Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 9 April 1898 — Page 3
DR.
Sadler
RE ABLE A N KX PE
SPHi -1A LISTS!
Office: 129 south Illinois sireet, Indiiuuipjlis, I ml. All dir-cases of the Blood, Skin and Urinary Organs will be treated for half puce for m.-xi thirty days. Catarrh. Piles Fistula, Rheumatism, Sto.nach, Liver and Kidney Troub les positively and permanently cuted Gleet, Inipotency and Stricture cured in the shortest time. No pain, no danger, no knife used. We effect the most speedy and :omplete cures in every form of Uterine, Ovarian and Pelvic diseases and all Female Complaints Call, or send stamp for a valuable book of information iree of charge.
Address DRS. SADLER & HOPE, Specialists, 129 South Illinois St., Indianapolis, Indiana Rooms 3, 4 and 5.
Daily,
Our brush should be used daily in place of the ordinary hair brush, hair washes, or hair growers. If you do not find, after six months' trial that
Dr. Scott's
ELECTRIC
Hair Brush
will do all we claim for it send it back and your money will be refunded. You can buy the number one size for
One
Dollar.
It Is Guaranteed to Cure
Nervous Headache in Ave minutes! Bilious Headache in five minutes! Neuralgia in five minutes I Dandruff and diseases of the scalp! Prevents falling hair and baldness! flakes the hair long and glossy I For sale at Dry Goods stores and Druggists or sent on approval, postpaid, on receipt of price«and ten cents for postage.
0 Our booh, TBS DOCTORS STORY" tent free on request, QivemfuU information concerning Dr. 8oottf» Electric Belts, $3, u, and $10. Electric Corsets, ftl, |US, 11.60, $2, andiS. EUctris Flesh Brush*s, ii 1 Electric Safety Razors, ftS. Electric Plasters, 26 era. I Electric JnsoUs, 60 cts, Elastic Trusses, $3.
GEO. A. SCOTT, 843 Brosdw.y, N. Y.
JOTICK TO SON-REMD IMT*.
|{tate of Iii'l'iua, Montgomery Co'iutv— In the CMrc ilc (Jourt, .J'vuu iry ter.11. 1393. lonry Rloe
IL
Will [a Kice,
L'UBI'JBVOS
Kice
iertha Keeves, Yrth'ir ««evei. t'Ua les Itto Reeves, lloevos. Hen -v vVe t, William D. lie^ves '.'ah S ittierlin, EJ Oscar leaves.—Complaint '37ns. IComenow thn plal it if« tiyTviiw Harney id George 3 trn their attorn-vs, and file elr com:ilalnt her.uu together with an afflvlt that said actlun la relation to re e*te, to-wit a suit in partition of real estate and. at each of said defendants to-wlf. William ce, Luther Kice, Bertha Reeves Arther Reeves inies Itoeves, Otto Reeves, Jessie Reeves, inry West, W lllft'n D. Rseven, Leah Sutherand I O^oar It dves are non-residents of
9
State of Indiana. loilc.i la therefore hereby given said non-res-ntdefendauts that
1111
LEONINE
r.
ess they Oe an I ap-
iron thi asth day of tin April term of the Dtgomury Circuit Court for \he year 1893, the
the
2U 1
day'if May,
IS9S.
dt the
irtllo isa in Orawfordavilio, In said County I State, and answer or demur to said comInt, thi «am« will be heard and determined fonlr absou riTXHNS my name aud the seal of said irt, alllx^d at nraw'orjsville, tills 28th day fobrnnry A. D. 18)8. TichS3J '91. WALfeA.CE SPARKS.
When a
Bull's Pills
argative, imuily medirine is needed, you can Iways rely on Dr. John W. Bull's Pills. For Histipation and hendache they have no equal.
leup KiitH to the West and Northwest. pn \pril 5 and 19, the North-Western le (Chicago & North-Western R'y) )l sell Home Seekers' excursioa tickfat exceptionally low rates to .1 large iber of points in northern NViecon
Michigan, north-western Iowa. Btern Minnesota, Nebraska, North ^kota and South Dakota, including famous Black Hills district. Better Jn a farm! Start now! Apply to irest ticket agent or addres
L.
H. Waggener, 7 Jackson place, Injinapolie, Ind. )r W. B. Kniekern, 22 Fifth avenue, licago, 111.
Special
IJOW
Rntea
Minneapolis. Minn., via. Big Four Jte, on account of Women's Presby^an board of Missions of the NorthBt, April 27-28, 1898. [full and detailed information call on ints Big Four Routo, or address the Jlersigned, E. O. MCCORMICK,
Pass' Traf. Mgr., Cincinnati, O.
•he rate of interest allowed to pawnKera in Philadelphia ha* been reed from 6 to 2 per cent, a month.
LESSON FROM HISTORY.
Jefferson's Plan to Raise Money Without Borrowing.
NATIONAL DEBT NOT NECESSARY.
Treasury Notes, Based on tiie Taxable Wealth of the Nation, the Only Safe Paper Money—No Generation Han the Kight to JLay Burdens on Ponlerity.
Jefferson was tbo father of the greenback, or treasury note, as ho was of nearly every good thing in our form of government. The credit of the origin of this species of the people's money is generally given to Lincoln and his advisers, but they only utilized in time of need that which Jefferson had fully matured during the war of 1813, as will be seen by the following extracts from letters that he wrote within the limits of that period. The old Federal party, whose genesis was the toryism of the Revolution and whose legitimate successor is the modern plutocracy, was germinating into new life and demanding then, as its offspring does now, the sale of bonds to raise the money for the support of the war. Jefferson, of course, opposed the bond issue on the ground (1) that the measure was unnecessary, and (2) on the broad principle of justice in the proposition that no generation has a right to lay burdens on its successor. "The earth belongs to the living and not to the dead," he thundered from Monticello. "The will and the power of man expires with his life, by nature's law. Each generation has the usufruct of the earth during the period of its continuance. When it ceases to exist, the usufruct passes on to the succeeding generations, free and unincumbered, and so on, successively, from one generation to another forever. We may consider each generation as a distinct nation, with a right, by the will of its majority, to bind themselves, but nono to bind the succeeding generations, more than the inhabitants of another country." These sentences clearly enunciate one of the cardinal principles of Democracy, as opposed to the specious fallacy of "a national debt being a national blessing" and the outrageous assumption that any set of men or any particular generation has a right to bind another or to lay burdens on posterity.
On the 24th of June, 1813, Jefferson wrote a complete outline of his plan for carrying on the war then in progress without ceating a national debt or borrowing money from foreigners, having previously matured his ideas by long and careful study of the subject. He wrote:
We are an agricultural nation. 8uch a one employs its sparings in the purchase or the improvement of land or stockB. The lendable money among them is chiefly that of orphans and wards in the hands of the executors and guardians and that which the farmer lays by until he has enough for the purpose in view. In euch a nation there is one, and only one, resource for loans sufficient to carry them through the expense of war, and that will always be sufficient and in the power of an honest government punctual iu the preservation of its faith. The fund 1 mean is the mass of circulating coin. Every one knows that, although not literally, it is nearly true that every paper dollar banishes a silver dollar from the circulation. A nation, therefore, making its purchases and payments with bills fitted for circulation thrusts an equal sum of money out of circulation. This ia equivalent to borrowing that sum, and yet the vendor,, receiving .payment in a medium ao effectual as coin for his purchases or payments, has no claim to interest. And so the nation may continue to issue its bills as far as its wants require and the limits of the circulation will admit. These limits are understood to extend with us at present to fciUO,000,000, a greater sum than would be necessary for war. In the year 1875 our state availed itself of this sum by issuing a paper money, bottomed on a specific tax for its redemption and to insure its credit, bearing interest at & per cent. Within a very short time not a bill of this emission was to be found in circulation. It was locked up in the chests of executors, guardians, widows, farmers, eta. We then issued bills bottomed on a redeeming tax, but bearing no interest. These were readily received and never depreciated a single farthing.
In the same paper he declared that every country permitting paper to be circulated other than that by public authority would end in bankruptcy. In other words, the only safe and legitimate paper money is that which is emitted by authority of the government and bottomed on the taxable wealth of the nation.
Again, on the 11th of September, 1813, he still further elucidated his plan for a government paper money, always available in time of need and ample to meet every emergency. He said:
The question will be asked and ought to be looked for, What is to be the resource if loans cannot bo obtained? There is but one—"Carthago dclo.nda est." Bank paper must be Eup pressed, and the circulation medium muBt be restored to the nation, to whom it belongs. It is the only fund on which they can rely for loans, it is the only reEource which can never fail tlicm, and it is an abundant one for every purpose. Treasury bills bottomed on taxes, hearing or not bearing interest, as may be found nocessary, thrown into circulation will take the place of so much gold and silver, which Inst, when crowded, will find an efflux into other countries and thus keep the quan turn of medium at its salutary level.
If our country could safely absorb and use $200,000,000 worth of government paper in 1813, when we had a population of 7,000,000 and less than a thousandth part of the commercial activity aud need of currency that we now possess with a population of 75,000,000, it is not overshooting the mark to say that we can use more than five times as muoh not only with safety but with such a healthy impetus to business as was never before heard of, and this amount will be all the money needed to pay the expenses of a war with Spain to free Ouba. With such facts before them and the recollection that the greenbacks saved the Union and gave us ten years of unexampled prosperity after the war, the people will not tamely submit to the issuing of more gold bonds at the command of the Rothschilds, IckelheimerB and their subservient Wall street tools. The American people are patient and long Buffering, as becomes a great nation, bat the bond buccaneers may presume too fur and tube one atcp too many for their
own good.
W.
8. BBYAJL
M'KINLEY'S "FIRST YEAR.
Result* Are Broken Promises and Prosperity Still Far Away. On the 4tb of March one year of Mr. McKiuley's administration expired, aud what are the results? The Diugley tariff, adopted to repay the large luanufacturers aud other monopolies for the liberal sums of money which they contributed in 1890 to elect McKiuley. As a consequence more trusts havo beeu organized during the tirst year of McKiuley's administration thau during any other four years in our history. The platform of the Republican party declared in favor of restoration of bimetallism and pledged Mr. McKinley to secure it through international agreement if possible, yet while the American commissioners were in Europe to procure such an agreement the president, in a special message to congress, July 24 last, advised that body to enact a law in accordance with the recommendations of the Indianapolis businessmen's convention, which has explicitly advocated the single gold standard, thus thwarting whatever progress the commissioners have made. And as for the general prosperity which the election of McKinley was to bring, where is it?
During the presidential campaign we were told that as soon as McKinley's election was assured then prosperity would come. But it dfidn't come. Then the Republican press told us that it would begin on the lBtof January, 1897. But It didn't. Next they told us that McKinley's inauguration was needed to bring it. Eut after the inauguration still it didn't come. They said an increased tariff would bring it. The Dingley tariff was adopted, with duties higher than over before, aud although it has been in operation eight months general prosperity has not yet put in an appearance.
And what are the Republican newspapers saying? They point to the little spurts of activity which occasionally
00-
cur, just as suspensions, discharges of workmen or reduction of wages here and there occur (but which the Republican organ rarely mentions), as evidence that prosperity is not come, but coming. Thus with one year of Republican ad ministration past not one of the good results promised has been realized.
Is it not high time for the American people to demand a change of policy, to that advocated by the Democrats, who believe that bimetallism, which Jefferson championed, and which was good enough for the country from 1792 till 1873, would be good enough for the people now, and bring them the prosperity which they have longed and hop ed for, lo, ever since that fatal act of congress, the repeal of the Sherman law in 1893? Let us have a resumption of the monthly addition of from $2,000, 000 to $4,000,000 to the volume of money, to keep up with the increase of population, as we had from 1878 to 1893, then, instead of growing scarcer every day in proportion to population, genuine and enduring prosperity will come and come rapidly. And it can be bro*ghr no her way. —Exchange.
SAFETY IN ORGANIZATION.
All Who Believe In F.qnal Rights Must Work Against the Money Power. The friends of bimetallism, of good government, of American patriotism, all who favor running our affairs in our own way, without regard to other nations—in fact, all who believe in a republican form of government—must unite and present a solid front against the money power. The only sure way to do this is to organize in every town and precinct, form clubs and associations, discus, the conditions and present the facts. The alertness of the money power is stp'tling and must be met. Give your personal attention and lend your influence in every possible way to break the force of the active work of the enemy. The deception, misrepresentation and plausible statements must be counteracted by the truth. If the mass of voters really and thoroughly understood the danger that menaces their welfare, there would be no trouble.
How can the facts and the truth be most thoroughly presented, is the great question. Mr. Bryan pertinently gives the warning. If the financial policy of the government—which is the most important—can be controlled by the money power, the same power can control any other question or policy of whatever magnitude when it is necessary! Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness is guaranteed to us. Let us guard our 6acred rights!—Mirror.
Victims of Yellow Badges.
The canary ribbon confidence game of 1896 has reacted in the New England states. The workingmen whose employers pinned yellow badges on them and marched them up and down to Mark Hanna'8 musia in order to prevent Mr. Bryan reducing their wages are now standing on the corners looking on at smokeless factories and wondering where the next week's family provisions are coming from. As a result of this shameless fraud they have political hammers out. lue first opportunity to get at the party which swindled them will be at the congressional election this fall, and there are indications of a mighty revolution in four or five states.
The March Toward Free Frade. The United States, despite the clamors of the Diugleyites, are entering upon a career of free trade. In spite of tariff monacles American manufacturers—including pig iron, steel rails, bars, billets, locomotives, bicycles, electric and other machinery, boots, shoes and leather, agricultural implements of all kinds and other products too numerous to mention—are successfully competing in the world'8 markets.—Grand Rapids Democrat.
A Healthy Infant.
The Wire trust has but $24,000,000 capital. Mr. Dingley should give bis Immediate attention to the struggling infant
"The 1 ight oi tka World, or Our 8nvtor In Art" Cost over $100,000 to publish. Contains Denrly 200 full-page engravings of our Savior, by the Great Masters. It is cot life of Chrit-t. but ail exhibit of ail the fjreat Masters' ideals of the Christ, Xo other book like it
WHS
ever published
AgentBare taking from three to twenty orders daily. The book is so beautiful that when people see it they want it Published less than a year and already in its twenty-filth edition, some editions consisting of ly.r,00 boo!?s. The presses are running day and night to till orders. A perusal of the pictures of this book is like taking a tour among the great art galleries of Europe. The Hermitage, Prado, UflBzi, Pitti, Louvre, Vatican, National of London, National of Berlin, Belvidere and other celebrated European art galleries, have all placed their rarest and greatest treasures at our disposal that they might be reproduced for this superb work. "First glance at the pictures brought tears to my eyes," says one. "Oleareu $150 first week's work with the book." says another. Many men and women buying and paying for homes from their success with this great work. Also man cr woman, of good church standing, can secure position of Manager hero here to dooflice work and corresponding with agents in this territory. Address for full particulars A. P. T. Elder, Publisher. 189 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, 111., First Floor.
Of the 1,754 students aided by tbe Methodist Episcopal Board of Educa tion last year, 283 were women.
Wanted,
By o'd established house, high grade man, good church standing, willing to learn our business then to act as manager and State correspondent here. Salary 1900. Enclose self addressed stamped envelope to A. T. Elder, general manager, 189 Michigan avenue, Chicago, III.
B. P. O. Elks.
New Orleans May 10-13, one fare round trip, via. Big Four Route. Tickets will be on sale May 6, 7 and 8. Returning tickets will be good fifteen days from date of sale.
For full information call on agents Big Four Routd, or address the underiigned, E. O. MCCOKMICK,
Pass. Traf. Mgr., Cincinnati, O. Mention tbiB paper when you write.
Ballets Point to Point.
A correspondent relates the following remarkable personal reminiscence of an incident which occurred during the Franco-German war: "A perfect Btranger (an Englishman)," said he, "called npon me and handed to me a chassepot rifle, which he related he had picked np on the field of battle after Gravelotte, which had a bullet or two stuck in about the middle of the barrel and which he requested me to get removed. This was done, and upon examination two bullets were found to have met point to point. A German bullet must have entered the muzzle of the French rifle barrel just as the French rifle had been fired, and the two bullets had met together without bursting the barrel. I inclose my card."—London Telegraph.
Must Have Loved Him.
Many stories have been told of a Manchester man who is supposed to be the—well, to put it humanely—plainest man in England. But we think the following is the funniest: "Mamma," a child was heard to say in an awestruck whisper, after a prolonged survey of the peculiar featnres of the guest, "thatgentleman's mamma must have loved children very, very mnob." "Why so, my dear?" inquired the unsuspecting parent. "Oh,"returned.the child in the same, andible whisper, 'cause she brought him up."—Strand Magazine.
No matter
how much of a business woman a woman may be, when the little lovegod makes up is in to shoot, there is no protection
lv a young woman
whose affections are already engaged, hesitates to assume the obligations of wifehood and motherhood, because she feels unfitted for them by some physical weakness o* disease.
The special ailments to which the feminine organism is liable, not only unfit a woman for happy wifehood and motherhood, but incapacitate her for any sphere of action. No woman can discharge the daily duties of any position with comfort or satisfaction who is constantly weighed down by headaches, backaches and. dragging, weakening drains.
Troubles of this nature are not by any means a necessity of womanhood. They are positively and completely cured by Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It imparts genuine health and strength to the womanly organs. It was devised for this one purpose by an eminent specialist in this particular field of practice.
For several years I suffered with prolapsus of the uterus," writes Miss A. Lee Schuster, of Box ii, Rodney, Jefferson Co., Miss. "Our family physician treated me for kidney trouble, and everything else but the right thing. I grew worse and worse. My body was emaciated, nands and feet clammy aud cold, stomach weak, with great palpitation of the heart. I dreaded for night to come for I would suffer with nausea all night and •o I continued until some kind unknown friend sent me your book with a marked page. I began taking your Favorite Prescription,' contrary to my family's wishes, and I began to improve right •way. I have taken three bottles and now I am very nearly weU and am very happy, and thaakful to yon."
.AVege table Preparation for As slmilating theTbodatidRcgufating the Stomachs
andBowels of
IM AMS /CHILDREN
Promotes I)i^csfiLon,ChecrfuIness and Rest.Con tains neither Opmm,Morptune nor Mm&raL NOTNARCOTIC.
&a/x efOldnrSXMUZLBJUiW JPur^ffan St*£~ jfix.Stnna
HxMbSA- v: 4nin Serti
ftimSctd
Aperfect Remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverishoess and
Loss
OF SLEEP.
Tac Simile Signature of
NEW YORK. 'Atb months old 35 DOSES -33 CE
ATS
EXACT C0PV OF WEA PPEH,
SEE
Where You All Want to Go
No. 108 South Green Street. Crawfordsville, Indiana
HARTLEY & PRIDE
Crawfordsville, Ind No. 214 S. Walnut Street.
OQ&m
WE HAVE NO AGENTS NOAGENTS
ELKHART OABSIASE AND
THAT THE 1
FAC-S1MILE SIGNATURE' •OF-
IS ON THE
WRAPPER
OF EVERY
BOTTLE OF
CUSTOM!
Oastoria is pat np in one-size lottles only. It lis not sold in balk. Don't allow anyone to fall Syou anything else on the plea or promise that it I is "jnst as good" and "vill answer vnry par* I pose." 49* Bee that yon get 0-A-S-T-0-&-I-A*
OOO uttb you gov Vra"Oal*V*Xrl*A4 k'
Mfornid Wine
S
sale priccs. Raving him the W doaler'e profits. Ship an?* whore for examination. jC Everything warranted. 118 styles of Vehicles, 65 stvles of Harness. ITop Buggies, to 70. V/1/7
•*«m» CO. w.
4
CD
$
CD CO c-f
XZ
CD
OQ
••a
50c Bottle
-AT-
The Clipper
XJl
3
CD
a It1
CD
O
CO
O t-i
&
CD W c+
3
Tj
O CD 03
to CD rt
O
& CD
but havo sold direct to the eon- Vl cuxnor for
25
&
fPTf''"""? 11®
year* at whole- 1 wttRM
VTT1ALA
Sorre.ve,f50to 112ft. Carria-X At\/ha\ 7a \\, ge. Phaetons. Trans. Wagon- C:V \fr\ jr ettes. Bpring-Koad and Milk 1
He.n. BvnTBarneee. Prtee.ftf.OO. "JJajons. Send for large, free Ke.tMBnrrty. Prle«. with eerUini, lampe. u. As good at leUi fer p5. Catalogue of all our styles, ahade, apron and tenders, 960. Asgoodaseellstor|90.
a.
PBATT. KLKOABT,ran.
IS T.TTTF, A GOOD TEMPER, "IT SHEDS A BRIGHTNESS EVERYWHERE."
—S
&
