Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 29 January 1897 — Page 2

WEEKLY JOURNAL.

ESTABLISHED IH 1848.

Sucresssorto The Record, tho first paper In Cruwfordville, established iu 1831. and to he People's Pros, established in 1S44.

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FRIDAY, JANUARY 20. 1897.

IT is announced that John Clark Ridpath has accepted the position of editor of the Arena magazine, and that he will soon leave Greencastle to assume the duties of his new position. It is comforting' to know that John Clark has at last found his sphere.

RKPRKSENTATIVK NICUOI.SON has a bill before the House requiring that all candidates for city offices shall be nominated at primary elections. The provisions governing these elections are similar to the general election laws, except that all expenses are to be paid by the party holding such election, and that a blue pencil shall be used instead of the stamp. If such a law is a good thing for city oflices why not apply the same rule for the nomination of county offices?

TIIE second administration of Cleveland has worked a reduction in the pension roll of something like 820,000,000 a year. A good portion of this was saved by the death of pensioners, but a much larger part came from the deserving veterans. It has been shown that the cases of fraud were insignificantly small. Of course this will meet the approval of the anti-pension howlers, but this class of skin-ilints would have been better pleased had Grover wiped out the entire roll.

MAJOR MCKINLEY has put his foot down on the inaugual ball as heavily as did^Governor Mount. He has written the committee having charge of the arrangement that it is "unbearable to think of such a vast amount of money being devoted to no more substantial purpose than display and pleasure when there are millions of our brethren throughout the world actually suffering, starving, dying from the lack of food, clothing, shelter and medical attention He suggests that 825,000 of the 850,000 which has been subscribed shall be devoted to the organized alleviation of wretchedness in the great cities of the United Stated, 810,000 to be sent to Armenia, and 815,000 to plague stricken India. The President-elect's sentiments and suggestions will find a warm response from millions of American citizen

IK the Vandalia railroad owes the Slate any money on account oi the provisions of the original charter granted the Terre|.Haute and Indianapolis Company the State ought to have the money, If on the other hand there is nothing due nothing should be paid. Nearly every Legislature for the last thirty years has had the question presented iu one form and another, but the matter has never been settled, and the people are as much in the dark as they were when the agitation began. The only way to determine the question is by an investigation. It is entirely proper and right, therefore, that the joint committee provided in the bill, written by the Attorney General, and which has paB&ed both Houses, should probe the matter to the bottom. The State should not want anything except what is justly due, and the Vanualia should be willing to pay

itB

honest debts.

AMERICAN Economist: One of the changes in the tariff of which we may feel sure is the change fron ad valorem to specific duties. There is no doubt but that the deficit in the National Treasury under the Gorman law has been much increased by the adoption of tliejsystem of ad valorem duties. Such a system opens up a broad avenue to fraud, and "many there be who go in thereat." The frauds practiced in the valuation of imports under the present tarilt'Jlaw have been very extensive. This is just what protectionists prophesied at the time of the passage of the law cand what every clear thinker foresaw. It is a system which puts a premium ofjframi. There is no excuse whatever for the adoption of the system of ad valorem duties by the supporters of the Gorman law. They were not working in the dark. There were plenty of facts" to throw light on the weakness of their theory. Ad valorem duties had bean tried again and again iu this country, and had been denounced by nearly every Secretary of the Treasury from Hamilton to Manning. Hut the free traders, since their advent to power, seem to have been running a race with themselves to see how many exploded theories, ruinous fallacies^ and disastrous experiments they could get together.

AJONIIEKITANCK TAX. In nearly all the States east of Indiana a large*»part of the revenue is derived fromiwhat is known as an inheritance ttax, that is a direct tax placed on the estates of rich men. The law is said to work well and is the source of a large revenue, mainly derived from property that has for years escaped the assessor and the taxgatherer. These facts have been emphasized by the chief fiuancial officer of the State of New York, Comptroller James A. Roberts, who has just submitted his annual report to the Legislature of that State. He warns the rich that they^ must consent to pay a larger proportion of the expenses of the State and^so relieve the people if they would avoid worse things Mr. Roberts, who is a Republican, warns his party that it cannot remain in power if it spends the money of the people recklessly. He then says: "This country has just passed through the most threatening political campaign in its history. The portents of 1890 were vastly more dangerous than those of 18(30, when peace and internecine war hung in the balance. Issues were advanced last year and vigorously supported by a large element of the American electorate, which, if adopted, would have undermined the very foundations of our institutions. These issues verv largely were the outgrowth of discontent among the people. The farmer as a class, the working people and the smaller trading folks are in distress. For four years the conditions has been exceedingly unsatisfactory for them. Hundreds of thousands of industrious people were out of employment, the best efforts of the farmer ha6 been attended with poor results, and the small tradesman and business man wereworse off than if they had been doing nothing. And the fact that in the midst of all this discontent, distress and suffering, the fortunate few, comparatively, were reveling in immense and almost limitless wealth, did more than any other one thing to breed, propagate and disseminate these anarchistic and populistic ideas. There is no mistaking the signs of the times in this country. There is an increasing enmity between capital and labor. And this feeling increases very nearly according to the concentration of great wealth in few persons. Furthermore, there are eminent authorities who are of the opinion that the multiplication of gigantic fortunes augurs no good for the perpetuity of Republican institutions.

Mr. Roberts proposes an amendment to the inneritance tax law in New York, designed to make the rich pay more in proportion to their wealth than they now pay. He says: "It occurs to me that it would be well for the Legislature to give very serious consideration to the question as to whether the collateral inheritance or transfer tax should not be materially amended so as to provide a graded scale that will make large estates yield very much more tax than they now do. At present an estate going to lineals, that is, heirs of tbe blood, pays only 1 per cent, and on going to collaterals and strangers to the blood pays 5 per cent. All estates going to lineals, real and personal, uuder 810,000 are exempt from taxation, and only tbe personal property of the lineals above 810,000 is taxable. Estates of less than 8500, real and personal, going to collaterals are exempt, but both the realty and personalty of the collateral above 8500 are taxed. Hequests to domestic and religious corporations and to bishops are exempt. No class of property is better entitled to bear taxation than personal, yet as a rule it escapes during the life of its owner. The equalized value of taxable real«estate increased from 1S70 to 1895 more than 155 per cent, while the equalized value of taxable personal property increased less than 6 percent in tiie same period. The total of personal property taxed in 1895 was only 8-i"9,S59,000, yet since the incorporation tax law was passed, in ISiMi the sum of 82,0115,001,404, or nearly five times as much, has been invested !n the capital of corporations in the State. The question is therefore, where is all this personal property'.' It evades taxation. The fact is, neither the assessor nor the tax gatherer ever gels a chance to list personal property until death intervenes and forces a balancing of accounts. Then the administrator appears, the surrogate is visited, tbe will is produced, appraisers are appointed, strong' banks and safety deposit vaults are opened and hundreds of thousands and millions of dollars worth of securities that no assessor ever caught a glimpse of are brought to light. In justice to the mass of small land owners and taxpayers who have from year to year borne more than their equitable share of the burden of taxation, I maintain that a transfer tax upon large estates that would make up to a certain extent for the years of exemtion enjoyed would be simply justice.

The inheritance tax in New York is much lower than it is in European countries. In view of the facts ajduced the Comptroller suggests that the law be amended by adding another section, which shall provide for the imposition of a tax as follows:

Five per cent, on estates of SI,000,000 and less thau S3,0U0,0n0. Ten per cent on estates of S3,000,000 and less than 8:5,000,000.

Fifteen per cent, on estates of S.3,000,000 and over SI,000,000. This proposed amendment does not in any manner affect estates of less than 81,000,000, but it does aim at a material increase in the tax paid by very large estates, Mr. Roberts says that it is manifest that in New York from 82,500,000,000 to 83,000,000,000 of personal property escapes taxation every year. in this respect Indiana is not unlike New York. Thousands of dollars in every county of the State escape taxation each year. Much of this is brought to lijrlit by death. THp estaio nt Delphi urnl tiiu Shirk I-SISLN' at Peril

are two instances in point. Would it not be well for the Indiana Legislature to look into the question of an inheritance tax with a view of engrafting it into the future revenue taising policy of the State?

A WRITKK in the

Atlantic

says that

George Pea body so directed his wealth that he produced the best educational lesults ever gained by 82,000 000 in the history of the world. It is another example of what, happens when an eminent business man gives peisonal attention to his benefactions. Daniel 15. Fayerweather should have profited by the example set by Mr. Peabody. Had he done so his millions instead of being divided among twenty lawyers would have been distributed among twenty colleges.

A mi.i. has been introduced in the House to prevent the giving of flowers to criminals. Let it pass. Anything to put a stop to a good deal of sentimental gush lavished on the part of weak minded females.

TUK Republican members of the Legislature in caucus have decided that they will tackle a Congressional bill, and the law will therefore stand as it was made at the last session.

I.N times like this he who giveth to the poor, and does it quickly, lendeth to the Lord.

YOUNTSVILLE.

Dr. Webb is very busy waiting on the sick. Mrs. Harry Lebo, after a serious illness, is better.

The "Love" property is 6truck by a "Lucas" at present. Wm. Hurley's missing bird dog has at lbst returned home.

Miss Florence Smith spent Sunday with Miss Millie Switzer. Geo. Munns has been suffering greatly from catarrh during the past few weeks.

Will O'Neal disappears from Yountsville on Sunday evenings and is seen in Wesley.

Miss Crett6 Switzer, residing at Crawford6ville, spent Sunday with home folks.

Mr. and Mrs. Salley, of Crawfordsville, have been visiting Mrs. Hurley the past week.

A few of our young people enjoyed a pleasant sleigh ride after churcli last Thursday nigut.

Mrs. James Work has returned from a visit with her daughter, Mrs. Sailor, at Champaign, 111.

Parents and pupils regret greatly the short term of school as we have such splendid instructors.

Miss Maggie Bell is visiting Mrs. Hirst. After a few days she will return to W. R. Smith's at Chicago.

Several of our young people attended the supper given by Clarence Fink and others last Thursday evening.

Miss Dora Stubbins, on account of sickness, was unable to return to her school at Crawfordsville, where she is progressing nicely.

Bert Hay worth disposed of his guitar Saturday evening, Miss Minnie Shanklin being the winner. It is thought slle will receive "bones" next.

We regret to announce that Mr. Fritz and family will shortly leave us and remove to Crawfordsville. Mr. Fritz will there go into business of his own.

Miss Katie Graham spent Saturday and Sunday at Alamo with her sister-in-law. Mrs. Belle Graham. On Saturday evening she was surprised by a number of guests.

Rev. Williams has been conducting a series of revival meetings during the past two weeks. Our minister labored earnestly and we believe he accomplished much good.

The Teachers' Institute met at this place on the 10th inst., all the teachers being present. An interesting programme was carried out, both in the morning and afternoon. Several young people met to listen to the interesting and instructive talks.

Mr. Lydick, of Crawfordsville, came and claimed the hand of one of our belles, Miss Elsie Thompson. They were united in marriage Thursday afternoon of last week at Crawfordsville, where they will reside in future We wish them much happiness and prosperity.

Walter Sidener, accompanied by Misses Cora Higgins, Bettie and Mary Hoppings, Florence Boraker and Inez Belew, and Messrs John Sidener, John Work, Lawyer Sullivan and Bert Hayworth, went sleigh riding Sunday afternoon, headed toward the North pole. When near their destination they were dumped out in the snow. Tbey were nearly frozen when Mr. Swearingen came to their rescue. They are not so anxious now to go sleighing again.

GARFIELD.

Mrs. Pickerell is on the sick list. Elislia Cox has purchased a new organ.

There will be six weeks more weeks of school here. Zelda Cox spent Sunday with Clara Moore.

Mrs. Long fell downstairs Sunday morning, hurting her head badly. Willard Binford and wife were the guests of Byron Cox and wife Sunday.

Frank Conrad is the. champion checker player when he plays over the telephone.

OscaroMartin had a runaway last Thursday morning, tearing the top off his buggy.

Brother Hole will preach here the second Sunday in next month. Everyone invited to attend.

One of the boys of our neighborhood went to see his best girl Sunday night and his horse broke

tended

looEe

and

came home, leaving him there, The protracted meetings which Brothers Hole and Jackson have been I conducting here two weeks, closed Mnrda 7 niirht. They were well at-'

and were a great succe.-s. there

lu»iug twelve additions

STATE LEGISLATION

MEMBERS DISPOSED TO DO THEIR DUTY HAVE NO SNAP.

JStissol Sonets tho N«j« os*ary Work nnl Writo* .Su^cnUvely on Cliuu^ «»t Illetliod* IVi-sonnr! of the Sotmte rai»in*rH Inntoitfl of Com mil t-oo -lork*.

Contests

anil

IIe in hers.

Their KQoct Tulksitive

Special OonesptmdoiHf. INDIANA HOLTS, Jan. 27.—There, is no particular fun in being a member of the legislature if one is ambitious to do thoroughly the work before liiiu and acquire some influence in the body. The "only man who really has little to do is a member of the minority. He is in no wise responsible for legislation, is not assigned to any important committee work and can spend his time to suit himself. But a member of the majority, if ho undertakes to give tho proper attention to all measures referred to his committee, not to speak of the measures upon which he votes upon the floor, is likely to have his hands full from the time he takes his seat in the morning until after midnight. In a session of two months every two years the Indiana legislature is exported to keep the laws of the state abreast of modern progress, to see that the shit" institutions are properly cared for, to understand all the little dotails about city, county and township government and to attend to a thousand and one things.that are needed here and there throughout the state. And this is but half his duty—the other and the larger half consists in "laying for" and killing off the hundreds of schemes with which every legislature is beset. 4

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Unquestionably there area few members of the majority who simply go in for a good time and lot their opportunities for doing service to the state go to the dogs. But'in strong contrast to this sort of men are a large number of both senators and representatives who go at everything they undertake iu the thorough sort of a way that keeps them hard Jat work until midnight every night upon the measures assigned to their committees or upon which they expect to be heard upon the floor. And, in spite of all this careful attention, bad legislation and carelessly drawn bills sometimes go through. Two years ago there was much discussion in the newspapers of possible reform in the system. There is no doubt in my mind that the system can be improved. The great majority of the members come to each session without any previous experience iu legislation, and in (50 days they are expected to accomplish as much as does congress, with all its experience, in six months. A number of plans have been proposed, among them the idea of having an initiatory session, at which measures might he passed to third reading, with an adjournment for two or three months and reference of all pending bills to a commission which should make recommendations as to their constitutionality, and whether or not they are so framed as to reach the purpose aimed, after which a brief adjourned session for tho passage of these measures should be held. Then another plan has been proposed for putting all members and employes upon a regular biennial salary and permitting the assembly to remain in session as long as it may desire to complete properly the work before-it. This system exists in a number of states. Any change will require a constitutional amendment, and, as everybody knows, the way provided for constitutional amendments was very successfully designed to prevent the possibility of amending the document.

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A great improvement could bo made by the people of the various legislative districts, however, if instead of hunting up anew man each time, or giving the nomination to any man that happens to want it, they should select some honest and fairly intelligent man (o represent them and then return him for several sessions. Thus tho state would obtain much better results from the work of the legislature. It takes a new member fully half the session to find out how legislation is enacted. It is all chaos to him at first, and half the time he is at sea as to what is actually going on. He does not know whoso advice ho can rely upon or who has some scheme to defraud the people. Thus he is suspicious of everybody and everything, and though suspicion is a good deal better trait in a member than careless trustfulness, yot it occassionally makes monkeys of the members. *1

There are three newspaper men in the senate, Senators New. Phares and Self, and three in the house, General Packmd, Mr. Jernegan and Mr. Fornshell. It goes without saying that thov are among tho most valuable members of tho assembly. Thou LieutenantGovernor Haggard, wha presides over the senate, is a newspaper man. The secretary of the senate, Mr. Lane, and tho assistant clerk and journal clerk of of the house are all members of the beloved profession. I attended a banquet of the Republican Editorial Association last week and was struck with tho fact that there has been a vast change since tho time which we can all remember when the average country editor was a beggar for the "county printing." He has improved jnst as his newspaper has improved from a wet blanket printed with apple butter on a Washington handpross to tho neat, clean and enterprising newspaper that every town of any size in Indiana boasts. The modern Hoosier journalist is a man of business not of dreams. His newspaper has coino to be recognized as a necessity, not a luxury, and tho fact has become generally recognized that his aim in life is to conduct a dignified, moneymaking business enterprise in a paper that seeks to give its constituents the most reliable information for the least money. Possibly a (:ood donl of the romance of the bnsiness hns none out, along with the bcauiilul :i:on uni­

ties for starvation that it used to present, but I could not think that any of the 40 or 50 well dressed and well fed raon sitting about the board at the Denison tho other night, or any one of the sweethearts and wives who sat at their Rides, would care to recall I he old times simply because they are old times. ,: "cS 9

The senate has never had a higher personnel than it has at this session. There is scarcely a man in it who had not earned a great deal of prominence

in his own community, and most of them have acquired reputations in law, business or politics that extends throughout the state. Tho last two or threo elections have weeded out almost all

the week ones of the body, and I doubt if there are more than two or three members on the floor now who care more for the corporations they represent than for their own ropntations as public men. I violate no confidence in saying that during some of the previous sessions the senate has had in it enough mon subject to influences, not the best, to effectually choko off legislation desired by tho people if it happened to run counter to some large interests. "While the makeup of tho present senate is not such that it is likely to go after corporations with a hatchet, simnlv because they are corporations, or strike =it business interests for reason of pure buncombe, yet I imagine that the professional lobbyists will be able to exert little or no influence upon it.

I uotice that, in the printed rules of the senate they have dropped the title of committee clerk and substituted that of stenographer. This is in the interest of truth. About six years ago the cominittee clerk began to go out and the stenographer began to come iu. It used to be a beautiful snap, the position of committee clerk in the scnato, for the senate committees never did anything but pass upon bills, and then was little or nothing for a clerk to do. Finally a girl who could take shorthand got a position as a committee clerk. Tho chairmoil of the committees in tho group to which she was assigned found her ready and willing to permit, them to dictate to her such bills as they desired to introduce—and their private correspondence as well. That ended the careor of the male person as a committee clerk. The senate now provides for eight stenographers, grouping its committees into eight divisious and assigning one stenographer to each group. Her work as a committee clerk amounts to nothing, but she is kept busy writing bills, personal letters and that sort of thing for the members of the committees to whom she is assigned. As a result, the young woman who gets the privilege of Setting her machine in the postollice of the senate has practically no work to do. The member.- of the house have not yet "tumbled" to this idea, and of the seven committee clerkships there five arc held by men, while one is held bj- a sister of one of the members and another, the clerkship of the judiciary committee, is held by two young ladies who divide the salary. The right to fill this clerkship and that of the ways and means committee were reserved by Speaker Pettit this year when he appointed the chairmen of these committees. About theonly committee clerkship in thehouse to which any duties are attached in particular is that of the ways and means committee, whose secretary is expected to compile all the data from which the tax levy and appropriation bills are made up. "a 'A 'A

If the Republicans can hold their forces together two of the Populists elected upon fusion tickets will bo unseated, Hart of Gibson^aud Miller of Parke. Tho first of the cases tried by the election committee was that of Hart, and the issue of the legality of fusion was squarely made. The attorneys for Uockrum, the contestant, bic-'ed their argument upon three proprositions —that the same name could not legally appear twice upon the official ballot that the certification of Hart's name as the Democratic nominee, when in fact his nomination was not made by a Democratic convention, but by a Democratic committee, was illegal, and that after a party convention has legally nominated and adjourned the only way its ticket can be changed is by the death or resignation of nominees, in which.case the chairman of the party committee can nominate. Tho evidence showed that the original Democratic nominee had not presented a wriHen resignation and that the nomination of Hart was made for the Democratic ticket by the county committee. Thesame ruling will oust Miller and seat Adams of Parke county. The case was conducted wi'th all tho form of a trial in court, and these legal propositions were made and thoroughly argued. Should the same ruling obtain in the courts not a low county officers elected on fusion uckets last fall would lose their jobs

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The "taiuy people are beginning to develop in tho house. Mr. Reynolds shows a disposition to orate at some length upon most of the subjects that come beforo the house and Mr. Blankensiiip can turn lose a lot of eloquence upon tho slightest occasion. Mr. O'Bannon, who has a loud voice aud a yearning for free silver, is ready to take Hie floor upon little or no provocation, while John 11. East and Mr. Remington feel it incumbent upon themselves to explain the Democratic view of almost everything that comes up. It will bo along time, however, before either house develops another Adam Ho wo or "Foghorn" Kelley. Tho senate does not devote a whole lot of time to oratory, but overy once in a while soma of tho dignified senators will got into a personal "scrap," and the way the repartee flies back and forth upon these occasions is beautiful. The statesmen on that side of the dome have a disturbing element in Senator Drummond, who is always ready with some personal flame that is anything but good humored. He has been rebuked once or twice in a mild and dignified way, but several of tho senators have a rod in pickle for him and ho is liable to get a pretty severe droving down before the session is over.

KUSSEL M. SKKDS.

AN IMITATION.

It Gives UH Pleasure to Publish tht fol* lowing Announcement.

All women suffering from any form of illness peculiar to their sex are requested to communicatc promptly with Mrs. Pinltham, at Lynn, Mass. All letters are re ccived, opened, read and an swered by women only. -A- woman can freely talk of her private illness to a woman thus hass been established the eternal confidence between Mrs.

Pinltham and the women of America.

This con­

fidence hasinduced more than1: 100.000 women to write Mrs. Plnliham for

advice during the last few months. Think what a volume of experieneis she has to draw from! No physician living erer treated so many cases of female ills, and from this vast experience surely it is more than possible she has gained the very knowledge that will help your case.

She is glad to have you write or call upon her. You will find her a woman full of sympathy, with a great desire to assist those who are sick. If her medicine is not what you need, she will frankly tell you so, and there are nino'! chances out of ten that she will tell you exactly what to do for relief. She asks nothing in return except your good will, and her advice has relieved thousands.

Surely, any ailing woman, rich or poor, is very foolish if she does not take advantage of this generous offerof assistance.

Never in the history of medicine has the demand for one particular remedy for female diseases equalled that attained by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and never in the history of Mrs. Pinkham's wonderful Compound has tbe demand for it been so great as it is to-day.

PARKER'S

CINGER TONIC

ibfttefl Lung Troubles, Dt-Mlity. distressing Kton\arh and female ills, and

is

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treatment faiJa. Every mother ami h«vulu! nhoiiM hnwir. PARKEK'S HAIR BALSAM

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the

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hair fulling,

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1

tt?v. It KOIHI: comforts and hea!*. it s-«'ks out. the cause of their .1 srul sets it ii Jit. It con. tains virtues oM as history, yet nover beforo so comoineil as to a of the highest pr.icuc.-iil eltkucy. Note the lied oi'uvi on all tho genuine.

0

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llanulncturinj

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