Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 16 July 1898 — Page 6
BILIOUSNESS
bosses many a body and bur
dens many a mind. You can't enjoy the food you like because you are bilious. You take all sorts of precautions, and yet the bilious attack leaps on you like a tiger from ambush. You know the feeling! The blood seeming on fire with a dull heat the boring pains in the eyes the head seeming to open and shut the horrible nausea. You know the irritability which precedes and the languor that follows the attack. It's miserable, isn't it Why not cure the trouble There's a pill that will cure biliousness. Dr. J. C. AYER'S PILLS are an acknowledged specific for this derangement.
A. Swanger, Texarkana, Tex., writes: "For fifteen years I have used Ayer's Pills, and find them very effective in bilious cotnplaints. I have yet to see the case where they have failed to cure."
Try
Ton (m Blllotim BO MOT FAIL TO
AYER'S PILLS
Sour Stomach
"After I wan Induced to try CA8CAKKTS, I will never lie without them In the liouse. My liver was in a very bad shape, and my head ached and I had stomach trouble. Now. since taking Cascarets. I feel flne. My wife has also used there with beueiicial results for sour stomach."
Jos. Kkehlinu. iwi Congress St., St. Louis, Mo
CANDY
CATHARTIC wti nnn I iv^
ifAtiWtlW)
TRADE MARK PCOfSTfREO
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. \Veakei..or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Stirling Krued Company, hicagro, Mootreal, New York. 318 MA_TA_RJIP
nv I
Sold and guaranteed bv all drug-
V'DAV
gtsu, to CIJK1S Tobacco Hubit.
Abstracts of Title
Furnished at Reasonable Rates.
Money to Loan
On Real Estate:5'" and Mortgages carefully executed.
Webster 4 S n'ent.
Recorder's Office.
FREE TO EVERYBODY
If wo don't make your watch run and keep time Its FREE—no chargo. Main Springs, warranted, $1.00. Cleaning $1.00. An experienced Jeweler in charge.
New Central Drug Store
Corner College and Water Streets.
It rata •wits von whether yon continue the nerre-fciJlujg tobacco habit. NO-TO-liAl^i remove* the desire for tobacco, outnervouadistress. expels tine, parifles the blood, to re an
I (^^^C*sescured/buy
•»i.PO«k®V^W•i p^lTO-TO-BA
from
...your own druggist, who will vouch for us. Take it with will, patiently, persistently. One
box, ft,
usually cures 3 boxee,
f!
60,
uar&nteed to cure, or we refund money. 1»—tdyCe., (llca^ Itaifwl, lit tart
When &
Dr. Bull's Pills
purgative, family medicine is needed, you can always rely on Dr. John W. Bull's Pills. For constipation and headache they have no equal.
EVERY WOMAN
Sometimes needs a reliable monthly regulating medicine. DR. PEAL'S
PENNYROYAL piLLS,
Are prompt, safe and certain in result. The fjeoute fDr.J'ears) never disappoint. Sentanywnere,
Sold at X. W. Myer's Now Central Drug Store, Crawfordsvllle, Ind.
For Hale.
My farm of 80 acres laying two miles south of Mace station and two miles east of Whitesville, Ind., is for sale at a bargain. For information address,
J. N. COULTER,
jyl-3m Pawnee, Oklahoma Territory.
War Map Free.
Latest official indexed maps of the world, Cuba and Philippine Islands for pockdt use, issued by the Chicago & North Western R'y. free, for two cent stamp.
Fine Monuments.
Robeit McMains has just received a car load of fine monuments and has them for Bale at 714 South Walnut street. If you want a bargain call and get prices. tf.
GOLD POWER METHODS
Infamies Practiced to Carry the Election of 1S96.
TEE AMENDE TO HON. 0. A. T0WNE.
An Incident Which Slum-n the Character of tin* Campaign Tli.it Is Being Waged Against Si Iv 1 r—"1! .i:'st Money" Organ
KetrActs it statcm. nt.
During tin- cM King and political campaign Of 1800 The Dispatch, on I ln- 'Jlst day of August, published an article conn ruins Hon. Charles A. Towne, then an independent candidate for oongress, with Democratic and I'opulist indorsement.", in the Sixth congressional district of Minnesota, wherein Mr. Towne was charged with dishonest and corrupt motives in advocating the restoration of silver and with having sold his convictions on the money question. Soon after Mr. Towne brought an action for libel against this paper and its editor and proprietor, which has since been pending. Mr. Towne has declared that his object in prosecuting this case was the vindication of his character and the defense of his reputation, and, having investigated the alleged facts on which said article was founded, we state on behalf of The Dispatch and its editor and proprietor that the accusations against the honor of Mr. Towne contained in the article complained of were not based on fact, and, in our opinion, the same were and are ustrue.—St. Paul Dispatch, April 80, 1898.
We reproduce the foregoing retraction merely to suggest to the reader the infamously unscrupulous methods by which the gold power carried the election of 1896. The charge against Mr. Towne was by no means exceptional. Almost every man prominent in the bimetallic forces, including Sir. Bryan himself, was charged with having been bought or bribed by the silver mine owners of the west, while the rank and file were all of them either misguided lunatics or repudiating scoundrels seeking to avoid the payment of their sacred obligations.
The St. Paul Dispatch is one of the leading papers in the northwest, and in the last campaign it was one of the most vehement shriekers for "honest money" and "financial integrity." It was sure that the free coinago of silver would havo the effect of oompelling the creditor class to accept money cheaper than gold, and the pious souls of the managers were shocked at the nfamy. Their virtuous indignation knew no bounds. It is a most singular circumstanco that so many intelligent men could work themselves up into a sort of religious horror at the idea of taking the smallest fraction of value from tho "almighty dollar, and at the same time deliberately rob, or attempt to rob, men of their good name with no more compunction than a Chinese cook feels when wringing off the hind legs of a bull frog for the frying pan.
To a man like Charles A. Towne a good name is a greater value than all the gold and silver that were ever mined. Had he been actuated by a sordid or corrupt motivo ho could havo gratified his avarice far better by taking the other side, which had and used $20, perhaps $100, where his own side had one. IS! man has ever given higher proof of his disinterested devotion to a political cause in the United States than has Mr. Towne in his advocacy of bimetallism. He surrendered high political honors with still higher in prospective, he lost lucrative business in his profession, and weather.
he lost old time friendship and social connections that were dearer to him than all. We know that it has been a difficult matter for him to raise sufficient money to respectably meet the expenses of his office. And yet the advocates of a monetary policy which could not live a day but for the insatiate greed of tho money lender deliberately and maliciously undertook to destroy his good name. There never was the slightest reason for believing that "he had sold his convictions on the money question." If there had been, the St. Paul Dispatch would certainly have mentioned it in its own extenuation, at least. I
The obvious fact is that the St. Paul Dispatch has mado an absolutely groundless charge and was likely to get hurt. I Hence after the lapse of more than a year and a half, when it found itself with a big libel suit threatening it, a complete retraction is made. The same
thing has occurred, we believe, in the through.—Pittsburg Times, case of one or two other Minnesota papers that had attacked Towne in a similar way. These little incidents should have the effect of opening the eyes of the people to the character of the campaign that is being waged on behalf of "honest money."
The People's Rights.
The question that naturally arises and one that you not infrequently hear, is, "Do not courts too often decide cases in favor of corporations as against the people?" Truly, it would seem to, and for this reason, it is claimed, socialism and anarchism have sprung up in various parts of the country, and therefore, in view of this fact, it may not be improper for us to here remark perhaps a halt should be called and some of our courts be given to understand that the people have rights and privileges that should be respected, as well as corporations.—Racine (Wis.) Journal (Rep.).
ting and hopeful opportunity to go down to the bottom of the knavery and corruption that has fastened itself on the politics and legislation of the state and apply a curative that will last It can be done only by the co-operation of the people. This is the time to do it, when the public mind is purified and exalted as it were by the sacrifices war makes necessary and imposes on alL—Pittsburg Post
Wolcott a Traitor.
Wolcott of Colorado, alleged silver man and bimetallism voted with the goldites in the senate finance committee to issue $500,000,000 of bonds. This action shows where Wolcott stands on the money question.—Silver Knight Watch* man. "i
GLEANINGS.
For many yc-ars Asia Minor has been the
chief
source of supply for emery.
Spain has more s*n.shine than any other country in buropo, the yearly avi&tge being hours.
The last criminal beheaded in Kngland was Lord Lux at. \v: was executed on Tower liili April 0, 1747.
The first toiler of a Hank of England note was l'.i rd William Ynughan, a linen draper of talY.inl, hanged in 1758.
A eorrespo: it of the London Times estimates that opulat ion of London ill 1901 will be '1,110.000 and 7,000,000 in IDSl.
A steel arch is to be thrown across the Niagara river neat- Clifton which will be 8-1 feet span, a greater distance than was overyet spanned by an arch.
The government of tho United States does not allow docked horses to bo used by the cavalry. England also objects to tho inhumane treatment of docking horses' tails.
Wearing braids down the back is not permitted at Berlin university. Two women students who wore their hair in that fashion havo been excluded from the leotures on tho ground that it made them kxik like schoolgirls.
A weeping willow tree on the Champs Ely sees under which Alfred de Musset is Baid to have writton his celebrated elegy, "Le Saule," has been cut down in extending tlie Avenue Marigny to the Alexandre III bridge in preparation for the 1900 exposition.
The ray apparatus devised by Professor Reginald A. Fessenden of tho Western University of Pennsylvania for the use of army surgeons in tho field is no bigger than an unabridged dictionary and weighs 25 pounds. It is operated by a gas motor of equal weight.
HAMMER AND TONGS.
If you are going to be a hardware man, be one. Keep away from politics and other bunko games.
If a customer asks for a bread board and you don't have one, sell him a mouse trap or a pair of andirons. Don't let any man get away with as much money as he brought in.
If your new clerk has too much cheek, keep him, but curb him down. If he hasn't any, bounce him.
When a woman customer comes in, encourage herto talk until she is tired. You will hear of a dozen things she needs at home, and that's your chance to soak her.
I can always sell to a woman who brings her baby into the store. You can't say a good thing about that kid that she won't believe.
When a man asks for a 50 cent knife, don't show him a SI one. He may have only the 50 cents with him, and as likely as not you will lose the sale altogether.
Don't talk too much. Don't talk too little. There is a happy medium somewhere between a claiu and an auctioneer.
If you have faith in your goods, your customer will have faith in them also. One sale may be made by lying, hut I don't believe a dozen can bo made by it to the same man.—Hardware.
THE BEEHIVE.
The poorest food gathered by bees is the juice of fruits—honey dew. Thick, well ripened honey will not granulate so readily as that which is thin.
A large number of extra combs are necessary when extracted honey is the aim. A little pine tar smeared on a board and placed nest the hives will keep ants away.
So far as can be done it is always best to shado the hives well during the hot
In rendering out beeswax always use a tin, brass or copper vessel. An iron one will darken it.
Never leave a newly hived swarm noar the place where it clustered or it may leave before you know it.
Dry and warm is tho rule for honey if you want it to retain its flavor and richness. Never put it in a cellar.
Uniting colonies will usually be moro successful if you kill the condemned queens two or three days beforo uniting.
The worker bee performs all tho work of tho hive, gathers the pollen and water, secretes the wax and makes the comb and caps the honey.—St. Louis Republic.
SPANISH OMELET.
Spain has some reason to regret that'she did not train gunners instead of matadores. —Washington Star.
Spain wants the status quo ante, but she will find herself compelled to ante up a good deal more than that before she gets
Spain at home is usually symbolized by a lion, meek and moth eaten. All the world knows now that a hyena is the only truthful symbol.—Philadelphia Press.
It is said that Spain once had a chance to sell the Philippines for $200,000,000. The fact that she once had a chance to get about the same price for Cuba indicates that Spain is addicted to the habit of letting goods spoil on her hands.—Cleveland Leader.
COLONEL SATAN.
Colonel Satan of Tennessee won't raise a thing among the Spaniards in Cuba when he gets there.—Pittsburg News.
When Colonel Frank Satan of Tennessee reaches Cuba, he will find thero a condition exactly suited to be his residence. —St. Louis Republic.
Those Spaniards probably thought that Colonel Satan of Tennessee had arrived and opened business when the dynamite cruiser Vesuvius got to "tossing 'em over the plate."—Cleveland Leader.
When Colonel Frank Satan of Tennessee reaches Cuba, he should experience little difficulty in convincing tho Span-
Pennsylvania's On* Chance. This year, we believe, presents a fit-! iards that General Sherman^ definition
of war Herald.
was accurate.—Chicago Times-
SIMPLE SALVE.
A strong solution of borax applied twloe a day will cure ringworms. The well beaten white of an egg, slightly sweetened and flavored with a few drops of vanilla, is good for children with Irritable stomachs.
For a stiff nook and pains in the chest, warm some sweet oil and rub on thoroughly with the hands, then cover with sheet wadding, the shiny side out. Wear it until you feel comfortable.
A difficulty of administering medicine to small children is overcome by Professor Alsnel, who affirms that a mixture of equal parts of Boap liniment and aloes will act as a cathartic when rubbed In •mall quantity upon the abdomen.
:l|f
limn
amwmmmmmmmmmmmmm'mmmmmmmmmis Temporary Quarters Y. I. C. A. Block. West
WE ARE CROWDED
Our temporary quarters in the Y. M. C. A. armory are too small to allow a good display of our immense stock and we will make some very low prices on goods of which we have too many in order to reduce the stock quickly. We have been too busy to prepare a list of the bargains for to-day's paper, but they are here in abundance. The continuance of the
In our temporary quarters gives all a chance on their every want at special prices Thanks to the confidence ot so many people in the truthtullness ot the ads. of The Big Store the Kebuilding sale inaugurated eight weeks ago has proven "the greatest sdling ot merchandise in the history ot the county and we intend to do our part by low prices and good offerings to make the continuance a greater success if possible.
Come and see us in our new quarters, you will find it the coolest place in the city to trade...
It Pays To Trade at The Big Store
lii
•'J
rary Quarters Y. M. C.
A.* Block, West Iain Street.
mmu mmmm mm mmmmm
Sale
