Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 22 September 1894 — Page 4

For S40. Our

t:KIl)v

A ROOR SHOT,

Mny MHAH tin? turcet, lint no OHO wod inIHH tin ••joyiiHMif of a iSumiuer MitiiiK whll«» the WinconBin Ontrnl oflVrn HO muny inducements to TH« Health-Seeker, Hunter and Fiehernmu.

/^atTCr. fyiwS-

di ffi fabljs eic .^Wrife: fo', '^Jfti'QPON .Gc'nl. Abe"nt|^ .AMLWAUK

Liebig COMPANY'S

An invaluable product made from tho finest beef the \vor.ld produces.

AS WE ADVERTISE!

Extract of Beef.

Children Cry for

Pitcher's Castoria.

SULKY PLOW will lift straight up with one le\cr

and one linger. The world cannot show its equal on

points. TURNBULL is the lig2test running wagon in the world. Stop and examine them.

Lowest Prices

On Hardware. Stoves, and Tinware in the city at

COHOON & FISHER

EKANHOOD RESTORED!

Thousands can testify that we do as we a^ree. JFor four weeks we hare sold goods at cost. 01 course we cannot always do that, but we can and will show you a line of ^oods as

CHEAP AS THE CHEAPEST!

The fall season is here and you must have a Heavy Suit, a new Overcoat, Unde.iwe.-ir and prepare for

(old

Weather. It is good policy to

patronize those who have treated you fairly and vou can trust. Our

Stock is Complete

With the best that can be tound, and all we ask is a carefnl examination, and if we meet your expectations we earnestly solicit a continuance ot past patronage.

LEE S. WARNER,

ONE PRICE CLOTHIER, MERCHANT TAILOR, HATTER AND FURNISHER.

Watch your Post Office for Daily Weather report,

-WE HAVE

Those WO Buggies

If a A 1

Now in stock and finished and made better than ever. Don't ler anv one sell you one for §75 when you can buy ot

Cohoon & Kisher

EPH JOEL'S OLD STAND CORNER MAIN AND WASHINGTON STREET

20

practical

This wonderful'rem

pimiaiiieeil i..i-,irui..l ierv..ii* discuses, such ns Wenk Memory, Loss of liriila nwur,jUfiKlacln'.U akeiulm .!', I.nst Manhood, Nightly Emissions, Nervousiii'^Nttll drains antl loss ot |Mmerin (.loneraltve Organs of either sex caused

IIBtOllKAIiD AilEll IblMi. For sale in (_'nm losM-vine, Itnl./bv STAN KKKN'V.iiml |.y T. L. BHO\V.\ a'son" Druggists."

Taft's Dental Parlors

i.") West Washington St.. (New ('ordora JSllildIng) Indianapolis, illd.

The Largest and

Best equipped otlice

in the country.

Teeth Extracted Positively without Pain.

Crown and Bridge work,.., .Ccrinan spoken.

A. Mckechnie, M'er'r.

M. L. Ilprt,

•vho recently purchased the

& a to

MILL]NEEY

has just received the latest

styles in Fall Millinery, and

can sell 'you Hats cheaper

than anyone.

liecause she pays no rent.

Call and see her.

STOVES!

Js our talk now. A full line of heating and cook stoves at prices to make them sell. A mammoth stock of new and second hand Furniture and house furnishings. Bring us your

Second Hand Goods-

Moved to

1 2 6

X. Green St. Don't

get in the wrong place.

J. K. P. Thompson.

PLUMBERS AND GAS FITTERS.

have an expert plumber and make a specialty of piping houses for water privileges. We contract work all over the

County. See us before buying a

-:PUMP~:

Iron Tumps, for deep or shallow wells.

WILLIAMS BROS., J2i S.

Green Street

Tho Country Is Entering Upon an Era ot" Unexampled Prosperity

And the Occupation of the Calamity Howler Is tioue.

KepubUoan Tapers ami Republican Lenders Acknowledge That the Advent of

Good Timet* lias Come Through the Enactment of the New Turilt'—Factories

Resume Operations in all Directions

and Give Steady Kinployment to Labor. The Hanks Let

LOOM*

of Their Hoarded

Treasure and llusiuess Kverywhere Ilegins to Boom—Democrat ie Times at

Hand*

Republican orators aiul Republican paper? have had a great deal to say in the past year about "Democratic times," though all the while the countr\- was suffering from the effects of Republican legislation.

This talk has suddenly ceased. The reason is not-hard to discover. At last the Democrats in congress, after a long and desperate struggle against the Republican obstructionists, have succeeded iu placing genuine Democratic legislation 011 the national statute books. The consequent- benefits were instantly discernible. Business, which had so long groaned and sickened under the blighting influence of laws enacted by Republican congresses for the benelit of the protected barons, the trusts, the combines and the gra-iiing corporations, immediately began to revive wheels in the factories began to revolve wage differences between employer and employe were quickly adjusted and the toiling masses not only resumed work but also realized an additional benefit in the increased purchasing pnwrof their wages given by the reduced tariff duties.

The revival of busine-s and industry in the past 30 days is really phenomenal. Factory towns are manifesting their old activity, merchants ave pushing their trade and the banks are already putting into circulation the money which has so long been idle in their vault*.

Democratic times have come sure enough. Depew's Testimony.

And they have come to stay. Business men recognize it. mechanics and laboring men recognize it. farmers recognize it yes, even the Republican politicians who have been doing nothing but howl "calamity" fort wo years recognize it and are ceasing their dismal croakings. Here is Chauncey Depew. who has himself interviewed in Europe on the situation. Depew says:

The settlement of the tariff question is the beginning of a new era of prosperity. There is

110

end of idle money which will

now seek active employment. 111 le~s hail two years the panic of Is!i3-'.i4 will he forgotten. Mines, furnaces, mills and faetories will be in full operation, railroads will be conveying profitable traffic and the movement of internal commerce and the free circulation of currency or the equivalent in business and wajjes will certainly increase the demand for everyi liimc produced upon the farm or el.-ewilr-e. \\\. are rijie for a loiiK period of prosperity in business, good wanes and full employment for labor.

However, this testimony of Depew wasn't necessary to inform the people of the United States that times were better since the passage uf the tariff bill, nor to convince them that we were, as a nation—thanks to the wisdom of Democratic legislation—about to enter

011

an

era of unexampled ami genuine prosperity a prosperity which, being founded on right principles, is bound to endure. Tho telegraphic columns of the papers are full of it. Every day the telegraph brings news of the resumption of operations by big factories, the establishment of new industries and the improved condition of trade. The St. Louis GlobeDemocrat, one of the ablest us well as one of the most intensely partisan Republican papers in the land, says of the situation:

Two or three months hence the improvement in business will be so marked and so persistent that the croakers of today will be confounded and humiliated. Partisan capital cannot be made out of the gloomy vaticinations which emanate from certain Republican journals and statesmen at this time.

The Improvement In Indiana.

In Indiana the. improved business situation is most marked. The Indianapolis .Journal, intensely Republican, contains daily testimony to the improved condition of trade. I11 its weekly

re­

view *|f the situation in Indianapolis are found these statements, among others: The Rock wood Manufacturing couipaiiv reports business improving. This week it shipped a sawmill to Ifayti, one of the West India islands, one to Kent ucky, one to Tennessee and two to Missouri. It also made a large shipment of pul!c\ to |u. Pratt & Whitney company, liar lord, Conn. All the depart incut* are running full time, and the company is especially busy in its foundry, having just honked several large orders for gray iron castings. love Brothers, proprietors of t|M. Indiana cotton mill, are preparing to increase their production by putting in Kid more looms.

Although the cjumers of fruit and vegetables will not put up two-thirds as many goods this season as last owing to the drought which cut oil' crops, they arc just now pushing business, giving employment to some 1,"IIHI men and women.

The manufacturers ot bicycles are much surprised that- their business is keeping up so well. Kindly all are shut down in August and .September, but now lo-v are running with fair forces.

The Hoosier woolen mills arc running. They have orders to keep 1 hem busy the next live weeks, and hope before that time to have orders to keep them running in their present manner for a longer time.

Furniture dealers report an improved inquiry for new goods and, as one of them puts It, can begin to see a little clear sky

President Bennett of the Indianapolis Stove oompnny says the works an now fairly busy iind tho company is well satisfled with tbe results of its business in \ugust.

Knight & Jiljson say they have 110 reason to ooiajualn Of tbelr.business. ^PSWCUW&ves of threshers and enin this ditfy, of whiofr thero are a

5) number, lire just closing their business vear, and find to their surprise that, fully

as many engines and thrashers have been Isold this year

as

in the year ending Aug.

'tfl.lS'.Kt. The Diamond plateglass factory at Elwood has started up the remaining departments of the plant, and it is now running at full capacity. I At Muncie Mariug. Hart & Co., windowglassmakers, starred with 250 hands

Sunday night Ball Bros, started started Monday night- with S50 hands and all the greeuglass factories with full forces.

At (rreenfield the Samuel R. Wells and the Columbia windowglass works have resumed, giving employment to .'500 hands.

At Anderson tho Riverview Farm Implement company of Brautford, Out., has secured a location and broken ground for its factory. It will employ 200 hands.

Pittsburg capitalists have completed arrangements for establishing at- Anderson a tinplate factory to employ 500 hands.

The wire flail factory at Anderson is working night and day, employing 00 hands. All the windowglass factories start up on the 20th and every factory in Anderson will then be running.

At Anderson the Anderson iron and lx.lt works resumed operations last week with its old force of 250 men.

At Noblesvillc the American Carbon works were awarded a contract for i,000,000 carbons for the Milwaukee electric company and not only employed all of its old force without reduction of wage? but will have to employ more men.

At Cicero the Modes company glass works resumed last week with nun amino cut in wages.

A Philadelphia dispatch to the Republican Indianapolis Journal says: There was a general resumption in the glass business in South Jersey today, and by Wednesday then will hardly be an idle glass factory at Millville. Clayton. Will iamstown, (ilassboro. Malaga, Bridgnon and Woodbury. All the factories went into full blast. The coming season pr ises to he the best for years in tbe trade, and the outlook for continued work throughout the season is excellent. The work is being started

011

a very satisfactory

basis to all. Most of the larger factories have orders now on their books to ran throughout the year.

Money Again Moving.

1

Not only is there a boom in the manufacturing business, but all kinds of trade is flourishing and the bank statements are daily bearing testimony to the trade revival. The Evansville Courier, in an able editorial review of the situation, says:

The Courier a few days ago showed that in the wool schedule alone the people were relieved by the bill of -?141,000,00o a year which has heretofore been taken from their pockets and given ft) the woolen manufacturers. This is the largest item of saving in the bill but it is doubly effective because while free wool reduces the burdens of the people to that extent it also takes from the arch of protection its keystone. All business men of the country fully appreciate this fact. They understand that the long reign of protection is nearing an end and that the most ordinary business prudence requires of them that they adopt their future business policy to the new conditions inaugurated by the new law. It is a significant proof of this statement that the loans made by the banks of the country were larger in extent last week than during the same week of Is!'.'. This result is a most gratifying surprise. No one doubted ihat there would be marked improvement over the same week ol last year, but that it should surpass the same week of 1SH2, eight months before the panic set in, exceeds .the expectations

01"

those who were the most sanguine in forecasting the immediate results of the enactment of the new tariff law. There is a gain of nearly ?0,00n,i)00 in the loans and discounts ot last week as compared with the same date iu lS'.tt, and again of nearly •Si.orio.uoo as compared with the same date in lsjci. The figures as shown by the last statement of the banks in the New York Clearing House association showed a total of loans and discounts to the amount of £lSi,K7!,iW. The figures for the corresponding date in 1 s'.jy were *4O0.1I','J.:(HII while those for ls were StST,H] ,700. Tlaonly year since ISst in which the loans and discounts have exceeded £400,000,1 KX) was in lSSii, so that as a result of the new tariff law the total loans and discounts at the date of the latest statement of the New York clearing house is the largest that the country has known since 1884. Of course this increase in the loans and discounts argues that there must also have been an increase in the deposits and the same statement .shows that the deposits were larger at the beginning of September, ltW. than at the ljeginning of the same month during any of the past 10 years. The increase over deposits of a year ago is .?212,000,000 and over 1V.I2 is $70,000,000.

Axministers For Knglniiri.

Another feature of the business revival worthy of consideration, is tinrapid increase of foreign trade which had been so discouraged and depressed through the malign influences of the McKinley bill. Touching on this is the following special dispatch from the Indianapolis Journal:

From reports received at the state department it appears that theTnited States has at least turned the tables on England and Ls now shipping to that country carpets to tbe value of nearly

*"110.1100

annually. To make the case still stronger, It is stated that these carpets are the famous Axministers, supposed heretofore to be produced in perfection onlv in England, and the trade is steadily increasing. "Tlicso Democratic Tlinex."

The country has fallen 011 "Democratic times sure enough. And within ao days the rejoicing thereat will be loud and general. The greatest growth ever known by the business and manufacturing intere.sts of the United States was from 1S50 to 1800, under a socalled free trade tariff. With the dawn of another period of reasonable tariffs has already come the assurance of great prosperity. That we are 011 the threshold of good times 110 one who gives a moment's thought to the subject can doubt. Cap]tal and industry are now convinced that j\j('jvnik*visni is forowr deiid mid free from the protection slavery that has so long hampered their efforts, they are now prepared to bring about that universal prosperity to which the unlimited resources and the inexhaustible energy of this country entitles it. "Democratic times" are at hand.

Why?

If Democrats caused the hard times why in bloomin1 blazes don't times continue to grqw worse instead of better?— Anderson Democrat.

The Magic Touch

or

Hood's Sarsaparilla

You smile at the idea. But if you are a sufferer from Dyspepsia

And Indigestion, try a bottle, and liefore yon have taken half a dozen doses you will involuntarily think, and nu doubt exclaim,

That Just Hits It!"

"That soothing effect, is a matfc touch!"' Hood's Nirsaparilla gentlv tones and strengthens the stomach at.d digestive organs, invigorates tho liver, creates a natural, healthy desire for food, gives refreshing sleep, am} in short, raises the health tone of the entire system.<p></p>Hood's

Kemember

Ss

Cures

Hood's Pills' are liver ills, constipation] HUousucss. ja unit ice, sirk headache, indlEtstion

Elevator Company Sues for SHo.OOO. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Aug1. n.i.—Tho State Klevator company is suing the city of Minneapolis for 885,000 damage*. It is alleged its elevator has been made insecure by the removal of dirt by the Great Northern road. The city is sued on the ground that the railway company was granted per* mission to perform the work.

Notorious Horsetliiof Caught.

OSIIKOSII, Wis.. Aug 30.—B. BV Lund is was arrested here for horse stealing ten years ago in Ohio. lie has served two terms for a similar offense and eight j*ears ago sawed his way out of the jail at Greenville, Ohio, lie was taken back to Greeh* ville.

Old boldierg of Green Custle, luil.

GKEEN CASTLE, lnd., Aug. 3A—Tho joint camp tires of the Fourteenth, Forty-third, Seventy-first, and One Hundred and Twenty-third Indiana volunteer regiments was held in Meharry hall last night. The regiments have brought together over 400 old members.

Gimi. AlKer's Nephew Drowned. HAVMHAI., MO., Aug. —Alexander, the 1-'-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. M. Alger, was drowned in the Mississippi river yesterday while in swimming with other boys. The body was recovered a short time afterward. C. M. Alger is a brother of Getv. Resell Alger.

Veterans at Clin\.»n, Iowa.

CLINTON, Iowa, Aug. 30.— The seventh annual reunion of the Jackson County Veterans' association opened yesterday at l'reston with 3,000 people in attendance. It is ^he largest gathering in the history of the association.

Families Forced from Their liornw.

BAY CITY, Mich., Aug. 30.—Hfjfrht families living in Heaver to vnahjp have been forced out of their ho tufa by forest fires, and sought she ter Ik Kawkawin village.

THE CHEAPEST

riaoc in the State to get a good

Watch

O

Clock

AT TilK

10'

1,

Jewelry .Store, South Washington Sircet.

KM/) )\v H'POSITE POSIT) I'FICK.

Spectacles Eye-GIasses

Till", liKST OX EARTH.

A. HuLsinan, Export.

i'MIMSTKATOirs SAI.K.

Notice Is lioruby Kiven Unit the uuclerHignod immstrntor ot the ostnt« ol Georgo p. Jones eeea.^-ii, will s.,11 as public auction in front Of hfj ^uurt House. Cnnvfonlsville, Indiana, ou

SATlildlAY, SKI'TKMKKK in, ]S!)1, onai |ini|iorty el said decedent, con.•istiiicol household and liiuhen furniture, one •dp luiKgy. ouo bruakiiu.' plow. etc. A credit of lorce months will lie givi-n on a 11 sums of five dollars and over, purelia-t-r giving noto with approved security, udcr live dollars, cash.

I-•)• COI'PACK. Adm.

Dated August '*(1, 1S! 11

M. D. WIIITH, \V)I, M. HK •:KVES. ClIAS. D. OKKAlt

WHITE, REEVES S OREAR, ATTORNEYS AT LAW

10: ,(.. KAtiT MAIN STREET. have a laruo amount of homo money to loan in sum* ot 4:500 up to $10,000, from 5^ to BK per com. on larm and city property. Also for hale a largo numbor of farms ami city residences at a bargain.