Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 11 July 1896 — Page 2

ATTORN 1ES.

CLODFELTER & DA. vIS

ATTORNEYS AT LAW

Will (lo ft genera! practice In nil Court.

fflcoovorSmitli & Steele's drug store, south Washington Street.

M. W. BBUNER,

"£*3*

:ii

ATTORNEY AT LAW.

Husiivs-* in all the Courts, anil sdttloin-jiit of ilpcmlonts cstiitcs promptly nttemloil to. Offlci- ovir Miitiornoy's imnlwiirs store.

LOUIS M'MAINS.

Attorney At| Law

—AND

General Insurance.

v* (Successor to C. W. Wright.

Office with Ristine & Ristiue,

and

4 Fisher Building.

TRffe9BCB9BBN*C?

Money to: Loan

With paymeiKS au.l timo to suit borrower. Interest the lowest. Hither real estate or personal ecurlty accepted, (food notes cashed. All inquiries cheer fully answered.

c. W. BURTON,

Onico over Kline's .lowelry Store.

W. W. MOiUlAN. W. L. I.EE

MORGAN & I,EE,

-:-GEM ER4L INSURANCE A.GENTS-:-

MONEY TO LOAN

At Lowest Kates.

A BSTKAOTS OF TITLE

Furnished on short notice. CITY and FARM PROPERTY for sale. Office: Orubaun liiock, N\ Washihgton street

C'mu fortlsville, Iuil.

C. W. URTON,

A.T I'OltXEY AT LAW

Will do a general law business in Montgomery and adjoining counties. Special attention given to conveyancing and the settlements of decedents estates. Ofllce ovor Mat Kline's

Jewelry store.

MILLINERY.

You can buy an elegant

SpringHat

Of Miss Kenyon for §2.00 and upwards, spring and summer Styles. Before buying ca'l and see

MISS KENYON

Her stock of Millinery is the finest for the least price. With Myers & Charni, Campbell corner.

CATARRH

mm*

DIRECTIONS for using

CREAM BALM

Applva particle of the balm directly into the nostrils. After a moinout draw a a through the nose. LVo threo times a day, aftor meals preferred, and beforo retiring.

KI.V'S E A HALM opens and cleanses the Nasal

HAY-FEVER

Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation, heals the sores, protects the membrane from colds, restores the senses taste and smell. Tl.c balm is quickly absorbed and gives reiief £-t once. I'rice 50 cents at Druggistsor by mail.

ELY UltOTHKKS. ofi Warr St., Now York.

J. L. PURSELL

PRACTICAL

Carriage and Biu^y Repairer

Re pa in tins: A S a

NEW WORK TO ORDER.

Corner Lafayette Pike and Grant Avenue.

CAPITAL CITY

WIRE WORKS CO.

.. W. f. SwisnEK, Proprietor. Manufacturers of Elevator Enclosure", Window Guards, Settees,

Wire Chairs, Flower Stands, Office Railings.

CRIMPED WIRE WORK.

Wiro Goods of all description. Orders promptly attended to. Office, 471^ south Illinois Street, Indianapolis, Indiana.

WANTED:—Severalin

trustworthy gentlemen or

ladies to travel Indiana ior established, reliable house. Salary $780 and expenses. Steady portion. Enclose reforcnce and self addressed atampod envolopo. Tho Dominion Company, third floor, Omaha Bldg., Chicago, ill.

Tt pays to tradeat the Big Store.

THE RE VIEW.

•BY

F. T. LUSE.

TSBM8 or 30BSCB1PT1OK

One year, In the county. Onoyoar,ontofth« coumy. Inquire at Office for Advert! inerate*.

1 00 1 10

JULY. 11, 1896.

COUNTY TICKET-

For Judge of the Circuit Court, ,1 EKE WHSl'

l'or Prosecuting Attorney.. C. W. iilKTON for Kepresentntivi

DAVI1) M'ALlSTK U. For Clerk, WA I.I.AC

E Sl'AUKS.

l-'or Treasure]-. It T. MEKKIi.I.. for Hecorder, GEOHC.E W. HEED. for ShertT

DAVID CANINE, for Coroner. DI!. SliOTTS for Surveyor,

M. 11UC KI- K. for Assessor, T. N. SlYKHS.

For Commissioner, :M District, .IAMK8 W. FOSTER. For Commissioner, 3d District,

A 1.1.EN ISYlCliS.

DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET-

i-'jr Governor

II. F.

SIIIVEI.V, of St. Josoph County. Kor Lieutt nam-Governor,

JOHN C. LAW LEll, of Washington County. Appollato Judgis, First District, EDWIN TAYI.OH, of Vanderburg County"

For Second District, E. GAVIN, For Third District, TIIEODOHE DAVIS. For Fourth District,

OKLANDO I.OTZ. ForfifthDistri.it, G. E. KOSS, For Secretary of State,

S. M. KAI.STON, oj Boone County. For Auditor of State, Joseph T. fanning, of Marion County,

For Tre'jsuter of Stale,

MOKGAN cIIAN

1)1.El', o! Ilaneock Couuty. i.

for Attorney-General,

j". 0. McM'TT, of Torrellaute. For Keporicr of the Supremo Court, 11ENKY WARHL'M, of Marion County. For Superintendent of Public Instruction," PI OF. W. If. SINCI.AIF, of Pulaski County for State Statistician,

O. II. DOWNEY, of Noble County.

WAIVING THE SHIRTAt tho dedication ceremonies of tho State Soldiers' Home, threo miles north of Lafayette, on the Fourth of July, Gen. Wallace was one of those invited to deliver an address and most inappropriately took occasion to bring out from its depository the bloody shirt and waive it quite vigorously for a few moments. Hoke Smith and the lato Jefferson Davis seemed to have been the principle characters for his diatribes. Gen. Wallace is a quiet candidate for U. S. Senator, it is understood, and thought it necessary probably in order to make himself "solid" with hia hearers, to inject the stuff in his address spoken of. But it will no doubt fail. The public long since has become disgusted with such orations. At the confederate reunion at Richmond, Va.-, last week Corporal Tanner, the distinguished Union veteran and late pension examiner, was re ceived with such a welcome by these "rebels" whom Wallace so denounces, as to brine tears to his eyes, and the demonstration in feeling favorable to a restored Union has never been surpassed since the close of tho war. There was none of the malicious sentiment pervading Wallace's address to be heard at Richmond, Va., last week where 10,000 Confederate troops ha:l assembled. Wallace remarked some four years ago that he was not a politician. The public will freely believe this statement and consider thsit- it would bo much more profitable to him and to the party to which he belongs to cease to tinker with matters of which he seems to know so little. His "'holt'' is certainly not politics, and as far as securing a majority of the popular voto for any position lie never has succeeded and never will. Stay with Ben Hur ami "them kind of fellows," but for your own credit ltave lloke Smith and Jeff Davis alone.

The Lafayette Sunday Times in speaking of Wallace says: "Gen Lew Wallace does not improve with age. He is as big a political fool to-day as when ho was a rip-snorting, roaring democrat—always doing the wrong thing at the wrong time, as was illustrated in hia harangue at the court house meeting Friday night."

THE Wilson tariff law is working out its own salvation and it is becoming I more and more satisfactory. One of tho things at first urged against it was that I it would tlood our country with goods of foreign manufacture. But the facts are that we are importing less manufactured goods now than before its enactment. Of tho imports of woolen goods from Bradford, England, February, 189(5, ehowed a decrease of §200,000 as compared with the same month in 1892. March 189G showed a decrease of 8887,000 compared with March 1895 while April 189G showed a decrease of 9952.000. This is a direct result of free wool the American manufacture has been encouraged. It is a great mistake to say that British woolen manufactures are prospering at the expense of tho American. '•••»vv'

A CAMPAIGN OF INSTRUCTIONCandidate Mount says this should be a campaign of instruction on the silver question. That is correct if the people are instructed rightly and the truth told by the instructors. It will be told only so far as it may be thought to be in ihe interest of the republican party, after that it is lies, misstatement?, sophistry, etc. In going far enough back into the tinancial history of the government, the reader will, if not too thoroughly prejudiced, soon ascertain who is responsible for the present depressed state of business and the uncartain ptate of monetary matters. Candidate Mount could, il ho would, easily show where his party has continually for many years past todied to the tnouey powers of the east, where the leading tinanceersof Now York have been called in time and again whenever any matter of finance were under consideration, where it has been possible under republican administrations to create trusts and all such organizations which suppress competition aud war against the interests of tho people. Mr. Mount should be fair—if it is possible for a republican candidate to be so—and go into all the true details iu money matters in his campaign of instruction. By all means get at the truth. The people are reading up now on money matters and you better net undertake to deceive them.

"f BOIS ANSWERS WHITNEY. Governor Boies, of Iowa, has made answer to the appeal of Ilou. W, C. Whitney for honest money. Governor Boies takes the position that the time has come for tho people to demand the restoration of silver. "Shall we lie down," he asks, "submit for all time to a gold standard, with its consequent effect of ruinous prices upon tho products of labor, its practical destruction of the great agricultural industries of the sections in which we live, its certain perpetuation of an enormous national, corporate and individual indebtedness that can never be paid in money so greatly appreciated in purchasing power as our own haB become through the demonetization of silver, or shall we insist upon the restoration of silver to the place of equality with gold, assigned it in the Constitution, as money of final redemption, with its consequent reduction to the purchasing power of our standard of values, its better prices tor the products of labor, its hopeful assurance that wo may some time pay our debts and be relieved from a condition of tinancial serfdom which, under present conditions, is becoming absolutely intolerable."

SETTLE THE MATTER THIS YEARThe contest at Chicago between the gold bugs and free silver men was simply a contest between wealth, and it might bo said poverty, between bond buyers and note shavers of the east and the producers of the west. Men who have dictated the financial policy of the government for the past third of the century by which they have been enabled io accumulate millions upou millions of wealth at the expense of all'the rest of the country, do not desire for an instant that this power should pass from their hands, or that any other part of the country should have a voice in tho matter of finances. It is rule or ruin with these eastern people. The west should speak out, should act in the matter. It is possible that America can continue ab a nation without Wall street. At any rate this government is not or should not be ruu in the interest of any class. Permiting it so long heretofore is the cause of the trouble which confronts us now.

FAIUHANKS aud Mount, both republican candidates talk about "their party carrying the State by 10,000 or 50,000 in November. This is bosh, stuff, and they probably do not believe it themselves. It is done simply to bolster their own party. In the ineii'.iiice tho silver feeling is increasing rapidly, and is gaining thousands o" a('.vocat:'s among the republican a. well as dome crats. They now begin to seo that tao great west and soulli foi years have beonlofing grou:.d by permitting the east and Wall street to control the financial policy of the government, and propose now, as they should long ago, to take a hand iu monetary matters themselves. Fairbanks and Mount represent the bond buying and wealthy manufacturing class of the party, who continue to wax fat and wealthy at the expense of all the rest. Indiana will not by its votes favor any such persons, and judged by the change continually going on the majority will bo tho other way.

WK never saw democrats subscribing money before to a republican campaign fund until we saw it in Darlington. If the republicans don't win tho victory this fall, so far as Uarlington is con cerued, it will not be because of lack of help from democrats.—Darlington Echo.

There are many of just such damphools in this county—fellows that call themselves democrats, but who patronize no democratic nowspaper, but go over into the camp of the enemy, pay him money for a newspaper, and then curse the democratic publication for lack of enterprise. They are of the eame breed of dogs that sciatch their ticket at the fall elections and succeed in putting republicans into county ofticee.

RETALIATED-

Occasionally some of the ill feeling among our republican bretiitvu of the State who are aiming to lesid the party through narrow but Howerv paths in this State, crops out. The Gowdy crew know, or think they tlo, just what is best for tho party, yet the old Harri-son-New gang think they do t. This feeling is frequently exhib.tcd. A few of the old crowd of ex-office seekers sought to oust Gowdy a few weeks ago but failed. He knew of two tricks to their one. Gen. Wallace belongs to the old crowd and docs not like Gowdy a little bit. At St. Louis during tho convention, he took occasion to bluff Gowdy and affront him regarding some political matters. It was considered ill-timed aud out of place, and Gowdy retreated, but evidently did not forget it. Last week at the Donnison House there was a gathering of many of the leading lights and candidates of the party for consultation. All of any consequence, but Wallace, wore invited and although present in the hotel he was not asked to come into the room where all tho others were present, but remained outside. Gowdy was doing somo "even up" work for tho St. Louis business, and seemed to have gotten in his work on this occasion iu tirst class style with ease aud felicity.

BOND buyers, note 3havers, government speculators and blood suckers generally arrogate to themselves all the knowlege regarding finances and are free to denounce the movement favorable to silver as dangerous to tho business interests of tho country. Any movement that may injure their particular calling, of course with them is wrong. Anything that may make money cheaper or benefit the people, reduces their hold «n the people as well as their per cent, profit. Verily what do the assertions of such men amount to when the motive that prompts them is seen? It is pure selfishness.

UNIVERSALLY the fellows that have gutted the public the most through extortionate lates of intereit iu the various lines of business, are loudest in demanding a gold standard. They are aiming to make a gold dollar worth two of silver, and if allowed full swing would want five of them for one of gold.

LOCAL Grand Army mou are indignant that General Wallace should have taken advantage of a nonpolitical gathering to gratuitously insult the Governor of the State and other democratic guests by making a republican tirade.— Lafayette Despatch to the Cincinnati Enquirer,

Some men gain sense by the advance upon them of age—others never do.

WHEN it comes to a gold standard McKinley is a fraud. In 1877, while a member of Congress, he voted for the Bland silver bill, and after Hays vetoed it, McKinley voted to pass it over the President's veto. There is no evidenco that McKinley does not still agree with Bland.

l,6l9.22o people in Chicago. That is what the school census shows, and it has taken ninety-nine days and 825,700 to find it out. This shows a net gain of 51,499 over 189-1.

THE entire cost of the Indiana State capitol, including expenses of the commission under whose supervision it was constructed, was 82,191,859.12.

Deafness Uannot be (Jured

by local applications as they cannot reach the disoased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inllamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, aud when it is entirely closed, Deafness is the result, and unless tho inflamution can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition. hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine eases out of ten are caused, by catarrh, which is nothing but an inllamed condition of tho mucous surfaces.

We will give One Huudrod Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free.

F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are tho best.

The rays have shown that tho tibia and femur in Justic Stephen Field's knee have almost grown together aud that the hinge has partially solidified.

Just What's Needed'

Exclaim thousands of people who have taken Hood's Sarsaparilla at this season of the year, and who have noted tho success of the medicine in giving them relief from that tired feelit-g, waning appetite and state of extreme exhaustion after tho close confinement of along winter season, the busy time attendant upon a pressing business during the spring months and with vacation time yet some weeks distant. It is then that the building-up powers of Hood's Sarsaparilla are fully appreciated. It seems perfectly adapted to over-come that prostration caused by change of season, climate or life, and while it tones and sustains tho system, it purifies and vitalizes the blood.

City property for sal e. Co., 118 W. Main St.

Will You Join the Reapers?

He handles

Crow" Whiskey.

C. A.MillerJfc tf

PHENIX BICYCLES,

"They Stand the Racket."

A test of 7 years proves then

Stover Bicycle Co,

CHICAGO URANCII. OPPOSITE AUDITORIL'M..

Harvest

Our experience has convinced us it den't pay to keep but the Best. A well pleased customer is our best advertisement

AND.

For the next thirty clays at-

No. 132 West Main Street.

I.

reliable.

mum mmm mam mam

If good publicity seed is planted where results are so sure as in drinking the

Oldest Whiskies

And the (boldest Beer at

THE CLUB.

Charles C. Smelcer.

JOpiE BjWRn IESI END

Has been refitted and is one of the finest places in this city. He handles nothing but the very best of

Freeport, 111.

Doesn't deoend upon Rain'"and Sun, Heat and Cold,

No. 128

N. Green St.

'Export," "Old Monarch."' ''Overho't" Rye, and "Old

Lafayette Beer, Best in the City. Free Lunch at all Hours

Dan Sullivan will wait on you. No. 210 West Market Street.

You Don't Get Slop

When you call for a Large Cold Beer or a Good Drink of Whiskey at

THE LODGE.

Jars

Jelly Glasses

We also have the Finest Dishes and Glassware ever seen in thig city

Prices Below the Lowest.

C. O. CARLSON.

West Main Street.

SPECIAL SALE

OF-

Carriages and Harness

Abrahaiti'®

O. BARNHILI^,

Funeral Director and Embalmer

Agent for the Burglar Proof Grave Vaults.

9

^Ve Manufacture all our Harness.