Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 28 October 1893 — Page 2

\rPoa:-E i.'.

o. W. l'AUL M. W. BKUNKR PAU & BRUNCH

Attorney s- At- Law

OFFLCO South side of Green a»reet«ver Zaok Mabo»noy'a hardware store.

E. W. REAM, Dentist.

Modem dentistry practiced in ftll Its phases. Bridge work or artificial teeth WITHOUT plates made after the most tecent devices. AL. styles of artificial teeth with an especial care to usetain ees and the restoration of a natural expros«ion of the face. For the extraction of teeth, all the reliable anaesthetics known to modern dentNUry, both local aud general,

Offlco over Barnhill. Hornaday & Picket's greepy, Crawfordsvllle, Indian.

G. W. BENEFIEL,

Veterinary Surgeon

AND DENTIST.

Office at Bob Davis' Livery Stame, Ub W. Pike St., Crawfordsville, Ind. Calls by mail or telegraph answorod promptly.

Abstract of Title.

Having eeenrod the service of Win. 11. Webster. late of the Arm of Jolinson & Webster, abstractors of title, I am prepared to iurnlsh upon short notice full and complete Abstracts ot Title to ail lands in Montgomery county, Indiana, at reasonable prices. Deods aud mortgages carefully executed, Call at Hocorders offlco.

THOS. T. MUNHALJU.

LOANS.

—AT

41-2 Per Cent.,

IntcreatPayable ancsally. Apply to

0. W. WRIGHT

Money to Loan

At 7 per cent, annual interest w'thout comiD'ssion.

k- ARM AND CITY PliOPEKTY tor sale or exchange. HOUSES to rent.

CUMBERLAND & MILLER,

118 "West Main Street.

CRAWFORDSVILLE IND.

AT LAWSON'S

Do you want to save fifty conts on the Dollar? You can do it by going to LawBon for your

CABINET PHOTOGRAPHS.

Hia price is S2 per dozen, and every picture is

Guaranteed

to be strictly first class and fully as ine if not superior to any S4 or So Cabinets made by others. Proofs shown when requested at

Lawson's Gallery.

A. S. Clement--,

Crawfordsvillc, Indiana, solicitor for HOME, INSURANCE CO., of New York. Cash Capital $3,000,000 cash assets

$6,000,000.

Insures farm

property against fire and lightning, cyclones and windstorms on cash or single note or installment plan. Most liberal blanketed policy issued. Farm property insurance a specialty. Ad dress as above and I will call and see you. Dec. 17-iy.

COD LIVER OIL, MALT. Hypophosphites!

That Is the splendid combination known to physicians in hospital and private practice as Magee's Emulsion.

Life is Are. Cod Liver Oil is fuel. Emulsion is the mechanical separation of the fat, that it may the better feed the Are.

is called by physicians "the finest made it deserves the high praise. Nothing can excel It doubtful if any equal it. it will not grow rancid and nauseate you it.will remain sweet to the last drop.

The distinctive combination with Hypophosphites and Malt gives new lite and strength to the delicate.

Supply more fuel than Is consumed, and the fire Is kept burnine. Magee's Emulsion will do that for you.

Try it, and tell the story of your recovery that others may know Its marvelous power in restoring vitality and strength.

FOB SALE BY DRUGGISTS.

THE RKVJEW.

3SP. X. Z.USK.

TBHVP o* 9miSCBirTfOi.

One year, in the county, $1 25 Oneyear,ont of the county, 1 4o Inquire at Office for Advert line ratee.

OCT. 28, 1893.

AGENTS FOE THE BEVIEW. t&i The following persons will act as agents to receive subscriptions for THE REVIEW. Subscription $1.00 per year:

Grant Agnew, Crawfords/ille. TT. Long and James Swank, Coal Creek township.

L. D. Stringer, Ladoga. J. S. Bennet. Linden. Lon Stingley, Kirkpatrick. Ira Booher, Darlington. Clarence Fink, Ripley township. Myers Chenault, Brown township. Dr. Shannon, Shannondale. H. Surface, P. M., Mew Market. 0. il. Eddingfield, New Ross. Jerre Chadwick, Mace. THE RETIEW will be clubbed with the following papers at these rates:

REVIEW and Sentinel, $2.00 REVIEW and Enquirer, $2.00 REVIEW and New York World, $2.00 REVIEW and Indiana Farmer, $1.75, or REVIEW and Enquirer and New York World, S2.S5.

SHOULD ADJ0UBN.

After an attempt of near three months to secure the repeal of the Sherman act Congress is now no nearer, it would appear, in accomplishing it than it was the first day it assembled. It should adjourn and stop the foolishness. It seems to be a case of "bull head" all around and there seems little probability of there very soon being an agreement. The Sherman law will ha^e to remain for a time at least. The President from his view of the situation demands unconditional repeal or nothing. The western Senators with a number from the south and east, with some republicans, demand a substitute for the present law, by which the purchase and coinage of silver will be continued. This iB the present situation. As neither side will concede anything why continue the farce? It would be better for the country under existing circumstances if Congress would adjourn. Let the members go home to their constituents and they will hear from them such opinions and views as they do not now possess. We believe that so far as the west is concerned the views of the democracy are not in accord with the President. We favor bimotalism, gold and silver both, and do not see, aside from speculators in money and bonds, how the rest of the country can get along without both. Unconditional repeal would be very agreeable to Wall street, but not to the mechanic, laborine man, and the millions of tillers of the soil in various parts of the country. Silver is the coin of the people and has been for a century or more. Gold is the money of the bond holder, the speculator, the non-producer. The President, an eastern man, and with eastern influences, would seem to have little sympathy for silver advocates. Honest money! Why is not silver honest money even if it has not a yellow color? Why should gold alone be the leading coin. It would seem to bo solely because there is more to be made in handling it, and is more desired in consequence among those whose business is to trade in money, bonds, etc. With this class gof the people we in the west have little sympathy. Their interest and ours are not identical. We cannot then but encourage those who have taken a determined stand for bimetalism. They represent a much larg or constituency. But why continue the discussion? Let the present law remain until, at least, there is some prospect of this bull-headism giving away before reason and sound sense. Congress should drop the subject, take up some other subject or adjourn.

EAILE0AD DISASTEES Accidents by railroads seem never so numerous as during the past six months in this country. The destruction of life and property have been frightful to contemplate. Most of these have resulted on "lightning," "flyer" or "cannon ball" trains, as the fast men operating them are pleased to term them. These fast trains are created for those who desire to go quick, and are impatient at the ordinary progress of most trains. We live in a fast age, entirely too fast for the,well being of the community. Fifty yearB ago the man completing a journey of 50 or 75 miles in a day was well satisfied. Now he must go 250 or 300 in the same length of time or he is out of joint and greatly dissatisfied. Slower trains should be run, and fewer accidents will be chronicaled. A speed of 25 miles per hour should be the regulation time and none Bpeedier permitted. Business would go on just as well if that rule were adopted and these harrowing accidents we now read of almost daily, of loss of life, mangled remains, burned coaches, etc., would be much lesss frequent. For the good of the public and themselves it would be much better if slower time of train runs were adopted

As it is we must continue to read of railroad accidonts and loss of life and property just the same as heretofore.

A NEW TEIAL, BUT TOO LATE. As was known, the Supreme Court last week granted Rev. Fred Pettit a new hearing, scat up on a life sentence from this county three years ago for the murder of his wife.

Through a mass of legal phrases which are intelligible to but few outside the profession, we are given to understand that some rulings of the court below were wrong, or that errors of some kind crept into the trial of such sufficient importance as to entitle the defendant to a new trial. But the decree of the Supreme Court came too late. The unfortunate man died within forty-eight hours afterwards and is now called to a higher tribunal, there to be examined for the deeds done in the body, and whether guilty or innocent his troubles here are over. A large number of the people both here and in Tippecanoe county have never been satisfied with his conviction on the evidence produced at the trial, saying that there wasentirely too much of circumstantial testimony and are pleased that a new chance for life and liberty was granted Pettit others considered him a double-dyed murderer and the sentence that he received was justice and just what he deserved. Since the trial, Nov. 1890i throe of the attorneys engaged in it have passed from this life to the world beyond, and a number of the witnesses have died or moved from the state. The tax payers of Tippecanoe county were put to an expense of $20,U00 or more in the trial of Pettit, and will congratulate themselves, that while not desiring the demise of any man, that they are through with that burden at last

DON'T it look somewhat cowardly to kick down and expose the short-comings of an old man in the community, when there are so many of the "high tones'' whose piccadillos and scandalous conduct is entirely overlooked? It certainly does. If ono church member should be "ripped up the back" for unlawful conduct then all the rest should. Making fish of one and fowl of the other is not fair, but the wrong doings of the well-to-do should be published just as quickly as the poorly clothed and lowly in position. It is perfectly proper to fill a half column with the drunken antics of "Nig" Seering, for instance, but let some man high in the councils of the church or his political party get on a big drunk or engage in questionable conduct with the servant girl, and it must be rigidly suppressed from the columns of a newspaper. That is about the principle upon which some publishers act. Now the question is, is this fair? Most people, men and women, act on the principle, kick a person down the hill that is going that way, but it is decidedly unchristian, unfair and cowardly in the extreme. Human nature is weak, and the wrongs of any one man should not be singled out for publication and those of all the remainder omitted. Publish all or none, everything or nothing, rich and poor, prominent and obscure. This would be the correct plan to pursue.

A PE0PER DOSE.

At balem, Washington county, five White Caps, who had engaged in the whipping of a woman, one of them being her husband, received sentences for various periods of time to the penitentiary. Three of them were sentenced for five years each and the other two for shorter terms. It is a wholesome sign to read of the punishment of these outlaws. It looks from this that this system of crime would begin to be quite unpopular and in a few years become obsolete. It is certainly time. The State has been disgraced too long with their disgraceful proceedings. Good strong allaopathic doses like the Salem Judge administered will have a Btrong tendency to blot out the White Cap business completely and those who are the most frequent violators of the law will become the strongest of advocates for its observance.

01TY INDEBTEDNESS.

The city has been compelled to borrow another $10,000 to pay off current indebtedness. It has frequently had to do this before. It well illustrates the miserable financial management of the past few years of the city. The present city government should purchase another electric light plant. It needs it badly. It should contract for one for $35,000, and after a few months juggling raise the price to $80,000. That is just what was done, and all under the management of republican councilmen, and for whom the Journal is the organ with the city printing thrown in. Some of the individuals responsible for the electric light plant debt, will have the gall next year to offer themsolves aa candidates for various city offices. Voters of all parties should retire them promptly into obscurity. For the high taxation in the city these men are solely respon sible. For the big debt which the city must pay they alone are the cause of it,

THE never-dying thirst of republicans for office was never better illustrated than at Indianapolis since Denny and the republican ticket wer« victorious, There are about sixty Bmall official positions to bestow yet for these places there are near 1,500 applicants.

THE name of one of the jurors hearing the trial at Lebanon of the state against Brown for the killing of Wesner, the attorney, is Ben Hur. No relation of Gen. Wallace's Ben probably.

EVERYBODY KNOWS HIM

A PROMINENT MEM.'LETT OF

THE

MAINE LEGISLATURE.

WHAT HE SAYS WILL RING OVER THE WHOLE LAND.

As the Trumpet Tongued Utterances of

One of Our Great Men.

The word of Hon. John R. Prescott, formerly a prominent member of the Maine legislature, is all powerful.

Mr. Prescott lives at Rome, Me. Everybody knows him, everybody respects him and everybody believes what he saye.

And it is an interesting story which he tolls and an eloquent tribute which he pays.

Thirty-two years ago, he says, "I was attacked with neuralgia in my face and head, mostly confined to the right side. There was not often a day or an hour that 1 was not suffering with that terrible severe pain, so severe a great many times that for several days and nights 1 could not sleep or take any food excepting a little gruel.

My nerves were terribly affected and I grew weak and feeble, as my many friends in the state of Maiue, and more particularly in Kennebec County will certify to.

About five years ago I was taken with what the physicians claim to be a liver and kidney trouble, a soreness over the right kidney so much so that I could not bear to be rubbed.

My bowels were very much constipated, could not urinnu* ireely. and suffered severe pain at sucli units

My (roubles increased very much, and for the past six months I could not got up from my bed iu the morning and dress before I would be in pain in my back and bowels.

I would often be forced to drop down and rest me and rnauy times be in such pain that I would cry like a child and ask why I could not die.

I have used for the neuralgia all the liniments I have ever si-cti advertised for the cure of that disease, and for my nerves and kidney and iiver trouble I have taken so many remedies that they aro too numerous to mention.

I have been treated by the leading physicians of Maine, have also been to Massachusetts to be treated by physicians in Boston, and from all I have received very little benefit. One eminent physician said that! could not be curedf and many pnysicians examined me and refused to treat me.

I had given up taking medicine.

HON. JOHN B. PRESCOTT, 07 &UXXS. About the middle of December, 1892, my wife had been reading some of the testimonials of Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy. She told me she wanted me to try one bottle of the Nervura.

I said to her I had taken all the medicine I should. She

Bent

to A. P. Cram,

the druggist at Mt. Vernon, and bought one bottle of the Nervura, and said she wanted me to give it a fair trial.

I commenced taking it about the 25th of December. When 1 had taken it about two weeks the pain left mo entirely from my back and bowels, and I can urinate freely without pain and the neuralgia troubles me but very little.

I gained in weight in the month of January twelve and one -half pounds. I am 67 years old and can work now every day, while before taking Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy I could not do any labor excepting a few chores,

I hope that anyone who is suffering from any trouble with the nerves or liv er or kidneys will give Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy a fair trial. I know that they will get relief.

I can truly say that I thank God that such a medicine as Dr. Greene'B Nervura blood and nerve remedy was created, and I Btill thank Him that I was induced to take this wonderful medicine.

I write this without any solicitation. The cure of so prominent and widely known a public man as the Hon. John Prescott has created an immense stir throughout the entire State of Maine, His friends and acquaintainces are surprised, nay, amazed, at his cure, for they had long looked upon his recovery as hopeless. People are calling on him from New Sharon, Mercer, Belgrade, Mt Vernon and Rome, and people are writ ing him from all over the country, inquiring about the remarkable facts of this cure by this truly wonderful healthgiver, Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy.

It ie purely vegetable and harmless and all druggists sell it for 81. We would add also that it is the discovery and prescription of a well-known physician, Dr. Greene of 35 W. 14th St., New York, who can be consulted free, personally or by letter.

ft\{ your

for" it,

Made only by

POCKET KNIVES

no advertising on them

Co

sulntely, t.'lfti wi 1

lii^a oe and ile. cent •^ufnV

wna tk'

Na.

41. Wagon. $43.auut

There was a youngw'ife ini

valuable Presents to be Civen Away in Return for

'•30 PRIZES, AMOUNTING TO

GOOD HOPE,

Who always used,

SANTA CLAUS SOAR

She. once lost her head, Put

her washing to bed,

And her

Cherub hung

always recognized as a friend of the family. SOLD EVERYWHERE.

N K. FAIRBANK & CO.,

IT yen wane :i thoroughly good

Sewing Machine

-REMEMBER-

The White

When you are looking for a sewing machine that is fitted for all kinds of sewing buy the White.

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

W. E. NICHOLSON

AGENT WEST MAIN STREET.

SPEAR

PEAR HEAD TAGS,

55 STEM WINDING ELGIN GOLD WATCHES Soi.G.? 01 V75 FHJE IMPORTED FRENCH OPERA GLASSES, MOROCCO BODY, BLACK ENAMEL TRIMMINGS, GUARANTEED ACHROMATIC... 23,57J CO 'V: OO IMPORTED GERMAN BUCKHORN HANDLE, FOUR BLADED

0,0OO ROLLED GOLD WATCH CHARM ROTARY TELESCOPE TOOTH PICKS )0 LARGE PICTURES (14x28 inches) IN ELEVEN COLORS, for framing,

an nbove articles will be distributed, by comities, among parties who chew S1J—. lug Tobacco, and return to us the TIM TAOS taken therefrom. .ill distribute 226of these prizes in tbis connty as follows:

ARTY sending us the greatest number of SPEAR HEAD /.- from this connty

we

sending us the next greatest number of

HEAD TAGS, we will give to eacn, 1 OPE PARTIES sending us the next greatest number •M'CAll HEAD TAGS, we will give to each 1 POCKET II i:

•. .\"E HUNDRED PARTIES sending us the next greatest ,r!'cr°f SPEAR HEAD TAGS, we will give to each 1 I LED GOLD WATCH CHARM TOOTH PICK 100 TOOTH

produced. It is the sweetest, the toughest, the richest, S ITU A i'.ively and distinctively different in flavor from nny n! .. convince the most skeptical of this faot. It is the largest seller of in on earth, which proves that it has caught the popular tnste ami n-f .. ii.O'i' participate in the contest for prizes. See that a T!N TA(J of .. -'^U HEAD you buy. Sena in the tags, no matter how a

oufon'the rope.

BUT IT WAS WHITE AND CLEAN ALL THE SAM&

^VMJNDRY-^

THERE IS NO EQUAL TO

SAHIA ci

and insist on having it. O

It is tlie best soap made for every household use, and once introduced it is

aU5

OA PL

Chicago.'.

s.,28£,ar%

SAVE THE TAGS.

Ga Hundred and Seventy-Three Thousand Two Hundred and Fifty Doner?,

$173,250.00

CONTF

Very sincerely, THE P. J. SORG COMPANY, MiDniiETov

of th: _,ple obtaining these prizes in this county will be puhiisb ... mediately after February 1st, 1894.

DON'T SEND ANY TAGS BEFORE JANUARY I. 1894.

^.ta ,RHART ssMiHiAfis harness BifG. eo.

pan freight both way

OUR HARNESS

are all No. Oak-tanned J^ealtuv. S'nglo 88 to ?20J [lonhlo Buggy, SI8 935* Hiding Haddlcw and Fly Net*. 3 per cent, otf fov canh with order. (M-nogo illustrated Catalogue free. Address

W.B. PRATT, Sec'y, ELKHARTJIW

THIS MACHINE

TO USE

IN YOUR H0IME

Wlir will von nnv iJV) Jifi.-, for •,*!„" ntn-V™ fhnt l« not to ho BKuriXr flte-.'ffiJ1' ,1"

23,1.0 .'0

r.750

28,87") "P

$173,250

iil ive GOLD WATCS

OPERA GLASS....5 OPERA GLASSY

OMJ HUNDRED PARTIES sending us the next greatest of SPEAR HEAD TAGS, we will give to each 1 PICTURE IN ELEVEN COLORS ....? 100 PICTUUI 4

Total Number'of Frizes for this County, 226.

i. '."ION.—No Tags will be received before January 1st, 1894, nor after Febr.ir.rv let, package containing tags must be marked plainly with Name of Senile., 1 -.v.v .o, and Number of Tags in each package. All charges on packages uii I

'.—SPEAR HEAD possesses more qualities of intrinsic value tlir-.n

20 POCKET KNIVTSi

Pi'CK'.i

r-r.r

K-t

'19

l*Gad

not satisfactory. War-

r*nt for two years. Wby pay on Agent $10to$50 to oixler for jroa? Write your own order. Boxing tree. We take all the risk of damage in shipping.

WHOLESALE PRICES. ng Wagons, 935 to 950. Guaranteed nun [or 950 to $86. Hnrrer*, 870 Ijo 8IOO, BMOB for $100 to $130. Top Hagirien tt ilZ, fine a $76. Pbaetonnat 875 toSIOO. Wngon WogonH, Delivery Wagonsanb Un&d

Wp3M

FREE

.r.U-r

t:.: reduce AT ONCF. the

i?! MADE. ivMMi h" o'm'T'mI nt A nrlec l*AK KEL all competitor*. will. VVITHOn' TTM VOW A CENT, place one our »c*t mncMnctt »it

yonr

home Put out tl»U navcrtWciw*'"!

M*n*l ta *i« wltli »ht:»rlojr iwr.l rye will you full Plir,ifj