Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 12 September 1896 — Page 2

ATTUlfNl ES.

CLUDKELTEli & HAt IS

ATT'iRNEYSATLAW

Will do a tjeueral iinictk'oiu all Courts'.

Uleoovci Smith it Steele's drug store,-iOiitli Washington Struct.

M. W. BRUNER,

ATTORNEY AT LAW.

Of

In all Hi'1 ourts. and t-ottlci

dei-edents e-Uiitfrt p|-oin|Hly atlonded to. Olll,-,• uvi't .Miiliornoy'f liard\var» stoic.

LOUIS M'MAINS.

Atorney At Law

AND—

General Insurance.

(siU-vos.Aor to

Office with Tlistii

ie iV Ristine, 3 and

4 Fisher Buildin

Money to: Loan

Willi imymoiKS an«l timo to suit borrower. Interest tho lowest. K.UIum' renl o^lntoor l»oir*oiml ^ocuritya-'ooptfi, uoo»l note?* oaslnM. All inquiries cheerfully ?inh\\erevl

C. W. BURTON,

onii'i? over Klmo'd .lowelry Moro.

W. W. MoUCAN. •,- w. L. I. EE

MORGAN & LEE. INSURANCE A6EMTS-:-

WSOPIEY TO LOAN

At Lowest Kates.

ABSTRACTS OF TITLE

Furnished on short notice. CITY and FA KM I'ROl'FRTY for sale. UfUoe: Ornli/uin Week, N. Wa-hiiigtun street

Crnufordsville. lml.

C. W. BURTON,

ATTOliXEY At' LAW:

Will Ju a general l.'iw hnsines** in Montgomery ami ailjuiuini: counties. Special attention given conveyancing ami the M'ttlcuicntH ot decadents estates, ufllcc over Mat Klino'ti j?welry store.

,9

MILLINERY.

You can buy an elegant

SpringHat

Of Miss Kenyon for S-2.00 and upwards, spring and summer Si les. Before buying ca I and see

MISS KENYON

lTor stock of Milliner) is the finest for the least price. With Myers k. Cliarni, Can.pbcll corner.

CATAHRH

fr&M

»IKMOTIONS for using

CREAM BALM

coV°

-\p]ilva iiartiele of tlio balm directly into tho nostrils. Aftor a moment draw a strong 1) real through tho nose. Lo tlireo times a day, aftor meals preferred. and before retiring.

ELY'S E A liAi.M opens and idealises the Nasal

HAY-FEVER

Passages, Allays I'aln and iriil-immatioi'., lieals tho sores, protects tho membrane from colds, restores the senses of taste and smell. Tic balm is quickly absorbed and gives rolief at once, l'rico .VJ cents at Druggistsor bv mail.

ELY HKOTUEltS. r,l! Warren St., New York.

J. L. PURSELL

PRACTICAL

Carriage and Bu^y Jiepairer liepaiutin^

NEW WORK TO 0RL)EU.

Corner Lafayette Pike and Grant Avenue.

CAPITAL CITY

THE REVIEW.

IJY

F. T. LUSE.

TtniiF or

One year, in the comity Oneycfir,outoft.hfc conrtv. Inqnireat Offlcefor Advertiinsrrates.

11)0 1 10

SEPTEMBER 12. 1896.

NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC TICKET-

Pre.-idelit,

WILLIAM .1. IStU AN. Nebraska..... Vice Pi-i-Mdenl, Airrin sr.WELL. MAIN-.

FOR CONGRESS.

HON .I'JSKL'LL

It I

EA

I

'I.E. JV?

DEMOCRATIC STATE TK'KET-

!'.r Covt i-nor

It. I"

\V. Wright.

SHIVKl.Y, St. Joseph County..' /. For l.tenti naiit-tlovernor,

JOHN C. LAW LEI!,of Washington County. Appellate .ludgis, I-'ir*t District, EOWIN TAYl.oi:. of Yaiiderburg County l'or Second lMsUi'-:, 1'. E. (!AYIN, l-'or Thii-.l District, 'I'll El (DO I! E DAVIS l-'oi Fourth District, (.iltl.ANDO LOTZ. i-'or l'ifth Disiri.it,

C. E. KOSS.

For -cri'tnr.v of State,

S. M. KALS TdN. in lioone (.'oui.ty. l-'or Auditor of State, Joseph T. raiiiiiug, of Marion County.': \. for Tresisuier of Mate, MOUGAN HANDLER, o: Hancock County. 'if/Oii l-'or Attorney-Genera!.

1

.) MCM'TT, of Terre Haute. l-'or Keporier u' 1 tic Supreme Court, IlENUY V.'AiiKL'.M, of Clarion County. For Superintendent of Public Instruction, Pi.OK. W. 1! SlNCLAIH. of Pulaski Couuty l'or State Statistician,

O. II DdWNEY, of Noble County.

SENATORIAL TICKET-

,1. A. 11 ED.ECOCK, of Clinton Count)3 J. S. AIKllAliT, of lioone County, •luiut Keprosentative of Montgomery, and Cl.iy,

UKOliCiEK. KA YSEK, of Clay County.

COUNTY TICKET.

i-'or Jtiilge of the Circuit Court, •ILKKM. Wl-bT

VT*or l'losecuting Attorney, y, C. Ul'HTON For Representative,.

DAVID M'ALIS'i'Ei!

•V :,i' l'or Clerk. WALLACE Si'AUKS For Treasurer.

I

WIRE WORKS CO.

W. F. SwisilEli, Proprietor...Manufacturers of

Elovator Enclosure", Window Guards, Setteos, Wlro Chairs, Flowor Stands, Office liaillngs.

CRIMPED WIRE WORK.

Wire Goods of all description. Orders promptly attended to. Offlce, 47Jtf south Illinois Stroet, Indianapolis, Indiana.

\\T \NTED:—Sovoral trustworthpgentlemen or ladles to travel In Indiana for established, reliable house. Steady position

Salary *780 and expenses. Enclose reference and self ad

dressed' stamped envelope. The Dominion mpany, third floof-, Omaha Bldg., Chicago, ill

1

'0.

T. .MEHHII.L. l'or Kecorder.

1 EOlitiE W. DEED. For Slier IT DAVID CANINE.

For Coroner. DK. S1IOTTS.

.... .. For Surveyi.r, I'. M. lU'CKI-.i For Assessor,

T. N. MYKHS.

For Commissioner, id District, .TAMES W. FOSTER. .I-'or 1 ommlssioner, 3d District,

ALLEN liYEKS.

THE CENTENARY SCHEME

Tho scheme hatched in Indianapolis some months since of having a centenary celebration at Indianapolis in 1900 to continue some months, is not dead, but is only sleeping, and wil! probably be urged with great energy and a big lobby as soon as the legislatureconvenes in January next. Honest members of any political party should oppose this with all tho resources at their command It is simply a scheme to benetit a few persous at Indianapolis at the expense of the tax payers of ir.diaua. If these persons desire it let tl em go ahead with their own resources aud take their chances of making it a success, but to force the people of the State by legislative enactment to help pay tho bills, would be an outrage Indiana dees not need this centenary may bo Indianapolis does, Let her pay for it then. It has been reported that the Hon. J. A. Mount has promised his support of the project. If so. this of itself should defeat ^him. It is anything to got money out of tho State with a lobby that is to be found the year around hanging around the hoteis of Indianapolis. If tho majority of the next legislature should bo republican the plan will be almost sure to go through and an appropriation of pa.ssibly a million or more of cash will be made for the project. This is one of tho aSuirs of the future that honeBfc members of the nest General Assembly should keep their eyes upon. It will bo forced through if possible, as it is in the interest of a few hungry politicians who will use every means within their knowledge to have an appropriation made for this purpose. Lot it bo defeated. Let the deeply interested foot the bills themselves.

HOW MANY ARE THERE? The question is often asked, how many in this county will vote the bolter's ticket, and from it average up the State for the total number. Close in vestigators do not count more than 50 votes for Palmer and iiuckner in Mont gomery county, about a half of whem live in Crawfordeville. Average cry county at this rate gives 4,000. Of course in several counties like Marion, Vigo and Allen the vote for them will run up into the hundreds, while in many counties they will not secure over 12 or 15 votes.

THE CORRUPTION FUND-

Never has national electiou been

Rut in spite of all their money we be lieve they are doomed to defeat. Additions to the Bryan column aro being made daily in almost every part of the country. The speaking of Bryan in the east has been of vaft benetit to the ticket. His arguments in behalf' of silver reraain unanswered. Tho Australian ballot system, now in use in all the States greatly aid the cause of a free ballot and an honest count. This is our hope, and in spite of Ilanna's corruption fund will result in a victory for tho cause of iree silver.

KINLEY'S PRAYER,

"Our Father who art in England, Rothschild be thy uaine. thy kingdom come to America, thy will be done in the United States as it is in England. Give us this day our bonds in gold, but no' in stiver, give us plenty of laboring men's cotes to keep monopoly in power and its friends in office. We know our father that we have done many things that were wrong, we have robbeci the honest poor, and brought distress to many a poor man we know that it was wrong to refund the bonds and make them payable in coin wo know it was wrong to water our stock, but thou knowe that we made money at that now. our father, thou knowest that wo are above politics. It is the same to us whether Gold Democrats or Republicans rule for thou knowest we are able to sway such parties in our favor. Lead us not in the way of 'common people," the farmer or laborer, and above all, deliver us from '10 to 1.' Thus shall we have tho kingdom, bonds, interest, power and gold until tho Republic shall end. —A MKN."

DRAWS THE CROWDS No

I

'cui speaker of this generation

haB drawn larger crowds to hear him than Hon. Wm. J. Bryan, and no speaker has shown greater versatility in the language, thought and general make-up of his addresses the people. No ono is abused who differs from him, no ono personally pointed out and held up, but. his speeches are conservative in tone throughout, and appeal to the good sense and reason of the peroplo. Mr. Bryan's addressee are of vast benetit to the cuuse of free silver and everything indicates his triumphant election.::

DGNT CHANGE YOUR RESIDENCEDemocratic voters should niako it a point not to remove their location into another precinct, until after theelection in November. We understand a pirt of tne republican plan now under way in the county IB to induce voters of the party opposite to them to move iato another township or even iato an adjoining county. This has been attempted in several neighborhoods, especially near the county line. Don't change your residence, if possible, until after November 3d. You may loae your vote.

"THE LAW AND THE. FACTS-" The above is the title of a pamphlet, issued this week from the REVIEW job room. The pamphlet is a compilation of figures and facts relating to the coinage of silver and the financial question in general. It iB is issued by the democratic central committee and should be in the hands of every voter of the county. By careful perusal of the work the voter can gain many valuable factB in guiding hira how to cast his vote.

HON. W. J. BHYAN addressed an audience of between 40,000 and 50,000 at Columbus, O., labt week—as large a crowd probably as was ever congregated to hear any npeaker in this country.

GRANT FOR BIMETALLISM"With free and unlimited coinage of gold and silver, we will clear away our public debt before the close of the century."—[U. S. Grant in 1873.

ALTGELDT.

Altfrel.lt,

us

O

held where a larger corruption fund will 1 The republican press of ttie bu need than by tho republican loaders

at the ensuing election in November. I

personal interest in a gold standard, oq^qo 3.1,000. is a very .sensible will contribute to this fund as never be- and will again be elecfed (5uv rnor fore. It is the only anchor on which to [11, i^. I11 a speech at liiianl, Illicling with any hope of success. I'lie jf

in a gold standard, this fund as never be­

lt is the onl) anchor on which to with any hope of success. I'he American voters to day are in favor of the election 01 Bryun by a great, majority. and were the election held to-day this mssi rt 1011 would tie atlirmed in a language unmistakable, lo stem this tide this immense corruption fund, runnino up into the millions is to be used. TLat is what llanna and his lieutenants of the republican national central committee are now engaged upon. All t,i eir arguments, all their work, all the labor of their leading speakers, falls upon stoney ground. The voters see nothing in what they eay. They know the governmant is upon a gold Btabdard basis to day, and they know that times could bo little less stringent than now, or business in all lines less dull. They want a change, are determined to have it, and can seo little hope for it in tho election of MeKiuley. This fund will be used in many ways to bring tho de sired result. The party can this year succeed in no other way, cannot possibly hope to defeat|the democratic ticket by any other means. The people are with us, tho millionaires, rich syndicates and money loaners are against us.

tract

a cain.lui.ttn for re-el etion

uriior of llliuois, iB almost sure

0

a a

The all street bond buyers, tho big eamohohas made an excellent Governor, syndicates, and those who have a big

particularly free in ilieir

Ji f, toward AItgehlut .11 the

a a

ity in Chicago of

a

week, he made an ex­

cellent a dress on the silver question from which we make the following

1

ex­

•'We are not proposing to. wrons: anybo iv. We are proposing to give every man his due. We are not suggesting ex 'rimont we are demanding a return to tho experience of the wo hl for thousands of years, and we say that thi ex periment of trying to force the nations of the earth onto a gold basis for the benelit of European creditors is ruining the American people. We propose to pay back the English cieditois in the same money they gave us, gold and silver. We propose to give them dollars that will have the same purchas.ng [lower, that will buy as much property and as much labor of every kind as the dol. lars they gave us. We propose to pay them principal and interest in exactly tho same money which they gave us. aud we say that their act in getting silver demonetized and gold made dearer after they h.id succeeded in getting our bonds and 1 otes so as to compel us to pay in a different kind of money from that what thev gave tK to pay in dollars which cost twice as much sweat, twice as much blood, was a fraud, aud a eritno against civilization."

TH E Indianapolis News was very free in giving advice to the bolters' national convention last week, suggentiug platform, nominees, etc. However as the entire thing from start to tinish was in the interest of McKinley and his party, the zeal of the news should surprise no one. The News seems to be one of those publications whose appropriate motto should be "Always independent, but always republican."

LINCOLN'S PROPHECY"As a result of tho war, corporations have been enthroned and an era of corruption will follow the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by playing on the prejudices of the people until all wealth is concentrated in a few hands and the republic is destroyed. Before God I fear more for my country now than when in the mi.lst of the war.'"—Abraham Lincoln.

M'KINLEY ON SILVER "I am for the biggest use of silver in the currency of the couutry. I would not dishonor it I would give it credit and honor with gold. I would make no discrimination. 1 would utilize both metals as money and discredit neither. I want the double standard."—[From a speech t\v McKinley in thr House of Representatives, June 11, ISftO—Congressional Record, vol. 21, page 0,111.

ELKIN'S OPINION.

'•Silver is the money or the constitution as much as gold tho people will have silver for money and will light for it, and the contest will not end until it has its proper place in the money system of the country."—[Stephen B. Eikins in a speech at Fairmount on June 19, 1SD-1.

GARFIELD ON MONEY. "Every man who is opposed to the use of the silver ciin as a part of the legal currency of the country I disagree with. 1 would endow tho two metals with equality and make coinage free."—

James A. Gartield in a speech delivered in the House of Representatives.

KFJ-CIILICANS

assisted very materially

in booming tho bolters' convention at Indianapolis, for which they are no doubt, entitled to the thanks of the convention managers including Bynum, Vilas, Flowers, et id. The bolters will reciprocate about the time of the election by voting for McKinley.

IT is remarkable at the great praise bestowed on the management, conduct and appearance in general of the dele gates to the bolters' convention at Indianapolis—by republicans. They wished it wo for the benetit they trust it may bo to McKinley.

PALMKU, the nominee of the bolters or President, is in his eightieth year, has been on all sideB of political issues, and should he live two years more will probably be against the principles he now upholds. However he is good enough probably for a leader of bolters-

WHEN 1 find a man talking about an honest dollar and then not telling you what he means by an honest dollar I am afraid ho loves darkness rather than light, because his purposes are evil.— Mr. Bryan at Hornellsville, N. Y.

FOR thirty years those who do not want it have, we are told, been trying to secure an international agreement favoring bimetallism. We have patiently waited, but we will wait no longer.— W. J. Brya^

EIGHT AND NINE CENT. Investments. Nontaxable. The State Building and Loan Association of Indiana. Callon JOHN M. SOHOLTZ, Crawford ville. •••--.

aim! mtwmmm

lie handles "Export,"

Crow" Whiskey.

Harvest

sure as in drinking the.

Will You Join tho Reapers?

mmm

IPHOIX BICYCLES.J

"They Stand the Racket."

A test of 7 years proves then, reliable

Stover Bicycle Co., Freeport, 111. E5

0 CHICAGO 1SRANCI1. OPPOSITE Al'DlTOKll'M ,7

mam mmim mum munK pke lour fleadpartGH

.AT.

THE LODGE

During fair week. If you want to leave any parcel we will take good care of it free of charge. Should you want anything in our line we shall be pleased to serve you. .-

P. S. Our Large Beers aud Good Whiskeys are winners.

JOHNNIE BfRRY'S WEST END SALOOK

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

He handles

•Old Monarch.'' "Overholt" 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.

Fruit Jars

AND

Doesn't denend upon Rain and Sun, Heat and Cold.

If good publicity seed is planted where results are so

Oldest Wh-iskies

And the Coldest Beer at

THE CLUB.

Charles C. Smelcer.

Jelly Gasses

A\ ulso liave the Finest Dishc^ and Gln.!SS\vure ever seen in this city

Prices Below the Lowest.

C. O. CARLSON.

"West Main Street.

GEO. KELLER

DEALER IN.,

Fresh and Salted

111 E. Market Street.

TWO SHOPS

D. C. Funeral Director and Embalmer

Agent for the Burglar Prool Grave Vaults.

No. 128

N. Green St.

Meats

11.7 South Washington Street.

St. Itcaidence.415 South Wa^ng^t.^