name of Congressman Cooper and others without their knowledge. He also used information obtained from Mr. Brookshire the same as from Mr. Cooper, these gentleman not knowing for what purpose. If the opposition can show nothing better than this to injure Brookshire they should throw up the sponge, as it amounts to nothing.
THE Indianapolis Sentinel, Evansville Courier and T. H. Gazette, are not near as strong moulders of public sentiment as they perhaps thought a few days ago, judged by the fact that the states convention did not at all follow out th« plans they had constructed.
JOHN JOHNSON is a candidate
for
RepJ
roBentative. He has some opposition from Wayne township, but this is not considered as amounting to much. A number of republicans in town don't like him and want him beaten, and it is said, are figuring on Capt. McCrea, of Coal Creek, to run against him. The prospects are that Johnson will have a warm time in securing tho nomination if he succeeds at all.
THE Journal had information the other day through a spiritualist from a "medium" that the democracy would m»3t with defeat year. Aside from the fact that the spiritualist furnishing this is an intense republican partizan our neighbor should remember that all spiritual news is alwayB doubtful, unreliable and deceiving, and if it bases its hopes on such stuff as that it will b« badly deceived.
Some tell us that we must have a tariff in order to get a revenue. Not so. Clap on a graduated income anil property tax. A tariff for protection is a fraud a sham, a delusion, a snare and a cheat, a tariff for a revenue only, sifted to bedrock, is no more nor less than a dead laid scheme to compel tho poorer class to pay more than their just proportion of tax.
SNAILS aro on tho free list so are eggs of insects (potato bugs, bed bugs, squash bugs, flies, gnats, etc.)These were placed on the common people. Our readers should be thankful that eggs of insects are on tho free list, for we common people need them every hour, and it would really be too bad if we had to pay a tariff on them.
PUTNAM COUNTY in 1890 gave an average majority of GOO for the democratic ticket. Clay county also gave a good majority for the ticket. This renders tho election of the Joint Senator and Joint Representative of tho counties, in. eluding Montgomery, a certainty, regardless of what this county may do this fall., •.,
Ix'strikos a man up a tree as if the Republicans were a trifle inconsistent in many of their assertions. They assert that the tariff is no tax, and that it does not add to the cost of goods. Thon they point to sugar—how much cheaper it is now than it was before the AlcKinley bill took away tho Consistency isn't "in it'1 when it comes to protection.
A CHICAGO man. Pardridge by name made a half million dollars one day last \veek, by the decline in" wheat. Ten chances to one he don't havo a dollar of it in one year from this time. Come, easy, go easy, and it seems almost impossible for men acquiring such sudden fortunes to rotain them.
HON. A. G. PORTER, a republican pot, and at this timo Minister to Italy, has been loafing at home for three months past, although drawing pay right along all the time. Ho has finally conchided to start back to Rome and leaves within a few days.
1 euipir.iiice Wine lor Invalidx. 11 is well known that there are cases when the most strict advocates of temperance are obliged to use some sort of wine, especially those who are old and infirm. Many weakly females as well as invalids and debilitated persons in warmer weather need a little strengthning wine. The great difficulty has beon in procuring a rich wine that is reliable. There are many cases where wine would be used to great advantage in place of alcoholic drinks, if only a genuine article could be had, and upon which physicians could rely as being strictly pure. The Wine of Alfred Speer, of Passaic, Now Jersey, and hiB Unfermented Grape Juice have been analyzed by chemists in nearly every State, and have always been proved strictly pure aud beneficial. TheGe wines are now being used in hospitals and by families for medical purposes, also by Churches for Communion service. It is principally sold by druggists. Mr. Speer's mode of preserving is such as to retain the rich flavor and weetness of the fruit.—Transcript.
The salvation army has 9,000 brass bands in its ranks.
Dr. E. Detchon makes a specialty of tho treatment and cure of disease of the Nerves, Lungs, Liver and Kidney, Diseases of females and children also, indigestion, dyspepsia, scrofula, St. Vitus dance, blood poison, dropsy catarrh, bronchitis, chronic cough, tetter on the handB and all disease of the skin. Also prepares valuable pientives of scarlet fever, diptheria and la grippe. Ample supplies of latest and most approved remedies kept constantly on hand. Office in drug store, south-west corner Main and Jreen streets, Crawfordsville, Ind. Jan. 16, 4w.
Aut oma tic air brakes for derailed cars is tho latest.
l'hyFicinuK Endorse and Prescribe itBe sure and call for Johnston's Royal English Rustha for kidney diseases, as it is endorsed and prescribed by our most talented and oldest practicing phys-
The brotherhood of trainmen .now has 440 local branches.
The Denver Trades assembly will start a newspaper.
Wv*
Remember fiat in
1
rfriater your Intt"r
of failure
no-
"VMkvpw MIC COAP~~
COLLARS
jahtaO-* }J
S MADE ONLY BY
N.KFA1RBANK
If you wane, a thoroughly good
Sewing Machi me
REMTiMBEIi-
The White
When you are looking for a sewing machine that is fitted for all kinds of
sewing buy the White.
several
Montgomery county you will find they use the White Sewing Machine.
W. E. NICHOLSON
AGENT. WEST MAIN STREET.
Nicholson & Sons
A je still doing business at the olti stand over the Citizens National Bank.
ONE DOZ. CABINETS $2
AN iirrautnl not to fade. No extra charge for family group*
0ffl,e!
JANVv.
and
gendingt
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Castor la.
s^°
.,F.ee
CUFF§«
AND
& CO. CHICAGO.
hundred families of
i¥
Ii ^impounding solution pan was acr»!eiitly spillpd o" the han nii.i on wiiHliiii(f »Iit'rward was discovered tlm tiie liair wa,s ''am plcii'ly removed. \N ul once put. tliis wonderful preparation on thV ruarketand so great lia« been the demand tliat we arc now introduri 11 throughout the world under the name of Queen's Anti-HairiiVi
•1 IT IS PERFECTLY HARMLESS AND t, SO SIMPLE ANY CHILD CAN USE IT. Lay the hair over and apply the mixture for a few minutes and hair disappears as it by magic without the slightest pain or injury annlipd or ever afterward. 11 iRiiniil^onvr.timF
l'oon
container WeYnvi^o'vn^ xms nrlvprtisoment is honest nm! straight fnrwurd In every worrt. it S'-nd to-day. AddreV- oYjpp&! r-ucr M.I'i
1
P?anvil??E?"*lm'"-
to re
,any
Sr E UIA Uys
AVe also know the above Company to be reliable.
AAiin aitm us merits.
ffKiNTLhHhN who do not apprcciatca beard or hair on their neck.
3
f11 Oneen'R Antl-Ilairino which does away
wnn bnavlni?. hy nd^rlri^ its future growth an utter impossibility. I. per botule, Kfint ir» r.nTc*. postnsre paid by us (secureiy j..
Price of Qneon'fl Anfi /rr nd^r!:i- its future growth pOT^nroMHcUy^nn!}iVotM'n*^^?'',C^ ^'ithnhuTstf^lrf,'»s...r contains. We inriVvo, to &1
llon
f"V('r,l,li"cr
5A!
WlBhinc to Introduce our CRATON FORIRAITS mid atthoflttmo tlmo extend our business »mo5e
ncw
c,lptoniors,wehavodecided
n„„n~e''iSend
mpJe'j£0Ilr
wcelvjnjjTbragon
piRiniy4 Corr^s-
ns
c,?-'
ronm-enteri Cut this out oftd
Race Street, CINCINNATI, O. You ca"
''ssafo delivery. YVV will pay »P0(1 for any
Every bottlo xusirantecd.
tboir
MUMMB rf.ii ^rha SILK DRKSS, 15 yarda best mlk Extra Lurcc Bottle aild flftmufctt Otoiiiito ool^ct from sent with order. ftooJ Salar.r or CouiiuiHoioa lo Acoata. AVe have tried Queen's Anti-Hairiiie, and find it does "all the above Company claim for it.—Editor.
friends so EottUo of QunenV Anti-H*ir!ae.
-j
to make this Special
us a Onl.imn Picture. PhotoRrnph.Tlntypo,Ambrotype
y°Ilr*''lf ir uny member of your family, llvlnuordead
exhibit you aCrayon i-ortrnlt Free orChitrac, provided you CUHna ug fn!n™^I^ S?«„«
wori,andf
tnr^d In nerW nd/lresson bncko Picture and It will bore leness. Itofnr^^K
1lnLc,h"n?°
We have just received our new stock of garden seeds of all kinds. Onion Sets and Early Sugar Corn that can't be beat. We also keep a £°i?
an(*
call and we will treat you right.
use your Influenco In BO-
PP,(r.turejr°° ?!«h,notInterferinK with the
MARSH & CO., Flour, Peed and Seed Store.
^l°ur« When in need of any please givo us a
MARSH
& CO.
