Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 8 October 1898 — Page 8

Sour Stomach

"After I wnn Induced to try CA8CABETN, I wll) never tie without them in the bouse. My liver was in a very bad shape, and my head ached and 1 had stomach trouble. Now. since taking Cascarets. I feel fine. My wife has also used them with beneficial results for scur stomach."

Jos. Kkluling, 1'j21 Congress St., St. Louis. Mo.

CANDY

zxwm

TRADE MARK REGISTERED

Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never bicken. Wcnken. or Gripe. 10c. 25c.50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling RMMdy loafian.T, (hltupi, Montreal, New York. ^18 ||A_Tfl_QAP Sold and guaranteed by all drug* HI!" I U'DAIf #ists to CX?HE Tobacco Habit.

Abstracts of Title

Furnished at Reasonable Rates.

Money to Loan

On Real Estate. Deeds and Mortgages careful'y executed.

Webster & Serpent.

Recorder's Office.

We Have )!OYCL

We are now finely equipped to ropair any kind of machinery from a wheel to a type writer Crime and see us. Miller blo k, right north cf Court House.

Francis & Gould.

Itresta with yon whether you continue tbe« iJUjajB nerve-killing tobacco Ua!.it. NO-TO-UAQ^f^ SSg33 removes tne doaire for tobacco, wi tb mt ffagSjj .Outnervousdistresa.expclaiuco-wfTfg tine, purifies tho blood, a ft. •tores lost niauhood.lrftf*&»1 a boxes you strong^-aTM 8

kRj^*so\d.

400. OM

te health, ncrTo^g Ja cured, lluy andlKJCket^-WH flg gL^JfO TO-ll A rrom '.^.I'/oar own drup^ist. who

M|| will vouch for U3. T:»i:p it with IV will,patiently,persistently.one box, ft. usually cure? 3 boxes. 02.50, guaranteed to cure, or we refund money. 6tlrlio|B«atd Co., CUeago, Bootml, Sew lire.

Dr. Bull's

When a good,

purgative, iamily medicine is needed, you can always rely on Dr. John \Y. 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 genu, tne (Dr. PeaTa) never disappoint. Sent anywhere, $1.00.

Sold at N. W.'Myer's Now f'«nfra! Drug Store, Crawford jvillo, Ind.

CTfOCm3GiHlCTp3tnrJrCCnfOEHrO^kjpl •,/iGfiflffs*.

A O E

We are at the oM «=t .•ml ami are at peace with

ail

cbiP-i':.

Our goods are seconii nf. (Air prices are right, iju ui guaranteed in every particular. L. A. W. and order at our store at all times. Give us your patronage :ird \vn will give you value r-.ceivod.

Merit Winn.

Nicholson's Sons captured tive firt-ts out of eight premiums at the county fair. All on pictures they made themselves. Don't be deceived by any cheap catch-penny a Jvertisements, but en where you know you can get the best at the price as cheap as the cheapest. For a short time only one dozen cabinets and one large mantello panel for $1.50. Come and bring your friends to Bee the prize pictures. Frames in regular sizes and kodak supplies. 118^ E. Main street, Grawfordsville, Ind. 1-vv

What do the Children Drink? Don't give them tea or uoffee. Have

:you

tried the new food irink called ^Grain-o? It is delicious att nourishing and takes the place of coffee. The more

Grain-o you give the children the more health you distribute through their systems. Grain-o is made of pure grains, and when properly prepared taste like the choice grades of coffee but costs about \i as much All grocers sell it lbc. and 25c.

O A S O I A Bean the The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of

The Willis Gallery still makes fifteen fine cabinets for 81.50.

To Care Conxtlpatlon Forever. Take Cascarets Candv Cathartic. 10c or 25c. C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money

Wall paper at cost, at the 99 cent store.

CAMPAIGN OF EDUCATION

That Is What the Gold Bugs and Plutocrats Fear. "J

THey Know It Mean* Death to S.vmlteaten. Trusts, Corporations aixl 3I«n«n«i? lies Which Have Hoeti Oppressing the .j-

People. I

It is au old aphorism "that men who think govern those who toil." A "Campaign of Education'' is a misnomer up.less it sets men to thinking. Iudeo ', the highest function of education is to teach men to think. If it fails in that esseutial particular, we have men who accept what is told them as truth and who, however much they may boast of their independence, are, nevertheless, the hypnotized victims of cunning men who use them to promote their schemes of aggrandizement.

The great mass of the people can have no interest in promoting the schemes of syndicates, trusts, corporations, monopolies or the millionaire class, who, operating in conjunction, constitute what is known as the "money power," or the plutocracy of the country, which, representing 4 per cent of the population, has managed to secure at least two-thirds of the wealth of the country. And this 4 per cent of tho population, by devising schemes, the result of thinking, are now dominating the financial policy of the republic, They constitute the brains and backbone of the gold standard aggregation of plutocrats and expect, by the influence they may be able to exert by the I use of money in the campaign, to snh-! stitutc duplicity, and all the arts of chicanery for education. These gold standard advocates propose to do the thinking for the masses of the people, and lead them, as white horses lead droves uf mules, or as bell wethers lead flocks of sheep. They are destined to experience sail disappointments. Tho great body of the people are thinkers along lines which involve their welfare. I The miud forces of the masses are now intensely active. The cliuck-a-luek methods of education, the tricks and enchantments of the gold standard wizards will not bo accepted as arguments by the rank and file of the American voters or as reasons why they shouid abdicate these prerogatives to do their own thinking on all political questions, including the "free coinage" or the "sound money" issues.

It may be expected that tho Republican speakers and the Republican press, during the campaign will indalgo in the usual amount of vulgar epitnets, when referring to those who favor free coinage and uphold the silver dollar as sound money. In 1890 the men who rallied to the standard of William Jennings Bryan, more than 0,500,000 of free men who would not bow down and worship the gold standard, as tho slaves of old Nabuchadnezzar worshiped his golden i'.r.age, were denominated "anarchists," "communists," "idiots," "border ruflians," "socialists," "blackguards" and other equally argumentative epithets. It was the goldbug method of education and will again be introduced, but with less avail. The people are now asking for facts, and they will ply the gold bugspeakers with questions which they will shrink from answering.

One of the choice declarations of the goldbugs has been that to coin standard silver dollars would drive gold out of the country, a condition which they depricated as a far reaching calamity. Well, from 1878 we have coined 423,000,000 of standard silver dollars, all debtpaying, legal tender, sound money dollars, but gold did not, therefore,! leave the country, nor was it ever shown that, owing to the coinage of silver dollars, uuy calamity, large or small, was created and if such a charge or any other charge intimating that the coinage of standard silver dollars has been productive of a panic in business, commercial or industrial affairs, those who make the charge will be required to point out when and where it occurred. This they will be unable to do. The people are thinking and bald assertion, vulgar epithets and duplicity will be swept

(away

before the onward

march of thought which education, worthy of the name, ,vill emancipate, the people from their money power vassalage.

The farmers, the working men, the producing classes of the republic have, to au extent which cannot occur again, been terrorized by the soothsayers and magicians of the money power—a favorite prognostication being that the free coinage of silver would not only drive gold out of the country, but would, to the utter consternation of rich and poor alike, bring home from Europe the stocks aud bonds held there for payment. Suppose this should be true, "what greater blessing," queries a distinguished United States senator, "could be bestowed upon this country than the giving to the nation and the people a sufficient amount of sound, irredeemable gold and silver coined money of our constitution to enable our people to transact oil their business, develop all our resourpeis and pay for and own all the obligations and debts of every kind of our government, stateB, municipalities aud corporations and receive the interest and enjoy perfect financial independence of all nations and all gold syndicates?"

Bat thoughtful men will ask the goldbug concocters of the delusion relating to the return of securities held abroad, because of the triumph of free coinage in the United States, in what sort of money would the foreigners ezpeot to be paid for their securities Manifestly in silver, the goldbug theory being that the gold has already been driven out by silver. The mere statement of the proposition reduces it to a delusion that

Coughs Thai Hill

are not distinguished by any mark or sign from coughs that fail to be fatal. Any cough, neglected, may sap the strength and undermine the health until recovery is impossible. All coughs lead to lung trouble, if not stopped.

Ayer's ctierrg Pectoral Cores Coughs

"My wife was suffering from a dreadful congh. We did not expect that she would long survive, but Mr. R. V. Royal, deputy surveyor, happened to be stopping with U3 over night, and having a bottle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral with him, induced my wife to try this remedy. The result was so beneficial that she kept on taking it till Bhe was cured."

R. S. HUMPHRIES, Saussy, Ga.

My little daughter was taken with a distressing cough, which for three years defied all the remodies I tried. At length, on the urgent recommendation of a friend, I began to give her Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. .Cfter using one bottle I found to my great surprise that she was improving. Three bottles completely cured her."

J. A. GRAY,

Trav. Salesman Wrought Iron Range Co, St.<p></p>Ayer's

Louis, Mo.

C&errg Pectoral

is put up in half-size bottles at half price—50 cents.

no thoughtful man will consider for one minute, aud yet this senseless vagary has been injected time a.ul -again into the discussion of the money qt'rsiiiii as one of tne impending disasters winch Would befall the country provided free coinage was to triumph and .silver regain its rights at the mints ro stand, as the constitution of the republic intended it should stand, as one of the metals out of which standard, legal tender sound money dollars should be coinod. Again, the people have heard that already the limited coinage of the standard silver dollar, the sound silver dollar, the legal teuder silver dollar is embarrassing the government by requiring vaults of large dimensions in which to store it. The educational knaves who resort to this trick laugh in their sleeves at the gullibility of those they impose upon. Up to 1806, as has been stated, 4213,000,000 of standard silver dollars had been coined, of this amount more than :J7o,000,000 are in circulation in the form of silver certificates, leaving about 18,000.000 silver dollars in circulation, or about 67 cents per capita of population, or if tho total amount, 423,000,000 were in circulation as coin, it would be only about §0 per capita of our population or if the total amount could be equally distributed to families of five persons, each family would have §30.

Along such lines the people are thinking and, as the campaign progresses, they will bo heard resolutely demanding of the goldbug Republicans facts instead of delusions manufactured by plutocratic spoilsmen to deceive men who do not think.

Slang From the Days of Old Home. Miss E. F. Andrews writes an articl on "Some Vagabond Words" for St. Nicholas. Miss Andrews says:

Passing through a vacant lot the other day where some boys were having a game of ball, I heard one of them who had got a rap on the knuckles from a "foul," exclaim, "Jiminy, that hurts!" aud thent after rubbing his fingers a moment, ho went bask to his place on the field, little dreaming that he had just uttered^ a solemn jnvocation to tho old Roman demigods Castor and Pollux. For our vulgar "jiminy" is but a corruption of tho Latin "gemini," twins, a name applied to Castor and Pollux, the twin sons of Jupiter and Leda. These hero gods wero the patrons of games and festivals of all kinds, and the especial friends of travelers hence, when an old Roman exclaimed, "O Gemini!" it was a devout ajjpenl to tlie gods for help or protection, very much the same ns when a knight of old called on his patron saint.

Slumber Street.

Oh, miles and miles of beds in a row, Acres of cmrrlT-rs white us snow. Pillows mi p.liow'H and sheets galore, Blankets mid juilts by the hundred scoreAll, these are the sights that each night street The children wi.o go to Slumber street!

1

Hushnbyfi, hushabys, soft and low '"i: Rhythmical murmurs, both fast and slow Ditties and hymn tunes and ballads rare, Melodies gay with plaintive air, Lullabys tender and soft and sweet— This is the music of Slumlx'r street!

Visions delightful, happy and gay, Of wonderful toys and merry play, Fanciful pictures of rare delight, Of verdant fields and skios that are brightOil, these are the dreams the children meet Who travel each night to Slumber stroetl

Cfh, scores upon Bcores of weary heads Peacefully resting in miles of beds! Each pair of eyelids is closed up tight, And cacli pair of eyes is hid from sight. Resting bodies and tired little feet— This is the business of Slumber street. —Arthur J. Burdick'a "Just Jingleu."

Tipped and Dumped.

Helen and her father and mother were dining in a hotel, and Helen, who was years old, had never beforo dined in a public place. The waiter was so attentive and courteous that Helen's mother said that he must bo tipped at the end of the meal. The word "tipped" was ono Helen had never heard used except in connection with a dump cart on her father's premises. When they got up to leave the dining room, she said: "Ob, papt, papal You forgot dump the waiter. "—Youth's Oompan Ion.

to

/50 pes new style fleece ba^k materials, and very warm for, winter wrappers worth 10cyd, choice in this sale yd 15 pes extra heavy double faced materials in all shades for tea gowns, dressing sacques, etc., worth 15c lie yd 5O pes regular

i2}4

and 10c per­

cales, light and dark styles, choice 7^c yd Goe,d dress btyle prints, light and dark styles, regular price 5 cents, at 3c yd 10!) styles regular Tic and 6c p.xints, bept cloth and colors, choice... 3£c yd 2,000 yds extra r.eavy canton flannel in short lengths, wth 8^c, at 6% yd Good unbleached muslin, one yd wide, in this sale 2^cyd Regular .rc quality unbleached muslin, yard wide 3^cyd

THE7 BIG STORE.

Temporary Quarters Y. M. C. A. Block, "West Main St., and 122 West. Main Street.

You can't go astray on your fall purchases if you trade with us. Our stock is larger and more complete than ever before and every item is being offered at special prices. We are determined to increase ourlbusin^ss, even if we are in temporary quarters, and realize we must sell goods cheap to do so. We don't expect our regular profit, but hope to 'sell more goods at a smaller margin and so come out whole in the end.

SPECIAL PRICES on Cloaks, Craperies, Dress Goods, Silks, Linens, Underwear, Hosiery, Ladies' Furnishings, Fancy Goods, Domestics and every article in our store in the great

Rebuilding Sale

Doivflmy a dollar's worth of merchandise in our Jin- without visiting our store and inspecting our stock.

You'll Save Money By It!

Here are a few items you can buy with Profit. The store is full of just such Bargains.

Extra fine bleached muslin, one yd wide, wth

7

1-2C, only... .5c yd

Lonsdale, Masonville, Fruit of Loom and oth best brands bleached muslin, worth 8f,c, choice Jc yd Best quality apron ginghams, 4 1-2C Regular 5c shirting checks in

20

different styles 3c yd 5o pes good heavy shirting, all fast colors aud well worth: 7 1-2C a? be yd Outing cloths in good shirting styles that usually sell for 7c,

at. 5 yd

LOAKS. CL0A

Our line of cloaks is ready for your inspection and includes all the styles that are thought to be good for the coming season. The goods were all made to our order and are

It Pays To Trade at The Big Store

r\

1

Temporary Quarters, Y. M. C. A. Block, West Main St., and 122 West Main Street.

tailored throughout in a manner much better than are usually found in ready-made goods. The" Special Rebuilding Sale Prices apply on these goods which make them great bargains.

WHAPPEKb.

We are proud of our lin oi Wrap pers for fall. The materials fc good and heavy, the printings are beautiful and styles are correct. Every garment is wide skirt, full hips, and fitted with separate waist lining. But the best part of the story is the list of prices: Regular $1.00 wrapper for... .$ .80 Regular SI. 25 ".... 1.00 Regular $1.50 "... 1.20 Regular $1.75 ".... 1.40

See them before you buy materials for making wrappers.

O