Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 31 May 1895 — Page 2
WEEKLY JOURNAL
ESTABLISHED IN 184S.
Successor to The Record, the first paper in Crawfordsville, 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. GRKKNK, Secretary.
A. A. McOAlN,Treasurer
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FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1895.
VOOKHKKS, of Indiana, and Vest, of Missouri, are out for "cheap money."' Cheap statesmen are always for cheap money.
ROSWKLT. G. HOKR, of the New York Tribune, has challenged ''Coin" Harvey to meet him in debate on the silver question. Mr. Horr is a man who usually makes the fur 1ly.
TIIK Populists are trying hard to convince the Democrats that the way to better their condition is to drop old principles and cut loose from their most distinguished leaders.
DELAWARE not only admits that it will have half a crop of peaches, but that there is more money in a half than in a full crop. The bulls are ahead, even in the peach business.
THE income tax men who are talking about a constitutional amendment in aid of their hobby will find more impediments in that direction than they did in the Democratic-Populist Congress.
AMERICAN oleomargarine is a part of the regular supplies furnished the German army. If Germany will relieve us also of bogus coffee and glucose we will try to worry along with the microbes of American beef and fruit.
IT is stated that this country is second only to France in erecting public monuments and marking historical spots. The tendency is this direction is increasing in America, and is to be commended for patriotism and good taste. rv:
WHEAT is bounding toward -the dollar mark. Of course the rapid advance is due to the weather damages and the ravages of the Hessian Jly. It is the opinion of many good judges that there will not be enough harvested in Montgomery county to bread the people.
THE gold-bugs of the East and the silverites of the West can raise all the dust they want too, yet the fact that the masses of the people want a dollar that will be of the ^same purchasing value everywhere cannot be lost sight of, whether the dollar is made of gold, silver, paper, cloth, tin, copper or zinc. Give us a dollar that is a dollar.
SENATOR MORGAN, of Alabama, is a patriotic American citizen. He is exceedingly indignant'fat the truckling foreign policy of the Administration. Commenting on the reported disposition of Great Britain to intervene in Hawaii, he said in Washington on Saturday that PearlJHarbor, which belongs to the United States, is a possession with which this country cannot permit England to interfere, and that, if that country shall pursue the policy toward Hawaii which is now suggested, Congress, when it shall assemble, will declare war, whatever may be the attitude or desire of the Administration.
CINCINNATI Commercial-Gazette: The political platform" makers have been very busy of late in declaring beforehand what is to be the issue next campaign, and we are told on every side that it will be a stand-up tight between gold and silver. It will be nothing of the kind. It will be a stand-up fight between prosperity as it has always existed under Republican rule, and depression and hard times that have always followed Democratic success. Silver will be only a side issue. The people have become thoroughly convinced that Democracy, as at present constituted, cannot successfully administer the affairs of this great government.
THE important subjects of forestry and good roads are making some progress in this country. It may be slow, but it encourages the »belief that the General Government and each of the States will eventuallygreach a settled and efficient policy in improving and maintaining the public highways and protecting the forests. At the last session Congress made an appropriation of $10,000 for an investigation of roads, and Massachusetts, through a highway commission, is spendingS300,000 in the betterment of old roads to form a State system. This sum is but a beginning in the work, which, if carried forward judiciously, will improve the value of property far more than the cost.
KOKEIGS SHODDY.'
ST. LOUIS Globc-Democrat: A plague of foreign shoddy is upon this country as one of the results of the new tariff law. This shoddy, now arriving by ship loads, is the woolen refuse of the world, raked up from the hospitals, slums, alms houses and pest houses of Europe, and the seaports of other con tinents. The McKinley duty on shod dy was 30 cents a pound, which shut it out as dangerous and a fraud generally but the Wilson bill admits it on a payment of a duty of 15 per cent, ad valorem, which is virtually no duty at all. Under the McKinley law the importation of shoddy averaged not more than !),000 pounds a month, but now it is coming at the rate of over 1,000,000 pounds a month. The Y),eople United States will soon be wearing this vile stuff or carpeting their lloors with it, and it is useless to claim that it can be properly cleaned or freed from disease germs. The prophets who said that the Wilson bill would reduce the Americans to rags might have put the case stronger, for it is now clothing them in the rags of European beggars and victims of contagion. Here are the official figures for those who doubt this view of the case: During the nine months ending March 31. IS!)!, the total imports of shoddy were 75,9:23 pounds. During the eight months ending with March 31, 3 the imports of shoddy amounted to !',713.187 pounds. Consumers of woolen goods have aright to know where this filthy refuse is going, and those who are working it up will doubtless be exposed, as they richly deserve to be.
CAPTAIN PYRRHUS WOODWARD read a paper the other day before the Henry County Historical Society on the Mexican War. Of the organization of the Fifth regiment and its oflicers the following extract from the paper will be of pecular interest to many people in Montgomery county: "The organization of the Fifth Regiment was completed at Madison and our regimental officers were James II. Lane, Colonel Allen May, Lieutenant Colonel John ]VI. Myers, Major James llaker, Regimental Quartermaster James S. Athon, Surgeon and JohnM. Lord, Adjutant. Col. Lane had entered the army as Captain of the Dearborn Volunteers, and had seen service in the Third Regiment before he became Colonel of the Fifth. He was thirtythree years old, a handsome man and a gallant soldier. His subsequent brilliant but stormy career in Kansas and Missouri is well known. Capt. May, of Co. I, recruited at Crawfordsville, was promoted to be Lieutenant Colonel, and Lieutenant Malilon D. Manson, afterward a distinguished officer in the War of the Rebellion, became Captain of the company. John M.Myers, Major, was twenty-seven years of age and a very competent officer. A few of the companies were not full and according to E. D. Mansfield's History of the Mexican War, the roster of the Fifth Regiment'showed 973 men. The First Second and Third regiments of Indiana had enlisted for one year, but the Fourth and Fifth Regiments were for the war.
TIIK Delphi Journal, discussing the State Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument scandal, says: "Ever since the appropriation for the monument was made the proposed tribute to heroism and valor has been a prolific source of quarreling and scolding, back-biting and cat-hauling. About the only fruit the monument has borne to, date has been in the shape of asses and fussy eld hens, and the people are getting heartily tired of it all. The plain truth is that this grand and heroic work has never been in the right hands. Gen. Lew Wallace is about the only man who has been in any way associated with the enterprise who has known a Corinthian column from a fence rail, and his ideas so shocked certain men in authority that the author of Hen-Hur was glad to get out with his life."
TIIK Cincinnati Commercial Gazette raps the late Indiana Legislature over the knuckles in a most unfeeling manner when it says:
The Indiana Legislature, following the illustrious example of the Fiftythird Congress, enacted some very defective laws. It undertook to regulate the fees and salaries of county and State officers, and got the thing into such a muddle that nobody knows just what fees or salary anybody is entitled to. The Governor has been asked to call an extra session, but he says nay, nay. Indiana Legislatures are seUlotn a thing of beauty and a joy forever. They are least harmful in vacations.
A MOVEMENT has been inaugurated by the friends of the late Governor Chase to create a fund for the benefit of his blind and helpless widow. Governor Chase died leaving his family in actual poverty. For twenty-five years his wife has been a confirmed invalid, confined nearly all the time to her bed, and for fifteen years she has been totally blind. The movement is noble one and should meet with a hearty response from the large-hearted people of Indiana.
SECRETARY CARLISLE says that when Cleveland's first Administration went out of office there was ample revenue and general prosperity. This is true and for the very good reason that the Republican policy of protection and of raising sufficient revenue by tariff had been in force all through Mr. Cleveland's four years' term. He was not then working under a Gorman tariff law. Mr. Carlisle unconsciously pays a neat compliment to the tariff law of 1883.
OUlt PUBLIC IMPROVEMENTS. IT seems to be the habit among a certain class to disparage the city council. Nothing they do suits some people. The truth is, they are constantly between two fires as it were, those want something and those who don't want it. Theirs is a trying position at best but we believe that under all the circumstances the present body is doing well for the city and the citizens and that the kickers of to-day will be the praisers of to-morrow. The council has decided upon' a course of public improvements which will be a burden upon a very few, a benefit to the many and a blessing to the entire community. It has always been true and always will be that every dollar spent on improving property adds two or three dollars to its selling value. So let the councilmen stick to their course without fear or favor and let every public spirited citizen encourage them. One councilman well said that if the people did not want anything they should require their candidates to sign an agreement not to vote for anything that would cost anything. But the kickers do not represent the people and a man on that kind of a, platform would not poll twenty-five votes. Crawfordsville cannot afford to stand still while other places are moving forward. Cementwalks, grass plats, curbs, rolled streets and sewerage are all good things and they are all inevitable. Gentlemen of the Council, stay with these good things, push them along, anil in five years {from now, nay one year hence, those who oppose them will confess that they were short sighted. This is no time for a halting course. To paraphrase Shakespeare, "There is a tide in the affairs of a city, which taken at its flood leads on to a fortune. Omitted, all the balance of the voyage is passed in shallows and in miseries. On such a full sea we are now afloat and we must take the current while it serves or lose our venture."
ALL the newspapers of the country Sunday, both Democratic and Republican, contained the following dispatch noting the growth of the tin-plate industry. It looked odd to see it in Democratic newspapers as two years ago they were filled with predictions that tin-plate could not be manufactured in this country. They even went so far as to caricature the first mills that were erected and said they were started by Republicans for campaign purposes. The dispatch says: "The marvelous growth of the American tin plate manufacture^in less than four years presents one of the most remarkable instances of industrial effort in history. From nothing it has become an established industry of large proportions, which already gives employment to some 15,000 hands. At the present moment, so far as can be gathered from the latest reports, there are in actual operation twenty-eight tinplate works proper, rolling their own black plates. Ten more are building, two or three of which are practically complete and ready to start up, while the majority of the others are expected to be in operation by July 1. These works possess an aggregate of 155 mills completed or building, of which about 110 are now in active work."
IT IS within the recollection of the people at large that when President Grant spent his 'summers at Long Branch the whole Democratic party with one accord and one voice denounced him and held him up to ridicule because he had abandoned his post of duty. The Democratic outcry was so loud that it developed into a quasi campaign issue in 187:2 when General Grant was a candidate for reelection. Now that the Democrats have a President of their own who spends his summers at Gray Gables they sing very low. The Republicans of course don't care. They hope the President will have a good time and get a much needed rest. The country will get a rest, too—a rest from Democratic incompetency.
SECRETARY CARLISLE'S speech at Memphis is- a further illustration of the utter impossibility of holding two positions, that are radically in conflict, at one and the same time, and defending them in a logical way. At some points iu his speech the reader is convinced that he is a gold monometallist. At others it seems plain that he is an international ibimetallist.—liuUanaitalis Sentinel.
The Sentinel has been a straddle of that pole for some time and it ought to know how to sympathize with a man in that position.
TUE deficit for the fiscal year ending June 30 next is computed by Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Curtis at $53,000,000 and he reckons upon a further •leficit of 835,000,000 for the five months from June 30 to November 30. If he is correct in his estimates, the new Congress, when it meets in December, will be confronted by an aggregate deficit of 888,000,000 in the seventeen preceeding months, or an average of over 85,000,000 per month.
TJIE country hasn't heard from Dan Voorhees on the financial question for more than a week now. His silence is becoming oppressive. His opinions are not matters of importance but the people area little curious to know which side of the current controversy he will be on when he does speak.
THE fact that the Wilson-Gorman tariff law will create a deficiency of between 850,000,000 and 800.000,000 at the end of the present fiscal year is evidence sufficient that it is not even a revenue tariff law. It is neither a protective law nor a free trade law. It is simply a nondescript, made up of deals and compromises and open bribery. Its protective features are chiefly for the benefit of trusts—-notably the sugar combine and the Standard Oil. It has not given work to one single American toiler, but has robbed thousands of them of the employment they had. It has not raised the standard of wages in a single American industry, but has lowered it throughout the country. It has not opened a foreign market for a barrel of American pork or a bushel ot wheat or a dollar's worth of manufactured goods, but has destroyed a considerable portion of the foreign markets already possessed by Americans. It has not brought a dollar of money into the country, but has sent millions out.
INCREASING imports, decreasing exports—selling less to foreign countries, buying more from them. "So runs the world away" under the Gormanized Wilson Tariff. According to the free trade theory this is the way for a country to lay up treasure. No individual would expect to get rich in this way.
HON. HUGH M'CULLOCH DEAD
Kx-Socrotary of tlio Treasury Expires ill Ills Home in Washington.
WASHINGTON, May 24.— lion. Hugt McCulloch, formerly secretary of the treasury, died shortly before 3 o'clock this morning. With him when the enc came were his two sons, a married
HUGH M'CULLOCH.
daughter and a grandson. Death was calm and peaceful, the patient having been for some time previous in a comatose condition. Mr. McCulloch was over 80 years of age. [Hugh McCulloch was a native of Maine, having been born in Kennebunk, that state, In 1810. Hu studied law in his early manliood, and on being admitted to the bur in 1833 removed to Fort Wayne, Ind. He aocepted the position of cashier of the State bank of Indiana, which incident undoubtedly shaped a career which developed into one of.distinguished financial success. He filled tho position of oashiier und director of the branch of the State bank of Indiana until 1857. in that year he was elected president of the State bank, in which position ho continued until 1863,when President Liinooln appointed him comptroller of the currency. After thoroughly organizing and putting his bureau into successful operation he was appointeu seoretary of the treasury by President Linnoln March 7, .1865, and he held that office throughout President Johnson's administration, until succeeded by Secretary Boutwell under President Grant March 11. 1869. Mr. McCulloch then established in London the banking house of Jay Cooke, McCulloch & Co., with which he continued until the suspension or tho American firm of Jay Cooke & Co. in 1873, when the London house reorganized 'under the name ol McCulloch & Co. A year afterward he returned to the United States. In 1884 he was again appointed secretary of the treasury, this time by President Arthur, serving until the first Cleveland cabinet was installed. Since then he has held no public office. I
Belleville (111.) JKrewery Uurned. ST. LOUIS, May 24.—A special to the Chronicle from Belleville, 111., says that the Star brewery was destroyed by fire at 10 o'clock Thursday morning. The brew and boiler house with the ice machines were saved. Fire Chief Nebgen received a severe injury from a falling iron bar. The loss will be 875,000, partially covered by insurance.
Married a Native.
SAN FRANCISCO, May 24.—According to advices received from Tahiti by an evening paper Jacob Doty, American consul there, was recently married to a native girl of Popeete. Doty is 26 years of age and was appointed to his present position by President Cleveland. l'ont Otllce Kobbcd.
O.MRO, Wis., May 24.—Burglars en tered the post office here Wednesday night, making a clean sweep of the safe, which was blown open, taking §340 of stamps and 850 or more of cash.
Creditors Won't Lone.
QUINCY, 111., May 24.—S. J. Carter, receiver of the Taylor Bros.' mill, filed a statement of its affairs. The assets are ^235,000 and the liabilities $156,000. All creditors will be paid in fulL
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Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice In the Kcientilic Ainci'icnii. and thus are brought widely beloro tlio public without cost to the inventor. This splendid paper. Issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has by far tlio largest circulation of any scientific work in the world. $3 a year. Sample copies sent free.
Building Edition, monthly, $2.50 a year. Single copies, '23 cents. Every number contains beautiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new houses, with plans, enabling builders to Hhow the latest designs and secure contracts. Address
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This is Important!
To Everybody in Montgomery and Adjoining Counties.
Those having1 dead stock to know that .Joseph Goldberg will send his wagon and haul them off their places, which will save them burying them. It will be beneficial to people's health and to the health of the rest of the stock. Notify him by telephone, telegraph, postal or otherwise and they will be removed on short notice. Also bear in mind that Joseph Goldberg is the man you want to sell all kinds of llides, Tallow and Furs and all other articles in his line. He will pav you the market price at all times and he will give you every pound that it weighs.
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ABSTRACTORS, LOAN AND
INSURANCE AGENTS
Money to Loan at 6 per cent Interest.
Farms and City Property For Sale
Life, Fire and Accident Insurance. Office North Washington st., Ornbaun Block, CrawforHaville, Ind.
W. K.WALLACE
Agent for the Connecticut Fire Insurance Co., ot Hartford. American Fire Insurance Co., of New York, Girard Fire Insurance Company, of Philadelphia, London Assurance Corporation* of London, Grand Rapids Fire Insurance Co., of Michigan. Office in Joel Block with R. E. Bryant,
South Wash. St. Crawfordsville.
MONEY TO LOAN
With payments to suit borrower, interest the very lowest Either real estate or personal security accepted.
Good notes cashed.
C. W. BURTON.
107J6 East Main street.
ED VOIUS. MAC STILWELL.
Voris & Stilwell.
(Established 1877)
Representing 20 of the Oldest and Largest Fire, Llle and Accident Iusurance Companies. Farm Loans a Specialty. Prompt and Equitable Settlement of Losses. Ollice—:{(i door north of Court House, Crawfordsville, Ind.
C. C. KICK, Solicitor.
a. w. PAUL. M. W. BKDKER.
PAUL & BRUNBR,
Attorney e-at-Lia'w,
Office over Mahorney's Store, Crawfordsville.IInd. All business entrusted to their care will receive prompt attention.
O. U. PERRIN. W1TER.
Practices in Federal and State Courts. PATENTS A SPECIALTY. {^""Law Offices, Crawford Building.
Opp, Music Hall, Crawfordsville.
FOR LOAN.
Wabash College loans its Endowment Fund. Principal paid in is again for loan. Money now on hand. For particulars inquire of the Treasurer, No. 7. second Uoor ot Fisher Building1, Crawfordsville, Ind.
T. H. RISTINE, Treas.
GEORGE W. FULLER,
per 16 or $2
Crawfordsville, Ind. Hreeder und Shipper of thoroughbred POLAND
CHINA hog's,13.P.Kocks, White Guineas and Fan Tail Pifreons. Stock and Etrffs for sale. Eggs $1.25 Write your want-.
6 per cent. 6 per cent. MONEY TO LOAN.
On improved property. In sums to suit. At lowest rates.
R. E. BRYANT.
Joel Block.
M. D. WHITE, W. M.KBEVES, CHAS.D.OIIEAR
Attorneys-at-Law.Orear,&ReevesWhite,.
Also a Largo Amount of Money to Loan at Six per cent, per annum on farms or city property in gums of $300 up to 910,000. Call and see us. Office 103V6 oast Main street.
JyfOTICE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS. ETC.
In the matter of the estate of John Wilkinson. deceased. In tho Montgomery Circuit Court, May term. 1895,
Notice is hereby given that William J. Miles as administrator of the estate ot John Wilkinson, deceased, bus presented and filed his accounts and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and notion 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 and show cause If any there be, why said accounts and vouchers should not be approved, and the heirs or distributees of said estate are also Dotifled to be In said Court at the time aforesaid and make proof of heirship.
Dated this 14th day of Maj, 1895. WILLIAM J. MILKS. May 17, '95-2t Administrator.
FOR letter beads see THB JOUBNAL Co., PRINTERS
