Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 22 September 1894 — Page 2

ATTOKt- EY&

M. K. IN.OOFELTEK. CLAUDE THOMPSON.

CLODFEITbR & THOMKOS,

LAWYERS.

Will do a general practice iu all Courts.

Office over .Smith Steele's a rug store, fouth Washington Mreot.

G. W. PAUL

(Over

il. \V. BKl'NKK

PAUL & BKUNER

torney s- A t- Law

Often South sidoof Urc-u ?trr.'IOVYR Znok MHornoy's hardware store.

HURLEY

& HURLEY.

AT muxKYS AT W.

First National liauK.i

Rive prompt atteir'on

J© UN 1.. SlliU'.M.

nil iepai

InMi-

IM'SS Intrustcil to ilium. Proper ul iee uiven in nil on#".' 'I nwing will.-, contract-, .settiint: estatos. law suits, partition suit-, t'ii'»cin-',ire of inoi'tf ai:t's. ore. Abatr.ic'.s earwu.ly i-xummt'tl, jvtld money to loan.

ATTOKNKV AT I.AW.

lioom No. -J. .S. \V. Corner Main and

Washington »trfel. special attention to Conveyancing.

VORIS & STILWELL

INSURANCE AGENTS.

FARM INSURANCE

A specialtv. We represent tin- Rc) al. Continent .1, Ohio Farmers, and seventeen other Companies.

F. HOFFMAN, 0. E.

iKormorly of Sharj) & Hoffman. :-V

ARCHITECT AND SURVEYOR. I I \NS Sl'liVEYS

ANN

A E N S

Northwest Corner Main and Washington Stre-»t.

LOANS.

First Morto Loans

DO

41-2 Per Cent.,

Interest Payable uuunally. Apply to

C. W, WRIGHT

Money to Loan

At 7 per cent, annual interest v'thout commission.

•'ARM AND CITY PROPERTY lor sale or exchange. HOUSES to rent.

CUMBERLAND & MILLER,

118 West Main Street.

CRAWFORDSVILLE IND.

W. W. MORGAN. W. L. LEE

MORGAN & LEE. vGEHERAL INSURANCE AGENTS-:-

MONEY TO LOAN

At Lowest Rates.

ABSTRACTS OF TITLE

Furnished on short notice. CITY ami FARM PROPERTY for sale. Office: Ornlxiun Illock, N. Washiligtou street

Crawfordsville. Ind.

ABSTRA' BOOKS

^'•A. C. Jcnnirson's abstract hooks contain a copy, of every deed of record co every tract'of land in the county, as welfas to every unsatisfied Mortgage or lien

Years of labor and many thousand dollars have been spent in making my books complete aad helpful in every way.

My 20 years experience aided by these unrivaled facilities in tracing titles enable me to Haiin that mv ollice is the host place to have DEEDS, MORTGAGES, LEASES, and CONTRACTS prepared, as well as reliable

Abstracts oi Title.

6 BARBERS 6

All the time and the only".

31? A ]V St

In the city at the

Y. M. C. A.

BARBER SHOP....

FRHK M'GALIP.

•THE REVIEW.

11Y

IP. X. LUSE,

sajiD or a

One year, in the conf Oneyear.ontof the co-• .. Inquire at Office foi Advertlm^' u*'

BliOOKSHIK1-:.

f. 00

1 10

SEPTEMBER 22, 1894.

STATE TICKET.

-retftry vi'Mutr -W. It. Xi KKS.

-A.

iitor of Stat.' K1M1 T. FANN IV 'i. easurer of Miit**—MoUiiAN CHANi' KK. Artorney ti^neral—FK \N Is -M. t-ll*TI 'ITU. i'Tk of Supreme Ouirt—C. W. \YKI.l..\ \N. «I Mge Supreme t'otirt.

1st District—(«K'KGE

F. 1UNKHAKDT. Ju-Im? Supreme District— .lUSi I'll

s. DAILY. ^uporiiitt'mlfnt Puhti«' I iistruotion—C HAs. '»V. THOM A*v

Stale StntiMk'i iu AI.KXANDKU FLLTuN. State K. •*. ODD AN

CONGRESSIONAL TICKET. For 4.:t!i£iv.«.»man

Di^tri -t.—KLLJAli V.

COUNTY TIUKHT.

Hepresou in live DA VI1) M'CAI.I.ITl-.Ii. Surveyor—I.El'. S. 1)1 KHAM Pros. Attorney—II K.N HY 1). YANcl.EAVE Auditor—.! A 1 .loHNSi »N. Treasurer—HEN WAHIHN'I »N. Shorlff—MlI.TuN M'Kl.j.. Coroner—1. S. 11EATTY. CotnmUstouer, 1st Mstrict—t.Et'KGE COllNS. Conunisalouer, District—SAM I"EI. li FIS11 EH.

TOWNSHIP TIBKET.

Trustee—BEN T. WELCH. Assessor—CYHL'S THOMPSON. Justice of the I'eace—J. G. OVKKTuN. CoastaVile-JOHN PATTERSON.

BFTEUKINRID&E DEFEATED.

Thn eontept for tho democratic selection for .Representative iu Congress in the Lexington. Kentucky, district has attracted much public attention within the past few weeks, and particularly on account of Breckinridge. The contest was between Breckinridge, Owen and Settle, and has involved vnuch personal feeling and caused some bloodshed. The primary election took place on Saturday and resulted iu the selection of Owen.

It would have been disgraceful to the State and district to have chosen Breckinridge after the facts of his conduct and licentiousness with Miss Pollard had be.-n brought out through the long sensational trial at Washington City last spring. The trial showed him to be a hvpocrit. a seducer and a man whose conduct in any community would have involved him in trouble and brought upon him the disgrace which he must now keenly feci in the defeat at the elections last Saturday. Ilisgall aod presumption in otl'ering himself as a candidate for the suffrages of decent people after the exposures of his life had come out were remarkable. The rebuke he has met with should and. doubtless, will retire him permanently from political life. The people of his district have acted on the line of morality and honor in closing ut his political career, and the public the country over will approve of the verdict of last Saturdav.

THF. democrats who were kicking six months ago are now the most enthusiastic democrats you find. Three months asio they were 'inpatient because they did not appreciate the task of overthrowing the trusts that have been fed by the republican party for thirty yearn. But now since McKinleyisn is overthrown they are happy.

For a starter, taritf taxation has been reduced thirty per cent. This means a saving to the tax-payers of the United States of at least ?oC0,000,000. not a dollar of which went into the government treasury under the McKinley law. But this is not all. The present Congress has levied a tax on incomes, thereby making wealth pay a larger share of the expenses (if maintaining the government. Another thing that pleases the voters is the repeal of the law exempting greenbacks from taxation. Hereafter men will not be found hoarding greenbacks to avoid their just share of taxes.

THE HRST GUN.

The republicans fired their first gun of the campaign, as they termed it, at Music llall on Saturday night. The explosion of this gun was not loud, was a sort of Chinese fire cracker, and did no harm. It was tired by "General" Grosvener, of Ohio, who came along distance to enlighten the people as to hew they should vote at the next election. His speech was simply a rehash of political matter to be found in republican newspapers, and littlo new was advanced. While the people will know that the new tariff law is bound to be more favorable to them than the McKinley law, (irosvenor was particular not to raontion this. Tho democracy here can stand many such "guns" as Grosvenor lire6 and be perfectly indifferent to the rosults, as they will do no harm. His speech created little enthusiasm even among his own party.

DEMOCRATIC prospects for success at the polls in November are brightening, and a full party vote will give ue tho victory.

BOUNTY BENEFITS-

One of the meanest and most unjust featuiesof the tariff law is Ihe large bounties paid to sugar industries. A private enterprise or corporation that I has to be kept alive by taxation wrung from the people has no right at ail to exist. Its abandonment and demisf I under such circumstances is in the iuI tereet of the

people.

During the year eudiug the .'50th day of last June flO.StVJ.SOtj were taken from the Treasury of the United States aud I paid to the sugar pointers of Louisiana.

The total amount paid—including I Louisiana and a few oiher States- was 81,J.09 ,.SM».

The cane sugar bounty of

over cl l.WO.OOO was divided am«ng ."iTS producers, thus making an average of 610,0110 to each producer. The beet

sugar bounty, which amounted to SSu'2.-

courage one industry why not another? Why should sugar have precedence over bread? Wheat has not much profit in its raising. Why not pay a bounty to the wheat raisers to encourage them? Tho whole system of wringing money from the government under the pretense of encouraging business enterpriaes is wrong, is selfish, is class legislation. Had it not have been for the paid tools of the sugar trust it could have been abolished. Let us hope that the time is not far remote when it will be.

THE "H0RSL" BUSINESS.

It is remarkable at the attention paid now to horse raising and the improvement of stock of that kind. There are vast sums of money invested in it, and it would seem to be the business of many thousands of persons. It seems to grow aud is becoming ono of the leading industries. Fast horses command fabulous sums of money. Thirty years ago a horse that could cover a mile in '2:10 was a wonder. Now there are thousands of horses in all parts of the country that do it easily. It is the result of care in breeding. Since then horses of speed have reduced the time until now it is down to 2:0-1, '2:03

l-to

V, aid

only the other day a New York horse ••Robert J." reduced it still lower, covering a mile in Q:0l1 Eventually, aud before two years, horsemen say that a mile will be made in '2 minutes. In these days of push and energy it need not surprise the public if such should prove to be a fact, it is, however, only after all a matter of sport. That is all this fast training of horses amounts to. There is no need aside from this of horses covering the ground so rapidly. It is solely the dollars in it to be won in wagers that is looked after. Horses of such speed are not needed in commercial pursuits.

A "CHRISTIAN" EXPRESSION,

One Lewis, a man who through some hook or crook, has been permitted to follow the calling of a minister of the Methodist church, said at the conference at Lafayette the other day in discussing some question relating to the prohibition and sale of liquor, that dynamite should be applied to the demo cratic party and it should be blown to hell. Tho natural expression to follow in reply to such an utterance with many would be

hell with such Christians."

The Bishop presiding, it was 6aid. promptly rebuked him and asked that such expiessions be uot uttered, but it showed the animus of the mac, the bent of his mind and tho real feelings of such a creature. It is a pity for any religious denomination that such beings as "Rev."' Lewis are permitted to have positions of consequence, as the utterances of a crank and hypocrite are too often taken as the views of the entire clergy of the church. "Rev." Lewis should bo stationed as a missionary to China or some far-oil' country where he may be able to do much more good than he ever can in this.

CHAUM'V M. DEI-EW expresses the common sense of the country when he says that the panic was largely "sentimental." In other words, the panic was due to excitement of the imagination wrought upon by unscrupulous calamity mongers for the purpose of manufacturing party capital, with cynical disregard of consequences. What did it matter to tho authors and architects of industrial panic and ruin that mills should be closed and thousands of workingmeL thrown out of employment, provided their partisan ends could be served? But the panic-mongers have done their worst and Mr. Depew has again rightly gauged public sentiment in predicting that "it will 6oon be practically expressed in unbounded confidence in the future."

RKI'I'ULICAN newspapers chuck wonderfully over the elections in Maine and Vermont, both of which States went republican last week, and for that matter never went any other way, and probably never will. The interests of the east compel it to go for protection and tho enriching of the few at the expense of the many. We cannot see why a people favoring that policy would ever vote any other way.

THE list of t*he members of tho A. P. A. organization at Terre Haute, numbering about 400 was made public a few da} ago, and nearly all of th'-m were found to be republicans TIN- will be found to be ihe case elsewhere hat members of it who have a? democrats will be found be -f a \t-ry v.cakkneed description ati ueVer leoaoie when voting time comes in their support the regular demncr.-itic .ticket.,

THE populists and republicans in Ala bama hav- united in oppi'Sitio'i to the democrats of that State. They will accomplish the usual result—defeat for themselves Tin se fusion tickets generally go that direction whiehevei party engages in them, as they are generally the combination of sore-heads who are desperate for spoils and will undertake

n)osl

anything to obtain them.

00U, was divided among seven producers, making an average of FL'il.TlJ to each THE usual lying reports of the numproducer. hers in attendance at political meetings

The people need sugar They also this year are coming iu. You can tell need bread, and of the two the former them by such expressions as "b actua could lirst be dispensed with. Now why count," "more than half of whom were not pay a bounty to producers of wheat? ladies." "a wheezy old tife and .1 um," It is certain that one class should not and such like expressions. Reporters of be favored ovt tho other. If you en-! these meetings should be made to take

oa'h before telling anything about them ami their reports might then attain to some degree of truth.

HELEN M. GOTOAK IS engaged in a $'2o,000 law suit with a Massachusetts politician, the suit being brought by her. Most persons would consider that the suit she was a principal in at Lafayette teu or more yvars ago furnished her enough notoriety to last a life tiu-i-. It would satisfy most, people.

Pi AIN A. D. ACKM AN. the prohibition candidate for Representative) of the 3th district, has become "Hon. Willis Jackman'' since he started out on his canvass. Accounts from various parts of the district, always have it "Hon." iu reports of his meetings.

AT Owen6boro, Kentucky, tho republican nomineo for Congress was caught playing cards for money in a gambling house. To belong to the "God and morality" party is one thing, to practice morality another, but this man is no doubt a fair sample of his party.

TL*KN out this afternoon at the Court House and hear Brookshire. Everybody is invited. Mr. 15. will furnish facts relating to the long struggle to secure the new tariff law. not always reported correctly by Washington correspondents. V•

HON. Tuns, JOHNSTON has been renominated for Congress from the Cleveland, (Ohio), district. Johnson is a manufacturer of considerable capital, yet an out-spoken free trader. He asks no protection from any source, aud would grant none.

OWEN'S plurality over Breckinridge iu the Lexington, (Kentucky), district is but 30G, but it is enough to silence the latter probably for all time to come.

WITH bated breath the public is anxiously waiting to hear some of ex-Presi-dent Harrison's key-notes of the campaign.

About .'3,000 marriage ceremonies are performod each day throughout tho world

D('iiliio.ss Cannot bo Cured,

By local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the rfar. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inllanied coidition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inllanied you have a riinibling sound orimperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed. Deafness is the result, ami unless the inllarnation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is noting but an inllanied condition ol the mucous surfaces.

We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness caused by catarrh tfiat cannot he cured by Hali's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars: free.

Y. J. CHENEY & Co.. Toledo, 0.

E^-Sold by all druggists, 75c.

Fisher and Fisherman :ame fr the name of a business occupation, hi 1 Fish, Fisk and a few more havv the same origin,

Home and Abroad.

Il is the duty of everyone, whether at home or traveling lor picture or business, to equip ^himself wiiii the remedy which will keep up strength and prevent illness, and to cure such ills as are liable to come upon all in every da", life. For instance Hood's SarsapariUa as a general tonic, and to keep the blood pure and less liable to absorb the germs of disease, will be well nigh invaluable. Change of drinking water often causes serious trouble, especially if one has been used toa spring water in the country. From a few drops to a teaspoonful of Hood's SarsapariUa iu a tumbler of water will prevent the water having any injurious effect.

Hood's Vegetable Pills, as a cathartic, cause no discomfort, no disturbance, no loss of sleep, but assist the dicestive organs, so that satisfactory results are effected iua natural and regular manner.

.N I TI

'ver Citizens' Nat. Bank.

I his shows that the lad appreciates our advertisments.

IN STBJP WITH THE SEASONS!

Is tile man who gets his

Fall Outfit Now

Isurrs,

cur plaee is lull of style, for Fall iu-

HATS

AND CAPS!

Light coluis and tlurk. A 1 go el weights. There are so many ciotlis that we can jilcasc you. We le id in la-:nons. The price is all right, too.

JAKE JOEL.

Now Is The Time

AND.

Nieliolso a 2 Sons?

Is the Best place in the City to get tlu

Best Cabinets.

& SONS'

I

—Ifvoi vvatK a thoicugi.lv goou

''Wis**

Sewing Machine

-REMEMBER-

Wher yo'u are looking for a sewing machine mat 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.

Kn."t

V—r-sfe-"5

S'

GROCERIES?

Will supply then,I,at Vour Product- will buy morejgoods at 1 rv than ,u .i.hu place in towi.. -^e nini before selling your Produce.

M» Street

White

I he next day she makes us a visit, is surprised at our low pi ices and makes her purchase.