Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 13 June 1896 — Page 2
ATTOKNIES.
CLOUKKIJTER & IIA IS
1
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Will do ft gent?raipraotk**in all Court?.
Glee overSwlth *fc Steele's drug store, -south Washington btreet,
M. W. BRUNER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
litiflitiffw Iii'all the Courts, nml settieniRiit of dccflcut!- estates j.roinjitly attenlel to. Offlo- OVIT MftUornvy's bard wans store.
LOULS M'MAINS.
Attorney At Law
—AND
General Insurance.
iMiocoBSor to c. W. Wriplii.
Office
l^istiue &
Ristine,
with
3
and
Fisher Building.
Monev to: Loan
Willi jjiiymeius* nti'l time to tcrest the low.-r-t. Kitln-i- r«'al ecurltyaeccnte'l. oo'J notei quirii s"'-heuili.'lj Miswercil.
uu borrower. In- I i-.-tiiti-i.r fn-rsiiiiii I nieli*".!. All in
C. "W. BURTON,
CifHce over Mine's .Jewelry Storo.
W W Mil! '.AN. W. I.. I,EK
MORGAN & LEE. vflENERAL INSURANCE MTS-:-
MONEY TO LOAN
At Lowest liatcs.
AHSTKA(3TS OF TITLE
Furnished on short notice. CITY and FARM PROPERTY for sale. Oflkv: Orutsiiuii Hlock, N. W ishibL'tou mreut
Crawfonisville. ln«l.
-C. W. BURTON,
A'l T.'lJfXEY A 1 LAW.
Will'lo a cenenil law hnsiness in MontKomery ai.'l iidloiiiiui cuiiiuies. J*|n.v:lnl iiltt-tition /ii.veiveii to .-oUM!yaii'itiK aiMl the wttlmm-nts of
Ui-t ilenls entutos. ,-lry st.
omco over .Mat Klino'n
MILLINERY.
You cun buy an elegant
S in a
Y-fEVER^y
11
Of Miss Renyon f'ir §2.00 :ind
p-
wards, spring and summer St\les. Before buying «. i'l a in! see
MISS KBNYON
Hor stock of Millinery is the finest for the least price. AYitliM-crs iS: Cliarni. Catr.pbo!! corner.
CATASHH
DIltKCTJONS lor U^IIIL'
CREAM BALM
A Pi»1 ?t »»f the halm directly »iito tlift nostrjlh. After a inomi'Ul draw a HiroiiK «.• a tlir«ui.'U tli« no**4. tiiriio times a day, alter meal* )jn'!orr»Ml, ami belore retiring.
A I.M
eii-dli
HAYFEVER l'asHai «'.u, Allays I'ain ainl IMIiimmatlon, heals tho Bores, protects the iiiomljniiiu Irom COHIH. l-eswirMB the senses of liisio itnl hmell. Tl.c halm ahBOrheil and Rives reli"f t.1 one.
P'iniokly
mco 50 i-ents at Druu'Kists cr hv in.-iil. KLY IJHOTIiKilS, 'A Warren St., Now York.
J. L. PURSELL PRACTICAL
Carriage and l^pairer
.Repainting
A S a
NEW WORK TO ORDER.
Corner Lafayette Pike and Grant Avenue.
CAPITAL CITY
WIRE WORKS GO.
W. F. SwiBHBit, Proprietor. Manufacturers of
Elevator Enclosures, Window Guards. Settees, Wire Chairs, Flower Stands, OOloo Railings.
CRIMPED WIRE WORK.
Wiro Goods of all description. Orders prompta Offlee, 47X south Illinois Street, Indianapolis, Indiana.
TXTANTED:—Sovoral trustworthy gontlomon or VV ladles to travel In Indiana for established, reliable house. Salary $780 and expenses. Stead position. Enclose reference and self addressed stamped envelope. The Dominion Company, third floor, OmahaBldg.. Chicago, 111.
It pays to trade at the Gig Store.
EVIEW.
-IIV-
F. T. LUSE.
TIBMB ONCBSCBIPTIO*
One year, ia tbe connt). •, tll0 Oneyear.onlofttecounty. -. llO I nauire at Office foiAdver timer ste».
JUNE 13, 1896.
COUNTY TICKET.
For Juilpi- of th^ nTiiit court, JKIiEM. W I: T. For l'ro?ecut!nc Attorn' -, ('. W. lil'HTON
For li-i.ri-.- iismr.r. I)A VJ1) M'AI.I^TKK For Clerk. WAI.I.ACK SI-AliKS
For Treasurer. T. MKHHli.li. For Hvor'l.-r. OF.OHUK W. KKKD
For Shi-r't!
ll.WID CANINE. K-ir Ct.ron"r. IJI!. .SIIO'l Iy-
F'or Survi-y r,, J\ V. BUCK Mi." Kur Asse--or, T. N. MYICKS.
For oniiiiissiouiT, 2-1 District. .IAMK.S W. FOSTER. For Commissioner, 3i Iii-tiict,.
ALI.KN BYKHS.
UNION TOWNSHIP DEMOCRATS
Call to Select Delegates to the Staw.
Congressional and Joi Senatorial Convention. The democrats and those wishing to meet with them, of Union township, will assemble in the lares court room on Saturday. June ".'O. at 2 o'clock t). m., for the purpose of selecting nine delegates to the State convention to be held on June "J1 and nine delegates to the congressional convention to be held at Frankfort on .July 30, al60 thirteen dele-, gates to the joint senatorial convention lo be held at I' rankfort on the same day. Upon tho same day precinct committeemen will be chosen to HII \acancies,
CMAKI.KS A. I'OWKIIS,Chairman.
EIGHTY MILLION DOLLARSThe above sum represents about the amount required a.id voted for by the present Congress to make the improvements of rivers and harbors, and known as the river and harbor bill. The President in a well written paper sought to defeat it by veto, showing the necessity of economy in governmental affairs, the vast sums already appropriated for this and that purpose, but hie elTorts were entirely useless as both branches of Congress passed tho bill over his veto and it is now a law. Eighty million dollars! An immense (i.m of money to be wrung from the pockets of the peoplearid for alleged purposes for which there is no immediate demand. In these stringent days of business depression, with the government aiming to meet all pressing obligatinns, with the people everywhere) complaining of financial stringency, passage of this bill looks to be and is an outrage. It must be remembered. however, that the republicans in Congress "are in the saddle" in both Ileuses, and are able to pass or defeat any measure brought before them. Let it be remembered then where to lay the blame whenever this specimen of tithntic thievery is spoken of.
Another thing connected wilh this river and harbor bill is the broad Held of corruption and intrigue that will be connected with it. The men most urgent for its passage no doubt thought of the profitable picking it would afford them hereafter—tho superior chances it will afford many of them for putting money in their pockets. Whoever knew of a government contract in which there was not a job—a job of high prices, slighted work and a division of spoils ainoLg the politicians controlling the work? We observe that $30,000 for instance. is to be devoted to the improvement of the harbor of .Michigan, it being one of the harbors to be improved.
It would be interesting to watch this "improvement/' who doer, it. who is his nec.reBt Congressman, wh» secures the money, how much goes to the actual contractor, and where the rest under tbe head of "sundries" is placed. The .Michigan City contract will probably in its management be on par with all the rest of the vast sum devoted to tho "improvement of rivers anil harbors."' The whole business smacks of corruption, of fraud, of extravagance, but in this corrupt age it is not to bo wondered that a President's veto had no effect in the matter.
THESE "PROSPEROUS TIMES''The silver sentiment is sweeping tbe country like a whirlwind. Kansas, Kentucky, Illinoie, most of the western and all the southern States, will instruct their delegates to the Chii-aco convention to favor and vote for the free coinage of gold and silver. The people through these delegates, if these are the prosperous times prophecied hy Cleveland so soon as the act doing away with silver was passed, desire a change to some other system of prosperity. Tfcey have seen enough of the present Bush times for three years past and demand something different from that so agreeable to gold speculators, bond dealers and Wall street. If it can be brought about they will have it too.
NATIONAL REPUBLICAN CONVEN TIONThe nslioual republican convention coivenes at iit. lyiuia nest
I\iesu to nominal- 11»*.i' Sat et- for pres-id^n' and loriiiu late plut'orm. The cl trid art- already JM'hering in fore. It is ain.ort ceiisin that no national i-jnvention of recei.t ynrii can and will uoniLat' a candidal-* for presider 1 more speedily Than this w-.ll do. It will be McKi and on thf- tirst ballot. Nine tenth- of the party the country nv*r through t'i «r deli-sates have expressed a prefer«.-i for L11 in and McKiuley it will be. Ail efforts of the bosses, Piatt, Quay. (_ larkson, Manley and others to 6tem the McKinley tide have oeeu useless. Jie has already nearly -"00 delegates pled»'-i his support and will Lave no trouble in securing the nomination. The rank and tile of tae party seew to think the name of even McKinley is a synonym of pro-p-.-rity, and are ready am! willing lo be taxed to support wealthy manufacturers anjil favored 01 es of the party if it
will but retura to what they denominate "prosperous time-s". So mote it be, but they are destined to be disap poinu-d. bueb "prosperity" will be but temporary, and those so vociferous for him to day may in four years from tnis time just as loudly anathamatize nun. McK'uley\~ election will not bring "good nmrs". The dawn of better times will ocly be on the return of better sense, more cont!dence and less selfishness among the people. That may be some distance away. Upon what kind of a platform McKinley may stand none will know until the jugglers of the partyhave made their report. The tariff question which will secure McKiuley the noncination is destined to be this year of a secondary consideration. It is the financial question tirst now with the people, and on this McKinley has not spoken, and whether he is gold standard man, a straddler or for free silver, no one knows, but he cannot equivocate on this question, and cannot and will not receive the uniteil support of the party in the
United States take whatever position he may. What he may say in his letter of acceptance of the nomination will be I read with interest, but be assured of one thing, straddling on the financial question will not go this year.
PKNSJON a. euts and those wanting pensions, but who failed under the rulings of Commissioner Lochran, now that he is out of that position are loud in their curs- of hiru, and as warm in their praises of Murphy, the newly appointed Commissioner, although he has done little or nothing yet to please or displease anybody. With the individual always looking for a soft snap by drawing money from the government, the pension examiner who will be the most liberal and question tho justice of a pension the least, is always the most popular and has the loudest praise from pension agents, camp followers and .luch. Loch ran aimed to be equitable and fair in his decisions, lie had been a brave solilier and worthy citizen, yet because he refused pensions to some whose cases on investigation he considered not right to grant, he v.-as denounced. The fellow that will give is always "clever," but the man that hesitates and investigates before acting, is a mean man measured by some persons' ideas.
THE RIVER AND HARBOR LAWNothing better could indicate the corruption with which the present republican Congress is permeated than the speedy passage of thj so-termed river and harbor bill over the President's veto. The vote stood 220 for to 00 against the passage of the bill, a score of democrats—it being humiliating to say—voted for it, but even without them it could and would have become a law. The bill means the appropriation of about SSO.OOO.OOO of the peoples' money to "improving" rivers and harbors in the United States, but it is little more than a corruption fu.id for lazy, lousy thieving politicians at different points of the county, 'the money will be used in hundred different ways from which was intended and political bosses in many sections will feel the reviving nf fects of pockets full of money of which many of them now do not. Why not ha«-e Sugar Creek "improved"? It would aid several of our local politi Ciaus.
THE main trouble with those Indianapolis gold bug democrats, who seem so anxious regarding the good money and bad money, and to save the remainder of the State from destruction, is that they did not get in at the head of tbe rapidly increasing free silver movement of the State. Almost every man mentioned 8B among tho leaders of tbe gold standard movement who assembled in a meeting at Indianapolis the other night, has been an office holder, is holding one now, or is seeking something from the people. They are just the cattle that are seeking to stem the free silver tide and crush out the free silver sentiment. Tho free silver people have not sought them for its leaders, and very probably will not.
KENTUCKY dropped into the free silver column, notwithstanding Bradley, her republican Governor, and all the hired tools of Wall street and the administration to prevent it. Indiana will follow as will many other States of the west and south.
THE GUARANTORS THEY PAY E E I In settling up the expens--* of the May musical festival Ht Inuial.Hpi is the otherd.iy.it -.VM? ascertain* tha" the entei laina-eots were tl.UU abort of meeting expenses and tfci' guarantors will have to (Jraw on their bank accounts to make up the deticit. A 111 ..sical festival is gi-neral'y a fashionable humbtie, but tbe los- in this case is amply made up ty the 'moid '.leseript-ons of costumes in tlii* city »per? worn by Mrs. li. and
Mrs. C. and all ttie o'in-r biui.tom* who desired to be tea and not particuiai ly to hear.
MI'KINLK.Y I? 1 h«? let']i sea. in.itU the hard
between the He -v!n\ to iioi.i-v hiid the
devil aid conciliate siiver fuc-
li..ins of bis paity, but how to do it is question. The KIM WI'! give him only a luKe warm tupp 'it when nominated if Ins letter of acceptance does not state in unequivocal terms that he favois the gold dolUr and the single gold standard. On the otuor hand the many thousands of silver coinage republic-ios will have opposite views and will curse his candidacy if he does not come out Hat footed favuring the free ejiuuge of silv.r. IKis going to lind it the p'oblem of his life (to suit both wings, and he will fail to do it too.
YVALLING'S TRIAL-
The
in
Walling, the suspicioned ac
complice of Scott Jackson in the murder of Pearl IJi-yan. has been under way for I several iias at Newport, Kv. The evi dence in the ense is very similar to that in Jackson's trial. The public has long since made up their minds that these two men. and these two only, are guilty of this cruel, cowardly murder, and the announcement of their execution will be the news most welcome in this matter.
BETWKEN 2.000 and 3.000 people were killed in the rush when the Czar undertook to feed the 'people at his coronation. But the death of two or three thousand peasants did not disturb the festivities or prevent the Czar from enjoying a: appointed dance. Why should it? Russia is still in that state of barbarism in which the Czar counts tor everything and the people for nothing.
BKICK.
the sugar trust t-.enator of Ohio,
is in favor of the gold dollar standard. This should made the ld bug5, wno are honest in their opinions, at once question themselves as to the correctness of their opinions. Anything that the sugar trust senator favors should be viewed with suspicion until it is ascertained tuere is no political jobbery in it.
How's This?
We offer ur.t- Hundred Dollars lieward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY A CO..
V. e. the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last lf years, and be lieve him perfectly honorable in all business transactionsand financially able to carry out any obligations made by their tirm. WKST THCAX, Wholesale Druggists, Tole.lo, O. WALDINC, KINNAN IT MAKVIN, Wholesale druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is takeu it ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the systemTestimonials sent free. Price 7o cents per bottle. Sold by all druggists.
Hall's Family Pi I Is are the best.
A Cambric shirt worn by Louis XVI. on the day before his death realized c'.'iTU and the napkin used at mam on t:ie morning of his execution $300 at a recent London sale.
Rich Discoveries of Gold At Cripple Creek, Colo., and elsewhere, are being made daily, and the production for ISM will be the largest ever known, estimated at two hundred million dollars. Cripple Creek alone is producing over one million dollars a month, and steadily increasing. Mining stocks are advancing in price more rapidly than any other stocks, and manypay dividends of 3o to 50 per cent. They offer tbe best opportunity to make a large profit on a small investment.
John i. Tallman Co., lo Rroadway, Now York, are financial agents for the Prudential Gold Mining Co., and others the famous Cripple Creek district. They will send you free, interesting particulars of the mining companies they represent also their book on speculation in stocks, grain and cotton cotaining raany new and important features.
Send for these books at once if you are interested in anv form of sneculation or investments. They may prove profitable to you.
It Goes Without Saying
that when you are suffering from catarrh, you want relief right away. What iB the use then of experimenting with blood "cures'' upon a disorder resulting from climatic changes? Use a local remedy, for a local disease. Use Ely's Cream Balm, which relievos at once the attacks of catharrh and cures chronic cases. 50 cents at all druggists. Thie remedy can be safely used by all without injurious results. It contains no mercury or injurious drug of any kind.
The coal fields of the United States have an area of nearly 200 000 square miles or ten times that of all the other coal producing countries of the world.
FENCE!
Ill
Harvest
"Will You loin the Reapers?
He handles
siimmmmmm?! wmmm mmmwK
If good publicity sure as in dunking
THE CI
Laf-ivette
Dan Sullivan wil'i wait on you.
liquors.
fjipvn* ro iDllj I
"They Stand the Racket" E|
A test of 7 years proves then, reliable.
Stover Bicycle Co., Froeport, 111.
CHICAGO 1SKA il. nl'I'USl I At' DITOiil I'M
Why pay60to90c. a rod for fence when you can makethe
BEST WOVEH WIRE FENCE ON EARTH
Horse-High, Bull-Strong, Pig and Chicken Tight,
FOR 12 TO 20 CENTS A ROD?
A man and boy can make from 40 to 60 rods a day. Over 50 styles. 36-page Illustrated Catalogue Freea
Ornamental Fence.
Ifyou havea Lawn nothingin the world would be a substitute for ourfine Ornamental Fence. Beautiful, Durable, Strong, and Cheap.
Plain galvanized FENCE WIRE sold to Farmers of wholesale prices. Circulars and Price List Free.
KITSELMAW BROTHERS, Box 92, Ridgevill6t Indiana.
Doesn't deiieini
JOHNNIE BARRY'S KE5I END SJ100N
Has been refitted and is one of the finest peaces in •t nothing but the verv lies! of
SPECIALS-SALE
For the next thirty days at-
No. 132 West Main Street.
Funeral
upon Rain and Sun,
..1
and Cold.
1U
•seed is planted wlice esults are
Oldest Whiskies
(.'oldest
And tiv.
so
Beer a
UB.
Charles C. Smelcer.
No. 128
N.
Green St.
this
Imported a nl lluiniislic W \m and l.iquors.
''Export."
Crow" Whiskev.
'Old Monarch.
r. Best
Wmes.
city. lie handles
"U\ t-rho
t"
T.ineof"
Also the Finest
Imported Oigars
In the Market at the
"HEALTH OFFICE"
128 West
Main Street.
Rye, and ,l01d
\\u City.
in
Fn.*e Lunch at all Hours.
No.
210
West Market Street.
Brandies.
Be«1rs.
GUS KARLE, Prop.
OF-
Carriages and Harness
Abraham'
D. e. BARNHILIv
Director
Agent for the Burglar Proof Grave
We Manufacture all our Harness.
and Embalmer
Vault"
onto 413 SouthWashington St. Toiophonee 61,81,8-3.
