Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 19 October 1895 — Page 2
ATTOUN Its
E. CLODreOLTEK. CLAU UK TLlOMa'SON
CLODFELTER & THOMPSON, A W E S
Willdo a jeiiorsi praotici" iu all Court?. Offlco over Smith .r Steelf'- trug store, ^oath Washington street.
VORIS & STILWELL
INSUKANCK AGENTS.
FARM INSURANCE
A
specialty. \'e represent the Rojai. Continental. Ohio Farmers, and seventeen other (.onipanies.
LOANS.
First Skto Loans
6 PER CENT.
Per auuum. I'.v.-ablo nnuuallv nt ourt of the vonr. with priviiftt- of pitying SIM or all of it. at any interest payment.
C. W. WIGHT
W. W. MOKti.VN. W. L. I.EE
MORGAN & LEE,
-MOTIL INSURANCE AGENTS-:-
MONEY TO LOAN
At Lowest Rates.
ABSTRACTS OF TITLE
Purnished on short notice. CITY anil FARM PROPERTY for sale. Office: urnbaun Block. N. Wasliihgton street
CrnwforJsville, Iml.
D. WHITE, WM. M. KEETES. CIIAS. D. OKEAR
WRITE, REEVES & OREAR,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
10:iS EAST MAIN STREET.
We li.iv* large amount of homo money to 1 oan in sum' ot $300 up to f10.000, from 5,Mj to 6H per cent, on farm and olty property. Also for sale a largo number of farms and city residences at a bargain.
Money to: Loan
With payments and time to suit borrower. Interest the lowest. Either real estate or perKnnl eeuritraccepted, Good notes cashed. All inquiries cheerfully answered.
C. W. BURTON,
Office over Tannenbaum Bros.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleaniej ud be&otiflef the hair. Promote* a luxuriant growth. Uever Fills to Bestore Gray
Hair to Its Youthful Color. Cures ic&lp diaeuei hair failing.
G. W. PAUL
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
(105 1-3 South Washington Street) Make* a specialty of land titles, construction wills and deed«, and oil kiadg of litigation.
ON
J. DAVIDSON
At the Grand Shoe Store for
Boot: and Shoe Repairing.
TSie best man in town In hU line. ii3 South Washington Street.
NEW PLACE
A N
I
NEW GOODS!
will pay cash for Produce. Staple and fancy Groceries very cheap.
Second-hand Goods bought and sold.
J. M. Stephenson
126 North Green St.
E A A S S E
IC
S
GRATEFUL-COMFORTING
O O A
BOILING WATER MILK.
Dr.W.R. McLane,
PRACTICAL
Years of experience in treating all Domestic Animals. Office at
INSLEY'SBARN
I y§r«
THE REVIEW
BY
F. T. Iuas.
TBBM8 Of IOBBCKIPTIOH
One year, in the coantj, Oneyear.out ofthe o.onriM Inquire at Office for ArivorT1iTi«"r.e«
*1 00 1 10
OCTOBER 19,1895.
THE NICHOLSON LAW UNPOPULAR The result o( the recent electi in Indianapolis and other elections iu other cities and towns to foiiow hereafter will indicate that the passage by the Ih*1 republican legislature of that measure was a great political indiscretion for which that party will hereafter be made suffer. The people despise force laws, laws especially to compel this thing or that. The Nicholson law, its advoca is say. is for the improvement of the morals of the people, to abridge the mauy avenues open for drinking and the evils that follow in its wake. That tnay be so, yet at the same time it is a restriction on each citizen's actions, and thithe citizen will resent. He will vote against any advocate of such law, and seek to retire the party that has fostered and created it. Most men consider themselves their own free moral agents and will tolerate no interference with their individual rights. The last legislature did cot puss the Nicholson jaw especially in the interest of the people. It was with lii' st of the members insidered a shrewd jolitical act that would secure to them an increased vote at future elections. Its contrary effect is already seen in the Indianapolis election, and similar results will follow in other parts of the State. Prohibition laws were never popular, either in Indiana or elsewhere, such as in many respects the Nicholson law is, and through the ballot box the people will express their condemnation of it. They will express it in the defeat of the party that created ii The leaders, the schemers for the success of the republican party in this State see it now and may seek to make amends for it, but it cannot be done. The election next year will clearly indicate the views of the people on the Nicholson law, and the republican party will be buried very deep ou account of it.
TRUSSLER'S DEFEATTrussier's defeat for mayor-of Indianapolis last week by Taggert is not going to be of aBy benefit to Harrison and his boomers when they go clothed in fine linen and "State pride" to the republican national convention next year to urge the claims of -Indiana's favorite 6on" for the nomination for President. Trussler and his friends will aim to be there, no doubt, and from now on they will treasure up their wrath for that occasion. While Taggert was undoubtedly a formidable man for the Trussler ,'orces to face, still with a united repub lican support his majority would not have been anything like it is, and might have been with the well known schoolings and corruption of the republicans ot that city no majority at all. There will be deep mutteringB and imprecations in the camp from now on. It has now been demonstrated to the satisfaction of Trussler and his friends that many of hi6 own party aided to a greater or less extent in his political downfall' and with thn connivance of Harrison men. TrusBler failed to support Harrison in 1892, and for good and sufficient reasons to him without doubt. The Harrison crowd desired to punish him for this grave offense, and they have now done so. The next act on the program will be no doubt, transferred to the republican national convention when the Trussler men will try and get in some quiet missionary work. Revenge is sweet and they will aim to have it. Harrison will find plenty of Indiana republicans fighting there as he did before, and their fight will be of much injury to him even if secure the nomination.
GEN- MAH0NE DEAD. Gen. Mahone, who a few years ago, attracted much attention as a politician in Virginia, died in Washington last week. Originally, Mahone was a prominent confederate officer, but soon after the war became, like Longstreet, Mosby and other confederate officials, quite "loyal" when the republicans aided him to office and at once became a pillar in party, and voted with it. His changing about face was considered much in the nature of a bargain and not from sincere conviction, and the friends of his former years dropped him speedily. He was rapidly going into obscurity, and in the few later years of his life, seemed to have been almost forgotten, even by his later political associates.
THE republican State central committee open up the shop for the ensuing year under discouraging circumstances. Since the last city election in Indianapolis they are doubtful if there is enough "state pride" left to boom Harrison for the next nomination for president
COLLLGE students are supposed to bo in college for the purpose of preparing themselves for business life. This seems to be an error. They are sent, probably to become proficients in foot ball and base ball games.
GIVING IT TO GORMAN. CURTAIL THEIR POWERS. The democracy of Maryland acted! If
defeat in consequence. A Baltimore democratic paper has this to say regarding the situation: "The democratic masses of this State know that their party needs reiieiuptiou from the ring that has too long usurped its nam 1- and prostituted its power. They are noi to be frightened iuto silence nor threatened into submission. They are the people, and they hold in their honest hands the decisive ballots that award the judgment of the court of last resort. When Louis XVI heard the first mutteriugs of the angry people under his palace windows^ he exclaim. 'this looks like a riot.' 'No sire,' was the answer, 'not a riot, but a revolution.' B06S Gorman will not this time escape his long-deferred reckoning with the people by reminding them that his ticket is marked '"regular," and that auy opposition to it is in the nature of a riot.
It is not a riot this year, but a revolution."..
IT IS useless for the republican papers to print a lot of perfunctory figures to dispute the proposition that President Harrison and Secretary Foster turned over to President Cleveland and Secretary Carlisle a collapsed treasury. The facts that can be stated in a few words without an enormous array of arithmetic are the plainest and most convincing. President Harrison, wheu he was inaugn rated, found an ample gold reserve. It ran up to nearly ?200,000,000 during Mr. Cleveland's first administration. When Messrs Harrison aud Foster retired the gold reserve was so near the "hundred millions" mark th it Secretary Foster had bonds prepared to issue, and had en in consultation with the gold speculators. The difficulty was bridged over and the embarrassments handed over to the new administration. The Mcjvinley law had placed duties so high that they were prohibitory, and it was a failure as a revenue raiser. The democratic administration found difficulty immediately to make both ends meet. Mr. Harrison had left them a depleted treasury.
THE Kansas City Times says: "Prosperity, which has forced its way in the face of opposition and is now present, notwithstanding the resistance, would have been here six mouths ago if the republican conspirators had not forced it back. Unquestionably the democratic party is in ranch better shape than it was last year, because it is the party of progress and prosperity. Its triumph depends on the happiness and contentment of the people. Its sucoess is con tingent on the activity of business and the healthfulness of industrial enterprise. Because of this the republican papers have denied the improvement in commercial conditions. They have protested in the face of cumulative evidence that wages have not advanced and that business has not improved. But these lugubrious plaints are contradicted by every circumstance. The streets of our cities show the difference."
Both the governors of Texas and Arkansas have acted prompt in the matter of the proposad Corbett-Fitz-simmons prize fight. They have intimated in umistakable terms that the disgusting exhibition shall not take place within the borders of their States. There seems no place where such shown will be permitted The truth seems to be that prize fighting is on the decline everywhere. The public have seen or heard enough of such affairs. The patrons and principals of them are generally the lowest dregs of humanity, and have tilled up to much important space in notoriety. We will soon hear of the last of them.
THE Indianapolis News made a ver\ determined fight for Trus: ler, the repub lican candidate for mayor of Itulianapr lis, but tho result of tho elections indica'es that it was not iu it at all, ano that the reading public took no Rtoek in its urgent editorials. Thet-e alleged in-d^pendent-neutrHl newspapers, are generally much more bitter and partizan than party organs, and the News if certainly an illustration of tbi-..
TOM TAGGEUT now looms up promi nently as a candidate for Governor next year. The brilliant victory won by him last week in the mayor's race at Indianapolis will direct attention more than ever toward him, and this together with bis former services as chairman of the State central committee will make him a formidable candidate should he desire the nomination.
REPUBLICANS
there
very indiscreet in not setting down it is one abridging the powers of me squarely on Gorman, the sugar trust city councils. As it is they can come as seLator, at the beginning of the cam-
1
is one law needed in Indiana
near doing aB they please and at tho
paign in that state. Instead of that he great expense to the tax-payers ..s any was the main figure, the "bogs" in fact, coi porate body we know of. Any uickat their state convention. The state atu-poop or corrupt scoundrel who can democratic ticket is in great danger of bo elected to the position of couucilinan
can pile up useless and extravagant expenses almost without end. Some legislator at the next session of the legislature can make himself very useful by securing the passage a law by which counciliiien can bo shorn of much of the power they now seem to possess.
MCKINLEY'S boom seems to be lessenning in proportions very rapidly as the time slowly rolls around for the presidential nomination of his party text year. In fact his specialty, tariff and high pro
tection. will not r,ext year be issues of the campaign, and he stands no better 6how for the nomination than mauy men less prominent in the party.
Ii was only the expected that happened iu the Indianapolis election, so thsreforo nobody was disappointed.— Journal.
Come now, neighbor, was there not much more of the "expected" than you were looking for, especially iu tho 4,000 democratic majority for Taggert?
Tiik election in Ohio occurs within three weeks. While it is not expected that Campbell will succeed there is probably no question that ho wouid have made a much better showing if sugar syndicate Brice had kept his hands off.
The Shakers have made a great hit. Their Digestive Cordial is said to be the most successful remedy for stomach troubles ever introduced. It immediately relieves all pain and distress after eating, builds up the feeble system and makes the weak strong.
The fact is, foods properly digested are better than so-called tonics. The Cordial not only coutains food already digested, but is a digester of other foods. Food that is not digested does more harm than good. People who use the Cordial insure tho digestion of what food they eat and in this way get the benefit of it and grow stront:.
The little pamphlets which the Shakers have sent druggists for free distribution, contain much interesting information on the subject of dyspepsia.
Lexol is not a mixture of drugs. It is nothing but Castor Oil made paltable.
Cape Horn is one mass of black rock without vegetation or birds. The sea always runs off it with tremendous force, and rounding the cape iscorsidered the roughest navigation.
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. (..heney & Co., Props., Toledo, O. We the undersigned, have known F.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 A: Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Walding, K'nnan A Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Testimonials free.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
An iron church, weighing fifty tons, seating six hundred people and costing .$75,000, is being put up for the Bulgarian congregation in Constantinople.
Intended to Catch Your Eye. Don't snip this paragraph becauso it is -small. It is worth reading for it telle «"ola B.ilHrtin. curiam vugh, 'ieUiing ji, iljroai •1 .pod up I'.'i-iiiig ill the i.ppci i"»'* cheat. A Mmplo cou-jti ma* 1 nt riuus if 'ei alone )nu anil to keep 3011 when you have allay lion iu your throat with ••j Balsam, 1/he druggists -nty five cents.
ii ii
I. .?
K/-
through the State are
saying they see nothing significant in tho great democratic victory at Indianapolis. Of course not, but what would have been the cry had Trussler have oeen elected. "As goes Indianapolis, so goes the State" would have been hoard scores of times. We are willing to take them at their word however, on this occasion.
MR. RP.ussi.EK and his friends will bo ready to see thellarrison crowd next year, no doubt, when they seek to make his support from Indiana unanimous for the nomination for president, and even if nominated, they will bo 011 hand at the election. Nothing I1U0 republican harmony.
.7
During the year ending September 3 Kaiser Wilhelm was way from Berlin 195 days. This is tour days bettor than last year.
Asia iB the most populous quater of tho globe.
Free Medical Reference Book (64 page3J for men and'women who aro affl'cted with any form of private disease peculiar to their sex, errors of youth, contageous diseases, female troubles, etc., etc.
Send two 2-cent stamps, to pay postage, to the loading specialists and physicians in tho country, Dr. HATHAWAY & Co.. 70 Doarbon Street, Chicago.
Sept. 21-13-w
Mrs. Lizzie M. Frost, ot Monmouth, Me., runs a grist mill. She turns on power and watches the machinery while her husband writes poems.
Human life is held too cheaply when tho individual who needs a tonic for his system, seeks to cover his wants by purehash every new mixture that is recommended to him. Roinoniber that Aycr's Suraparilla haB a well earned reputation of fifty year's standing.
-THE-
White House Grocery's
A Halt Patent made of 1-3 Spring, 2-:} Winter Wheat and guaranteed to be the best Flour for the money ever sold in this market.
OUR PRICE IN CLOTH BACKS:
50 lb Sack 25 lb Sack
We are also headquarters for Sugars. Teas, Coffees. Dried and Canned Fruits.
20 lbs. Granulated Snsrar *1.00 21 lbs RicUrewood A TOO 22 lbs. 1.00
McMullen & Robb,
First door south of First National Bank.
IT'S A FACT!
The College Street Grocer, heads the list when it comes to handling
R. E. A TKINSON
Clean and Firsh Groceries
Best produce market in the city. Visit his mammoth grocery, corner of College and "Water streets.
—GO TO-
JOPNIE BARRY'S WEST END
"West^Market Street, for the
Best Wines, Liquors and Cigars.
Ihe Largest and Coldest glass of Beer in the city, drawn from the old
fashioned cedar faucet. No pumps used.
DANNIE SULLIVAN, Bar Tender. JOHNNIE BARRY, Proprietor.
GrolcL Ring for 1 Oc
Hundreds of useful articles for presents at ioc ana higher. I will sell you
HRISTMAS GOODS
.".eApei. than any man on earth iou only *ie a chavr-e. still :7 give away Tables, Cloth, Racfc" aU Irou. Bo-'ds.
Carlson's lOc {Store
"WHERE DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES." GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM
THE USE OF
SAPOLIO Liqnors. Wines,
Also the Finest Line of
Imported Oigars
In the Market at the
"HEALTH OFFICE"
128 "Went Main Street.
85c 45c
Brandies. Beers.
GUS KARLE, Prop.
