Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 17 May 1895 — Page 2

WEEKLY JOURNAL.

ESTABLISHED IN 1848.

Successor to The Record, tlie first paper In Crftwfordsvlile, established in 1831, and to The People's Press, established 1844.

PRINTED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING.

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A. A. McCAIN,Tieasurer

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Entered at the Postofflce at Crawfordsville, Indiana, as second-class matter.

FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1895.

THE way to stop loans is to stop deficiencies.

HOME prosperity is the key to an easy treasury and a high credit.

IF we do our work at home our labor at home will be employed and the wages paid at home will be spent at home.

THE country will be pleased to hear that Secretary Gresham's health is improving: but his diplomacy remains as bad as ever.

So TnE Standard Oil monopoly "is" at the bottom of the Cuban revolution. It is to be remarked, then, that the Standard Company has one thing to its credit.

JAMES R. GARFIELD is a candidate for State Senator from the Mentor district. His distinguished father started in political life as State Senator from the same place.

Gov. TURKEY, of Tennessee, will seave another term by reason of a daring fraud, and the people will see that his party naver gets a chance to repeat the outrage.

Two days have passed since a single Democratic leader has threatened to come over to the Republican side, but next year at this time the movement hither will be lively.

A FEW shut-downs in factories are taking place. They are the result of strikes, however. In general the output of the great industries is increasing, and good times are not far off,

THE Republicans are willing, of course, that Carlisle shall join their party but he must not ask them to send him back to the Senate from his State over men who have always been faithful to the good cause.

THE situation, for the Democracy is rather serious. If the silver crusade be persisted in there will be two Democratic tickets in the next canvass, or else, what will hit the party just as bard, most of the opponents of that policy will join the Republicans.

THE recent rains in the West have greatly improved the agricultural outlook, and the restoration of good times, Bountiful crops will solve several political questions that are now giving the country considerable trouble.

THERE hasn't been much noise about the Chapman meetings, so some people are inclined to regard them as less profitable than previous revival meetings held here. It is an old saw and a true one, however, which tells us that still water runs deep.

THE following stanza lias been carved on a tombstone in Burlington, Iowa:

Ueneath tills stone our baby lays. He neither cries nor hollers: He lived juBt one and twenty days

And cost us forty dollers.

THE Democratic leaders down South are becoming alarmed, and now are seriously declaring the party must come out flat-footed for free silver or lose 'the Southern States Hoke Smith's mission to Georgia does not seem to have panned out very well.

THE civilization Japan is encouraging in eastern Asia is likely to present some odd features. On the Loo Choo islands between Formosa and Japaa not a vehicle can be found, but the people have telephones and a mail service. The Orientals may need a little time, but they will catch up.

BOSTON has now reserved 14,000 acres for park, recreative and water purposes, and Philadelphia has established twenty-six new public parks, gardens and squares during the last seven years. London also is pursuing the same policy. These cities know the difference between a real and a fictitious boom.

THE new telephone organization promises to give the old Bell Company some hard sledding for the future, and now a company has been organized to take a tussle with the Western Union. Its feature is a new divice in telegraphy for which it is claimed the cost of telegraphing can be reduced so that two hundred words can be sent for less than it now costs for ten. The new device also promises to rival the telephone. Let them come.

WOOL AND TITE TARIFF. Discussing the question of wool and the tariff the St. Louis Globe Democrat says: "On a certain clip of Missouri wool the following has been the range of prices for the past few years: For that of 1889, !i0c: 1890,24%c 1891, 25^0 1S92, 24c 1893, 23c 1894, 17c 1895, 13c. The average price from 1889 to 1893, both years included, was about 24 3-5c. For 1894 and 1895 the average was 15c. On another clip the price was 23c from 1889 to 1892, inclusive, and it was 22c in 1893, 10c in 1894 and 12c in 1895. The average in 18S9-93 was 22 4-5, and it was 14c in 1894-95. These quotations are, in all cases, the top St. Louis figures in their class, which is the best grade of Missouri fine wool. This is the outcome of the assault made upon the American wool-grower by the Democratic tariff of 1894, for the drop in prices has extended throughout the whole country. Sheep-raising has ceased to be profitable, and the flocks are being rapidly diminished in every wool-growing State. The Democrats were warned long before the tariff bill was passed that the placing of wool on the free list would be disastrous to the American producers, but they persisted in their purpose, and this element of the population is now solidly arrayed against them. However, there is light ahead for the woolproducers. As George II. Wallace, President of the Missouri Wool-grow-ers' Association, recently advised in an address to the sheep owners of the State, the wise thing for them to do is to preserve the purity and integrity of their flocks. The present conditions are discouraging, but a change is not far oft. No political event of the future is more certain than Republican victory in 1890, and with the return of that party to power a duty will be again placed on wool, and the American growers will get ample protection against his foreign rival.

THE Milwaukee Journal calls attention to the curious fact that while the country was on a paper money basis, at the time the national banks were established, the people west of the Rockies would none of it, but insisted on an exclusive gold currency. So strong was this feeling that provision had to be made in the banking law for gold banks on the coast different from those in the East. They would not accept the national bank except on a gold basis. This-state of affairs continued till the resumption of specie payments. Now these States are all for silver. They stood out for a gold monometallism when all the rest of the country went to paper and when the rest of the country came to a gold standard they made haste to put themselves into the silver ranks.

ONE of the striking passages of Mr. Choatc's speech before the Supreme Court in his argument against the constitutionality of the income tax law was this: "Landholders have escaped bondholders have escaped. We believe your Honors will be constrained to hold that the receivers of incomes from personal property will escape. Who are left to be taxed? We are left—the bone and sinew and brains and nerve scattered throughout this great community of 70,000,000 people. What was intended to be a tax upon capital turns out to be a tax upon labor. How low long do you suppose a Congress, in which the balance of power was held, to give it the most dignitied name, by what is called the People's party, would have consented to levy a tax upon the people, only omitting all recourse to the accumulated wealth of the country and its income?''

THE advantage of the Wilson bill to the importers is shown by the imports since it became a law. The value of dutiable imports for the last seventh months is §214,290,345, while for the same seven months last year the dutiable imports amounted to only SHO, 708,375. There was nearly $50,00 ,000 sent abroad for goods in the last seven months that were spent for home pr ducts under the McKinley law. '1 he factory men can understand why they are out of work or receiving reduced wages, bj' observing the workings of the Wilson bill.

THE editor of the Review of Reviews gives his testimony, based on personal observation, to the success of the South Carolina liquor system. "Drunkenness and disorder," he says,-"have decreased to a remarkable extent and whereas the negro laborer was formerly accustomed to spend his week's earnings in carousing on Saturday night and Sunday, he is now spending more upon his family, or else saving his money to buy land."

LAFAYETTK Courier: The fact that Quay, Piatt and other political buccaneers of that stripe have formed a combination in favor of "anybody against Harrison," is one of the best reasons in the world why people generally should find additional cause for regarding the Indiana man as the most available and desirable candidate in the whole list.

CINCINNATI Commercial-Gazette: A correspondent asks us to define a dollar. The definition is very short. A dollar is one hundred ccnts. A cent is a fictitious or fiat value placed by the Government on a piece of copper. Hence, a copper cent is logically the real standard of value, just as a gill is the real standard of measure.

EX-GOVERNOR IRA J. CHASE died at Lubec, Maine, last Saturday evening, of erysipelas, where he had gone to engage in evangelistic work. Governor Chase served through the war as a private soldier and was a prominent minister in the Christian church. He was an active member of the Grand Army of the Republic, and it was his crisp and taking speeches in these soldier gatherings which first attracted attention and brought him into political prominence. He first served as Department Chaplain and afterwards as Department Commander of the Grand Army of the Republic. In 1880 he run for Congress against C. C. Matson and was defeated by 528 votes. In 1888 he was nominated and elected Lieutenant Governor, and upon the death of Governor Hovey in 1S91 he became the Governor of the State by statutory succession. He was nominated for Governor in 3 892, but was defeated by Governor Matthews. Intellectually Governor Chase was not a great man, but he performed his duties in whatever station he was was called in a very creditable manner and to the satisfaction of the public whom he served. The announcement of his death will be received with regret by a large circle of friends throughout the entire State.

CHICAGO Inter-Ocean: Secretary Gresham is more sensitive about the courtesies due him from the Hawaiian Minister than he is about those of his Ministers to the Hawaiian government. Had President Dole been as sensitive about these affairs as Secretary Gresliam, Ministers Blount and Willis would both have left Honolulu on the return boat after they landed. But it is encouraging to see Mr. Gresham getting up his dander about something. England and Spain have both been walking on his coat tails so long that he has followed the example of the man who resented an insult from his equal by going home and kicking his own child.

THE Chickamauga Park Commission has completed the purchase of Gen. Sherman's battle ground at the north end of Missionary Ridge, Chattanooga, and it now becomes a part of the National Military Park. tThe tract contains 50 acres and embraces the ground of assault of the Army of the Tennessee and the positions about Tunnel Hill defended by Gen. Bragg's army. The central drive of the National Park, 20 miles in length, has already been completed to and through the tract thus purchased, and historical tablets, batteries, and monuments will be erected upon it before the dedication of September next.

THE Republican Fifty-first Congress made appropriations amounting to $98S,417,183, and during its term a large slice of the public debt was paid off. The next two Congresses were Democratic. Their aggregate appropriations were respectively $1,207,104,. 547 and $989,239,205, and it is needless to add that the public debt has taken a big jump in the wrong direction. The noise about billion dollar Congresses serves now only to call increased attention to the failure of the Democratic party in economy and to its general lack of capacity.

IT is the impression of many who are in a position to know that if the Supreme Court should overthrow the income tax law Congress will be sum nioned in extra session. To date Secretary Carlisle is behind his esti mates of revenue for the present fiscal year by thirty millions. In other words, the deficit is fifty millions, in stead of twenty. Something must be done to secure additional reven

THERE is some force in the idea of a Southern banker that the low price of cotton has proved to be a bless5ng in disguise by impressing upon the farmers the necessity of diversifying their crops. Certainly the South lias too long neglected the work of raising her own supplies of all kinds, and the production of more grain aud vegetables will materially promote her prosperity.

THE Trilby craze that is sweeping over the country is getting to be a trifle tiresome. Had the. book been written by an American* it would have received cold coinfo.it from the people, but, coming from a Frenchman, it has been received with open arms, so to speak. The craze will soon die out, and in a year or two the book will have passed from memory.

HAVING settled with Nicaragua, and made Cleveland play into her hands, England will now proceed to take measures to steal some territory from Venezuela When that is done it will quietly make terms with Hawaii and those islands will accept a British pro tecborate, To use a popular phrase of the boys, the United States is not in it

THE end of the Crawfordsville quart shop is in sight. The new laws will soon be out and the Crawfordsville council is a unit in declaring that as soon as the Moore bill becomes opera tive the quart shop will have to go These dens have stood too long already and their extermination will be blessing in full dress uniform.

FARMS and city property tor sale. C. A.MILLER & Co., 118 w. Main st.

Catarrh of the Stomach.

INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT THIS

PECULIAR DISEASE.

A Well-known Man Relates His Experience and Tells How He Succeeded In Getting Relief. (From the SI. Louis, Mo., Chronicle.) viv

No one knows except myself the amount of suffering I endured for upwards of four years, from what I was told was catarrh ol' the stomach." The speaker was Mr. J. P. Fox, one of the best known professional swimmers in St. Louis, now at Prof. Clark's Natatorium, 19th and Pine. Prof. Fox's occupation necessitated his being in the water several hours every day. He contracted a severe cold, which he neglected, then another and another and finally he broke down, the effect of these colds seemed to debilitate and finally disease his stomach, and he had such symptoms as— stinging pains in his head, an inflammation of the membranes of the throat and air passages, which filled with a slimy substance, his appetite failed him, he became gaunt and tliin and excessively nervous— all of which denoted Catarrh of the stomach. An attack of vertigo one day rendered him unconscious for half an hour after which he was confined to the house, and scarcely able to walk across the room. He was sleepless, had violent pains and indigestion of the worst kind. Mr. Fox said to our reporter: "Often I would be seized with a feeling of suflocaCon. This went on until one day a friend insisted that I try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, and he read to me a paper wherein several cures of cases similar to mine were reported. I determined to give them a trial. My mpther threw the doctor's medicineaway and actually before I had taken half of the contents of the first box I began to feel a marked improvement. I began to sleep well, with my returning appetite I began to take a better view of life, the gnawing sensations in my stomach disappeared, I ceased to belch up gas and had no feelings of vomiting after eating, the soreness in my throat went away, and, well, within a month, I ventured out of the house. I kept on with the pills, and well you see me now. I feel as well as ever I did and I don't suppose there is a sounder man physically than myself in the country. I am in and out of the water three and four times a day, giving swimming lessons, and I certainly attribute my present good health to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. You can use my name if you want to, and I shall be pleased to tell of the great benefits I have derived from the use of the pills at any time."

Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People are now manufactured by the Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., and are sold in boxes (never in loose form by the dozen or hundred, and the public are cautioned against numerous imitations sold in this shape) at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50, and may be had of all druggists, or direct by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine Company.

THE American farmer is getting tired of Democratic sneers at the home market. He has.been studying t.he subject in the light of practical experience. The demand for his products is undiminished, but lie feels the effect, of the scarcity of cash through slack work and small wages, occasioned by the operation of the new tariff law. The farmer probably feels most sensibly and keenly any impairment of domestic industries. The fields are dependent upon the factories. They work together and usually benefit each other. The foreign market buys now from six to eight per cent, of our farm products, while the slurred and despised home market consumes from !)2 to 04 per cent. The more this home market is protected in its varied sources of vitality, the better it, is for the farmer. He has no channn in Europe, except in times of war or famine.

THE editor of the Alliance (O Review has invented a voting machine which, though simple and compact, is said to register the freeman's will Unerringly, the. only formality required being to press one or more buttons. That the blanket ballot, though an improvement ment on the old-style bundle of tickets, is still a clumsy device is universally conceded, and likely enough in course of time it will be replaced by some button-pressing device. Not least among the merits of the Alliance invention is the fact that it registers'the votes as polled. The voting machine may yet knock out the political '"machine" as well as the big ballots.

CINCINNATI Cummercial-Gazvlle: 1'resident Cleveland reiterates 011 all possi ,ble occasions that he is for sound money, just as if there was not another sound money man on the continent His letters and his otlicial acts will not harmonize altogether. He is on record with his party in favor of opening up the doors once more to the wildcat currency of the old Democratic days. A sound money man can hardly be in favor of that sort of a currency. It looks very much as if Mr. Cleveland's sound money views only go so far as to oppose silver.

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Morgan & Lee

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OTICE TO NuN-ltESIDENTS.

State of Indiana, Montgomery County: In the Montgomery Circuit Court, May term. 1895.

Ezra C. Vons vs. James S. McKee. Complaint No. 11,664. Comes now the plaintiff by Paul & Bruner. his attorneys, and flies his complaint herein together with an affidavit that said defendant. James S. McKee is not a resident of the State of Indiana, and that t.be object of this action is to quiet the title to real estate In Montgomery county, Indiana, and to enforce alien against the same and toobtaln possession O' real estate in said county.

Notice is therefore hereby given said defendant, that unless he lie a 3 appear on the 44th dav of the May term of the Montgomery Circuit Court, for the year 1S05, the samo being the 25th day of June. A. D., 181)5. at the court house in Crawfordsville, In s-iid county and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in liis absence.

Witness my name, and the seal of said court, affixed at Crawfordsville this 2nd dMj- of May, A.I).. IS95. WALLACE SPARKS.

V4—' ?t Clerk.

JS^OTICK TO NON-UES1 DENTS.

State of Indiana, Montgomery County: In the Montgomery Circuit Court, May term, 1895.

Ezra C. Voris vs. Mrs. George W. Williamson, Warren Williamson, Charles Williamson,Clara Williamson, Elmore Williamson. Complaint No. 11,660.

Comes now the plaintiff by Paul & Bruner, attorneys, and flies his complaint herein, for possession and to quiet title to real estate, together with an affidavit that said defendants, Mrs. George W. Williamson, Charles Williamson. Clara lllianison, urien Williamson »nd KUi ore Williamson are not residents of the State of Indiana.

Notice is therefore hereby given said defendants, that unless they be aud appear on the 45t.li day of the May term of the Montgomery Circuit Court, the same being the 26th day of June. A. D., 1895, at 1 he court house in Craw fordsville. in said county and Mate, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in their absence.

Witness my name and the seal of said court, affixed at Crawfordsville. this .'ird day of May. A. D., 1895. WALLACE SPARKS. 5-4-3t Clerk.

J^TOTICE OP IJJSOIJVENCY.

In the matter of the estate of George Robinson deceased. In the Montgomery Circuit Court, No. 886.

Notice is hereby given that upon tition tied in said court by the executor of the la6t will of said decedent, setting up the insufficiency of the estate of said decedent to pay the debts and liabilities thereof, the Jud«e of said uuu did, un the illlidaycot May, ISijo, And .said estate to be probably insolvent, mid order

I.e same to be settled accordingly. The creditors of said estate are therefore hereby notifltdofsucii insolvency and required to tile iln-ir claims against said estate lor allowance.

WitHess the Clerk and

ceat

ot said court at

Crawfordsville, Indiana, tills 9th day of Mav. 1895. WALLACE SPABKi-. 5-17-2t Clark.

Estate of.Selina Stoneclpher, deceased. OTjCE OFLE1TERS TESTAMENTARY.

Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has duly qualified aud given bond as Executor ol the last will and testament of Selina Stonecipher, late of Montgomery county. State of Indiana, deceased, and that letters testamentary on said estate have been duly grauted to lilm.

Said estate is supposed to be solvent. WILLIAM H. STONECIPHER, Executor. Dated May •"!. 1K95. 5-10

Estate of Elizabeth Petro, deceased, j^OTICE OF APPOINTMENT.

Notice is hereby iriven that the undersigned has been appointed and du'y quallfled as administrator ot the estate of Elizabeth I'etro, late of Montgomery count}',Indiana, deceased riuid estate is supposed to tie solvent.

HENRY M. PERRY,

Dated May T, 1895 -5-24 Administrator.

Estate of Rebecca W. Servies, deceased. OTICE OF APPOINTMENT.

Notice is hereby jilven that the undersigned lias been appointed and duly qualified as administrator of the estate of Rebecca \V. Servies, late of Montgomery county, Indiana, deceased. Said estate is supposed lobe solvent

WILLIAM J. MILES,

Dated May IS, 1895.-5-24 Administrator.

ED Vjioi! MAC STILT ELL.

Voris & Stilwell.

(Established 1877)

Representing 20 of tho Oldest and Largest Fire, Life and Accident lusuranee Companies. Farm Loans a Specialty. Prompt, and Equitable Settlement of Losses. Office—3d door north of Court House, Crawfordsville, 1 nil.

C. C. RICE, Solicitor.

MEN WANTED

To take orders. Instruction and outfit, free. Siilury or co mission as preferred. Splendid chance lor reliable men, Experience not necessary. Write for termsnud full particulars'

The K. «. CHASE COMPANY.

Nurserymen. 4t Geneva, N. •U'1 o. W. l'AUL. M. W. BUUNKH.

PAUL & BRUNER,

A t-torneyB-at-Law,

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

O. U. PEBRIN. A W E

Practices in Federal and State Courts. PATENTS A SPECIALTY. ^"Law Offices, Crawford Building.

Opp, Music Hall, Crawfordsville.

GEORGE W. FULLER,

per 15 or $2

Crawfordsville, Ind. Breeder and Shipper of

Breeder and Shipper of thoroughbred POLAND CHINA hogs,Q.P.Hocks, White Guineas and Fan Tall Pigeons. Stock and Eggs for sale. Eggs 81.26 Write your wants.

M. D. WHITE, W. M. REEVES, CHAS.D.ORBAR

White, Reeves & Orear,

Attorneys-at-Law.

Also a Large Amount of Money to Loan at Six per cent, per annum on farms or city property In sums of t'.iOO up to $10,000. Call and see us. Office 103^£ east Main street.