Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 3 September 1892 — Page 2

BUSINESS DIRECTORY.

VTTORHKYS.

JOWN^TON A JOHNSTON,

ATTOKN KTS-AT-LAW.

Prompt attention given to collections and settlement of decedents estate.

Went 8i(lo of Square over Yeagley & McClamrock's Stioe Store.

LOANS./

41-2 Per Cent,

Interest Payanle annnally. Apply to

C. W, WRIGHT.

M. D. W1IITK. W. K. IIL'MPHUET. W, M. KBKVBS.

WBITd HOMPHRIES & BEEVES.

ATTOUJISYS-AT-LAW.

Office, 103^ E. Main St.

—G7W7'BENEFIEL,

Veterinary Surgeon

AND DENTIST.

Offloe at Bob Davis1 I.ivery Stable. 125 W. Pike M, St., Crawfordsville, Ind. Calls by mail or telegraph answered promptly*

G. \V. PAUL

At 7 per cent, annual interest without commission.

FARM AND CITY PROPERTYI ror sale or exchange. HOUSES J. to rent.

CUMBERLAND & MILLER,

118 "West Main Street.

CRAWF0RDSV1LLE IND.

A. L. Tomlmson,

113 EAST MARKET ST.

Successor to George Long & ,Co.)J

We have a Cine line of Sugar, Coffee •(Tobacco and Canned Goods.

Come and Inspect Our Stock.

Farmers desiring to exchange theii produce for Fresh. Groceries, and always at the

Lowest Current Rate,

Should call at our store on Ka^t Market St -eft.

We have a good trade and expect to maintain it by lair treatment of all customers.

A To in so ii

"E, W. REAM, Dentist.

STModern dentistry practiced in all its phases. Bridge work or artificial teeth WITHOUT plates made after the most recent dovices. A!'. Htylea of artlQcial teeth with an cspecial care to usefulness and the restoration of a natural expression of the face. For the extraction of tooth, all the reliable anaosthetics known to modern deutNtrjr.both local and general, are^ed.^

Office over Barnhill. Ilornaday Ai Picket's groory, Crawfordsvllle, 1 udiun.

—PLENTY OF—

JVIONEY TO LOAN

On Farm or city Property.

NONE BUT THE

Best Insurance Companies

Are "Represented by

Morgan & Lee

Ornbaun Block, AVost of Court House.

The Big Four route is popularly known as the Veteran's lino to the G. A. R. encampment at Washington, September 20, '92, because in connection with the Ecenic Chesapeake & Ohio R'y it passes in full view of the famous battle fields of Virginia. Rates aB low as tho lowest. Accommodations unsurpassed. Make vour arrangements to go via tho Big Pour route. For tickets and full information call on or address G. E. Robin--sonjagent Big Four route, Crawfordeville Ind., or D. B. Martin, Gen'l Pass'r Agent, Cin., O.

FHE REVIEW.

F.

x.

TBBMS 0* SOBBCRirTIO*.

One year, in the county, In Oneyear.outof tU« eounw, Inquire at Office for

Advertim? rates.

SEPT., 3, 1892.

DENOOSATIC NATIONAL TICKET.

FOH PRBStPBNT,

GROVEK CLEVELAND, New York. KOK VICE PRESIDENT, A1JLAI E. STEVENSON,

Illinois.

DEM0GBAT10 STATE TICKET.

tlnvnmnr

State Statician

M- w-

..CLAUDE MATTHEWS

S^nUGoverncr::::..^®«MpRK 5« Secretary Of State \Jrri i^vnVp«5nv Auditor of State...JOHN OSCAK 1ll^DERbOi Treasurer of State Attorney-General ALONZO GluvEN SMI111 Reporter Supreme Court

Supreme Judge, Second

CHL'NEK

PAUL &BRUNER

Attorney s- At-Law

OXQco South sideof Green btrectover Zaok Maomey's hardware store.1

Money to Loan

K"

Muu:s

Superintendentof Pubiic^uouon^.......^^

A"

pkele

niB^pTUA

DT'NESV

Supreme Judge. Third Jiistric^

ABE

Supreme Judge. F'^^f^yYEViioWAKD

Appellate Judge. LV KEINii AllDT Appellate Judge. Second

Appellate Judge, Third District.

1)AyIg

Appellate udge. Fourth ^kuVnDOJ.'iOTZ

Appellate Judge, Fifth "'^^^OKGEEVKOSS

DEMOOB^IO OOUMTY TIOiE.

CLEKK—WALLACE SPARKS.

TER.

SURVEYOR—W. F. HUNT. FOR ASSESSOR—J. F. ROBBINS. CORONER—D. M. CUL\ ER.

I

TREASCKKR-JOHN HUTTON. RECORDER—FRANK W REN. SUERIRF—JOHN BIBLE. PROS. ATT'Y—W. S. MOFFET. REPRESENTATIVE—DA\ ID MCCALLIS

FOR COMMISSIONERS.

FIRST DISTRICT—ROBT. DUNBAR. THIRD DISTRICT—ALLEN B\ERS. JOINT SENATOR, MONTGOMERY AND PCT-

NA.M COUNTIES. JAMES SELLER.

JOINT REPRESENTA TIVE—MONTGOMERY, PUTNAM AND CLAY COUNTIES. FRANK ADER. REl'RESeNTATIVE TO CONGRESS, ELC.HTH

CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT, E. V. BROOIvSHIRE.

OPINIONS OF PROMINENT REPUB•ri:v LIOANS ON THE TARIFF. The manufacturers and the trusts get protection and the profits of the tariff the farmer gets the husks and the humbug.—Hon Ben Butterworth.

The tariff bill should be read: A bill to prevent the diffused blessings of Providence from being enjoyed by the people of the United States.—Hon. John A, Kasson, Iowa.

I am for protection which leads to ultimate free trade.—Hon. James A. Garfield, 1S70.

Yes, men are on the free list. lhey cost us not even freight. We promote free trade in man. and it is the only free trade I am prepared to promote. Hon. W. D. Kelley, l'a,

If the tariff on wool make clothes cost more, a person will get along with one suit where he would otherwise ha\e two. —Jay Gould.

The policy of protecting the wool grower is to gradually reduce the pi ice. —Hon. John Sherman, 18S3.

Go on with your driveling idiocy (tho McKinley bill.)—Blaine to McKinley. When a gentleman stands upon this floor and tells me that this high, this extraordinary high tariff, is for the protection of the laboring man, I tell him I do not understand how he can possibly substantiate su€h a theory. Hon. John A. Logan.

If you levy a duty on the raw material, you discriminate against American labor.- -Hon. Henry L. Dawes.

Thore is not a section or a line in the entire (McKinley) bill that will open a market for another bushel oT wheat or another barrel of pork.-—Hon. James G. Blaine.

What is true of wheat is equally true of other grain. Therefore the farmer has practically no protection at all. Hon. Wm. B. Allison.

A Bystem which give to a Vanderbilt the possession of wealth beyond tho dreams of avarice, and condemns the poor to poverty which has no refuge from starvation except the prison or the grave. John J. Ingalls.

II. CLAY JAKVES, Montgomery county, has been nominated for Joint Senator for Montgomery and Putnam counties by the third party. Who in the thunder is H. Clay Jarves? Enquiries around fail to designate any man by that name, and ho might bo a mythe. In what part of Montgomery he livos no one seems to know. It will bo observed ho parts his name in the middle, and by this moans ho may eventually bo discovered. II. Clay J. come to tho front and conceal not your light under a bushel.

DEMOCRATS Bhould bo on their guard the enemy is active and unscrupulous see that no democrat moves from one township or county to another after the 7th of Sept., 1992.

LET AN INVESTIGATION BE MADE. Tho almost daily reiteration by different individuals that there was something crooked in the purchase and establishment of the electric light plant, certainly demands that a rigid investigation be made toy persons competent to do so, and if any thing wrong be discovered let those guilty of wrong doing be promptly brought up before the bar of justice. That long winded report published by order of the city council is not at all satisfactory. There is little business shown in its compilation of various items of cost of the plant, and much that is unintelligible. A citizen that is competent to know said the other day that he could duplicate the present plant easily for $40,000, while the report shows that its cost to the city was over $60,000. Has anybody been "seen" in this business? The tax payers are in terested in a searching investigation. They want no Boss Tweedism here. One thing has lately been developed. It is asserted that some people are furnished light cheaper than others, is this true? Do the managers make fish of some and "fowl" of others? There seems to be fowl work somewhere. The entire city management is in the hands of republicans, and unless enough determined, honest voters of that party come forward and demand an investigation it cannot be made. They are deeply interested and should demand that the books bt opened. An honest man fears nothing from an investigation—a rascal does. If no wrong nor crookedness of any kind is discovered no harm is done to anvbodv.

PATRIOTISM AND REPUBLICANISM. If to be patriotic makes an institution republican, the P. O. S. of A. should be proud to rank with the republican party that party is proud to be thus classed.— Journal.

Now all this results from a confusion of terms, a failure to comprehend the true definition of the two words, patriotism and republicanism. The Journal without consulting its dictionary is foolishly led to believe both have the same meaning, that is that they are svnonimous. Patriotism as an accepted term means love of country and a desire to uphold its institutions—republicanism means a desire for power and to obtain it regardless of any moral restraits, either by intimidation, bribery or any other unlawful plan that may suggest itself. That party since its creation has been fruitful in resources to obtain and continue in power. It is ready to appeal to any prejudice to win position has called to its aid the church, the secret and social orders, or any society whose aim may be non-partizan-. The main incentive with it is to obtain control, regardless of tlie'means adopted. To force its hands into the public treasury is the main thing. The Journal, however, is to be excused for its miscomprehension of the terms—patriotism and republicanism—having been so long engaged in the unwholesome field of the latter, its views have become narrowed, its eyes blinded. The scales may in time fall from its eyes, and it may soon learn that there is a vast difference between patriotism and republicanism.

TESTING THE GERRYMANDER. Republican schemers in this State are aiming to throw aside the present apportionment of Senatorial and Representative districts, on the ground that it is unconstitutional and wrong. The present apportionment is probably as fair as can be made, and a re-apportion-ment would not be any better probably, although it would suit some ambitious republican office seekers were it changed. The gerrymander feature of politics in this State was put under way by the late Oliver P. Morton, the "war governor." who hesitated at nothing to accomplish political ends. It was only a temporary expedient, however, and recoiled with a bad effect on his party, and at subsequent elections most of the districts aimed to be benefitted clocted democrats. The people like and desire fair play, and denounced the gerrymander thus introduced into politics. There has been no change in this State for seven years past, but republican schemers having failed otherwise now desire an appeal to the courts. The case for the court to hear and determine may be too late in time to benefit them, if they are to be benefitted, before the next election.

BOYCOTTING THE STATE FAIR. A labor organization at Indianapolis 'will undertake to boycott the State Fair, for some reason, real or imaginary. This is

Email

business. The boycott is

a creation of malice, and its actions are generally unjust. The fair is for the people: not a faction of it, and in any event if tho faction don't like it or its management it can stay away. Let it do this, and it has done its own duty, perhaps, but to step over the line and influence others against a company or organization is wrong. The faction in this violates tho most prominent rule in business or social life—attend to your own business and leave that of others alone.

THOUSANDS of persons journey to New Orleans next week to witness tho prize fight for $25,000 between Sullivan and Corbott. In Louisiana prize fighters are protected in their brutal work, and tho contest is witnessed, strange to say, by many who are considered decent citizens.

STARTLING.

.. '.KlVJC T-piS

What Does This Mean To Our People?

It Rings With a Great and Grand Hope.

Something Thousands Are Seeking

,'For.

A Fact of Marvelous", Import to All.

NEWBURG. N. Y.—A "telegraphic "dispatch from Newburg. N. Y., reveals the fact that a most marvelous change has taken place in the person of one of its oldest and best known citizens. H. S. Shorter, esq., is an aid man of 75 years, and lives at 391 Broadway, Newburg, N. Y. It appears that Mr. Shorter, who was an extensive lumber dealer, began to grow languid, got tired easily, was nervous and debilitated, until^at last he became so weak and exausted that he was just able to drag himself around. He lost flesh and strength so rapidly and became so alarmingly prostrated that his friends and relatives despaired of his life.

Now came the marvellousJ[change. Suddenly Mr. Shorter was transformed from his condition of extreme weakness to onoof strength his nerves] grew quickly strong and steady, hisgmuscles became vigorous, his blood was revivified and enriched, he gained 13 pound in weight, and today is in sound and perfect health.

Such a remarkable transformation in a man of his age was a nine days' wonder.

Of course the cause was eagerly looked for. Your correspondent, determined to know the truth for the paper's readers, listened to the following astonishing facts from Mr. Shorter's own lips: "I feel now like a new man!

What do you think of taking an old man of 75 years, physically weak and broken down, and making him feel like a boy again! Giving him new life, health and strength, and adding 15 pounds of solid fiesh to his weak and debilitated frame!

And all in two months, with three bottles of Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy! Well, that is just what has taken place in me. Instead of being weak, debilitated and exhausted. »just able to drag myself around, I feel like a new man! "1 advise all to use Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy!"

Surely this wonderful remedy is a most marvelous health restorer, and without doubt, the greatest medical discovery of the age.

If it can thus give back health and strength to an old man. weakened and exhaused by disease, how much more surely and certainly will it cure the thousands who are run down. weak, nervous and prostrated, who suffer from poor blood, weak nerves, dyspepsia, indigestion.'constipation, malaria, kidney and liver complaints, etc. For debility it is a speedy restorer of*strength and vigor. If you are run down in health and need a medicine to strengthen tho nerves, invigorate the blood, tone up the stomach and regulate the bowels kidneys and liver, Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, which is purely vegetable and harmless, and is the bebi] remedy known in the world.

Use it. for it will restore your health and strength. You can get it at any druggists for $1.

It is the discovery and prescription of the well-known and successful physician, Dr. Greene, of 35 W. 11th St., New York, the eminent specialist in the cure of nervous and chronic diseases, who can bo consulted free, personally or by letter.

Maine has wild land worth ?20,000.000 at a low estimate. .......

Happy iloo iei~.

Wm. Timmons, Postmaster of Idaville., Ind., writes: "Electric "Bitters has done more for me than all other medicines combined, for that bad feeling arising from kidney and liver trouble." John Leslie, farmer and stockman, of same place, says: "Find Electric Bitters to be the best kidney and liver medicine, made me feeljliko a new man." J. W. Gardner, [hardware merchant, same town, says: Electric Bitters is just tho thing for a man who is all run down and don't care whether he lives or dies he found new Btrength good appotito and felt just like ho had s, new lease on life. Only 50c. a bottle, at Nye & Booe's Drug Store.

Tho horses making the best time this year were all shod with tho new light metal, aluminum.

If the hair is falling out and turning gray, the glands of tho Bkin need stimulating and color-food, and tho best remedy and stimulant is Hall's Ilair Renewor.

DR. PHILLIP SATTLERJ PRISIDINT

Smith A Steele, Crawfonlsvllle. II. D. Sorvies, Now Market. S. s. Heath, Alamo. T. F. 1'atton it Son, lirown's Valley, J, W. Ilollln it Co., New Kiehmond Kliorer Korsey, Darlington. J. T. lSronaugh, NowHoss.

VOU Should KnoW -A FACT. THAT & CO.

Chicago Make ASOAP

of

"WhichHas HO Equal. Standaj\dQualitySlight

If want a thoroughly good

Sewing Machine

REMEMBER

AGENT, WEST MAIN STREET.

l-o

White

When you are looking for a sewing machine that is fitted for all kinds of

sewing buy the White.

Remember that in several hundred families of Montgomery county you will find they use the White Sewing Machine.

W. E. NICHOLSON

EXPLANATORY.

Many of the special prescriptions of the Chicago Medical Clinic have become valuablo by standing the tests of time and extensive employment. We have often been urged by our patrons to give them to the world that their full value might be felt in a wider field of usefulness. To this end we have placed theix^ iu the hands of the well known firm of Foley & Co., who have the sole rights for their manufacture and sale. The reputation of this ffrlXL will afford the best guarantee of their standard purity and strength.

has made many cures that are astonishing. We cannot too strongly advise thoso who are suffering from incipient Bright's Disease and Diabetis, Lumbago, Female Weakness, constant Back Ache, incontenence of urine, usually common with old aire, derangement of the kidneys, as indicated by a brick-dust-like deposit in the urine, aiid Gravel to tako the Clinic Kidney Cure.

CHICAGO MEDICAL CLINIC. DU. PHILLIP SATTI.KH, President.

We can therefore confidently offer to the public Two Great Remedies of the Chicago Medical Clinic.

CLINIC SARSAPARILLA.

The Clinic Sarsaparilla is a valuable remedy for all diseases arising from impure blood such as Pimples, Boils, Carbuncles, Pustules, Scald Head, Running Sores and Ulcers, Scrofula and Syphilitic Affection, Cancerous Tumors, Ring Worm, Eczema, Tumors and all heriditary blood taint whatsoever. By its cleansing and tonic properties it imparts new life and vigor. It removes the tired, listless feeling with a loss of interest in usual work. Its restorative! qualities impart increased appetite and energy.

A REMARKABLE CURE.

.1 am pleased to let t.ho public know of tlioremarkablo cure effected in my Case. I iitui scrofulous taint of the blood from childhood. Finally, an ulcer*commenced on my nose, having all tho appearances of a most malignant cancer. Tho appearance of tho soro was most formidable and 1 was in great agony and despair as 1 contemplated th progress of this malignant disease. 1 was induced to try tho Clinic barsaparilla and at once noticed a change for the better. It nppeared neutralize tho poison in tho blood and tho growth of tho ulcer ceased. From the bottom of tlie

THE CLINIC KIDNEY CURE

SUFFERED TWENTY-SEVEN YEARS.

Mr. G. A. Slillson. a merchant of Tampico, 111., writes, August 10th, 1S91: MESHES. FOLEY & Co. OENTLKMEN ^our Kidney Cure is meeting with wonderful succoss. It lias cured somecaoes hero that physicians pronounced inciuable. I, myself, can testify to its merits. My face to-day is a living picturo of health, and your Kidney cure has made it such. I had suffered twenty-6evon years with tho disease, and to-day I foel ten years younger than 1 did one year atro. I can obtain 6omo wonderful curtiiicatna of its medical Qualities*

FOIvKY'S FAMILY PII,I,S Have gained an enviable reputation for all diseases arising from a disordered Liver, such as Biliousness, Headache, Chronic Constipation, Lassitude, Dizziness, Jaundice and Sallow Complexion. A splendid dinner pill to relieve the uncomfortable feeling after eating that affects so many also Sour Stomach and Flatulence.

The action of this Pill is mild but effective, without griping or distressing. A lieautifnl sourenlr allium containing fine lithographic rlows of the Worlds Columbian Expedition will lie sent gratia to those mailing two wrappers of Foley's Family Pills to

The above Remedies are for sale by the following first-class firms in Montgomery County:

Accept no substitution from other dealers who inav attempt to palm oft interior or worthless concoctions in place of these splendid medicines!

Honest Goods at Honest Prices

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

CASH FRY'S THE O E R,

See him before selling your produue.qit will pay you

MRS. H. B. ADAMS, 16i)9 Wabash Avenue, Chicago,

FOLEY & CO.. CHICAGO*

C. I'otorman. Mace. A. 1.. l'.ittle, Winratc, Wm. Campbell, Kiikpatrlck Ed K. Hamilton, Mowers. Shannon & I.aToilette^ Shiuuiaiidak 1). 1). Kiikllo, I.adoga. Demp.s Aumaii, Whltesvillo