Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 1 August 1896 — Page 2
ATT OKXI K-S.
CUIMKLTER. & 1)A. IS
ATTORNEY8 AT LAW
Will doagenoralprneUoeiu nllCourts.
fllce ovorSmiUi te Steele's drug store, south WasUlugtcm Street.
M. W. BRUNER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Hiisiiw-t in nil tli» Court*.
.1
ml s-ettic
of deotMi'tits I'rtnlfs jiromptly hiumiiM tu Oflliv over Mulionjt-y'b lianlw U.1 *um-.
LOUIS M'MAINS.
Attorney At| Law
—,\ND-
Generai Insurance..
•. (MiLVessur to C. \V. Wright.
Oflice with Kistine Ristine. 3 ami
c«'4 Fisher Building.
.Money to: Loan
...........
Willi juiyinoiKs nml time to suit liorrower. Interest the lowest. Hitlier renl estate or personal eeurity accepteil. Ciooil notes easlietl. All Inquiries i-liuerfully answered.
C. W. BURTON,
... .-vOflleo over Kline's Jewelry Store. ,:
W. MO KG AN. W. L. LEE
MORGAN & LEE,
•:-GEN ERAL INSDRANCE AQENTS-:-MONEY
TO LOAN
At Lowest .Rates.
"ABSTRACTS OF TITLE
Furnished on short notice. CITY ami FARM PROPERTY lor sale. .Office: Orubatiu Uloek, N. Washington street
Cniwfortlsvillo, Iiul.
C. W. BURTON,
ATTORNEY aP LAW.
V\ ill do a general law business Montgomery ami adjoining counties. .Special attention given to eomeyaneing and tiio settlements of decedents estates. Oflleo over .Mat Kiloo't)
Jewelry store.
MILLINERY.
You can buy an elegant
SpringHat
Of Miss Kcnyon for $2.00 and upwards, spring and summer Ktvles. Before buying call and see
MISS KEN YON
Her stock of Millinery is the finest for the least price. With Myers & Cliarni, Campbell corner.
ATARRH
DIRECTIONS for using
CREAM BALM
Applva particle of the balm directly into the nostrils. After a moment draw a strong re at li throuuU tlio nose. l':-o three times a. ilay, alter meals, preferred, and before retiring.
HAY-FEVER
ELY'S E A HALM "pens and •leauses the Nasal
Passages, Allays Pain and iDtlammntion, heals the sores, protects tlio membrane from coLit. restores the senses of taste and smell. TLt balm quickly absorbed and gives relief t«t once. 1'rico 50 cents at Druggistsor by mail.
ELY 1JK0TIIEKS, fill Warren St., New York.
J. L. PURSELL
PRACTICAL
Carriage aud Busjgy Repairer
Repainting A
ltm
NEW WORK TO ORDER.
Comer Lafayette Pike aud Grant
Avenue..
CAPITAL CITY
WIRE WORKS CO.
W. F. SivtSHEH, Proprietor. Manufacturers of
Elnvator Enclosure?, Window Guards, Settees, Wire Chairs, Flower Stands, Office Railings.
CRIMPED WIRE WORK. Orders prompt-
Wire Goods of all description ly attended to. Office, i~X south Illinois Street. Indiana.
Indianapolis,
\XTANTED:—Several trustworthp gentlemen or ladies to travel In Indiana (or established, reliable house. Salary 1780 and expenses. Steady posiUon. Enclose reference and self ad'dressed stamped envelope. Tho Dominion -ompanr, third floor, Omaha Bldg., Chicago, lit.
HK REVIEW.
F. T. LUSE.
TKBMB or Jl?BSCBU"'tOH.
One year, ill the county. Oneyear.ont of thu con&ty ... Inquire at Office for Advertiiusratee.
(11)0 110
AUGUST 1, 1896.
NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
I': c.-Ment,
WILLIAM .1. IlltYAN. Neiiraska. Vice 1'ivsidcn AKTH'.'lf SF.WKi.L. Maine.
DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET.
r---Vv"v'V^i:- rr?5
K.:-r (iuvt»rnor
is. SlIlVKI.Y, ot St foil
11
tv.
tor Lleun nant-iiovernor,
JU1IN C. LAW I.EU. Washington County. Appellate .)u.lg(,s, rir-t. District, EIIW IN TAVLOli.of VaudeilMii-g Count}'
S 0 1 1". I'. GAVIN,
.' Kor Third J).strict, Til E01)0l{ E DAVIS. l'or 1 i'ii 11 District,
(Ilil.ANDO I.17.. For Fifth "Disn !•'., U. E. KOSS, For Secretary ol Male,
S. M. ALSTON, oj lloone County. Fur Auditor ol State, Joseph T. Fanning, of Marion County.
For Tre.'isurer of State,
MOKGAN CHAN 1)1.Kit, ol Hancock County. For Attorney-General. J.G. McMTT. of Terre Haute.
For ltepoi'ier ot the Supremo Court, 1IKNKY WAItlil'M, of Marion County. For Superintendent of Public lnstruitiou, PliOF. W. li. SINCLA1P. of I'ulaski County
For State Statistician,
o. II. DOWNEY, of Noble County.
COUNTY TICKET.
For Judge of the Circuit Court. EKE M. WEST
For Prosecuting Attorney, C. W. IU'KTON. For Representative,
DAVID M'AI.ISTEK. For Clerk. WALLACE Sl'.VUKS.
For Treasurer, H. T. MEK1ULL. For Keconlcr. GEOKGE W. HEED.
For Shel ltl
DAVID CANINE.. For Coroner, Di SHOTTS.
Fur Surveyor. M. lll'CIi l-.K. For Assessor, T. N. .MYEKS.
For Commissioner, «M District, .1A1 E8 W. FOSTER. For Commissioner, .'Jtl District,
ALLEN liYHHS.
KURJYAL WINGATE'S OPINIONKurnal John Wingate lives up in the north-west part of the county, in fact there is a little town up there named after him. The Kurnal aspires to be a politician, in truth has run for olliee occasionally. His frientls even claim that he discovered Mount's great superior titnes6 for Governor and hypnotized the convention into nominating hira. The Kurnal, ho-waver, has rarely had much inMuence in- politics for some reason or other. lie lately wrote a letter for the Journal from the west in whichhe has the following to say regarding the silver sentiment: "There is a general seBtitnent in this, country ?hat the free silvet craze has reached its high water mark and the tide is now receeding.''
The Kurnal does nofi observe close enough. He dillera frotU' many of hisown party in this State when he says the siivor s«ntiinent bas reached its high water mark—in fact many of them would think that he know very little about Tae- browed politicians of his party don't say that— those that have an eye on the political barometer. They will tell hiiu truthfully that it is on the increase. They will, ask hint to compare the feeling regarding the white metal
li0
days ago and
that of to-day. They will inform that there is hardly a school district in Indiana iu which republicans are found but what some of them favor the frse coinage of silver and approve most of tho [datform ou which Iiryiin was nominated. Wingate had better withhold any prophecies ho may have in store until after the election and then he can say to thena "I knowd it," etc.
Tho free silver cause is gaining, adherents daily, and wherever free silver literature is being circulated tho cause is strengthened. In a few eastern states where moEt of the business- done iB in buyiug government bonds, or simulating in government securities, and where little or no wealth is produced from the soil, of course, they oppose I free silver, as it ib liable to injure their calling, but every where else it is growing in popularity. If the central, west anJ southom states had -lO years ago have taken the matter iu hand and determined to have a say id the management ot affairs, the east would not to-day have dictated to us as she doee, and the neglect of it heretofore is largely the cauBe for our present troubles.
T. II. B. McCain and wife are in this city to-day, en route home from the far west. Mr. McCain has pronounced views on the money question and, although not a republican, believes that McKinley is sure to carry Indiaua this fall.—Lafaette Call.
Get right after htm Mack, Sue him for libel.
HARRISON FOR SENATORTlio name of ex-president Harrison we observe is mentioned iu connection with th position of U. S. Senator in the eve the republicans aro successful this fall iu securing at the election a majority of the .State legislature. It would be a funny circumstance after time servers, policy the tight Fairbti' ks and McKeen are tuuking to have some other man step in and secure the place, yet in politics stranger things than this have happened. It is quite probable that Harrison is not yet prepared to throw asi chances for political honors even if l.o has been president, and the fa• that he is going to take a hand iu the contes this year would indicate this to ime extent. If his party should be euceifsful ho would doubtless consider he was entitle., to some of the credit tor it as well .is Fairbanks or McKeen. and could have the Senatorship forced oil him. Wliat he :jay greatly lac! however, may be a "barrel" to buy up enough members to make his election a certainty. Fairbanks aud McKeen b.itli have "barrels," and will have to draw on tin. vigorously in the event the majority is republican in the legislature. The friends of Harrison should see that he is amply provided with the sinews of war, if he concludes to be a candidate for Senator.
THE LAST OF THEMbelieve that the populist party will this year exhibit its greatest strength and after that dwindle down to the insignificance of the prohibition party, or even less. The men running that uarty are built on too narrow a gauge, are too intolerent and bigoted, too selfish, too one idead to have a prolonged existance as political factors. The exhibitions of most of their leaders at St. Louis in managing their convention best illustrates the material of which they are composed. Instead of drawing voters to them their verdent and bigoted actions are calculated to repel. They, by their foolish and ridiculous ideas of aiding and bringing the free siivor party into power by nominating Bryan aud throwing aside So well are calculated to do it more harm than good. These long bearded, unkempt aud uncombed leaders of the populist party if they want to have their doctrines prevail and getting people to believe and act with them should exhibit more common sense than they have heretofore shown, should have some tolerance of the opinions of others, Their bull-headed course convinces nobody, and their actions lead many to doubt their sincerity. As stated we believe they will bloom the largest this year—after that the tiuis is with them.
I iiKLiEVE the struggle now going on iu this country and in other countries for a single gold standard woul if successful, produce wide spread disaster in and throughout the commercial world The destruction of silverand establishing gold as a sole unit of value must have a ruinous effect upon all forms of property except those improvements which yield a fixed return in money, it is impossible to strike silver out of existence as money without results which will prove distressing to millions anil disastrous to tens of thousands. 1 believe gold and silver coin to be the money of the constitution indoed, the money of tho American people anterior to the constitution, which the great organic law recognized as quite independent of its own existence. No power was conferred on Congress to declare either metal should not be money. Congress has. in my judgment, no power to demonetize silver any more than to demonetize gold.—James CI. Blaine. February, 187*.
The city hereafter receives its advertising of ordinances, notices of street grading aud graveling, etc., at lower rates than ever beforo through competitive bids for such work. The work for a year has been awarded to tho Argus News and thus passeth from the Jour nal a plum that it sucked to the utmost extent. If the council see to it that the new occupant of the field lives faithfully up to its contract, it will be the means of saving §150 to S'200 per year. Nothing like competition, but this would not have occurred had tho council have remained solidly republican as hereto fore.
The Wall street democratic tickit which Whitney, Vilas, Bynum, and some others expect to place before the country in September, will not be a loss or gain in particular to any party. If thoy made no nominations probably some of them in their zeal for protectian might vote for McKinley, (they migut call themselves democrats) but as it is he will lose them, and tor this should we be thankful to tho Wall Btreot crowd that is at the bottom of the movement.
ONE big loss of campaign thunder on the part of the republicans this year ib the fact that they cannot say a thing truthfully against the character or standing of Mr, Bryan, the democratic candidate for president. His neighbors, republicans and democrats alike, testify to his standing as a citizen. The "Mariah and the kid" style ot literature, so dear to the republican party in campaign times, will have to be reserved for some other occasion.
NO GREE_EYIZING IN THIS DISTRICT. The suggestion that demi.eratic candidates for Congress in this district, time tried and true, should give way to a republican renegade and permit him to havo the nomination, is the work of men, hungry olliee
seekerB
and such. Had Cheadlo have
stood in with his party, and r.ut been cHst asida by more ambitious aud aggressivo men of his party who did not like bis course, he would to day, no nil! doubt, have been a lirst-class gold bug and high
tan
If man. Me is at heart to
day republican, but is angry personally at his
party
and would do anything
to wreck it. We havo no faith in these latter day democrats. Let them tarry in Jerico u:.til their beard hath grown. Let them vote the ticket and act with the party for a few years, beforo appealing hungrily for olliee. Tho democracy of tho natiou were (Jreeieyized in 187*2 and have cursed the day since that th allowed a score of disappointed republican olliee seekers dictate to them that important nomination. The democracy of this district should not be Cheadleized. We have no use for any such men, and there is no substantial reason whatever thi.t they should be supported —at least bv democrats.
Let's see. It has only been a few years sine William McKinley voted for the free coir.age of silver at the ratio i,f IGto 1. Where does ho stand now? Why does he advocate the single gold standard? The answer is plain. Wall street dictated the republican platform ana McKinley either had to accept it or get out of the race for President. \s the Major wanted the nomination he was willing to 11 md on any soit of a platform in order to secure it.
The republicans in many places acknowledge since the main question this year is that of money aud fiances, that McKinley was the wrong man to nominate. lie may tell the public about tho beauties of protection and high tariff, but on money matters ho knows nothing and never did. His management of his own linancial matters certainly proves this.
McKinley has already become so bored with the nuportunities of republican olliee seekers at his home at Canton, Ohio, that ho has had to retreat and for several days
laEt
week was at Cleve-
laul: to escape from them. A republican olliee seeker sticks like a tick, and a great majority of tho party has become quite hungry since Cleveland hustled many of them out.
Mu. Bkyan said at Kansas City: "I believe to the very bottom of
my
heart
and the belief touches every tiber of uiy being, that until we restore silver to its equal place by the side of gold, to the place it occupied for so many years, so many centuries and so many ages, there can be no lasting prosperity, etc.''
The Review announces that it will not support Joe Cheadle for Congress. This being the case it may be well foi tho democrats to revise their plan and nominate some one else.—Argus News.
The ponderous influence of tho Argu« News, no doubt, secured the nomination of G. W. L. Brown, it being, as understood, the organ of that individual.-
They call that man a statesman whose ear is tuned to catch the slightest pulsations of a pocketbook, and dtnounce as a demagogue anyone who daies to listen to the heart-beat of humanity.—William J. Bryan.
Bryan's name appears on three national tickets this year. Three in the hand is better ttiau uu« and McKinley must view the present political situation with considerable anxiety.
IJkki: Most, tho nutod anarchist, is an avowed gold standard man and favois tho election of McKinley. The "good" boys all cling to tho gold standard platform.
McKinley was nominated by 'syndicates, trusts and wealthy corporations— Bryan, by the people, and tho people will elect him in spite of the opposition.
These and for throe years past are "gold standard" times. How do you like them? Would not most any change be preferable.
Deafaess Oannot be Cured
by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased 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 ot the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inliarued you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, Deafness is the result, and unless the inflamation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition. hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are caused, by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition ot the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred 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 the best.
Six young women were candidates for admission to the bar in New York last week.
111 E. Market Street.
Mtmmmmmmn mmmm mmmt,
PHOENIX BICYCLES,
"They Stand the Racket." =3
I
A tost of 7 years proves them reliable.
Stover Bicycle Co., Freeport, 111.
CHICAGO lilt ANCll. OPPOSI TE A DITOlil 1'
ff -r-
1
mam mmm irnmi mam
-4-
THE CLUB. Charles C. Smelcer.
Will You Join the Reapers?
I Doesn't deneml upon Rain"and Sun,-. Heat and Cold,
If good publicity seed is planted where results are so sure as in drinking the....
Oldest Whiskies
Ami the Coldest 13eer at
JOHNNIE BARRY'S WEST El"~pOf[
Has been refitted and is one of the finest places in this city. He handles nothing but the very best of
Imported and Domestic Wines and Liquors.
Me handles "Export." "Old Monarch.-' ''Oveiho.t" Rye, and "Old Crow" Whiskey.
Lafayette Bet r, Best in the City. Free Lunch at all Hours.
Dan Sullivan will wait on vou. No. 2 io West Market Street:
Ton Don't Get Slop
When you call for a Large Cold Beer or a Good Drink of Whiskey at
Our experience lias convinced us it dui't pay to keep but the Best. A well pleased customer is our best advertisement
Fruit Jars
A N
No. 12S
Nr. Green St.
THE LODGE.
cr
Jelly G-lo.assess
We also have the Finest Dishc* and Glassware ever seen in this city
Prices Below the Lowest.
C. O. CARLSON.
West Main Street.
CxKO. Iv
....DEALER IN..
EL LEK
Fresh and Salted Meats
TWO SHOPS
C. RAKNHILL, Funeral Director and Embalmer
Agent for tho Burglar Proof Grave Vaults.
JOHN B°8WANK AMUto£UlDgUm^
JOHN B. 8 WANK, Asslatant.
117 South Washington Street.
ReBld6nce.«5SouthWaahlngtonSt.61,81,83.No.Telephones
