Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 3 September 1892 — Page 2

WEEKLY JOURNAL

PRINTED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING

By T. H. B. McCAIN.

Bntered at the Postofltce at Criiwl'ordsvlllo Indiana, as seeond-clasB matter,

W GBKLY—

One year in advance 81.25 Six months 75 Three months 40 One month 15

DAILY—

One year in advance J5.0 Six months 2.5 Three months 1.2 Per week1delivered or bv mall .1

SATURDAY, SEPT. 3, 1892.

THE gerrymander ought to go—the gerrymander will go.

THE Democratic press in Indiana is overpowered with de'ight. The Muncie nail mill has been burned.

THE Indianapolis Sentinel says there are 449 licensed saloons in Marion county, 390 of which are in IndianapoliB.

HON. E. V. BROOKS HIKE belongs to the Congress so vividly described by Ex-Speaker Reed in to-day's Journal.

THE people of Indiana are required to pay State taxes this year to the amount of $2,249,654 as against $1,087,700 in 1890.

THE school trustees would set a good example to the neglectful by mowing the weeds in the vicinity of the school houses. This would be in the line of education.

THE cheapest and best newspapers in the world are printed on protected paper, from protected type, witn protected ink, by protected presses, driven by protected power, within magnificent protected printing houses.

TnE Star

continues to insist that the

tariff on wool, corn, wheat, etc., does not increase the prices of these articles. We are glad to have the Star thus come over to the Republican side and agree with us that the tariff is not a tux.

THE Star still insists that the tariff on wool does not increase the price of wool. It parts company just here, with Mr. Cleveland, whose free trade message of 1887 asserted that: "These [tariff] laws, in their logical and plain effect raiee the price to the consumer of A.LL articles imported and subject to duty, by precisely the sum paid for such duty." The modus rivendi of the Star and Mr. Cleveland is thus sadly out of gear.

PROF. W. S. SUMNER, of New Haven is one of the great free trade advocates of this country. He was before the, Tariff Commission, in 1882, and delivered along lecture to that body. At its conclusion he was interrogated by various members of the Commission, and in response to a question by Mr. Kenner, in regard to wages, said: "It is not the business of government to make wages high or to favor the poor laboring man, except to let him do the best he can for himself." This idea was incorporated in the Democratic platform when the resolution favoring a tariff equal to the difference in wages here and in foreign countries was voted down, and "a tariff for revenue only," substituted therefor.

OLD soldiers, who, for any reason, are inclined to support Grover Cleveland for the Presidency, should read and reread the defense offered by the Durham, N. C., Globe of the ex-president's pension rocord. It is hardly necessary to mention the fact that the Globe is a 'stalwart Democratic newspaper,and that it zealously advocates the election of

Mir. Cleveland. It says: The pension fraud is theft, and we repeat that no man can honestly defend it. The South has been taxed to death to pav this grand army of rascals—these bottle scarred bums who reach in the empty palm and when Cleveland struck the beggars in the face he did a good business job. We hope to God that he may have a chance to hit 'em again. Vagrants and mendicants should be both vigorously slapped and kicked.

WHILE the Stur carries Cleveland's picture at the head of its editoral columns, it will not adopt his free trade utterances, and not only says it won't but "insists" on it. In Cleveland's memorable free trade message are theee words: "These laws (tariff laws) as their primary and plain effect, raise the price to consumers of all articles imported and subject to duty by precisely the sum paid for such duties. So it happens that while comparatively a few use the imported articles, millions of our people who never use and never saw any of the foreign product, purchasoand use things of the same kind made in this countri and pan therefore, neurit/ or unite the same enhanced price which the duty ulds to the imported articles.'1'

There is a tariff of 25 cents a bushel on foreign wheat and by the Cleveland rule it enhances the price of all wheat raised at home juBt 25 cents per bushel, but the Star "insists" that it doeB not. THE JOURNAL does not ask nor expect the Star to follow his teaching, but would like to see it stick to the utterances

of

its Btandard bearer.

THE KEYNOTE OF THE DEMOCRACY.

Congressman Brookshire addressed a small audience at the court house Saturday night on the issues of the coming campaign, and from a speech from one who is in the place to know, as Mr. Brookshire is supposed to know, the speech iell decidedly fiat. Many people of all parties went for the sole purpose of hearing the speaker explain why he voted to retain the tariff on sugar and take it off wool and tin plate, but they were disappointed in getting his reasons except as to why he voted for the free wool bill. His reason for voting for free wool was the

Bame

as he gave last

campaign, that is—that all the wool we need from foreign countries does not compete with the grade of wool we raise in this country. Mr. Brookshire seems to have, forgotten the many petitions and prayers from the wool growers all over the United States saying that foreign wool did compete with theirs, and that if it was allowed to come in competition with their product they would have to stop the business of sheep raising. Mr. Brookshire forgot all these and says the sheep industry is declining and does not need protection, forgetting that the fact that it was declining was the very reason that it needed protection.

As to the Reciprocity clause in the McKinley bill, Mr. Brookshire seemed never to have grasped its meaning. He says instead of a reciprocal trade with the Southern countries and islands we should have it with the thickly populated countries of the old world. There are very few things in the thickly populated parts of the old world that we cannot make ourselves and according to the Republican idea, we should make them, and get commodities we can not ike from countries south of us who will take in return from us, things they cannot make or raise.

After Mr. Brookshire had closed, Jas. M. Seller, candidate for Joint Senator, took the floor for a half hour and put in the whole time trying to get the audience to laugh, but not a smile till he reached the point of the suger tariff. He asked the audience this question: "If the removal of the sugar tariff lessened the price of sugar why not take it off of everything else also," and placed the blame on the Republican party. If the removal of the sugar tariff was a good thing as Mr. Seller indirectly wanted the audience to understand, why did the whole Democratic party in Congress vote to keep it on, and "*hy are they now pledged to rejjlace it if they get in power? Thie break would have provoked a wooden man to smile.

REGISTRATION LAW.

The following law passed by the last legislation is in force and effect. Republicans should see to it that its provisions are complied with. Those moving in Montgomery county from other parts of Indiana are required to register in the clerk's office at least fiftynine days prior to the election. The last day for registration is September 7th. Following is the amendment:

Section 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Indiana That each elector shall vote by ballot in the precinct wherein he resides. Any person who, having been a resident of Indiana, and a qualified therein at any general election, have absented himself from the for a period of six months or since last so voting, or who shall gone into any other State or sovereignty with the intention cf voting therein since last to voting, or during any absence in another State or sovereignty, shall have voted therein, since last so voting, and also any person who shall not have been a bona fide resident of the county in which he resides at least

voter shall State more have

Bix months before any election, shall before being entitled to vote at such election in this State, register in the officer of the clerk of the circuit court of the county in which he resides, a notice that he claims to be a legal voter in such county. Such registration shall be made at least fifty-nine days prior to any such election, and the notice shall state person's name, age and place of residence (by which 6hall be understood his lodging place), both at the time of registration and during the period of four months prior thereto.

AFKAID OF HIS PARTY'S POSITION ON SOGAK A.ND TINTHE JOUKN.VL

invited Mr. Brookshire's

attention to some of the issues of this campaign, especially the declared purpose of the leaders of the Democratic party to put the tariff back on sugar, and put tin plate ou tho free list. We politely asked him to explain tha principle upon which they would put a tariff of

GO

per cent, on the poor man's

sugar, and try to make amends for this burden by assuring relief to him of a few cents of tax ou tinware. But the honorable gentleman refused to ''face the music." He did not dare even to mention the subject. Like a craven he lied from the field of contest not daring to strike a blow in support of his party's declared policy touching the tariff on sugar. He refused to mention the word sugar, or in any manner whatever, to discuss the purpose of his party to rimpose the duty on that article.

Mr. Brookshire knows that the ltepub-

lican party removed the tariff from sugar. He knows that every Democrat in Congress voted against its removal. He knows that the leaders of his party have declared their purpose to put the tariff back on sugar so soon as they shall get the power to do so. He knows th&t the people, even of his own household, are asking for some explanation of this strange freak of party leaders. But nothing could induce him to even mention the subject. We generously offered t,o print in our paper any explanation he might see fit to make touching this matter. But he does not dare to attempt any public explanation of the curious purpose of his party to put tinplate on the free list, and a tax of 60 per cent, on sugar. The truth is, that Mr. Brookshire is disgusted with this inconsistent position into which he has been forced by Henry Watterson and the Southern brigadiers, and he cannot screw his courage up even to

thG

point

of mentioning it in a public address.

THE DEMOCRATIC TARIF PLANK.

Henry Watterson, the brilliant editor of the Louisville Courier Journal, is the author of the tariff plank in the Chicago platform. A plank had been reported by the committee which as he termed it a "facing four ways for Sunday" affair, and like the famous bull in the China shop went for it and shattered it into a million pieces. The substitute was carried by a decisive vote. What it means can best be i^pld by Watterson himself. In along article in the Courier Journal of August 11 he extols the free trade platform and declares that protection

Is a job from one end to the other, the more iniquitous because whilst levying tribute upon the masses for the benefit of the classes, it ia suplemented by a steadily increasing pension list, LOOTING THE TREASURY to the tune of one hundred and fifty millions a year, two-thirds of which go to the support of COFFEE-OOOLERS AND CAMP-FOLLOWERS, AND OTHER RED NOSED PATRIOTS, THAT LOAF ABOUT THE DOGGERIES AND BROTHELS OF THE COUNTRY, SWEARING FOR ONE ANOTHER, TOWARD AN ULTIMATE AGGRARIANISM AS CORRUPT AND CORRUPTING AS EVER EXISTED IN THE WORLD.

The platform as interpreted by Mr Watterson is not only an attack on protection but it assails every Union soldier who draws a pension. How do the soldiers who periled their lives to save the Republic enjoy such endearing terms as "coffee coolers," "camp followers," "red-nosed patriots" and the like as applied by the great Democratic chief? Mr. Watterson proceeds:

The Democratic party can gain nothing by making wry faces and throwing harmless tufts of grass at this Republican Robber Tariff and this REPUBLICAN ROBBER PENSION LIST. It has everything to gain by the integrity of its convictions, and the courage thereof. THE ADMINISTRATION OF GROVER CLEVELAND STANDS AS A MONUMENT OF UNFLAGGING DEVOTION TO THE INTERESTS OF THE PEOPLE AND IMPLACABLE HOSTILITY TO THE ASSAULTS OF THE LOOTERS.

No wonder the brave one-legged Gen. Sickles said in the Chicago convention that there were 25,000 Democratic soldierain New York who would not vote or Grover Cleveland.

GR0WTH OF HOME AND FOREIGN MAR KETS.

A fair sample of Democratic attempts to change positions was shown in the speech of Judge Sellar Saturday night. When the McKinley bill was under discussion before its passage it was the unanimous cry of the Democracy that it passed our foreign trade would be greatly damaged, and it was, by this bill, the policy of the Republican party to build up the home market by building new industries. Now the Democracy are rolling as a sweet moisil under their tongues and seemingly getting great solace out of the fact that the foeign trade has grown greatly beyond the expectations of the Republican party, even far more than the home market has. It was the settled policy of the Republican party to build up both of the markets, and we are glad to know that within this short time even the DemocraDy have to admit that the foreign trade has wonderfully grown. Within another year we hope to see the home market doubled, even against the efforts ot the Democracy in trying to run the tin-plate factories out of Indiana.

A DISPATCH from London, England, of Aug. '28, says: "Several Welsh tinplato manufacturers closed their works on Saturday. Sixty works are now closed, and ten thousand hands are idie. Many sailed ou Saturday to find employment in America." Thus the McKinley bill goes on with its good work, closing tin factories in Wales and opening new ones in the United States. The Democrats propose, however, to repeal the tariff on tin, close the American factories, aud re-open the now closed ones of Wales. And they are appealing to Americans to vote for a policy that will break down the industries of their own country and benefit only foreign monopolies.

MICHAEL F. FOLEY, the young statee-

man of Coal Creek township, made a speech out in that neighborhood a few days ago, in which he made the statement that tinware was selling for twice the sum it sold for before the McKinley law was enacted. The young man should come to to town and make inquiry of our dealers before he again exposes his ignorance. He would find that none of it sells for more and much of it sells for a lower price than it did before the law was enacted.

ON the first page of yesterday's Indianapolis Sentinel appears the following telegraphic dispatch:

LONDON, Aug. 28.—Several Welsh tin plate manufacturers closed their works on Saturday. Sixty works are how closed and 10,000 hands are idle. Many sailed on Saturday to find employment in America.

On the fifth page of the same paper a dispatch from Crawfordsville appears a notice of Brookshire's speech. It closes with the following:

He brought down the house when he said "the amount of tin made in the United States in one year would only pay the tax on what was consumed in twenty-two hours."

If there is no tin plate manufactured in the United States the question arises what caused the closing of the Welsh tin plate works, and why did the "many sail for America to find employment. The telegraph editor of the Sentinel should use the blue pencil more freely to make things "cawnsist."

THE trade paper of the iron merchants, the Ironmonger, says, "It the erection of tin plate mills goes on in the future as in the past year, we will soon have facilities for furnishing the entire world with tin plate. They are springing up in all parts of the country, and where they have begun operations are proving successful."

CAN either the Star or Review explain how retail dealers can pay the manufacturers 865 for mowers and sell them to the farmers for $40, or how they can pay the manufacturers $26 for hay rakes and sell them to the farmers at $16? WJ

IF

you move from one township to another after September 7th, you will lose your vote.

IF

you move from one precinct to another after October 7th you will lose your vote.

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Strong witnesses.

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2,228yG7X.

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tBUTLER

UNIVERSITY,

IRVINGTON, IND. 38th. YEAR.

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are made from the best brands of rooting Tin plate, arid steel sheets pralvani/.ed. Von can buy them painted or not.

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THE

JOUIIEAII JOB OFFICE lor note

heads..

ChiSdren Cry for

Pitcher's Castoria.

$100000 TO LOAN

/percent. Annual interest/

Without Commission,

NO HUMBUG.

Cumberland & Miller

118 West Main St.

ABSTRACTS OF TITLE Hster,

aving secured the services of Win. Web lute ol' the llrm of Johnson & Webster, abstractors of title, I inn prepared to furnish on short notice, full and complete abstracts of title to ull lands In Montgomery county, Indiana, at. reasonable prices. Deeda and mortgages carefully executed. Cull at the Kocorder's olllce. octovl THOS. T. MCNHA LL. Recorder.

MONEY to LOAN.

At and per cent for 5 years on Improved Farms in Indiana. We prant ou the privilege of paying this money back to us in dribs of $100, or move, at any interest ayment.

Write tooi call oil

ask

Druggist Tor

Chlchutcr'i SnqlUh 2)ia-J

mond Brand

inKed and

Gold

metalllox

bozos, sealed with blue ribbon. Tako no other*

G. N. WILLIAMS & CO.,

Crawfordsville, Indiana.

O. W. PAUL. M. W. 1II1UNEU.

PAUL & BRUNER,

A tto neya-at-Law,

OHfce over Maliorney's Store. Crawfordsville, Ind. All business entrusted to their care will receive prompt attention.

THEO. McMECHAW, DENTIST,

CHAWFOKDSV1LJLE, INDIANA, Tenders his service to the public. Motto good work and moderate urices."

Y.. D. WHITE, W. HKKVES W,E. HUMPHREY,

White, Hsniphrey & Reeves,

.. ATTOilNE YS-A T-L A W, Crawfordsville, Inc. Ollice lO.'iu Main street.

Money to Loan.

Houses aud Lots for Sale Dwellings to Rent.

also

Abstracts ot Title ant! Deeds aud Mortgages Carefully Prepared.

AL.BERT C. JENNIS0N

Loan and Insurance agent, and abstractor a Conveyancer.

122 East Main St., Crawfordsville

Morgan & Lee

ABSTRACTORS, LOAN

ANP

INSURANCE AGE]'

."Honey to Loan at percent Interest.

Farms and City Property For Sale.

Lite, Kire and Accident Insurance. Oflice North Washington st., Ornbauu Block, Crawfordsville, Ind.

FIRST MORTGAGE

LOAN,

AT 4 PER CENT Dterest $ payable Annually

APPLY TO

W. WRIGHT

Fisher Block, Room 8, Crawfordsville,

FOR SALE

At the Gold ltidgo Herd Poland China hogs, of both sexes, at lariners' prices. A so a

Wlilto Plymouth Hoc chicks. Eggs In season Come and inspect .x.y stock before purchasing Also, have the celebrated Pacing Miiliion. Bill Hull man, mark of out of Daniel Boone, 1st dam by Green Mountain Morgan.

GEONGEW.

KT:I.I,HU.

7 miles north of Crawfordsville, Ind. Mention THEJOUUNAL

O. H. Erganbright, V. S.,

(J HA DITATE Ol-"

Ontario etcrnry Coilee,Toronto, Cai

TREATS ALL

DISEASES OF DOMESTIC ANIMALS.

—Surgery a Specialty.—

Your patronape solicited. Calls by mail or telegram promptly answerod. Oflice witli Merrick & Darnell, Livery Stable. 11:2, 111 anil llti East Market Slreei, Crawfordsville, Indiana.

IIO

., Aftor. Loti.

accompanying sw lu sw n., 7r»ibi cf Jiiy woiuht and mtMjsure-lL'ut:.... 43 in. 33 in. 10 io. njiiuts Will Khow tho H'ljultSOirWabt.. J'.l in. 11 in. :1'.C XBGllthu* 'Hij. .... y.: m. 4i-m. 13 in. PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL CONFIDENTIAL.

Hat*m!r§4, and with no otarvlnif. inrcnvptii?nce, or bad efl'ecU. Ircr rarticular* n«'.drcM, with ti ceritt in clomps. OR. 0. IV. F. SRYOEft, M'VICKSfi'S TSEfiTER, CHlGfifiO IL!

U'i-i'oU.

In order to introduce our CHATOX FOR. TIEA.ITS and make new customers, wo huvo decided to xnnke this flpeeliil Otter: Bend us a Cabinet Picture.l'hotouniiih.Tintypo, Ambrotvpo or Daguerotypeof yourself or any ruemliorof your family,Hviiig or dead, and wo will make ynu a Crayon *»ortr«tt Free orCliiti'ge, provided you exhibit It to your friends as a sauiplo of our work, and uso your influence In securing 11s futuro orders. Place name and address on back of picture and it will be returned in perfoct order. Wo make any chango In picture you wish, not interfering wlthnkenccs. iinv liinklni'Mciivo.

Address ail mail to ECLIPSE PORTRAIT CO., IIO East Randolph St., CHICACO,..III.

Bfli f{JS.-Ve

will forfait

$100

to uny onoL

86iiuing ns nLn^o om! r.o'o roc»Vvin5 cpn'on wk S'V.I! rthisoltar..THIS

-OI'FEIl la

sxniL'ii.y

BONA KiUi:

ft-'