Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 20 August 1892 — Page 8

11

iffc-

XI

E. Bowers and wife have gone to Iowa on a few weeks visit. Richard Frost and family visited in Parke county last week.

Mrs. Sergeant, of Crawfordsville, is visiting at Robert Smith's. We are strictly democratic and will endeavor to give all the

Ladoga horsemen took most of the big prizes at the New T'oss fair last week.

Dr. Graybill lives in the house occupied by Dr. Southerlin on Washington street.

Rev. Carson, of Upper Sandusky. O., preached at the Presbyterian church Sunday.

Dr.-Drake, Charley Kapp, Will Rupp, and Mort Mills are at Denver, attending the Jvnighls' conclave.

The Midland ran two express trains over the road most of this week to accomodate the visitors to tLe Lebanon fair.

Harry Anderson, after a protracted visit with home folks here returned to

FRTJlT JARS!

NORTH UNION.

Francis Surface is improving his arm. J. B. Dolcy attended the Rockville fair Tuesday.

Mrs. John Foust and daughter are in Parke county. Miss Dora Bartholomew, of Indianapolis is visiting here.

Fruit Jars, Fruit Cans, Jelly Glasses, etc, Extra Taps and Rubbers, Sealing Wax, Wax Melters and Stew Kettles

-AT-

Ross Bros' 99 Cent Store

Honest Goods at Honest Prices

Business is conducted on the "Live and Let Live" Plan at

CASH FRY'S

E O E

See him before selling your produue.

newB.

J. F. Graham and family visited Thomas Patton, of New Richmond, Sun* day.

Henry Armantrout and family, of New Market, visited his parents here Sunday.

John Childers and Will Smith will attend the encampment at Kansas City next week.

The North Union scribe of the Star has better give the old bachelors a rest and perhaps profiit' byit.

We will say ifor the benefit of the public that Will Smith doeB not write the items for the Journal as has been reported. He is Btrictly democratic.

LADOGA

Frank Dicks has moved to Indianapolis. Peter Fudge bought tho old M. E. church.

Mrs. Kate English is on a visit at her mother's. Mrs. Ida Boswell, of Noblesville, is visiting Mrs. Lynn.

NTC. Slavin and Harry Wilson were at Indianapolis this week. Mrs. Minnie Steward, of Indianapols, is quite sick at the home of her father.

It

will pay you.

his place of employment in Texas last Monday. Harry is making a business man.

Henry Mclntyre has moved into his new residence on Franklin street. The Monon agent, Mr. Bressender and wife have taken rooms with Mr. Mclntyre as boarders.

George Cooper, the mail carrier from the P. O. to thj Chicago & Southeastern depot, just received his pay for the iirst quarter of his year ending June 30. What is the matter with the department at Washington city that it takes half a quarter to pay off their men. Somebody is holding back money or using unnecessary delay.

TIH2 GRANDEST G. A. R. ENCAMPMENT.

SgNever since the organization of the Grand Army of the Republic has there been such a Reunion as will take place iu Washington City in September next when will be recalled the last Review of the troops at the close of the War. As nearly every old comrade puts it. "I will attend the Encampment this year if I have to walk," but the Chesapeake & Ohio R'y., has made the rates so low that the journey can be made in most approved Btyle at small cost, Palace cars will run through from all sections without change over the Chesapeake & Ohio R'y., and its connecting lines. This is the old soldiers' route as it passes through the most memorable battlefields of the war, Bull Run and Appomatox, the first and last great battlefields being reached only via this route, besides, there are Manassas, Rappahannock' Culpeper, Orange, C. H., Richmond, Cold Harbor, Soven Pines or Fair Oaks, Fortress Monroe, Old Point Comfort and Newport News where the Naval combat between the Monitor and Merrimac took place, all reached exclusively via the Chesapeake and Ohio R'y.

The lowest excursion rates will pre« vail via this route. For full information address C. B. Ryan, Assistant General Passenger Agent, Cincinnati, Ohio, or the nearest ticket agent.

Drunkenness, or the IJiiuor Habit Cm-ecl at Home in Ten J)oys by Administering Dr. Haines Gulden Spneillc.

It can be given in a glass of beer, a cup of coffee or tea, or in food, without the knowledge of the patient. It if? absolutely harmless, and will effect a permanent and speedy cure, whether the patieut is a moderate drinker or an alcoholic wreck. It has been given in thousands of cases, and in every instance a perfect cure has followed. It never fails. The system onco impregnated, with the specific, it becomes an utter impossibility for the liquor appetite to exist. Cures guaranteed. IS page book of particulars free. Address the

EN SPECIFIC

Co..

How Hardware House!

-The Best Place to Buy-

Hardware, Stoves and Carriages. Turnbull Wagons, Superior Drills, Farmer's Friend Drills with all Steel Frames. Sulky Plows and Horse Shoe Harrows. These Goods are fully Guaranteed.

COROOM FISHER,

Soutli Washington Street, East Side.

STRANGLED

BY THE REPUBLICAN SENATE.

Ueitsurai Passed by the Democratic House Which tho House of Millionaire*

Suppressed.

[Congressional Record.]

Mr. Dockery: I desire to submit the following brief summary of the record of this house in respect to some of the important questions that have coine before it for consideration. Of the 9,713 bills introduced, this house has passed 195 public and 301 private, of which 305 have become laws. Besides these, the house has passed 131 senate bills, making the total number of bills, both public and private, that have become laws at this session 436.

Xew States.

Among the important bills that have passed the house are those admitting New Mexico and Arizona to statehood in the American Union, this high privilege having been denied them by the Republican party at the time of the admission of the Dakotas, Wyoming, Idaho and Montana, solely because it was recognized that they would be Democratic states. These bills sleep on the calendar of the Republican senate.

Home Rule for Vtali.

The Democratic house has also passed a bill to authorize home rule for the territory of Utah by permitting the citizens of that territory to elect their own local officers, whilst in no wise impairing the provisions of the Edmunds act forbidding polygamy. This bill has not been accorded consideration by the senate.

Chlneie Exclusion:

The Democratic house also originated the bill which is now a law absolutely prohibiting Chinese immigration."

Anti-Option Bill.

The Democratic house has also passed a bill commonly known as the "antioption bill," which prohibits, under severe pains and penalities, gambling in farm products, the effect of which has been, as claimed by the farmers, to lower and depress the price of almost every product of the farm. The senate has declined to pass this measure.

Labor Bill.

The Democratic house has also passed a bill in the interest of labor, which will hereafter prevent contractors upon any public works, either of the government of the United States or of the District of Columbia, from employing the services of laborers and mechanics for a longer period than eight hours in any one calendar day, except in cases of extraordinary emergency. This bill secured the approval of the senate, and is now a law.

Safety of Railway Employes.

The Democratic house has also passed a bill to promote the safety of employee and travelers on railways by compelling common carriers engaged in interstate commerce to equip their cars with automatic couplers and continuous brakes, and locomotives with driving-wheel brakes. This measure is obviously important to a vast number of laborers, when we recall that for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1890, there were employed in the handling of trains, as trainmen. switchmen, yardmen, engineers, firemen and conductors, 153,235 personsOut of this vast number occurred 1,459 deaths and 13,117 injuries, the result of some form of railway accident, the total number in killed in coupling cars being 3(5!), and injured 7,841. This alarming mortality is manifestly due to the defects sought to be remedied by this bill, inasmuch as statistics show that on passenger trains, where the automatic couplers are employed, the fatal accidents average but one for 1,700.000 passengers carried, and the injuries one for every 200,000 passengers carried.

I'lirfpitiire of

GOLD­

1S5

cinnati. Ohio.

Race Street, Cin­

rt:iilro

ici T.:»ml fit-ants.

The Democratic house hns also passed, despite continuous and repeated filibustering on the part of the Republican minority, bill providing for the forfeiture of certain lands heretofore granted for the purpose of aiding in the construction of railways. The public domain of the United States, since the organization of the government, has comprised 1,819,889,987 acres, including the 229,987,187 acres ceded by the original states, the Louisiana purchase, the purchase from Texas, the Gadsden, Alaska and Florida purchases, and the territory acquired as a result of the Mexican war. Of this vast domain, 155,504,994.59 acres, an area greater than four times that of the state of Missouri, has been granted to railroad corporations. Of this area 27,870.773.52 acres were granted by tho government to the states for the construction of railroads, prior, to March 4, 1801. The grants under Democratic administration, however, were made to tho states under such limitations and restrictions, notably in the case of the Illinois Central, as to yield a profitable revenue to the states. It has been the policy of the Democratic party to preserve the public domain for actual settlers, and upon its return to power in this house after the tidal wave of 1874 it inaugurated tho policy of wresting the public domain from the railroad corporations where the terms of the granting acts had not been fully met. The Forty-eighth and Fortyninth congresses forfeited 50,482.2-10 acres, whilst not a single acre has been granted to a railroad corporation since* the return of the l^emocmtic party to the control of this house. This bill, which passed the house July 8, lSiW,

forfeits 54,828,990 acres of these grants and restores them to the public domain for the use and occupancy of the people of the United States. Consideration has been denied this bill by the Republican senate.

Tariff Legislation.

This house has illustrated in its tariff legislation that fundamental doctrine of the Democratic party, that all taxation Bhould be for public purposes, and so levied as to impose its heaviest burdens upon luxuries and its lightest touch upon the necessaries of life.

It goes without saying, Mr. Speaker, that were the Democratic party in control of the executive and both branches of the legislative departments of the government, among its first acts would be the repeal of the McKinley tariff. Confronted, however, with a hostile senate and executive, we have .been constrained to content ourselves with efforts to repeal some of the most pernicious and onerous features of that law, and even these measures of relief have not beyi accorded a hearing or consideration by the senate.

We have passed bills reducing the duties on tin plate to one cent per pound after the 1st of October of the present year, and putting this article of prime necessity upon the free list two yeare thereafter. "We have passed a bill fdr the benefit of the cotton farmers and laborers, admitting free of duty bagging for cotton, machinery for manufacturing bagging, cotton-ties, and cotton-gins.

We have passed a bill admitting free of duty any ores containing silver and lead, in which the value of silver is in excess of the value of the lead.

We have passed a bill forbidding tourists from importing free of duty wearing apparel and other personal effects into the United States exceeding $100 in value.

We have passed a bill placing binding twine, an article of agricultural necessity, upon the free list.

And, finally, we have passed a bill removing the duties from wool and reduc ing the duties on woolen goods mort than one-half of the present schedule rate.

This last measure is of paramount importance, inasmuch as it deals with an article of universal and commanding necessity, an article which under tht present law bears about one-tenth of al the taxes imposed for the support of th government of the United States.

Mr. Speaker, a bill has also been reported by the committee on the postoffice and post roads repealing the act of the last congress which provides enormous subsidies to certain ocean steamship lines. This bill has been favorably reported, but has not yet been reached on the calendar.

The house has also endeavored to pass a bill providing for the election of United States senators by the people, but action upon this measure was defeated by the dilatory tactics of the Republican minority. -ijE-'v

PENSION BILLS

Approved bj- the Various President*.

Lincoln 44 Grant (two terms). 53f Hayes 334 Garlielil and Arthur ~0t

Cleveland g»»fl

Harrison 1,395

Carnegie Not Naturalized.

It may not be generally known that Andrew Carnegie, born in Scotland, has never been naturalized and is not an American citizen. He has controlled a good many votes, but has never cast one. He is here for revenue only and probably means just what he said when he told the English diners who had been taking wine with him that "only in America were the people such fools as to maintain a high tariff tax."—Logansport Pharos.

ALTHOVOH I AM A I-tKl'Um.ICAN' I AM

OF THE OPINION THAT TH HUE IS ABSOLUTELY NOTHING IN THE TALK TO TIIE

EFFECT THAT THE TAX LAW WOHKS A IIAHD.SIIIP TO TilK FAIU1EK. THERE HAS

KEEN A DISPOSITION TO COMPEL COIU'OIUTIONS TO TOE THE MAKE IN THIS STATE,

AND ANY INCREASE THAT MAY HAVE BEEN

M-UH ON FARM LAND IS NOT NEAll SO HIGH IN PIIOI'ORTION AS THE INCREASE IN

THE RAILROAD ASSESSMENT.

Judge

Gardner, of Daviess county, Before the Board of Tax Commissioners.

There is 110 preparation which will keep naturally straight hair in curl, but the following will keep the hair in curl for a short time: Two ounces of borax, one drachm of gum arabic, and one quart of hot, but not boiling, water stir these together, and as soon as all tho ingredients are dissolved add three tablespoonfuls of strong spirits of camphor. On retiring to rest wet tho hair with the'above liquid and roll in twists of paper. Do not disturb until morning when untwist and form in ringlets.

The Pinkertons are doing what cvn the states of the Union are forbidden to do. and it is time to put a stop to the practice. It is the business of the government and not cf any private agency to enforce law, to keep order, to appoint police, and especially to maintain armed military forces.—Shelbyville Democrat.

Good for dysentery—eggs. Take an egg, beat it up lightly, swallow it at a gulp repoat the dose every threo hours during the day and you will be cured.

A lump of beeswax dissolved in a small quantity of sweet oil over a candle and cooled is an excellent remedy for chapped lips.

Lawson's

ORDER YOUR NEW SUIT OF

Colmaix®& Murphy, The Leading Tailors, 206 East Main Street.

IndiariapolisBusinessUniversitY

OLD BSTART & 8TRATTON. NORTH PENNSYLVANIA ST.. WHBN BLOCK. 0PP08RB P03T-0FFICH.

THE HIGHEST Established 1850 open ty time short expenses low no fee lor Diploma aitrlcuy Business Bcbopl merclal center endorsed and patronized by railroad, industrial, professional and business men who employ skillod help: no charge for positions: unequalcd in the success of its graduates.

SEND FOR ELEGANT CATALOGUE. HEEB & OSBORN, Proprietors

Time Grows Short!

Tli}

Crowds are Increasing!

The Buyers'Chance

NO PKEFEKENCES! SO KE8ERVES!

*©-STORE NOT&OPEN TILL 9 A. M.

-'-Tr"—

1,000 imported photograph albums in the way must be sold this week at. 81.50, S2, 82,25, $2.50,82.65, $3, 83,25, 84, and 85 all less than cost of importation. Plain colored gros grain silk at 50 cents and 75 cents-, worth 8i to 81.75.

Cream Domet flannel, 7c, worth 12£c. Ten yards fine dress ginghams for 70c, worth 81.25. Entire millinery stock must be sold out next week. Pattern hats and bonnets for a song.

Gjeat lot of muslin underwear marked at ruinous prices. Half wool challies, 8%o, worth 20c. Childrens' extra line fast block hose, all sizes, 25c, sold at 35c to 50c. 37 dozen fine knotted fringe damask towls, 10c former price45c.

L. S. AYERS & CO.

INDIANAPOLIS. INI).

5 Dollars for 2 Dollars!

Only one price at Lawson's Gallery and that is 62 per dozen—the best- S5 cabinets for 82 per dozen. "When yon visit his competitors, get a sample oi' their best S-l or 85 cabinets: take it to Lawson a*.d he will guarantee as line or superior work at 82 per. dozen. "No catch pennv game at

Comer Main and Washington Streets, Over Con Cunningham's.

Ono Limited .Kirst-Clua* rare for the

Hound 'J rip.

Harvest excursions August .'?0th and September 27th. The "Wisconsin Central Lines" will run low rate Harvest Excursions on above dates, to points in Minnesota. Montana,'North and South Dakota. Tickets will be good twenty (20) days from date of sale, with stopover privileges to points" west of St. Paul and Minneapolis. For full information,'address any of tho company's representatives, or

J.

C.

POND,

Gen'l Pass, and Tkt'Agt.. Chicago,

111.

Vantlalia Line Excursions

To Kansas City, Mo., Aug. 2nd to Aug. 7th,—Sl-1.25 round trip. Good to return including Oct. 11, 1802. To Denver, Colo., Aug. 2nd to Aug. 7th—One way, 818.25, usual fare 8.10.40. lo Denver, Colo., and Return, Aug. 2nd, to Aug. 7th, 818.25 the round trip. Good to return including Oct, 11th ,1802.

To Helena, Mont., Aug. 2nd to 7th, one faro tho round trip, irood to return including Oct. 20.

To Itockvilk', Aug. 2nd to Aug 4thone faro the round trip. To Maxinkuckeo Sunday S°.00

Saturday

30

To Shades—81.10 Round Trip. J. C. HUTCHISON,

IIAltVKST l.XCI KSION WUST.

.Auk. 2!) mill Sopt, 20.

The Toledo, St. Louis & Kansas City R. R. "CloverLeaf Route," will issueHalf fare excursion ^tickets on above dates, to pointh South, Southwest, North and Northwest from Ohio, Indiana and Illinois stations.—Ample return limit.

Two trains daily to Harvest Territory. Free Chair Cars—Vestibuled Sleeping Cars, through tickets and baggago checks.

Call on nearest Clover Leaf Agent or address C. C.

Without

Medicine

o^q

10 days a.fjg

4.35

Agent.

JENKINS,

Gen'l Pass. Agent, Toledo, Ohio.

A word to the wise: Look at your shoes, if they need repairs take them at once, to W. S. Richard's.

])r.\\ illiard IJnll'sllygonic Treatment (by tlio uso of CASCADE) as unfolded lu our Manual, Is tho only successful treatment now for curing I'llos, Dyspepsia, Constipation, and all curablo dloeasos, without a grain ol medicine. Thousands uso it. Do you? Why not?

CURE

Yourself

Our IH-pago pamphlot niailotl on 1 eceipt of Ono Dollar, tho prieo of which ill bo roturnod, on return of tho I'amihiot unsollod, il not Satisfactory. Send ic. in stnrnps for circulars to

THE CASCADE CO.,

C, I.. Kossitor, Jtobblns House, Crawfordsville.

AtiKNTN WANTED.

Try Dullani's Great German 10 cent Liver Pills,

40

& (Vs.

in each package, at Nyo

1