Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 16 December 1893 — Page 2

ATTOKNB

G. W. PAUL PAUL &

K. W. BRUNEK

BRUNEiR

Mtorney s- At-Law

Offlee South sidoof Greeu street »ver Zack Maaorney's hardwara store..

E. W. REAM, Dentist.

Modern dentistry practiced In all Its phases. Bridge work or artifloial teeth WITHOUT platea made after the moat recent devices. Al. styles of artifloial teeth with an especial care to usetalnesa and the restoration of a natural exprea«ton of the face. For the extraction of teeth, all the reliable anaesthetics known to modern dentil, both local and general, gg™*,ntll|t

Office over Barnlilll, Hornaday A Picket's fP**" ery, Crawfordavllle, Indian.

G. W. BENEFIEL,

Veterinary urgeon

AND DENTIST.

Office at Bob Davis' Livery Stable. 125 W. Pike St., Cinwfordsville, Ind. Galls by mall or wlepraph answered promptly.

Abstract of Title.

Having secured the servlco of Wm. II. Webstar, lato of the firm of Johnson & Webster, abstractors of title, I am prepared to tarnish upon short notice full and complete Abstracts of Title to all lands In Montgomery county, Indiana, at reasonable prlcos. Deeds and mortgages carefully executed. Call at Recorders offlco.

THOS. T. MUNHAL.JU.

LOANS.

41-2 Per Cent.,

Interest Payable ahnnally. Apply to

C. W, WRIGHT

Money to Loan

At 7 per cent, annual interest without commission.

fARM AND CITY PROPERTY tor sale or exchange. HOUSES to rent.

CUMBERLAND & MILLER,

118 "West Main Street.

CRAWFORDSVILLE IND.

COD LiVER OIL, MALT. Hypophosphites!

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

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

Magee's Emulsion

Is called by physicians "the finest made tt deserves tine high praise. Nothing can excel it doubtful if any equal It.

It will not grow rancid and nauseate you tt.will remain sweet to the last drop. The distinctive combination with Hypophosphites and Malt giveB new life and strength to the delicate.

Supply more fuel than is consumed, and the lire is kept burning. Magee's Emulsion will do thatforyou.

Try It, and tell the story of your recovery thAt. others may know its marvelous power i» restoring vitality and strength.

FOR SALE BY DKUGGISTS.

pArritr.R's

1

HAIR BALSAM Clcantca ci.d Ircautifiei the hair. Promotes Ji:\umul growth. Never Fails to Bostoro Gray

Hnir to ittt Youthful Color. Cured rcolp dt^esoj

it

hair falling.

«jQc,and $1.00 a* Druggists

•he Consumptive and Feeble and &11 who tflrrfrom cvlHiiinli'i'i I'i-e

11.01'arkcr'o

fAKE

PLEASANT

TILT'WEXT MOR^INGTFEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND MY COMPLEXION IS BETTER. My doctor Bays It nets gently on the stomach, liver BD1 kldnevH, and is a pleasant laxative. Tbla drink Is mado from herbs, and prepared tor us# as easily an ten. itlscalleil

LRWISmmCIlIE

{AM'II Family j, In order to ©IIATOIi If. W

d»J." In order to be lieallhy, this fsneccwary^ Address, "VIIIMTIIK IT \V001\VAKI. LcKOVdi. Y.

Hg CHRISTY. BREAD SLICF'-t

MRN on WOMEN' make $10.00 a d:iy culling the Wonderful Christy Bread Sliccr." Write quick for territory. CmtisTV

KMI E

(Jo., Fremont, Ohio.

THE REVIEW.

F. T. LUm

VBHMB O* SUBSOBIPTIOM.

One year, in the county, Oneyear.ontof the county, Inauire at Offlee for Advertiln« rate*.

$1 S& 1 40

DEC. 16, 1893.

AGENTS FOFI THE BEYIEW. The following persons will act as ageDts to receive subscriptions lor THE REVIEW. Subscription $1.00 per year:

Grant Agnew, Crawfordsfille. H. Long and James Swank, Creek township.

Coal

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. O. M. Eddiugfield, New Ross. Jerre Chad wick, Mace. D. W. Barnett, Wesley. THE REVIEW 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, $2.00, or REVIEW and Enquirer and New York World, $2.85.

0LUB EATES FOE NEXT YEAE, THE REVIEW is clubbed with the fol lowing papers for the ensuing year at the below reduced rates: REVIEW and Sentinel $2 00 REVIEW and Enquirer 2 00 REVIEW and New York World 2 00 REVIEW and Indiana Farmer •.. 2 00 REVIEW and Orange Judd Parmer,

Chicago 2 00 or THE REVIEW and any two of the above named publications for $2.85. Now is your time to get a good supply of reading matter for 1894 at cheap rateB. Hand your name, with the mon ey, to the agent in your neighborhood.

THE PEEPTITUAL AND 0HE0NI0Tom Taggart, chairman of the democratic State Central Committee, in declining further strife for political honorB quoted as sayiDg one among his reasons, was that the public get tired and disgusted with chronic and perpetual office seekers. He is eminently correct on that point and the time is coming whea that class of MED will be detested, and offices will seek the man instead of the reverse as now, Office seekers are responsible for the present civil service law which they so detest. Office seeking begets a score of vicious and bad habits among most of its votaries. Deceit, treachery, lying, laziness, peculation and general dishonesty follow in the path of the majority of perpetual office hunters. Very few men come out of office with as good reputations as when they went in. The business of seeking place forces many of them into the worst cf practices. We mean that class who make office Beeking a life business. Take those in our own county for instance, going back say for the past twenty-five years. How many of them of the great number who have held official positions are better off morally and financially? Only a few. The public observe this state of affairs, and yearly are noting the demoralizing condition of the general run of office seekers. They are considering that a very few years of office holding is enough for the best of them. Let most men get a slight taste of official position and they are ruined the remainder of their lives.

They never know when to let up in their importunities, and they cease only when the breath has left them. And so many of them never know when they have enough, but remain in the field forever. These are the chronic fellows, these the ones that to whom Taggert refers as becoming deteatible to the public.,-':

MAJOR MOKINLEY

Ginger

onie. Itcurosthi? wyrBtCo'ijrh. Wrnk lebiliiy,I»-

•3,

Hheuiratlsnjftiidram. oOc. fl* The onlv sure cure for Corns, ".in• i-as.-. !5ct9. AT DIMRBWU.

.igostion, IYin.-.lc 'vcaliuc HIWDERCORR all I'uiu. MuLia

AT

states that the cut

in tariff taxes is not as great as he expected. His most serious objection to the Wilson bill is that it substitutes advalorem duties for specific duties.

In 1842 Henry Clay, tbo father of protection maintained in a speech in congress that ad valorem duties wore tho proper ones to impose. "Compare," he said, "the difference between the specific and advalorem system of duties, and I maintain that the latter is justly ontitled to the preference. The one principle declares that the duty shall bo paid upon the real value of tho article taxed the specific system imposes an equal duty on articles greatly unequal in value. 1 believe that if we adopt a fixed rate advalorem whenever it can bo done, tho revenue will be subjected to fewer frauds than the injustice and fraud incident to Bpecific duties."

Although Ilenry Clay has been called the father of the protective system he never insisted that the protective system should be made perpetual. "No one," he said, "in tho commencement of the protective policy ever supposed that it was to bo perpetual. Wo hoped and believed that temporary protection. extended to our infant manufactures, would brin^ them up and enable them to withstand competition with those of Europe."

FATBIOTISM VS. PABTYI8M. Dropping the names of thousands and thousands of worthy and honorable soldiers from the pension rolls without the authority of law, and then slandering the men who periled their lives for three and four yeart as an excuse for his (Commissioner Lochran's) action stamps him as a mountebank ana a charlatan.— Journal.

Commissioner of Pensions, Lochran, saw as much service during the war as the most of them. His word is that of a genuine soldier, and his bravery was never questioned. His services will no doubt compare favorably in the army with the writer of the above extract, yet because the Commissioner desires that justice and honesty shall prevail in his department of the government, he must be maligned by unthinking Bcriblert« all over the land. You never hear such fellows denounce a fraud in the pension department, although it may be ever so well known. They are silent when it is discovered that some man has been drawing a pension who had no right to do so. The Journal knows that Commissioner Locbran dees not desire that any ex-soldier entitled to a pension shall be deprived of it, that where one so dropped from the rolls is discovered it is at once restored, that in Iowa, WeBt

Virginia and other StateB systematic efforts to perpetrate frauds in pensions by which the government for years has beeD swindled have been discovered. Why not view this matter from a nonpartisan stand point, and in the interest of justice and right to the whole people? Republican newspapers and orators can not look at it in that light. They have generally run the pension department in the interest of the republican party, and generally favored the granting of pensions to every applicant, provided he was likely to vote the republican ticket

AN INCOME TAX.

An income tax to be levied on corporations will be introduced in Congress, or at least made a portion of a bill for increasing the government revenues Of course corporations that have grown fat and rich by the protection afforded them heretofore through republican legislation will object. That is to be ex pected. They would be ungrateful to smite the hand that protected them They will aim to prevent it, but should not succeed. They should be forced to bear their share of the burden of taxation, and one of the most feasible plans is by a direct income tax. It has always been the policy of the republican lead ers to protect these wealthy corporations and monopolists as far as possible These monopolists are convenient in a big campaign. They greatly aid in furnishing the "munitions of war" to fight the democrats. Carnegie, Wanamaker and scores of other rich republicans have furnished the money heretofore to the republican campaign managers, and the party returned the favor by enacting such laws as threw taxation to a great extent on the middle and poor classes of the country. An income tax would compel them to help shoulder a load that others have borne.

ALLOW NFT DELAY.

There should be no delay in CongresB in the discussion and enactment of a tariff reform law. A reasonable time should bf allowed and no more in get ting the law through. Republican tactics are for delay and obstruction. Whatever they can do will be done to prevent the passage of the law. The democrats should take the bull by the horns at once, and prevent any by-play or foolishness that the opposition may originate. Two months or even a shorter time is ample for discussing the subject of tariff in all its bearings. It has been discussed enough among the people and Congressmen for five years paBt. There is little sense in further delay. The majority of the American people demand a tariff reform law. Let them have it. Trusts, monopolies, and those accumulating fortunes under the McKinley law desire it to remain undisturbed. Congressmen should heed those who are to be benefitted—the people.

THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE. The message of President Cleveland last week was a very lengthv and able State paper. One thing in all of Cleveland's papers is the sincerity that attaches to them. He seeks no evasion for any supposed political advantage. He says juBt what he means. Every department of governmental affairs is represented fully in this message. The "Hawaiian" affair, the treasury department, the pension department, are all fully reported and the suggestions demand proper given space. The message closes urging Congress to tako up tho long delayed subject of tariff reform, and tho advantages of it thoroughly amplified and explained. Of course republicans generally see nothing in the message. They never do, and it is immaterial that they should. The administration and Congress has the opportunity to enforce justice in the Hawaiian affair, in the pension department, and pass a reform tariff law. and should do it.

TOM TAOGEKT, chairman of tho Democratic Sritate Central Committee, announces bis retirement from politics. This is to be regretted, as ho is a very efficient, popular and able political leader, and tho absence of him from future political contests in tho Stale will bo greatly missed.

HOW SOON POBGOTTEN. Only a little over a year ago James G. Blaine, the leading republican politician of the country, in fact the brains of the organization, passed from earth to realtnBof the unknown. He, when hving, came as near being worshipped, and what he said and did, were looked upon with more reverence and esteem by his party, than any man of tbo past quarter of a century. It was proposed at once right after his death that a monument to commemorate his virtue*, to show coming generations the esteem in which he was held by his contemporaries, should be erected at some point in his adopted State of Maine. It was to cost $20,000 or more. The persons having the matter in charge report that after a year's effort they have been able to raise but $115. The chances for a monument judged by this are many centuries away. His political friends are too much engrossed in seeking for spoils to think much about a monument, and if one is erected it will be by his relatives, not those he befriended when in the zenith of his political power.

THE Tribune is the great republican newspaper of Chicago. It is honest in its editorial opinions, even when it hurts the G. O. R. P. In a recent editorial the Tribune says: "It is notorious that the worst paid labor in the United States is that employed in the high protected industries. Beggardly wages forced Americans out of the mills and factories of New England to give place to the Italians, whose discontent was expressed in Btrikes until they were made to give way to the wrefched, superstitious French-Canadian imported operatives, who can live on less and endure more than any other class the mill barons have yet found."

STEALING

has been reduced to a sci­

ence by many operators in the hazardous calling. Last weok at South Bend, this State, a bank was entered during the noon hour while all the employees were at dinner and robbed of $15,000. Although in a prominent part of the city where hundreds of people were passing during business hours, no one saw the stealing done and on whom to place the charge no one knows and the money has perhaps vanished forever.

MILLIKAN,

tho secretary of the repub­

lican State Central Committee last year, declines further honors in that direction and has resigned. It may be that he sees big money in buying tax titles during the coming winter, as the chances are that there will be many for sale, and dealing in them is Millikan's "best holt."

DURING

the present year six men in

various parts of the United States have been killed while playing the game of foot ball. This beats the prize fighting record, but then foot ball you know "develops the muscle" of the 11 persons on each side engaged in it, is endorsed by college authorities, and will perhapB continue.

How's This!

We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. P. J.

CHENEY

& Co., Props., Toledo, O.

We the undersigned have known P. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm.

West and Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Walding, Kinnan Marvin. Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O.

Hall's Catarrh cure is taken internally actiDg directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Testimonials free.

People are said to eat much more bread in winter than they do in summer

Mr.

S.

H. tjonklin writes fromMt

Carmel, Conn. "Enclosed please find check for your bills of May 2d and 12th. I repeat the gratification I expressed before as to the convenience, the economy, and the real artistic beauty the National Lead Company's Pure White Lead Tinting Colors have proved to me in using them. It would seem as if tho old way of trying to produce the desired shade of color by mixing many colors together with much labor and guess-work must be abandoned in favor of your economical, Bure and easy method. My painters wish to introduce their use in an adjoining town, and want a couple of your books as ui des."

The unusual proceeding of suing the paronts of tho boys who hazed him has been beguu by Thayer A. Henton in the Omaha courts.

Fire Sunday Morning.

Near the hour of two' o'clock Sunday uiorning the kitchen of tho residence of Mr. Murphy on west Wabash avenue was discovered on fire and an alarm turnedjin. Tho fire company with hose arrived in about ten minutes and soon began turning water upon the firoAfter a battle of about a half hour the (lames wore extinguished. The loss to tho owner is perhaps $300, tho main portion of tho residence being saved. The cause of the lire is unknown as it was discovered in a portion of the premises where no firo for heating purposes was used.

SAN SOAR

it sartintyisfheixst thing far HOUSEKEEPERS ihat ever was invented

isihe

CHEAPEST, for it saves TIME,LABOR AND

CLOTHES.

jjttiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiitiiiiiMiiiiiiiiitw«Hnri|

1 When 1 Was aGaL washday was always aperfeddread, but land sakes,rt a'mt no chore at all nw since flwn faiRfeANKfolkS' got to making".

immci

Made only by

Is pure and unadulterated, while for rapid cleansing power It has no squat. I?

N. K. FAIRBANK & CO., Chicago.

If .vol want a 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 that In several hundred families of Montgomery county you will find they use the White Sewing Machine.

W. E. NICHOLSON

AGENT, WEST MAIN STREET.

New Winter Goods Now In

Beautful Patterns! Seasonable Prces!

W. A. COLMAN,

MERCHANT TAILORS.

Mens' Low Instep Boot

A SPECIAL FEATURE.

JEE

THEM AT-

Kd YariCamp & Co

Main Street, Opposite Court House

West End Saloon

John Barry, Prop

Wines, Liquors and Cigars.

.A BEAUTIFUL RESORT.

TRY BERRY'S WOODEN FAUCET BEER

KH ART

mmi ftHD

and fnraest miurafaotnrera in America mllinc Baggies and Harness this way. {lege to examine before

Snip with priv­

ilege to examine before an money paid. We pay freight both mqi/tif not satisfactory. Warrant for two years, why pay an Agent $10to M0 to order for yonf Write yonr own order. Boxing free. Wo taae all tho risk of damage in shipping.

WHOLESALE PRICES.

Spring Wngonn, 835 to 850. Guaranteed nM •a sell for IWO to 885. Surrey* 870 to 8IOO, am an sell for 8100 to $130. Top liugglen atS42, fine at $75. Phaeton*at 875 tog (Oft. Vgpffonettes, ad Carta.

Nn 6.1 Wnnnn 4/13 UUk Wagons, Delivery Wagons an*. W5l0n#

OUR HARNESS

are all No. 1 Oak-tanned Leathw. Single S8

to

£80 Doable Rnsityi 818

to 835. Hiding Hadillcn and Fly Notn. 3 per cent, off for cash witti order. M-^age illustrated Catalogue free. Adllresu

W.B.PRATT,Sec'y,ELKHART.IN

THIS MAGHINE

TO USE

IN YOUR HC'SBE'

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119 Road

Wa9onl

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