Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 14 July 1894 — Page 2
E i.-s
M. E. CLODFELTEK. C1.AUDE THOMPSON.
CLODFELTERI THOMPSON,
LAWYERS.
Will do ft gi'iim al practice lu all Courtts.
Office over Smith A Steele's drug store, nouth Washington street.
G. W. l'AUL M. W. UKl'NEK
PAUL & BEUNER
Attorney s-
At- Law
OCQctt South sideoC Green.street over Zaok Mftoruey's hardware store.,
HURLEY & HURLEY.
ATTORNEYS AT
iXIN L. SHKt'M.
A W
(Over Kirst National lliiuk.t
Will give prompt attention to all legal business iutruslod to them, l'roper mlvice give'U in all case.- Drawing wills, contracts.. settling estates, iaw suits, piirtitlou suits, toreelosure of inortpaL»»»rt. t?tc. Abstracts earotuily rxuniiiiol» and money to loan.
ATTORNEY AT I.iW.
Offlre: Hoom No. J. N. W. Comer Main and Washington street. Special attention to Conveyancing.
CHESTER J. BRITTON. M. D. C. VETERINARY SURGEON. AND DENTIST.
arndtinti* of the Chicago Veterinary College. Treats all dssiiases of Domestic Animal?. OFFICE: over Moffett Jc Morgan's Urug store, •GV4 east Main street. Infirmary at F. McDonald's livery rtnble, 222 eust Market street.
LOANS.
First IrtM Loans
do
-AT-
41-2 Per Cent.,
interest Payable annually. Apply to
C. W. WRIGHT.
Money 1 to Loan
At 7 per cent, annual interest .w'thoyt commission. "u' -r
i-Aim AND CITY PROPERTY tor sale or exchange. HOUSED to rent.
'CUMBERLAND & MILLER,
118 West Main street.
CRAWFOUDSV1LLE INI).
\V. W. MORGAN. W. I.. l.KE
MORGAN & LEE, -.'-GENERAL INSURANCE AGESTS-:-
MONEY TO LOAN
At Lowest Rates.
ABSTRACTS OF TITLE
Furnished on short notice. CITY and FARM PROPERTY lor sale. Olllce: Ornbaun lllocU, N. Washihyton street
Crawfordsvillo, Ind.
ABSTRACT BOOKS.
A. C. Jennison's abstract books contain a copy ol every deed ot record to every tract of land in the county, as well as to every unsatisfied Mortgage or lien.
Years of labor and many thousand dollars have been spent in "making my books complete asd helpful in every way.
My 20 years experience aided by these unrivaled facilities in tracing titles enable me to claim that my office is the best place to have DEEDS, MORTGAGES, LEASES, and CONTRACTS prepared, as well as reliable
Abstracts ol Title.
FLY-FIEND.
Will positively protect Horses and Cattle from any anuoyanco from Files, Unats and Jnsentn of every kind. Improves appearance of coat, dispensing with fly nets. Recommended by thousands. Try It and bo convinced. Price of "Fly-netd," Including brush, quart cams, ?1.00 half-gallon, 11.75 one gallon, »2.50. One gallon will last :5 hond of horses or cattle an ontlre season. Beware of Imitations. Address ('rwenl itlfii. Co., 2,10!) lmlin.nu Avr.,l'hll.
ROOFLESS PLATES!
Are giving thorough satisfaction to thousands.
Get One!
These sets of teeth do away with the palate part and make alight, strong and exceedingly satisfactory plate as thousands testify. At least make inquiry. Teeth extracted positively without pain.
Taffs fatal Parlors
a.i West Washington St., (New Cordova Building) Indianapolis, Ind.
A, McKechnie, M'g'r.
THE REVIEW.
-1$ V-
35". X. I»USE.
TKIUie or SJBS"U..TIO
One'year,'in tne count Oneyear,oai.of th« con Inantre at Office for A
Dciiincrulic Cull.
The democrat# of Montgomery county will meet in their several townships at a place designated below, Saturday. July 11. at 2 o'clock p. in., for the purpose of selecting delegates attend the following conventions: Stale. Congressional and Joint Representative. Stale convention meets at Indianapolis. August 15: Congressional at Covington, July 23 Joint Representative not set. The various townships will meet and sele-t delegates in accordance with the table below. •. state Con. Hep. Coal Creek. Ceil. School liou.-e 2 1, ,.l Wayne, Waynetovn 2 .t Ripley, Alamo 2 2 Hrown, Brown's Valley 2
TAVLOK THOMP
They fail to look on both sides of the question. Thoy do not seem to realize that there is a great financial stringency in this country, ami that no interests are more effected by it than railways and that numbers of lines are operated at bare living expeusss, and others at a constant loss. A more unpropitious time for a demand for increased wages has not been known during the past decade. The strikers also forget the fact that tnen operating and owning railways Lave the right to do so whether it may be suitable to others or not, so long as they violate no law. and have also the right to designate what wages thoy will pay their men. There is no law written or understood which will force tnen to work at prices not satisfactory to them. They can tjuit, but they have no legal authority to prevent others from taking their places, neither can they destroy the property of those antagonistic to them. In the present Btrike at several points property of the railways has been destroyed or injured and men have been beaten who have otlered to work. This is contrary to public sentiment,and which always in the end triumphs. The strike must end, and the strikers will bo defeated,
TAXING GREENBACKS.
The House of Representatives by a large majority has passed the bill of Representative Cooper taxing greenbacks. This law should have been passed twenty years ago, or to be more specitic there never should have been a law exempting them from taxation. It was originally enactod in the interest of money lenders and well-to-do people to onable them to avoid their just share of taxation, and throw the burdens on those least able to bear them. It was a republican law, enacted by the leaders of that party years ago, for the purpose of winning the support of the rich and favored classes—the capitalists who would come down promptly with their regular campaign assessments. It is hoped both houses will agroe on this measure and that it will soon become a law. These individuals who every year just before the 1st of April are in the habit of changing all their cash into greenbacks, or at least making oath that thoy have done so. and for the purpose of escaping taxation, would then to a great oxtent bo headed off, and would bavo to boar burdens that they heretofore threw onto other people.
THE district convention for the nomination of a candidate for Congress by the democracy will meet at Covington on Wednesday, July 25th. The chairman of the committee, whoever he is. does not believe in advertising, as no official notice of the meeting has yet been published tVat wo r\.e aware of.
entirely
over
00
1 10
Ivertatw -itef.
JULY 14,1894.
DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET. iie iresC!itJitive—DAVI1") t'ALLI^I KK. Surveyor—LEH S. lll'RllAM I'ror.. Attorney—11KNKY 1. \.\NCI.LA\h. Auditor—JAMKS JoHNsON. Treasurer—HKN WAKHINTON... SlieritI—M1I.TON M'KKK. Coroner—J. S. liKATTV Commissioner. 1st District—(Jh.Hltt.iE OltNS. Commissioner, in-l District—SAMt KL K. KIS11EK.
2 .5
Scott, •enter School 1 lou.vj... 1 2 2 t'nion, large court room '.I 11 ..11 Madison. Linden .iiJv:"- 1. 2 ^.f :2 SugnrCreek.C'en. school house 1 1 Franklin, Darlington 2 2. Walnut. Mace 2 2 2 Clark, I.adoga 2 4
Total it. :t 3s
-UN. Secy.
J. J. MILLS, Chairman.
THE GREAT STRIKE.
The present strike, or the one that has been under way for two weeks past is the most extensive in the number of men involved and the interests at stake, of any heretofore known in the country. 11 originated as all are aware first between the Pullman Car Company and its employees over the matter of wages, and through which the railway lines of the west were drawn into it. It has been decidedly expensive and both employees and managers will be losers, terminate whichever way it will, in vast sums of money. Hut that the ttrikers must yield there is no doubt. They most generally do. In this case it would seem there is little reason nor sense in the actions of the strikers.
STATE POLITICAL PR0SPE0TS. PULLMAN. There is no reason why the democracy Mr. Pullman, the t)aI«c0
with a good ticket selected and judicious represents one of those shoddy
the
political management cannot carry the' crats that have acquired sudden State this year. While taking the coun- fortune and his rapiuly acquired power trv
PASSED THE SENATE.
After a discussion of nearly four months the tariff bill last week was passed in the Senate by a vote of 30 for to 35 against it. The bill has been greatly changed in many of its features since coming from the House Senator Hill, of New York, voted against it. Senators Yoorhees and Turpie voted for it. A conference committee of both houses now take it in hand and it will be subject to further changes before a final vote is taken. It is a subject of congratulation that the long agony is over, and that an end of tariff tinkering and tariff discussion is in sight. The new tariff law will not be what the people wanted when by such large ma jorities in 1S92 they voted for tariff re form, still it is better than none at all, is an improvement in the interest of the people over the McKinley law, and will be welcomed. Thousands have pre dieted that just so soon as a tariff law was enacted and a certainty arrived at regarding it that there would be secession of the financial stringency in this country and a general improvemen bo manifested everywhere. It is to be hoped they are correct, and it will not be a great length of time now uutil it is demonstrated one way or another. The new bill for the approval or rejection of the President will be placed in his hands within a few days.
PENSION COMMISSIONER L00HRAN. Pension Commissioner Lochren has recently given out the statement that this administration will "save" 625,000,000 at least this year on pensions, and that it will save a still larger sum next year.—Journal.
tide maybe against gave him the opportunity to tyruu.zc
the democraov, we do not believe the over less fortunate- 'viduals. He jthe State.! reputed to be worth co,000.000. Hmud it convenient on account of tie
same exists taking separately On the contrary there is everything to deserve that the democracy in Indiana continue in power. During the past few year® some of the very best laws in the interest of the people have been eaacted by democratic legislature. No scandal arising from political contentions has arisen in the State. No malfeasance in office of any State official has been noted. The laws have been faithfully administered, and considering the universal prevalence of hard times this commonwealth has prospered as well as any of its neighbors. Under a republican administration it could not have been improved upon if as good. It should be remembered that a democratic legislature routed the grasping school book monopoly, that a democratic legislature enacted the new election law, the now assessment law and many other beueticial movements. Take all these things into consideration the party must stand in favor with a majority of the thinking, intelligent voters of the State, and there is no substantial reason why it cannot again triumph this year, if party leadors are true to the {trust imposed upon them.
1
The word "save," as quoted is used by the Journal in this instance to express its indignation or contempt of the Commissioner in hts efforts to reduce the enormous expenses existing in the pension department and to conduct the office on an economical, fair anil honest basis. Had there been an increase in the matter of pensions to the amount of 825,000,000 last year that would have been perfectly satisfactory to the Journal and many others in his way of thinking. While there would have been no justice nor wisdom in it, it might eventually have redounded to the continual demagoguery of the republican party leaders, and have been an approval of the extravagent system of government management that has always distinguished it. Commissioner Lochran is pursuing a straight forward, honest and impartial course in his management of the department over which ho presides, and despite the aspersions of the political demagogues will receive the approval of the people. Fairness, impartiality and a business system has distinguished him in his officialjcapacity—not a toadying to time servers, treasury leeches and political trimmers.
INDIANA'S GREAT WHEAT CROP. Indiana's wheat crop has been put into the shock, and a great crop it will bo. The most conservative figures as to the acreage in the State this year place it at 2,750,000. This is about 9 per cent, less than the full acreage. John B. Conner, editor of the Indiana Farmer, says the yield will equal and perhaps exceed the average. In the southern part of the State there is much of the gain, it is reported, that will yield thirty bushels to the acre. The Indiana Farmer estimates that the average yield for the State will be eighteen or twenty bushels an acre. If the average yield iB eighteen bushels an acre, the crop will amount to 43,600,000 bushels. The price for now wheat promises to be 48 or 50 cents. At 48 cents a bushel, the value of the crop will b'e 820,800,000. Mr. Connor thinks it safe to say that there is a full wheat crop in this State. Ho believes the shortage in the acreage will be made up in the excess of yield.
THE latest Terre Haute freak to attain notoriety is Eugene Debs, the manager, president, superintendent or something of the American Railway Union.
car lJ
uriBto-
stringent times to reduce the wages ot his me:-., but could not reduce the rent the houses owned by him and rente1' to them. It is an unjust rule th won't work both ways PuilniHU.it be safely said has through the strike received his first buck-set. mole and manner of doing bu~: have been ventilated and it is sa! say. that he will never again receiw returns in cash from his business as in the past, His cars will in thousands of instances be boycotted hereafter, a: receipts in cash from them will again in long years be near as extenshe as formerly. A man with money and property may generally speaking do with them as he choses, but they do not give him a moral right to tyrauize over other people
1'HF. income tax was repealed.'' suys the New York World, "in 1871 by a single vote in the senate, as a part of the policy of wealth to "protect" itself. During the period of tumult following the war the attention of the people was diverted from economic questions to uritters of sentiment ami passion. But the attention of tee plutocrat is never diverted from his pocket. Whether it was to "protect his interest" in the Pacific railroads at the public expense. get rid of taxes, or to secure bounties for himself through taxing other people, the rich mau who looks after "the politics of business" never failed to camp in Washington when emigres? was in session.
One after another the taxes on wealth and luxury were repealed, until nearly the whole burden of the cost of government rested upon consumption—the necessaries of the people. Now the most list and productive and the least burdensome of taxes—that on incomes —is to be restored. It will never again be repealed. No political party, for the next ten years at least, will dare to propose its abrogation.
Tin: Terre Haute fair leads the world in the amount offered for harness racing this year. Its six days' meeting will be held August 13-1S. inclusive, and the amount hung up is no lets than 690,000 for twenty-four races. Buffalo offers 675,000 for twelve days' races Detroit, 670.000 Hartford. 655,000 New York. 611,000 and Cieueland 6-11,000. These will be the leading meetings of the year, and Terre Haute leads with the largest sum ever offered in the world, and to be trotted for over the finest track in this or any othor country. %,
1
.1 -L'WW.'UHJ'.—B-
CataiTh Cannot be Cured
with local applications, as they cannot reach the scat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must take internal remedies. II all,s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall's llatarrli Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular pre scription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing Catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CiiK\i:.v & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
Sold bv Druggists, price 75c.
Partial deafness is very common.
Attention .Fanners!
If you have a horse that has poor appetite, is stupid, hair rough, run down in llesh, and out of fix generally, use Morris' English Stable Powder and you will be surprised at the result. One package will add ten dollars to the value of a poor run-down horse, colt or mule. Full pound packages 25cts.—5 for 31.09. Soldby Nye & J5ooe.
How is Tins?
Something unique even in these days of mammoth premium offers, is the latest effort of Stafford's Magazine, a NewYork monthly of home and general reading.
The proposition is to send the Magazine one year for one dollar, the regular subscription price, and in addito send each subscriber fifty-two complete novels during the twelve months one each week.
Think of it. You receive a new and complete novel, by mail, post paid, every week for lifty-two week, and in addition you get the magazine once a month for twelve months, all for one dollar. It is an offer which the publishers can only afford to make in the confident exceptation of getting a hundred thousand new subscribers. Among the authors in the coming series are, Wilkie Collins, Walter Besant, Mrs. Oliphant, Mary Cccil Ilay, Florence Marryat, Anthony Trollope, A.ConanDoylo, Miss Braddon, Captain Marryat, Miss Thackery and' Jules Verne. If yon wish to take advantage of this unusuBl opportunity, send one dollar for Stafford's Magazine,' one year. Your tirst copy of the magazine, and your first number of the firtytwo novels (one each week) which you are to receive during the year will be eent you by return mail. Remit by P, O. Address
STAFFORD PUBLISHING CO., Publishers of STAFFORD'S MARAKI.NK. P. O Box 22G1. New York, N. Y. riease mention this papor. .! mr24 ly
Jfl
AVOID THE ANNOYANCE
(liven away with every £3.50 h.u. or. sold for 20 cents per pair. -.•
W.
Stoves and Dishes.
IN STEP WITH THE SEASONS!
Is the mau who gets his
Spring Outfit Now
(Mir placf is lull of Styles lor spring In'
SUITS, HATS AND CAPS!
Light colors and dark. AH light weights. Thoce arc so'many cloths that wc can please vuti. We le ul in fashions. The 1'i'ice i* nil right, too...,,..
JAKE JOEL.
i.auie.s. (if havmg your hat blown ofl bv •^-curing th«
PATENT HAT FASTENER
MRS. J. A. HARLAN.
If \oi want a thoroughly good-
Sewing aoh ine
-.RE MB El I-
The White
Wlie: vou are looking for a sewing machine tnat is Jilted lor all kinds of ,v„ sewing buy the While.
Plows and Cultivators.
Hardware Department
O'Brien
Remember that in several hundred families of Montgomery county you will find they use the White Sewing Machine.
E.
NICHOLSON
AGENT, WEST. MAIN STREET.
I-^oolicss Elegant!
71
Large Arm Itoeker, Cane Seat,, Only $1.75. Bedroom Suits $12.50.
Wagons
duti fr
mm
I L|^HII
A full size Bed Couch, covered Plush or Velvet Carpet (not common lirussells) for a few days $10.00. Worth elsewheie $14 or $15.
An endless variety at very low prices.
A. prices jou never hoard of before. Remember our
Where we alway.-, show the best goods at lowest living prices!
'.Are right to the front and we are selling them.
ZACK MAHORNEY & SONS.
every facility for
r^tf£~\Cl.vk:.8.* Blolorr. Elocution AM Fbytfc*] culture required in &i) oounee &nd without extra
IS-kHS? iiniwtHNi I
i|y IUCD ©iTlf
At lnrln|t(Mi a Ivbviti o( Indlanspolla
