Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 24 May 1895 — Page 2

Weekly

Three months

jouinal.

ESTABLISHED IN 1848.

Successor to The Rccord, tbe first paper in Crawfordsvlllo, established in 1831, and to The People's Press, established 1

844.

PRINTED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING

THE JOURNAL COMPANY-

T. B. MCCAIN. President. J. A. GREENE. Spcretary. A. A. McCAIN, Treasurer

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One year in advance 1-9® Six months

n0

B'HE DAILY JOURNAL. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:

One year in advance Six months 2.50 Three months i*«® Per wetk, delivered or by mail 10

Payable in advance. Sample copies free.

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

FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1895.

THE fact of aiost interest about the income tax law is that it is certain to be repealed at the next session of Congress if the Supreme Court doesn't knock it completely out before that time.

NOTRE DAME UNIVERSITY, at South Bend, is to celebrate its golden jubilee in June. Notre Dame is the largest Catholic educational institution in the United States, and one of the largest in the world.

SOUTH BEND has the cement sidewalk and curb fever. About four hundred of the property holders have been notified to make these improvements within the next sixty days. Of course there is a howl but the council has given it out that it means business.

HUGH MCCUI.LOCH, whose distinguished career is fast drawing to a close, was the first comptroller of the currency. He organized that important branch of the treasury department and put the national banking system in operation during the early days of the war.

SECRETARY OF STATE OWEN, who refused to publish the Holler fish law, and Judge Wakefield, of Logansport, have been arrested by the order of the Attorney General on the charge of taking fish with a hook andJine atMaxinkuckee lake in violation of the provisions of the law. The Attorney General says he proposes to test the question as to whether the Holler bill is a law or not. The result uof this case will be awaited with deep interest all over the State.

THE sentiment in favor of international bimetallism is steadily marching on in»Europe. The upper house of the Prussian Diet appointed a committee some time ago to consider and report on Count von Mirbach's proposition to have an international conference called to agree upon a basis for the reinstatement of silver as money. That committee, on Tuesday of this week, agreed to favor it, the vote standing 10 to 4. The danger to an international agreement is among the 1(5 to 1 free coinage advocates in the United States.

THE only objection urged against emmensite, the new American explosive, is that has burst every gun so far in which it has been tested in large charges. It is a fine, yellow powder prepared by a secret process, explodes from friction and is but slightly affected by atmospheric changes. A charge of 230 pounds fired at Sandy Hook blew a 15-inch gun into small fragments, tearing a hole in the earth 10 feet deep and 25 feet in diameter.— St. Louis 0loljc Democrat.

The Democratic party is loading itself with emmensite, and when it explodes in'90 it will blow several 15-inch Democratic guns into fragments. The holes that will be torn in the earth will be frightful to behold.

PRIOR to 1S73, according to the report of the Director of the Mint for 1893, page 2S2, there had been a total of 8,031.328 silver dollars coined. Of subsidiary and token silver coins, that is to say of half and quarter dollars, dimes, half dimes, and three cent pieces, there had been coined about 13(5 millions of dollars, of which !»8 millions were half dollars. Since 1873 there have been coined of silver dollars 419,332,777, and, in round numbers, 29,000,000 half dollars, 23,000,000 quarters, and 18,000,000 dimes. In other words there has been coined more than fifty-one times as much silver during the last seventeen years as there were during the first eighty-one years of the

Nation's existence.

TREASURY officials begin to feel that the deficit for the fiscal year will exceed $50,000,000, even if the Income Tax law be allowed to stand as the Supreme Court left it in April, and shall yield $0,000,000 before July 1. Secretary Carlisle's estimate sent to Congress last December showed a deficit of $20,000,000 for the year ending June 30, 1895, and that was predicated on an estimate of customs revenue $15,000,000 smaller than the one sub mitted to him by the Chief of the Bureau of Statistics, and an estimate of internal revenue $14,000,000 less than the one submitted to him after revision by the Commissioner of In ternal Revenue—an estimate which was originally $25,000,000 larger than the one submitted to Congress.

"COIN" AT SCHOOL

Of the making of books tnere is no end, especially of books now beingwritten on the financial question. The latest to come to hand is "Coin at School in Finance," by George 13. Roberts, and published by the W. B. Conkey Company, Chicago. »Itis written in reply to "Coin's Financial School, and in the same style. The scene is laid at Eagle Grove, Iowa. In the depot hotel of• the town one evening in the present Spring there were casually gathered four persons—a bricklayer, a locomotive engineer, and some traveling salesmen. The party naturally fell to discussing Sf the crops, the weather, the prevailing prices and the business outlook. One of the traveling salesmen happened to remark that "according to Coin" prices could go no way but down on account of the demonetization of silver. A farmer took him up, and the discussion that followed took up the evening. The next day and thereafter the same men and others continued the discussion in the opera house off,Eagle Grove, with Judge B. P. Birdsell,» of the District Court as Chairman and instructor. The book is a pamphlet of six chapters and 168 pages. It consists of a series of dialogues worked up into the form of a school and illustrated with a profusion of cuts, some of which are of a satirical character. The first two chapters treat of the alleged decline in prices since 1873 the third of the history of bimetallism in the United States: the fourth of the effects of free and unlimited coinage of silver, if it shall be permitted the [fifth of answers to objections and the sixth of miscellaneous questions and answers In respect of literary style and logical force and directness the book affords a striking and pleasing contrast with its prototype. The crowning excellence of the work, however, is its perspicuity. One cannot read Harvey's book five minutes without feeling that he has dropped a stitch somewhere and if by going back several pages and reading them over again he can pick it up he is fortunate. Mr. Roberts' book, on the other hand, is absolutely clear from beginning to end, and the reader becomes increasingly interested in its statements and ^arguments as he proceeds.

THE New York Press recently contained the followwing forcible article showing that low duties make unsound money:

The country is feeling the same inflation in its import trade, contraction in its export trade, and feverish demand for small bills and coin for its retail and wages markets, that it has usually felt during the early experiments vsrith a low tariff system. If we had now, as we had in 1852, a free system of State banking, the State banks would everywhere be issuing "wildcat" notes in millions in response for the active tenders for discount of what is called "commercial paper," meaning thereby the notes which country merchants everywhere are willing to give for the plethora of imported goods coming in under the Gorman law if only they can find nearby banks able to supply them with small money of any kind in exchange for their time notes. Hence, simultaneously with the statements in the official returns of foreign commerce for April that for the first four months of the calendar year our imports of merchandise exceed our exports by $68,001,551, while for the ten months just passed there is an increase in imports of $45,242,529, and a decrease in exports of $38,97S,'.)49, there come statements beginning with the middle dates in April indicating that the country banks and banks of the interior cities are seeking to effect discounts of the notes into which our plethora of imported goods is seeking conversion.

This is the old process of inflating our currency through the discount and deposit departments of our banks by thrusting on the country, through low duties on imports, a large excess of foreign goods."

LAKAYIOTTK Courier: It is to be regretted that General Wallace will not, consent to serve as one of the regenls of the State Soldiers' Monument. Iut it is better that he should retire at, tno beginning, in view of different?.- of opinion with the majority concerning the completion of the work. From an artistic point of view he is doubtless justified in protesting against the absurd statue of "Indiana" at the summit of the shaft, but the cost of removing the figure and replacing it with another would be so great that the State authorities could hardly afford to sanction it without incurring the intense displeasure of the people.

IF OLD Thad Stevens were alive now, and should read about the racket General Lew Wallace has stirred up about the uncompleted Soldiers' Monument, he would bay it was just what might have been expected from appointing "one of them literary fellers."—LaFuyette Call.

The quotation which the Call attrib utes to Thad Stevens really belongs to Zack Chandler. Thad Stevens was a college graduate and an accomplished scholar, while Chandler belonged to that class known as self-made men. The remark was characteristic of Chandler and can easily be believed that he made it.

WABASH college should be thankful that she has gotten well past the period of exclusive preacher rule and we say th\s with all respect to the sacred calling. Del'auw should also move up a peg.

WHO OPPOSES SEWERAGE? If the sewerage question should be put to a vote of the people of Crawfordsville an overwhelming majority would be in favor of this much needed improvement. First of all the laboring classes would vote solidly for it, as it would give employment to a large number of them. T^ie merchants would vote for it, as it would put the wage money into circulation. The well-to-do property owners and those in easy circumstances would vote for it as a good convenience which they want and can easily pay for. The rent-paying class would vote for it, because it will be an advantage to them and will cost them nothiug. The progressive property owners who are really too poor to pay for sewerage all at once would vote for it when they learn that their assessments can be paid in twenty annual installments. Those who would vote against it would be that small and decreasing class in Crawfordsville known as "kickers," who have opposed every improvement since Major Wliitlock laid out the town in 1823. But no vote is necessary, as the Council represents the people and is unanimously in favor of sewerage. The preliminary survey now being made by City Engineer Waugh should be followed up promptly by the plans, specifications and actual work of construction.

THE gap between treasury receipts and expenditures continues to widen. The treasury deficit for the year, to date, is $53,099,259.61, -and for the month to date is $5,799,890.41. Had it not been for the $180,000,000 secured by the bond issues the treasury would now be absolutely bankrupt. It appears that about $115,000,000 of the receipts from the sale of bonds have been used for current expenses. And here lies the bottom of the whole financial trouble. All the bluster and blow about the currency is simply tomfoolery to deceive the people, so that they will not clearly comprehend the real trouble. If we had a tariff that would yield revenue sufficient to meet current expenses, to say nothing of its protective features, nine-tenths of the currency trouble will disappear, and the other tenth will yield to very simple treatment. It is not the "crime of 1873" ljut the "crime of 1894" from which the country is suffering.

GENERAL WALLACE'S career as a regent for the State Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument may be said to be brief but brilliant. The trouble with General Wallace is that he has ideas, and he does not propose to sacrifice his artistic tastes and notions on the altar of an impecunious treasury. We take it to be true that there are few who will question the justness of the General's criticism, especially that of the crowning figure on the monument. Except the superscriptions there is nothing about the structure to indicate that it was erected to perpetuate the military glory of Indiana. As it stands it is just as appropriate for the "new woman" as for the "old soldier." To carry General Wallace's ideas into execution will require money, and this is not in the treasury. The majority of the board recognized this fact and upon this rock they split.

ONE of the arguments used by the Democrats against the McKinley law was that it encouraged the importation of shoddy. Well let us see how the Gorman-Wilson law has worked. Under the McKinley law, the imports of shoddy for the nine months ending March 31, 1894, amounted to 75,923 pounds, while under the Gorman-Wil-son law for the eight months ending March 31, 1895, they aggregated 9,713,187 pounds. This is free wool with a vengeance, with smallpox and every other contagion known to mankind thrown in as a bonus. The new law is a great boon to the shoddy Democracy-

THF, Woman's Relief Corps, auxiliary to the Grantl Army of the Republic, and standing upon the same platform with it. was organized eleven years ago in Denver with a membership of about 100. It now has a paid-up membership of 145,000, and in the tenyeats has expended $1,015,000 in cash for re lief and benefit of unfortunate sol diers, their families or the widows and orphans of those deceased. It has founded schools, homes and hospitals, and has led the van in the march for teaching patriotism in the public schools.

THE Appellate Court decides that when a road supervisor has impounded stock found by him running at large, the owners can secure their release only by paying expenses necessarily attendant upon their taking up and care. Where such officer has acted under the strict letter of the statute, the claimant has no right to the possession of the property impounded until he pays or offers to pay the costs and expenses.

THE State Press Associations of Louisiana, Indiana and Minnesota have recently accepted the invitation to visit the Cotton States and International Exposition during October. The Indiana association gave up a July excursion and the Minnesota association denied itself a trip to Yellowstone Park in order to go to the Exposition.

THE, question of bimetallism has again come to the front in Germany The Upper House of the Prussian Diet on Thursday adopted a resolution proposed by CountVon Mirbach, declaring that steps should be taken for a prompt settlement ot the currency question by an international agreement on bimetallism. Next week the Reichstag will also pass a similar resolution. The bimetallists have already received 200 signatures in the Reichstag which will give them an absolute majority in that body.

A CONCESSION has been let for the star attraction at the Cotton States and International Exposition. It is the Myers Leaning Tower, and is likely to be more of a marvel than the leaning tower of Pisa. This one will be constructed of steel, and will be 350 feet long, traversed by elevators, with galleries for spectators. The exterior will be decorated with electric lights, controlled by an automatic switch-board.

THE Treasury odeficiencv now exceeds $50,000,000, according to Democratic estimates, and it is growing at the rate of nearly $500,000 a day. Jn the light of these figures the tariff smashers must admit that it is a large and yawning condition, not a theory, that confronts them.

THE bonds sold to the Belmont-Mor gan syndicate at 104% are now quoted at 122X, and the average citizen can easily figure out the cost of the Democratic blunder in that relation.

THE Supreme Court of Indiana, last week, decided that directors of State and county fairs were liable for letting gambling privileges upon and within the fair grounds.

Choked to Death.

FORT WAYNE, Ind., May 20.—1 hit tie Pliilabaum, aged 5 years, watched her sister, Mrs. Maxwell, cooking a beef pot pie for dinner. The child asked for a taste of the meat and was given a bite. It choked her, and despite the efforts of Mrs. Maxwell and neighbors she was dead in ten minutes.

Kill* Himself at No Cost.

ANDERSON, Ind., May 20.—Fred W. Irwin walked into a hardware store here and under pretense of buying a revolver, was shown several weapons. He finally selected one and had it loaded. It was handed to him and he promptly blew out his brains. No cause is known.

Corner btoue l.aiil.

MUNCIE, Ind., May 20.—The corner stone of the A. M. E. church was laid Sunday in this city. The St. Paul's German church and the Congerville Baptist church were dedicated.

Charged with Fmbezzlin^.

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., May 20.—"Billy" Weedon, conductor on the Louisville division of the Pennsylvania road, was arrested here on two indictments charging embezzlement of $15.

Robbers Sentenced.

JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind., May xo. George Willis was sentenced here tc two years in prison, and Thomas Burton three years, for robbery. They are notorious thieves.

Negro Killed.

JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind., May 20.— William Kimbick, a drunken negro, was killed in this city by a policeman whilu residing- arre f-t.

Wife TS. Horse.

Husbands, give your wives at least as much consideration as you wovld a pet animal. You would not knowingly work a favorite animal while sick. Yet, how many feeble, debilitated wives work on, dragging out weary lives, made mi.stra.ble by the many diseases peculiar to women. They suffer in silence and because delicacy prevents complaint you underestimate the disease and its effect in shortening her life. Get her Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescri .tion. We assure that no sr.fferer from those painful and weakening diseases, which wreck the constitutions of so many women, can take it without being benefited. The greatest restorative tonic and strengthening nervine known to medical science. Produces refreshing sleep and drives melancholy away. Prevents threatening insanity, and cures sleeplessness, nervous debility, spasms, St. Vitus's Dance, and kindred nervous diseases.

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Money to Loan at 6 per cent interest.

Farms and City Property or Sale

Life, Fire and Accident Insurance. Office North Washington st., Ornbatin Block, Crawfordsville, Ind.

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Agent for the Connecticut Fire Insurance Co., ot Hartford. American Ffre Insurance Co., of New York, Girard Fire 1 nsurance Company, of Philadelphia, London Assurance Corporation* of Iondon, Grand Rapids Jflre Insurance Co., of Michigan. Office in Joel Block with R. E. Bryant,

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FOR LOAN.

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N

OTICE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS. ETC.

In the matter of the estate of John Wilkinson. deceased. In the Montgomery Cirouit Court. May term,

1895,

Notice i» hereby given that WjUiam J. Miles as administrator ol' the estate ot John Wilkinson, deceased, has presented and filed his accounts and vouchers in final settlement ot said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and fiction of said Circuit Court on the 8th day of June, 1895, at which time all heirs, creditors or legatees of said estate are required to appear: in said Court aud show cause if any there be, why said accounts and vonchers should not be approved, and tbe heirs or distributees of said estate are also notified to be In said Court at the time aforesaid and make proof of heirship.

Dated this 14th day of May, 1895. WILLIAM J. MTLES May 17, '95-2t Administrator.

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