Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 28 January 1899 — Page 6
mm-
CANCER CURED
WITH—
Soolhiug OH". Absorption
Method.
Cancer of the
p. nose, lip, ear, neck, breast, stomacl) or in fact all inter-
Jr. B. P. Hye'eSanltorlura, nal and ex22V N. Illinois St. ternal organs or tissues. Cut this out and send it for an illustrated booL on the above diseases. (llorae treatStent sent in some cases.)
DR.. B. F. BYB, Indianapolis, lad.
Abstracts of Title
Furnished at ReasonableJjRates.
Money to Loan
Oh Real "Estate. Deeds and Mortgagesjcarefully executed.
Webster & Bergen t..
Recorder's Office.
Extracting Teeth
is something that everyone droadn until they've tried our painleaas way. We apply trie mediciae to the gums and take out teeth for the mn?t sensitive a"d nervous persons without pain. This seems uuteawnablp until youv'e irioil it then you see how easy It is. Any 0110, tricn tlio youngest to the oldest, can have thin medi'-mc used without a particle of danger or unpleasant afrer effects.
DOH. COUCJI1LIN fk WILSON. 48N. Pennsylvania^St, Indianapolis, Indian.i.
ac^CinlCTI^Sw31OTI^I^tmilCiiaCiplCinl^N"li'Jp
Close Prices. jj
Qood Prices. S
That is the rule with us. You will do well when you trade with us in the Grocery business. "We are the people for Flours, Sugars and Fancy Goods.
DIGKEBSON & TRUITT.
5^nfOG^Pfigtnrgi5{^gO?t3l^G^tni3[nBggllffiD?i51 I
N.^WOOD, A. M.v M. President
Chicago Medical and Surgical Institute,
617 LaSalle Avenue, Chicago,
ttfe
111.
tfatahKihed la Cht»yo S\ntt May 1st, 1878.) The oldeat* Urscitt mont reliable and •uct'eiftful Medical Institution in tJie Northwest.
Private room* for patient* with facilities for anjr ^Mergency. Surgical operation performed In the •wit leloatlfle manner.
Write for circulars on Deformities and Braces, Club Feet, Curvature of the Spine, Piles, Tumors, Cancer, Catarrh, Bronchitis, Paralysis, Epilepsy. Kidney, Bladder, fiya. Ear, Skin and Blood Diseases, and all Surgical Operations. Best facilities, apparatus and remedies for
fiuccccsful treatment of every form of dlseaFc requiring tnedical or surgical treatment. lVe abeolptely guarantee to cure every ease of ifervou* Debility and diseases resulting ivm abuses and Indiscretions of Youth and Manhood Bpcrtnatorrhoeo* Seminal Weakneaa {Myht tosses), lmootency (loss of sexual power), Varicocele, Hydrocele, Strlctare, Phlmotl*, etc., etc*, Gkargen Iteaaonabfe—Age and experience are important—No mercury or injurious medicines used—So tint* lost from work or business— No Insurable case* aooepted, No medicine &entC.0.1>. Failure is unknown to us, we cute thousands annually. -We have ten thousand testimonial letters on Ale from frateful patients permanently cured,
a
Write us today,
atients from a distance treated by mail—JUedMnes aenf everywhere free from gaze and breakage—State jail historyand exact symptoms of your case and send for talon and t«rm*-~Consultation free and confidential, personally or by letter—160 page Bockon all Chronic aid Snrgual Dlseeeee and Ust of 1 ttO aueatloas ike. (Mention this paper.)
EVERY WOMAN
Sometimes needs a reliable monthly regulating medietas. DR. PEAL'S
PENNYROYAL PILLS,
ife andoertainin result. The nou£s) never dUapftoint. Bent anywhere,
Sold at N. W. Myer's New Central Drug Store, Crawford ville,"lnd.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM CUtaset aDd beautifies the big. Promotes a luxuriant growth. Never Falls to Restore Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color. Cures Bcaln di**«-a k. Iiuir falling. 60(%«ml $l.Uat Pr'ijrglrt*
CLEOPATRA
mar h*ve uied Crix-Us Tablet*, woman's greatest safe and harmless remedy. Not taken internally. Clo-tho tablets, the ereat remedy for Instant relief of menstrual pain. Price $1 per box. 8am ele of either sent on receipt of 10c. Bgrptian Chemical Company, Cleveland, O. mm
Subscribe for TheReview. ja*
THE MASK THROWN OFF
Financial Conspiracy Assumes Definite Form.
PARTING OF THE WAYS REACHED.
The finfre Bill F.nihodle* n. J'Inii to Deprive the People of the Illicit to Create anil Inline Money it ml to Regulate Its Value—Wbolesilie Scheme of l*rivnt-» Robbery.
The mask has at last been openly thrown off. The financial conspiracy concocted by the arch conspirator John Sherman to enslave the indnstrial masses of the American people, dating from the act of congress placing the "exception clause" on the greenback and the demonetizing crime of 1873, has now assumed a definite form and character as the most dastardly and treasonable attempt to subvert and destroy the "sovereignty" of our nation and people ever formulated, and now embodied in the bank and bond bill presented by Secretary of the Treasury Gage for the consideration of congress and the people. We have reached another "crisis" in onr country, and now stand face to face with the problem which is to become the "crucial test" of our ability to maintain free constitutional government, based upon the suffrages of the common people in their contest for future financial and political liberty against the Wall street oligarchy of financial tyrants, led by Gage, Mc-
Kinley. Hanna, Tom Reed and Sherman. We have again reached the "parting of the ways" in the people's fight against tliia new form of plutocratic insolence and will awake early in the morning of the twentieth century to a realization that our republic has been completely monarchized and Europeanized, as a direct result of the financial plan embodied in the Gage bill, unless the people awake and overthrow this heartless.moneyed oligarchy at the elections of 1898 and 1900. This bill and the future banking system contemplated under it area complete subversion of the "sovereignty of the people" in their constitutional right to create and issue money and regulate the value thereof by law. It boldly proposes under forms of law to "seize everything" on the earth and under the earth belonging to the free people of the United States to cover their property with a blanket bond mortgage as the basis of security for the future issues of private national banking corporations and turn our people, with all their property and interests of every kind and character, over to the control and direction of a heartless oligarchy of ill gotten accumulated wealth.
A gang of money speculators—without native land or patriotism—whose only God is greed and gain. Men who look upon our government with its house and senate as agencies only for the "protection of the Stock Exchange" and the bourse. Men who say by their acts, such as Gage and little Eckels, that the United States must become as part of the European system that our old form of Democratic government based on the suffrages of the industrial masses is becoming "too weak" for safety for the stock and bond gamblers that our ship of state must with all possible haste during McKinley'g administration be drawn into foreign harbors and anchored under guns where the natural rights of men to life and liberty can be regulated by the "higher rights of property" under the eye of rulers commanding obedience by so called divine right. Such is now the policy and tendency of the governing influences controlling and directing the so called Republican party now in power.
A party that only succeeded last election by deliberately lying the people out of their senses and is still keeping up the same line of commercial lying about the return of prosperity to deceive and hold in line tens of thousands of duped and deceived partisans until Gage's "banker plan" of stealing the property of the people can be placed under lxnd to secure the "fiat prom ises" to pay—of the Europeanized national banking "sound money" sys tem in the United States, latterly in angurated under Harrison's administration by Charles Foster, secretary of the treasury, who #a the 11th of July, 1892. surrendered the option of paying our coin obligations gold or "silver" to a firm of Jew gold gamblers in New York, and by that act also surrendered to foreign control the sovereignty of the American people over their financial system—a treasonable crime against the vital principles lying at the base of our form of government, for which he should havo forfeited his life on the scaffold.
Gage'splan, sanctioned by McKinley, to seize the entire property resources of 70,000,000 people, bond the same and then present to the national banks a paper currency equal to face of the bonds which these "private corporations" may loan to the jH-ople at theiT own price is a proposition as deeply dyed with moral treason to the principles of free government as any proposition of the kind ever proposed in the monarchies of Europe.
The congressman who votes to fasten this infamous un-American financial system on OUT people, based or. gold bonds, ought to be met by amass meeting on his return from Washington, in every district in the Union, and driven out of the country. Such traitors ought not to be tolerated. Why not substitute for this wholesale scheme of private robbery the issue of legal tender treasury notes and devise a system for loaning to the people direct on their own real estate securities in limited amounts at 2*4 per cent interest, payable to the government as a part of its revenues instead of hawl|ng over this great "sovereign preroifui* e" to a heartless gang, whoa?
god in the golden image is set up in the stock exchanges of our own large cities and the bourses cf Europe.
It is a treasonable proposition and should at once obliterate all former party lines from among our people who revere the memory and principles of Jefferson, Jackson and Lincoln, patriots who will pledge their lives again if need lie for tho rescne of our government from European political and financial control, with the restoration of the currency, loaned to the people direct to whom it belongs, supplemented with the free coinage of silver as it existed prior to the Republican legislative crime of 1873. Down with Gage's plan to sell our people into bond slavery for the benefit of private parties! No congressman or senator who is an honest man can vote for this infamous proposition, approved only by knaves or blind partisans, fit subjects for lunatic asylums.
Down the financial traitors 1 Up with the rights of the people under the flag of Jeffersonian principles borne by our Bryan.—C. A. Power in Silver Knight Watchman.
DEAR MONEY.
Tti«*rc Can Be Xo Industrial Revival With an Appreciating Dollar. The discussion of the. money question in the past few years has made clear to everybody the increased purchasing power of the dollar. Nobody questions any longer that on tho average a dollar will purchase about twice as much of commodities as it would 25 years ago. The mily question in dispute is whether the dollar has appreciated in value or everything else on the average has de predated. But tli,~- discussion has also drawn attention closely to two things and has had an effect on them that was not anticipated. One is that the dollar paid to the workingman buys about twice as much as it did 25 years ago. and therefore the same amount of money paid for wages means about twice as much in what it will buy. The other is that the doll ir paid for interest will buy twice as much, and therefore a rate of 3 per cent now gives as much returns to the lender as per cent did then.
Both propositions have been freely urged, and the effect of the first has been to destroy very largely sympathy wiih wage earners.
It is remarkable how widespread has become the claim that wages are too high in this country and must come down. In tact, the advance in wages measured by purchasing power has been less in the last quarter of a century than in the one preceding and has not kept pace with the increase of producing power, but these facts are not urged by the employer. The effect of the second proposition is seen iu the reiteration of bankers that "low interest rates have come to st.iv." As a fact they have come to go lower unless industrial revival calls for the use of money in legitimate business. And there can be no permanent industrial revival if standard money continues to appreciate in purchasing power. a
DANGER OF A MONEY TRUST.
The Scliem* to Destroy All National Money Rxeept Gold. If the plans of the bankers as expressed in the McCleary or Overstreet bills in congress, in the Indianapolis plan and other alleged reform plans for reforming the currency are carried out, a most g:'rt''.ntie and farreaching trust, combination or "gentlemen's agreement" will be created--a combination which will practically have in its power to levy an annual tax of from 7 to 10 per cent on all industry and commerce. The plan is to destroy all national money except gold: to limit the legal tender money to gold to place in the hands of the banks power to issue all currency, in other words, give them absolute control over the circulating medium. The banks already have a powerful association, and as they are not above coercing smaller banks or coercing elections or debtors this power over the country will be absolute.
National money, such as greenbacks and treasury notes, when once in circulation. performs its duties as a medium of exchange withont expense to the people. but a bank note, or its equivalent bank credits, can only be got into circulation by means of borrowing at thrbank at rates varying in this section at least from 7 to 10 per cent, which must be turned over or renewed at least once iu 9d days. Thus, as long as it is circulation, industry and commerce must pay an annual tax for its use to the amount of the interest or discount paid to secure it. This tax is perpetual. Tliis is the reason why the banks are attempting to discredit and get rid of nation: nionev.
Sllle W a on Sliver Platform* The election of Mr. Sibley to congresE in a strongly Republican district of Pennsylvania was a fitting sequel to the sph-ndid tribute that was paid him in his nomination by two districts. Not only is it a great victory for him p?rHonally. but it is a distinctive triumph the cause of bimetallism. He has a national reputation as a champion of silver restoration, and his election completely negatives the idea that "silverism" onl.'lives among the mountains and njKj'.i the prairies of the west. Mr. Sibley will bo a member of the minority. lint at the same time he will make his mark in the Fifty-sixth congress.
Many WarnlnifN In HtMtorjr. If the regular army is to be increased, it will ultimately become a political machine like the Roman legions or the janizaries, to dictate our rulers and trample on our liberties. Cseear pnt his foot on the necks of the Roman people, His line ended in a Nero. Spain tried it to her downfall. Alva, Cortes, Pizar
ro and Weyler are the significant nameof her history. The empire is saturated with its privileged classes and younger sons of the nobility swarming in the public service. Is this the feast on which our palates are to be satisfied t— I Omaha World-Herald.
L'laid fancy mixtures and plain CHsbmereF worth 15 to 20c yd... 10c yd Ladies' cloth, serges, en shine res in all colors and fancy mixtures, 34 to 40 in. wide worth 2Tj, 30 and 35c all at 20c yd All wool cloths, henriettas, serges black brocade novelties and fancy mixtures. 35 to 40 iu, wide worth 35, 40 and 50c. Choice at ,25c 1 50c, COc, 75c checks plaids and brocade novelties.35c yd Vingna cloths in fancy mixtures for tailor made suits and silk and wool novelty goods that sold for 75c to 1.00 50c jd 5 pc 42 in. black twill worsted for tailor made gowns worth II yd at 65c yd 50 inch blacjf all wool serge worth 75c 45c yd 50 inch black gloria silk worth 85c 59c yd 27 inch Corduroys lor bicycle costume# worth 75c 50c yd
Special low prices on every article in the dress goods department including a fine assortment of cheviots, kerseys, meltons and broadcloths for tailor made gowns and the famous Priestly and Gold Medal black goods. 12 tine dress patterns that sold for SG.01) S4.50 18 same 7.00 5.63 17 same 8 00 6.00 25 same 10.00 7.50 27 same 11.25 8.44 5 same 13.50 10.13 6 same 151!0 11.2!)
Remember you con buy all linings and tummingsat a discount of 25 to 33^0 per cent. also. Needles per paper Kant Open hooks and eyes per card Hooks and eyes worth 10c otton belting 4 yds velveteen binding Curling irons Dre6B sti.ye per set Rubber dressing combs worth 10c footh brUEbce worth 10 and 15c Clothes bruphes worth 15c •_ hililiens hose supporters worth 15c La- ies hose supporters worth 30 and 35c.
Dadies beauty pins per card of 6 13c Talcum powder per box __ pc Mennens Talcum Powoer worth 25c 15c.s Craddock blue soap 7c Woodbury's facial soap, dental cream facial crtam and facial powder all 25c articles 17c Cuticura soap wojth 25c 19c Eastman toilet waters, bay ruui and Florida water, 25c articles 19u Witch hazel extract 10c bottles oc Iloiisohoki ammodia large bottles 6c Large botilts blueing worth 10c 5c 10c bottles perfume 8c. Ivorette soap per har 2c. Castile soap per cake 3c, Tar soap per cake lOy Japanese tooth picks per box 3c 25 ladies jackets, fine kersey cloth in castor, blue tan and black, all silk lined, sold for S12, Slo, $10 50, 818 and S20. Choice of lot $7.98 35 ladiee nnd misses fine cloth jackets, all colors and blnck miinv all silk lined, others half silk lined worth $10 to $15. Choice. $5 98 35 Indies arid misses jackets in smooth and 'ouuh cloths all shades and many ot them silk faced solii for S7.50 to $10. Choice *3.98
Great bargains in plush and cloth capes. 15 Indies tailor made suits in tine cloth elegantly made worth $15 to $25. Choice $10.00 10 childrens cloaks nice and warm for children 4 to 12 years of age worth $1.50 to $2 -0c Mioses jackets size 10 to 16 years woath $5 to *2-00 Ladies dress skirts worth $1 50 to *2.00 SI.25 Plaid dress goods 30 inches wida worth 10c yd Black satinB worth 75c at Black Satins worth 90c at Black Peau do Soies and Armures worth $1 inc yd Black taffetas worth 1.15 at 87c yd Blark taffetas extra wide worth 1.25 84c yd Black bengaline silks worth 1.50.. $1 yd Plain and fancy silks worth 2oc, 35c, 50c 15c yd PlaiD and fancy silks worth 50c, 75c, 3oc yd Plain and fancy silks worth 75c to 81.25 50c yd Plain and fancy silks worth $1, 1.50 and 2.00 75c yd L. D. Brown & Sons' famous silks, satin duchesee, faille francaise and Peau de soie worth $1.15 at 87c $1.50 at 1.12H 1.75 at 1.32 2.75 at 2.07. Embroideries worth 5c 4c yd 6l/ic 5c yd 20 to 2oc 15c yd 85c 25c yd Laces worth 5, 8 and 10c 2° Laces worth 10, 15 and 25c 7c yd Laces worth 25, 30 and 35c 12^ yd Laces worth 35. 50 and 60c 19c yd Beaded black laces orth $1.1 50, 2,00^ )0c yd Odds and ends of corsets worth 50 to 75c 25c Odd sizes in corsets worth $1 60c Ladies plain anu ribbed wool hose 15c pr Ladies fleece lined hose, high spliced heels, double soles, worth 30c 19c pr Childrens Spanish yarn hose, double knees, wth 50c 32c pr
Hoys wool hose double knee arul toe, wth 25c... .15c pr Boyw school and bicycle hose fleece lined 12c pr Odds and ends infants wool hot-e wth 25 to 30c... 19c pr Mens wool half hose 15c pr Ladies and childrens black hose and mi ns hose in black and tans 3c pr Ladies scarlet all wool vests and pants worth worth 75c 59c
S S
25c Articles 17c. 75c Articles 50c.
MORE PROOFS
Of the fallacy of buying arijthii.g in Dry Goods or Notions without visiting tiie Big Store is given below. '1 he items are taken at raodom from all departments and nerve to show how our immense umi goodly stock is being offered rather than move it back to the new room. Every item is included una wo would be will pleaded if we could sell it all before removal. One fifth, one fourih, one third and even one half otl the regular prices etiould be a temptation for \ou tc exchange jour money for our eoodi-.
Every Item Will Be Found, As Advertised
"S, 2c 3c 5c
.. 2cd 2c 3c "c .v-'yj 4c 7c .. 10c 9c 2 0
If Santa laus didn't bring you what you wanted in Bric-a-brac, Medalions or other fancy rtuffs you can buy it now for two-thirds of the former price.
I
XjOTTIS BISGHOI1
Temporary Quarters Y. M. O. A. Building and 122 W. Main.
:-'°y
Mene jersey ribbed shirts and drawers wth 25c.... 19c Childrens fleece lined union 6uits wth 25c........ 19c Childrens and misses Onieta and Melba union suits worth 50c, 38c.
Infants fleece lined ribbed vests worth 10c, 3c. Choice of any felt sailor or walking hat in the store wori $1.00 1 50 and 2.00. .6c.
Childrens c«ps worth 50 to 75c, 17c. Dewey capB worth 60c, 35c. Boys shirt waists, Star and Mothers Friend, worth 75c, 1.00,1.50, 45c.
Mens night shirts worth 81 to $1 25, 69c. Hand knit fascinators, black and white worth 25c, 15 cents.
Large size Shetland wool squares, black, white and colors, worth 60c, 40c. Umbrellas, gloria silk, steel rod, "Princess of Wales" pearl and Dresden handles, worth $2, 2.35 and 2.50, best value ever offered, $1.39.
Umbrellas, gloria silk, steel rod, Dresden and natural wot.d handles, trimmed, worth #1.35 and $1.50, 90c. Good fast black umbrellas including small sizes for school children, worth 60, 75. 85c, at 45c.
All silk ribbons. No. 5 and 7, worth 5 to 10c, 3c yd. Gros grain silk ribbons, No. 5, 7, 9, 12, worth 10, 15 and 20c, 5c yd.
Salin, taffeta and fancy ribbons, 2y2 to 4 in. wide, worth 30. 35 and 40c, 19c yd. Silk and colored beltings worth 25 and 35c, 10c yd.
Tinted and fringed doileyeand stand covers. 10c. Finishing braids, per bolt 5c. •.•: Crochet silks 3 spools for 10c. Ladies seallopped edge and plain linen handkerchiefs warth 12}£ and 15c, 10c.
Ladies seallopped, embroidered and plain linen, and mPns colored bordered handkerchiefs worth 20c. 12'.2'c. Upholsiery materials worth $15.25 to J&2, 75c yd.
Upholstery materials worth $3 to $7.50, $1.98 yd. Large size chenille table covers worth 61.50, 89c. Plain and fancy stripe ecnm wrth 7to 10c, 4c yd. ...'•.Unbleached muslin yard wide,2^c \1.
Regular 5c unb'eachcd muslin 3%c yd. Extra heavy 6ki[c unbleached muslin, 4c yd. Best 8J \C unbleached tnuslln 6J-4C yd. Yard wide bleached muslin 3}^c yd. 7c bleached muslin, li'jc yd. Lonsdale. Masonville and Fruit of Loom .c yd. Extra line bleach muslins and long cloths worth 12^c to 15c., 9c yd.
Good cambric muslin yard wide, oc yd. Ladies wrappers, fleeceback matf rial, Wth $1 at G8c, Ladies wrappers fieeceback, worth 1.25 each 79c. Ladios fieeceback wrappers worth 1.75 each 1.25.-ts»-«! *... White cotton blankets worth 50c pr. each 15c. White and fancy cotton blankets worth 7tc to $1 pr, each 29c.
Yountsville crib blankets worth $1, each 60c. Wool blankets in white and colors worth $2 to 2.25, 1.50 pair.
Wool blankets extra large worth 3.50 at 2.50 pr. Wool blankets worth 4.50, 5 to 6 including Yountsville goods 3.49.
Wool skirt patterns worth $1. each 79c. Wool 6kirt patterns worth 1.50 each 1.15. Colored wool flannels including Yountsville twilled goods worth 35 to 40c at 25c yd.
Full size bed spreads worth 65c. 49c. Extra large bed spreads worth 3 to 3.50 at 1.98. Silkolines and golden draperies wth 10c to 12J^c rt G'a1' yd.
Fancy tickings, denims and cretons worth 15c 20 and 25c at 12c yd. Upholstery and drapery materials worth 75c and 1.00 yd at 50c yd. ifeM
Lonsdale cambric worth I2}^c. 8?)'c yd. •••,•:• Unbleached sheeting over 2 yds wide, 9c yd. Regular 5c shirting checks, 3c yd. 7J^c checked shirtings 5c yd. Fine shirtings worth 8 \c and 10c, 6I4C yd. Good feather ticking worth 15c, 9c yd, Feather lickines, staple and fancy stripe worth 18 and 20c, 12£c yd.
Choice of our 5c outing Flannels, 3^c jd. Choice of 7J^ and 8J^c outings, 5c yd. Beet 10c outinge, 6'4c ydOur 5c canton flannels, 3J^c yd. Oil" 7}-£c cannon flannels, 5c yd. Extra heavy 8})C canton flannel, 6)40 yd. Table oil cloth, 8c yd. Good apron gingham, 3%c yd. Choice of our 10c fieeceback wrapper material, 10?.jcyd.
Choice of our best 6c prints. 40c yd. 10o pc fancy prints worth 5c, 3c yd. Cotton crash bleaceed, 2j4c yd. Unbleached lineu crash, 3%c yd. Checked glass crash worth G%c, 5c yd. 4 Turkey red table damaBk 35c quality, 22c yd. 2 yd wide all linen damask, 35c yd. Linen finish thread, spool, lc. Machine thread, spool, 2c. Silk twist, spool, lc. Darning cotton, 2 cards for lc. Mourning pins per box, lc. 2 papers good pins, lc. Wire hair pins per bundle, lc. Invisible hair pins, lc box, Sefety pins worth 5c, 3cdoz.
50c Articles 33c. $1.00 Articles 67c.
