Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 29 September 1894 — Page 6
Lowest
escripfivc
^PONtvGcnkpa MILWAUrVCC
Liebig COMPANY'S
CORN. CORN. CORN
Everywhere we hear the cry. "The uiost bountiful crop of Corn ever raised in the county." Some of the ears must be very large. \\'e want to see who holds the banner 12 ears, aud for th:it reaeon we offer the following inducements to the farmers.
For the Largest 12 Ears'of Corn.
For the 2d Largest 12 Ears
For the 3d Largest 12 Ears
This rem will be weighed correctly before your eyes, placed in our north show window, your name and weights kept by us. When a proper time has elapsed for all to have a chance to display what they can do in raising fine corn, we will present the lucky ones with their presenta..mpln the meantime do not forget yourselves, or to tell your friends that the
Is still up with the times with a new and extremely choice line of tin: best made
.hat be purchased in the markets.. Call and examine them and be convinced.
LEE S. WARNER,
ONE PRICE CLOTHIER, MERCHANT TAILOR, HATTER AND FURNISHER.
Watch your Post Office for Daily Weather report.
-AVE HAVE-
Those $40 Buggies
Now in stock and finished and made better than ever. Don't lei an)- one sell you one for $75 when you can buy of
Cohoon & Fisher
Tor 840. Our ''KID" SULKY PLOW will lift straight up with one lever and one finger. The -world cannot show its equal on 20 practical points. TURNBULLis the lig2test running wagon in the world. Stop and examine them.
O11 Hardware, Stoves, and Tinware in the citv at
COHOON'& FISHER
An invaluable product made froin the finest beef the world products.
MANHOOD RESTORED!
liy
rOUEASD ATlMllSlMi.
over exertion, you thin
A O O S O
May inlfsH the tstrpct, but no one
naed
Extractor Beef
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Castorla.
v-^V'
We present the owner with his choice of our Sjo7Suiis or Overcoats.
"We present the owner with his choice of our Si 2 Suits or Overcoats.
EPH JOEL'S OLD STAND CORNER MAIN AND WASHINGTON STREET
TiTnrn
ri 1JL
\Ve present the owner with his choice of our 85 Pants,
This wonderful remedy
mmntuivcd to cure »1! nervous disuse*, audi na Weak Memory, Loss of brain I'nwcr. 1 lotul.ielie. Wakefulness, Manhood, Nltfhtly KuilsalonB, Nervousneri!*«ull drain* unci !«.'*?» of powerin Generative Organs of either sex caused
«*rr«irs OXCGSBITO ueo
mlns'thi
trujov 111 *a 111 ui a Summer online liile h«» W iM^.nHiu Ontrni nfUM1* HO innny iiidueemeiitB to tin Jleulth'.Seel'.er. iluiiter nud Fisherman.
of tobacco, onluzn or stim-
umnis, which l»au to Infirmity,Consumption or Infinity. Can ho carried in vent pocket, per bnx.O for &*»• hy mall prepaid. VVlthal&5 order wo |(flve a wrltl«n euarntit\ elo rure or refund the money. Hold by all ^drutft'lHtB. -Afor It. take no other. W rll« for free Medical Hook sent Penh lu plain wrapper. Addrcb* IV EUVE 8EJ£I CO., Masonic Temple, CUICAUO*
For Pill6 in Crawford^vlllo, ind., by STAN KKKN V.atnl by T. D. BKOWN &SON, DrugtfUts.
Tafl's Dental Parlors
Sf) West Washington St., (Now Cordova Uuilding) Indianapolis, lml.
RTlie
Largest and
Best equipped office in the country.
Teetli Extracted Positively without. Pain.
Crown and Bridge work, spoken.
than anyone.
W
Prices
German
A. McKechnie, M'g'r.
I
Mrs. M. L. Wifsrt,
wlio recently purchased, the
Myers & Charni stock of
MILLINERY
has just received the latest
styles in Fall Millinery, and
can sell you Hats cheaper
•••'Because she pays 110 rent.
Call and see her.
STOVES!
Is 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 126 N. Green St. Don't get in the wrong place.
J. K. P. Thompson.
PLUMBERS AND GAS FTTERS.
We 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
wells.
Pumps for deep or shallow
WILLIAMS BROS.,
121 S. Green Street
TO ENSLM UBflR.
Ever the Aim and Object of the Republican Party.
Origin and History of Ihe Labor Ltn\.
Contract
In 18(U oiiiigi'css passer! mi act substantially entitled an act to encourage immigration. This was its ostensible purpose, but its real object was to clothe contractors, mineowm-rs and manufacturers with power to contract virli and import laborers from Europe to supplant American workmen, and to reduce the price of American wages.
Mr. E. B. Washburn, in reporting the same to the house, said: Tin' vast mtmlier of laboring men, estimated at nearly l.-.'id.iM.xi, who have It 11. their peaceful pursuits and patriotically gone forth in defense of our government and itsjinstitutions, lias created a vacuum which is becoming sesionsly felt in every portion of the country. Never before in our history has then1 existed so unprecedented a demand for labor as at the present. time. This demand exists everywhere. It exists in the ntrricultural di-triets of the northwest and in the cent ral Mates in Xew England, and among shipping interests of the lakes and sea boar !. and is felt in every field of mechanical and manttfact nving industry. The dearth of laborers is severely felt in the coal and iron mines of ]Vun-\ 1vania: in the coal miner- of Ohio. Indiana and Illinois: in the had mines of (ialena, and in the gold and silver mines of California. Nevada. Idaho and Colorado. It is believed that ihe denial.d for laborers 011 outrailroads alone will give employment for the entire ini:: igra ii ,1 1 '•t'o.ire --. in lNiH.
Held the Laborer's All.
The second section provides that contracts may be made whereby immigrants shall pledge the wages of their labor to repay the expeii of their immigration. aad further provides for the enforcement of tin: contract and thai it shall operate as alien upon any land acquired by die immigrant when recorded in the county where the land is situated. 80 drastic were the provisions of this measure that it gave to the importer of laborers not only a lien upon any land they might enter, bat up. .11 the wages they mighr earn.
Senator Sherman in reporting this measure to the senate very adroitly tried to conceal its real purpose, but inadvertently disclosed the secret before concluding the statement. He said:
The special wants for labor in this country at the present time are very great. The war has depleted our workshops and materially lessened our supply of labor in every department, of industry and mechanism. In their noble response to the call of their country our workmen in every branch of the useful arts have left vacancies. which must be tilled or the material interests of the country must suffer. The immense amount of native labor occupied by the war calls for a large increase of foreign immigration to make up the deficiency at home. 'The demand for labor never was greater than at present, and the fields of usefulness -were never so varied and promising.
It was true us stated by Senator Sherman that then- was "a noble response to the call of their country-'liy the 'workingmen, but while absent lighting its battles their vacant places should not have been filled with cheap laborers imported from Europe under contract. Paupers unable to get to this country under the terms and provisions of this law could virtually enslave themselves in foreign countries to American contractors and American manufacturers and the contract would be enforced hero to the fullest extent.
Amounted to Slavery.
The second section of this law reads as follows: Sec. 2 And he it further enacted. That all contracts whiclrshall hi: made by emigrants to the United States iu foreign countries, in conformity to regulations that may be established by said commissioner, whereby emigrants shall pledge the wages of their labor for a term not exceeding months to repay the expenses of their emigration shall 1 held to be. valid in law and may be enforced iu the courts of the United States or of the. several states and territories, and such advances, if so stipulated in the contract, and the contract, is recorded in tie recorder's office in the county where the emigrant tthn.ll settle, shall operate asalien upon any laud thereafter acquired by the emigrant, whether under tlie homestead law when the title is consummated, or on property otherwise acquired until liquidated by the emigrant but nothing herein contained shall be deemed to authorize any contract, contravening the constitution of the United States, or creating in any way the relation of slavery or servitude.—United States statutes. At large, volume 15, lsr,:t-i r.
The extent to which the authors of this measure knew they were going is apparent from the last lines of the section—"but nothing herein contained shall bo deemed to authorise any contract, in contravention of the constitution of the United States, or creating in any way the relation of slavery or servitude."
A further provision of this law exempted the immigrants imported under contract from military service. The American workman might be taken from his placo in the shop at any time, but the imported laborer was in 110 danger.
Why Did They Continue It?
"We ask Republicans why they took advantage of the absence of the wagoworkers who were in the army? They say it was necessary. Labor was scarce and wages was high. Will they answer why, when tho war was over, when the armies disbanded and the men returned home to take their places, this law was not repealed? Will thoy inform us why, when half a million of men were discharged from tho mills or factories in 1875, this law was kept upon the statute booki? Will they answer why during that long opriod of depression, when kundveda orthousands of iimd
wm ant
of employment and seeking work, it was necessary to import as was done under this law, large numbers of European laborers? The fact that this statute remained iu force nearly 20 years, 18 aft^r the war had closed, and that every effort to repeal it in the interest of American labor was thwarted is sufficient to satisfy the most skeptical peuson that it was fashioned and framed iu the interest of the contractor and manufacturer. From the time of the enaotment. of this law till its repeal over 6,500,000 immigrants came to our shoros. How many of these left their native land and came
1
Enacted For (lie I'lirjio-e of Giving Em ployers Cheap I.nhor—lVrpetHilled to
Keep tlio Luborers Who Hail Keturned
From the War From Securing
K111-
ployment at Goml WaRi's- lli'iaitrliiilile
Reports ou the Hill Made by Repub
licans In Congress.
to us voluntarily upon their own reI sources because of their admiration for our institutions, and how many debased and vicious characters wero brought here under this contract system cannot be told. Laborers were imported under the provisions of this law up to the time of its repeal, and the statutes now in force prohibiting the same arc still being evaded 111 many ways by men who cry loudest "protection to' American labor!" Tho
Republican party, supreme in all departments of the government, was cognizant of the fact that while honest laborers were unable to secure employment importations under contract were constantly being made, but 110 ^tep was taken to protect them from this competition.
It remained for a Democratic house to repeal this law at the session of 18^-1-5, which was done by the bill of Repiesentative Forau of Ohio.
Do Not Change Townships.
Democrats cannot now move from one township to another without losing then
NAME FULL TICKETS.
It Koep* Up tho Organization ftml Gathers I'nexpt'HiUMl riu
MYERS MUST SPEAK ALONE. rrCantlitlutc Owen Too Sirk to Hi*
KiigaKcmoiits to speak.
The joint debate between Captain Myers and "Rev." W. D. Owen, the respective Democratic and Republican candidates for secretary of state, is off. The wiser heads in the Republican partyhad all along regarded a joint debate as a foolish thing and "viewed with alarm" the certain humiliation that awaited their candidate. This prospect or something else made Mr. Owen very sick so sick, in fact, that he went to a Michigan sanitarium. The other day Chairman Gowdy wrote Chairman Taggart positively refusing to carry out the programme arranged. Of course nothing was left for Chairman Taggart but to accept the declination. However, lie made the suggestion and request that should Mr. Owen recover his health sufficiently to permit him to re-enter the canvass later on that the debate lie carried out according to the programme originally laid out, either in whole or in part. Captain Myers stands ready at any moment to meet his opponent,"nnd Chairman Taggart will insist 011 the joint debate in the event that Mr. Owen once more enters the canvass. Captain Myers will keep the appointments as originally made.
Do Not Change Tou nsllips. Democrats cannot now move from one township to another without losing their votes.
CERTIFICATES OF NOMINATIONS.
The Chairman': Ite to
First Duty Should Kile Them.
"The importance of giving early attention to the matter of filing certificates of nominations cannot be overestimated," said Chairman Tnggnrt. "Though it is a matter of vital interest to the party and the candidates themselves, I find it is one that is most often neglected. This is probably due more to procrastination than a failure to realize the importance of the matter. It should bo the first duty of the county ohairmau to^ see that nominations tire properly certified, that names are given with absolute correctness as to spelling, etc., and that all legal requirements are complied with. And candidates in their own interest should make it a point to be certain that their chairmen have performed their duty. 1 would request till chairmen and candidates to give this matter their earliest attention."
"Infamous Tax Law."
Now hear the Republicans howl about that infamous tax law again. That bloated corporation, the Western Union Telegraph company (composed one part wire and 099 parts of water), has gono into court to keep from paying tax (under the new law) on its 2,500 000 taxables in Indiana. But all these corporations must pay.—Viucennes Sun.
Why They Bolted.
i(
If tho
reformed tho Louisiana sugar growers would have been over $91,000,000 in locket on this year's crop. No wonder they are kicking themselves all ovor
ans
There Is Merit'
In Ilood'M MHmnpnrilln. I know Itbeoausa It lias
U0110
mo good. I was In a bad conditio
John R. Lochaty, Roxbury, Ohio.
Kith Hour Mlomnc-h, Ilcnrt Palpitntiou, Hot FIUHIU-K. Since talcing Hood's SaraKpa. rllla I atn as well as ever. I give H»od's .S&rlaparllla oil the credit. I took 110 other medicine. .IHN
K.<p></p>Hood's^
rp
THE
111*.
''It should be'the duty of every county chairman to see that a complete ticket is in the field," said Chairman Tnggnrt the other day. "The advantages are far more than I can readily enumerate, but chief among them is the benefit of keeping a party organization. It is utterly impossible to keep up interest and get out a full vote without a local ticket in the field. Therefore it should make 110 difference how great the Republican majority in a locality full county and township tickets should be placed in the field and active canvass made. It is really surprising what a good effect this has. And it not infrequently happens through local disaffection or the personal popularity of candidates that Democrats capture some good offices even in the most hopeless Republican strongholds. Take the case of Wayne county for instance. Though it is the strongest Republican county in tiie state, tiie Democrats have kept up their organization and made their fight always. As a result they have not only greatly aided the state ticket but every once and awhile capture a fat office, as. for instance, sheriff and auditor, when the Republicans had an immense majority 011 the rest of the ticket. It is the observation of these results that makes me so persistent in urginr that a complete ticket be placet! in the field in each county and township. If this is done this fall Indiana is just as certain to go Democratic as election dav is to coiue."
I.OCIIAKY, Koxbury, Ohio.
Cures
Hood's Pills are rapidly taking the load."
,vim
Place in the Stale lo get a good
Wat cli
..'..OR
LI.
Clock
.is AT TIIE
Jewelry .Store. 111 South Washington Sireet.
RKMOYAi.— NOW .S1TK POSTi H'l'lCi:.
Spectacles Eye-Glasses
Tin-: p.kst
ox
earth.
I.. A', llulsmiin, K.vj'ert.'
li.M IMs'l'i AToii'.S sAI.I.
Xotiee is hereby Ktven th it th( undersigned dministnitor of the ostntu of (ioorgo F. -lone-., eee isi,-.t, will soil at public auction ill front of be Court Mouse, Cnuvfordsrllle, Indiana, ou
SATI
KDAV, SKI'TK.MUKK 15, iyji,
1 onal property of said decedent, coaiisting of household and kitchen turuiturc,
0110
tip buggy, one breaking plow, etc. A credit of teree months r.-i 11 bn given on all sums of tlv« dollars and over, purchaser giving noto witU approved Becuritv. t.'ieler live dollars, cash.
I.. -I. COIM'AUK. Adm.
1'ate.l August ]s!ii
6 BA ItliEKS 6
All the time aud the only
In the citv at the
M.
fl
McKinley tariff had not been
'or having voted for
toe Dwnocratic "change" in 189*.—New *orb Beoord«r (Rep.).
e.
A..
...BARBER SHOP....
FRANK M'BAtlP.
1 i.M IN IS'i'ii A'l'Ii 1 .s.M.K.
A Notice is hereby given that the undersisuod administratrix or the estate of David Cntnpboll, deceased, will oiler tor'aalu at public auction, at the late residence of tilt.- deceased, two niilorf north-east of Crawrordsvillo on tho Darlington lead,on
MONDAY, OCTOIIKK l-Vl'll, l*!h
all tiie personal property of the deceased not taken by the widow, consisting of horses, cattio, hogf, corn in the Held, wheat in bin and tlenl, and a general assortment of fanning implements, household and kitchen furniture.
A credit of nine months will he given on all sums over live dollars, purchaser giving Ui noto waiving valuation and appraisement laws, bearing sii per cent. Interest after maturity villi sufficient sureties. Pive dollars and unJor, ,, MAHY M. CAMPBELI-.
II T'K IIAMILTON.
Auctioneer. Administrairix.
J^OTIC'ETO HKJKS.CRKDIirOKS,
ETC.
In the mutl**rof tho «Htate of SaraU Lnno,
In tlio Moutuomory Circuit Court, September
Notk'o horohy given that Tho.*. M. Shaekeltur«l, admibUtrjiior
01
tho cstatoof Sarah Lauo
clneoa^ed, has presented ami filed hi* arcounW ami .ouchera iu final Hottlmiiont of said and that tho same will come up for the examination and aotiou of Said Circuit Court on tlw 3d day of October, at which time all heir* creditors or legatees of said estate arc recjnirod to appear in said Court and tfhow cause if any there bo, why said accounts and vouchers should not be approved, and the heir* or distributees of said estate art* also uotifled to be in said Court at the time aforesaid and make proof of hcirfhin.
AS M. SHACKELFORD, Administrator Dated this Sth day of September, 1894.
EiOHT and nine per gent. Investments. Nontaxable. Iho State Building and Loan Association of Indiana. Call on JOHN M. SCHULTZ, CrawfortiaJail on JOHN M. SCHULTZ, Crawford^•ille, Indiana. .. Apr 6 3m
