Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 81, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 April 1910 — Page 2

RENSSELAER REPUBLICAN . DAILY AND SEMI-^Elft.Y. "■ ■ ■ . i,b si unu. 'W* Inu 1* ths M*folu weekly Edition. wuciiraoH nates. . WMjgjfjwy, to rtmw, Tear $1.60. A OLJtAK, MslMken. . Tuesday, April 5, 1910.

REPUBLICAN TICKET.

For County Clerk. JUDSON H. PERKIN'S. For County Auditor. J. P. HAMMOND. For County Treasurer. A. A. FELL. For County Sheriff. L. P. SHIRER. For County Surrey or. W. FRANK OSBORNE. For County Assessor. JOHN Q. LEWIS. For County Coroner. W. J. WRIGHT. For County Commissioner. First District. JOHN F. PETTET. Second District ROBERT S. DRAKE. For County Council men. First District. S. T- COMER. Second District NATHAN ELDREDGE. Third District. FRANK BABCOCK. At Large. JOHN HUDSON, W. V. PORTER, F. E. LEWIS.

STOMACH FEELS FINE.

One or Two Ml-o-na Tablets Drive Away Distress from Stomach. Get a 50 cent box of Mi-o-na tablets today and learn for yourself how easy it is to put your out of order stomach in perfect condition. Mi-o-na stomach tablets give instant relief—and do more. They build up the stomaqlLso quickly that in a few days belching, sourness, headache and dizziness will entirely disappear. Mi-o-na stomach tablets are guaranteed to cure indigestion and all stomach ills or money back. “I have been troubled with my stomach for two years. I tried everything I heard of. Mi-o-na stomach tablets did me more than $25.00 worth of good. They are the best in the world.”—Denrue Stephen, Coudersport, Pa., Feb. 1, 1910. Fifty cents for a large box of Mi-o-na at druggists everywhere, and at B. F. Fendig’s, who recommends them.

NEWS IN PARAGRAPHS.

Eighteen inches of snow is reported at Tower, fifty miles north of Alpena, Mich. At Sauit Ste. Marie, the mecury fell thirty-one degrees during last Wednesday night. Mrs. Ellen Nelson, age 35, is lying at the point of death at her home in Starke county, as the result of: burns received in a fire. She was assisting her fathei in burning brush when her clothing caught fire, every bit of it being burned from her body. Refusing to accept public charity and feeling financially unable to der fray the usual funeral expenses themselves, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Barbitskv, of Whbash, buried the body of their child in an ordinary store box Wednesday. The official call for the employes, performers, etc., of the Hagenbeck & Wallce shows, has been issued and all are to report in person to their respective department managers in Peru not later than April 20. The circus will give its initial performance of the season in Peru on April 23. Requisition papers for the extradi tion of J. Ogden Armour, of Chicago, who was recently indicted by the Hudson county (New Jersey) grand-jury * for conspiracy in controlling the prices of meat products, were filed with Governor Fort, at Trenton, N. J. yesterday by Prosecutor Garven, of Jersey City. August Hackenburg, an old resident of Anderson, and well known in German circles throughout the state, committed suicide Wednesday by shooting himself through the head 'with a revolver. Hackenburg, who was a machinist, suffered a stroke of paralysis six weeks ago and his left ; side had been practically useless since. It is thought that despondency "hver ill health was the reason tor the creed. , -

beveridUe (Jives keynote TO PARtY AT COlft tfNTION.

Continued from first page.

Democratic Party’s EtU Allies. But why has the mfSrtanted Democratic party fallen on such evil dayaT Ask the followers of Cleveland In New York and he will tell you that the Democratic party In New York la controlled by Murphy’s Tammany Hall In the metropolis and Conner’s Tammany Hail In Buffalo, Utterly Ignorant of the country. profoundly Indifferent to Its needs, and Concerned only In the enormous and purely local loot of the great cities of the Empire State. Ask the follower of Bryan In Illinois and he will tell you that the Democratic party In Illinois Is controlled by Roger Q. Sullivan and Ms Chicago Tammany Hall, allied with all the evil interests In both parties throughout the State of Lincoln and Grant. Ask the follower ot John W. Kerii. ?£ .and he will tell you that the Democratic party In Indiana Is controlled by Thomas Taggart and his Tammany Hall, which prostitutes every ob&slderatton of public welfare to Its ends Just as Murphy's Tammany Hall does in New York and as Sullivan s Tammany Hall does In Illinois. As a Republican. I do not rejoice In this plight of the Tammany controlled end misnamed Democratic party of toWith all my heart I wish Its eteSppts, purpose, record were otherwise, ere It a party which honest men who Her from us could trust and vote for, krmwHig that their filth would not be betrayed. It would be easier to fight for righteousness In our own. But It is not; and SO it is more vital than evCr that the Republican party should be kept true to the people's conscience and the people's Interests. It shall be kept true—lt will be kept true. In fighting for that we are fighting not only for the welfare of our own party, but for the welfare of the American people, and through them, of all humanity. Indeed, the Republican party means the welfare of the nation and of humanity; if It did not, I would not be Interested In It. Tariff the Immediate Question. In this the Immediate question Is thetariff. The misnamed Democratic party In Its convention this month will declare for a tariff for revenue only. I have shown you bf the i*eCor<j that such a declaration Is false pretense. But suppose It were not; a tariff rof revenue only means a, tariff "which will bring In the most revenue. But such a tariff Is a tariff on things which everybody In this country consumes and which nobody In this country produces. That means a tariff on coffee. Will they favor a tariff on coffffee? It means a tariff on tea. Are they for a tariff on tea? It means a tariff on food products which we cannot-raise in this country yet which we must have. Are they for a tariff on these products? The only great modern tariff-for-reve-nue-only country In the world is the United Kingdom, and her tariff revenues are raised on coffee, tea and such products as I have mentioned. A tariff for revenue only places the workingmen and manufacturers of this country on an exact equality with the laborers and manufacturers of Europe and other countries. Do American workingmen and manufacturers want that? A tariff for revenue only has been abandoned by every modern nation on earth excepting only the United Kingdom, and the United Kingdom itself is about to abandon it. Shall America, the most advanced of all countries, go back to the tariff methods of China, Turkey and Abyssinia? Shall America now put on what Chamberlain and Balfour in England declare to be the “worn-out and mothiftten revenue system” that the United Kingdom is now casting aside? Germany. France, Italy, Japan, Austria, all the modern world, have protective tariff? —scientific protective tariffs—although their protective tariffs are far lower than our tariff. Shall, we stand alone among the nations On the tariff question as the Democracy oneg urged us to stand alone among the nations on the money question? Shall we be for free trade now as the Democracy urged us to be for free silver then? Indiana for Protective Tariff. The Republicans of Indiana are for a protective tariff which covers thy difference between the ’ cost of production here and abroad. Less than that is unjust to American more than that is unjust to American consumers. And Injustice Is the only foe that protection need fear. It was to reduce the Pingley tariff to meet changed conditions and secure justice that we undertook Jts revision. Our last state platform said; “Protection never wag a matter of schedules. and while reaffirming the timehonored doctrine that there shall be a discrimination In duties that will tully protect the wage earner in the United states, we have never desired a higher rate than would accomplish that purpose. Give protection to the wage-earner? Yes! But give unneeded millions to gigantic interests? No! That was the last platform of Indiana Republicans and that is my platform now. What Beveridge Stands For. At the last session of Congress, in common with other life-long Republicans and protectionists, I fought for such duties In every schedule as would carry out this principle. Like President Taft, I wanted free iron ore. of which we have the greatest deposits on earth and which the Steel Trust chiefly controls. On iron ore no protection is needed, and I could not stand for the duty that was proposed and passed, and I cannot standtor it now. But a majority of Democratic senators did stand and fight for it, and stand for It -now. Like President Taft I wanted many raw materials which need no protection. find duties on which burden American industry, put on the free list—yet only two were so treated. I could not stand for the duties on these articles proposed and passed and I cannot sfknd for them now. Like President Taft, I wanted the an;lent woolen schedule reduced —a schedule forty-two years old, which if ever right, long since has served its purpose; which now gives to the Woolen Trust unfair control of our markets; which oppresses the woolgrower, burdens other woolen manufacturers, raises the price and reduces the weight of the people's clothing. I stood against that schedule when we tried to reduce It; I stood against it when the bill was passed; and I stand against it now’. I could not stand for the duties placed on lumber, out of which the homes of :he people are builded; lumber, of which we are the greatest exporters on earth; lumber, out of which for domestic use and export mighty fortunes have been made; lumber, In the making of mighty fortunes out of which our forests have been ruthlessly slaughtered. I could not stand for the duty proposed on lumber when that schedule was voted on; I could not stand for it when the bill was passed; and I cannot stand for it now. But Democratic senators did stand and fight for It, and stand for it now. Fought Cotton Schedule Increase. I could not stand for an Increase of < duties on cotton cloths, the higher frades of which are used as clothing y every man. woman and child, rich or poor, throughout the whole Republic, i I could not stand for that when the ! evidence was against it and no evidence for it; and when the manufacturers themselves formally declared before the House Committee that their business was thriving, their labor employed and that all they asked was that the tariff on cotton goods should not be decreased. I stood against those Increases on cotton goods when the schedule was voted on; T stood against them when the bill wate passed; and I stand against them now. I” could" not stand tor"an Increase of duty on structurad steel, punched and feady for use, out of which all modern buildings are constructed and with which bridges al over the country are i builded; and I cannot stand for it now. I could not.stAtad for the increase of ' duties on those grades of linoleums which are the bdor thaji’s carpet; or on zinc, which Is a universal necessity; or on sUk. which Is a part of the clothing >r adornment df evnrv tro»rlM« •.»-

man, nelress or working girl; and I cannot stand for them now. ■I could not stand for the obsolete and Ififaihous sugar Schedule, which no man in Indiana can read and understand. but which the Sugar Trust can read and understand; yet determined efforts to change that schedule were opposed by Democratic votes. Only one thing was done to the sugar schedule —a thing insignificant and absurd; we reduced the tariff on refined sugar five cents per one hundred Rounds — one-twentieth of one cent a pound—which was jworse than no reduction 1 because it cannot possibly affect the pflce and therefore is a deception; yet that is one of the boasted reductions we hear of. Above all, I could not stand for the slaughter by the Conference Cofnhiltfee of the modest and moderate beginning of a tariff commission which I wrote Into the bi'l that passed, the Senate; but all save one Democrat were the feriemles-of any tariff commission then and are its enemies now. These are examples of increases. I agalnst them then—l am against them now. Meaningless Decreases. It is said that the law has made reductions on articles entering into the consumption of the people to the value of five billion dollars; yet the bulk of value of those articles is made up of IUCh things as lumber, agricultural impiements, meat and food products, of all of which we are the greatest exporters In the world; steel rails and coal, which,we export; barbed wire, monopolized by the Steel Tiust; nafls, manufactured and sold by an International trust as complete as the in- - ternatlonal tobacco mbnopdly; yarns ; and threads, the raw material for textiles, on which textiles themselves when finished for the people’s use, the tariff was increased; sugar, which was not in fact but only in preterise, etc. These are examples of decreases. • From few If any of them do the people get the slightest benefit. | It Is suggested that all legislation is : compromise—and compromise on 'purely j economic details often is wise; but cotnI promise with sheer injustice always is , wrong. To trade decreases that do not help the people for increases that hurt the people is not honest compromise—-it Is spurious compromise; It is not honest protection—it is a perversion of protection. Extortion is not protection. If a hate should be Increased one thousand per cent, the extortionist would claim that it vyas protection and denounce aAa free trader the real protectionist. Will'lnsist on Revision. I was for a law that would have taken the tariff out of the way of business for ten or a dozen years—and such a law ; could have been Written and it shall be j written. Business needs tariff stability, and only a satisfied people can give tariff stability. The dictate of justice are better for business than the dictates of bosses ; for the people obey justice and defy • bosses. I was for a law that would have protected the wages of every workingman in Indiana and yet enable thift workingman to get his clothing and creature comforts cheaper—and such a law could have been written and it shall ho written. | I. was for a law tsat would have made the position of salaried man and traveling man fiiore secure and yet made less his cost of living—and such a law could ‘ have been written and-shall be written. I The farmer’s prices, the laborer’s wage, the clerk's salary will not be reduced if the enormous and unfair profits of the ; sugar trust, the woolen - trust, the tobacco trust, the oil trust, and other moi nopoiies of the people’s daily necessities j are reduced. No! but the people’s cost of living will be reduced. ! I was for a law that would have given every manufacturer in Indiana ample protection, and yet enable him to get his raw materials cheaper—and shell a law could have been written and it shall be written. I was for a law that would have benefited the farmer and yet reduced the price he pays for tire necessities he buys —and such a law could have been written and it shall be written. , Tariff a Moral Question. , The making 6f a tariff, so long as moderation and Justice are followed, is an economic question; hut the moment excess and injustice are practiced, the making of a tariff becomes also a moral question. So the tariff fight last year wa» a moral fight. And who bore the battle? I i want the people of Indiana to know that all the real fighttijg that was done for Justice in tariff schedules was done by , Republicans and not by Democrats. Not only did the Democrats do no real fighting in the Senate, where all, the real fighting occurred; but when we tried to force the tobacco trust again , to turn over to the government the millions of ctollars of taxes it annually was collecting from the peopßfc-gnd to take from the trust its coupon system, which is its most powerful weapon for Crushing competition, the Democrats of the Senate voted solidly against it. After the Senate had passed that amendment the Conference Committee mangled it and gave back, again to the tobacco trust its coupon sysi All these things and many more the bill contained when, as a conference report, it came to final passage. But passing a bill does not sanctify the wrongs of" its separate paragraphs, I fought and voted against it and for what I consider I plighted honor. I fought and voted against excess and for protection. I I fought and voted against the interests and for the people. I fought and voted | for the genuine Republicanism of Lincoln, the founder of our faith; of Morrell, the j father of our tariff; of Garfield, the tnj terpreter of our principles; of McKinley, the apostle of protection; of Roosevelt, | the captain of the great modern moverI ment for righteousness in American government and American life. The People His faster. When first I was chosen as the people's senator, eleven years ago, I said, 'speak--1 ing to the legislature that elected me; | “The people only are my masters, and to ! the people I will be true.” That has i been my platform since—that is my plat- \ form today. And when that, is no longer my platform. I voluntarily will hand i back my commission, to the people who gave it. But assuming that honest differences of opinion exist—and giving to those upright men who voted for the law as a whole credit for perfect sincerity, what is the way out of the difficulty? Surely not to turn the government over to that grotesque band of politicians in public life and who want to get into public life who today misrepresent the Democratic party. The people know what such men did in the tariff contest in Cleveland's , day, for which Cleveland rebuked them ; ( what they did in the last tariff contest, ; for which Bryan rebuked them. What honest Democrat —what honest citizen—approves or trusts them? Demand* Tariff Commlaaiou. Where, then, lies the plain remedy? In a tariff commission. | Three years ago I presented to the Senate a bill creating such a commission. That idea had back of it at that time more manufacturers, more stock-raisers fndre farmers, more of all the producing interests than any similar measure ever Presented to the Nation's legislature. Yet i that body at that time it had not one single friend; and every Democrat was its enemy. Events have changed all that. The tariff debate helped to change it. The change became so great that a member Of the Finance- Committee itself, Senator McCumber of North Dakota, declared in a powerful speech that this question never could be intelligently or justly settled except. by the aid of a tariff commission. Yet every Democratic senator except Senator Newlands remains Its enemy. A tariff commission Is the one great piece of constructive legislation the Nation needs and demands to settle tho tariff question. It is wicked and absurd that the interests of all the producing elements of the country—manufacturers, farmers, stock-raisers, merchants, workingmen and other* —should longer be mere cards played by politicians for their own political advancement and pecuniary welfare. We have a Bureau of Corporations, a Bureau of Labor, an Immigration Commission, Monetary Commission to gather tfie facts on all these subject*— yet all these facts put together are not ao Intricate and difficult as the 'facts a tariff commission must gather.. Republican!* New Favor Plaa. When I Introduced the tariff eotnmlsalon bill three years ago I said that It had no friends In Congress. Today a ufrge majority of Republicans are for R, and But" had only a few friends in Congress. ! Therefore I fait that it was imoosaihla to

get a rull Hedged tkrut commission enacted into law; and so I acted on the theory of getting the best I could, and It proved a fatal theory. For what was the’ result? I drew the provision authorizing the President to appoint persons with fall power to make tariff Investigations under his direction Senator Aldrich would not agree to all of it. He struck out or changed vital language. Yet what remained of my provision gave these persons broad powers to gather necessary facts to aid Congress in tariff legislation. In this form it passed the Senate. But the Conference Committee struck out absolutely every word giving those persons any powers to Investigate and collect the facts, leaving to the President nothing but the authority to employ persons to assist him in the administration of the maximum and minimum section of the law. Senator Hale, the senior member of the Conference Committee, declared again and again on the floor at the Senate that the Conference Committee had done this for the express purpose of depriving these persons of any power whatever to gather facts or to do any work which a tariff commission could do, And no senator denied the trythfulnese of Senator Hale's statement ag a matter of fact nor his correctness as a matter of .Jaw .after he had made his determined assault. President Taft’s Efforts. , President Taft, by executive construction. has attempted to restore to th«se persons he Is authorized to employ, some of the powers that the Conference Committee purposely destroyed. But executive 'oonstructlon can not restore powers that Congress deliberately refused to give. EVen If It could, another President might construe it differently; and •Ay President at any time can discharge the sO-oallej tariff board. A commission of experts as permanent as the Department of the Government, with duties fully prescribed in the law Itself; a commission safe from the accidents of politics, secqre frbm the dlfferlflf opinions of changing Presidents; a commission equal to that of Germany Or Japan—that la what the Government needs, that is what the Nation demands and that is what we will have. Work of Republican Party. Republican law and administration has stopped rebating by railroads, has regut Jatgd railway rates and established the principle that the Government can protect the shipper from discrimination, dishonesty and abuse. Republican law and administration has limited the powers of eased meats, poisoned foods and Impure drugs. But much remains to be done. The States oan not do it. These trusts are formed under the laws of States which clothe them With their powers and issue to them letters of marque and re, prlsal to sail the seas of trade throughout the whole Republic, sinking honest merchantmen wherever they find them and levying tribute wherever they go. They must b#vbrought under the guns o" national authority, stripped of their unrighteous power and made to serve the people by honest methods and for fair profit instead of being permitted to rob the people by dishonest methods and for outrageous profits. Theodore Roosevelt urged this plan. President Taft has recommended it in his message. I proposed it in my* debate with Mr Bryan. It is,right in principle; but no bill bringing these gigantic Corporations beneath the power of the Nation’s government must permit any of the evUs which they practice under the aiftfaority of State government. No such law must perpetuate the wrongs that trusts- commit today under the protection of wtate governments. Any law for this greattend must be carefully drawn in the interests of all the people, to protect all hdnest business. And the time has come % hen all laws are read and studied before they are passed. The time has gone v hen statutes are enacted on faith. A kind of public man has appeared who I joes upon the theory that “faith witiout works is dead.” —-—lnsists on Injunction - LnTr. | The possibility of abusing the riglit of injunction must be prevented. Every Snan should have his dav in court—that is the first great maxim of law-madeii liberty and liberty-made law. This i3£ the foundation of the people’s respect fort and obedience to the courts. To give to, the laboring man his day in court on any injunction .against him gives him nothing more than his just rights, and takes from the employer none of his Just rights. On the one hand it takes from the laborer’s heart,, his sense of wrong and from the censcienceless agitator his chief argument ; while on the other hand It puts the employer to no disadvantage if he is in the right, and denies him improper advantages if he is in the wrong. It quenches the fires of unrest; it strengthens the Nation's faith in the courts, and it does all this- by securing justice. Justice is the sovereign word of public peace and human welfare.

The Party of Conservation. Republicans started the movement to save from the interests the natural resources of the Nation. The hands of monopoly and greed already have seized upon billions of doUars worth of these sources of our prosperity, and they now are reaching out for still more. They shall not have them. Our natural resources must be developed not in the interest of a privileged few, but for the benefit of all the people. Coal' in the United States has long Since passed into private hands; yet the Nation still owns enough in Alaska to supply fuel to American consumers for centuries to come. That coal land must be kept the property of the people. Before the Senate Committee on Territories, of which .I am chairman, private interests testified that on one single coal field in Alaska a net profit of two hundred million dollars can be made. If such profits are possible, the people should get part of them.

I a tn sorry that no Democrat ever thought of or proposed any of these great policies; for they are so broad and great that they are policies of patriotism and not policies of partisanship. And. yet no Democrat in public life ever did propose a single one of them. No Democrat in public life proposed the railway rate' law; that law was Republican in origin and enactment. No Democrat proposed the conservation of natural resources; that was Republican in origin and execution, and will be Republican in enactment. No Democrat proposed the meat inspection law; that was Republican in origin and enactment. No Demo M-at proposed the pure food law; that was Republican in origin and enactment. No Democrat proposed the child labor law; that was Republican in origin and will be In enactment. No Democrat proposed the employers’ liability law; that was Republican In origin and enactment. And whatever the so-called Democratic party has proposed before an election, enough of the men who were elected on those proposals repudiated them after the election to nullify them. The Republican party has its shortcomings and its faults, for it is human Yet it is our glory that within the Republican party there is always a saving and regenerating Influence springing from the conscience of its voters which corrects its mistakes and In the end brings it true to the nation’s higher destiny and to human welfare And It Is a misfortune of the Democratic party that even good men like Tllden, Cleveland and Bryan could not save It from the dark and forbidding Influences which brought its promises to naught. With this truth of history before them, will any patriotic citizen vote to give other ffreat affairs to the management of such men? Take for example the Panama Canal—the mightiest work of human Rands. The process of wedding the world’s greatest oceans is being accomplished even as I speak. That, too, was Republican in origin, enactment and execution. The Panama Canal will be remembered when all other legislation of today Is forgotten. What citizen is willing to trust that vast enterprise to the associated Tammany Halls of the nation? Fighting for the Right. To me public life has but one meaning’; to me this Republic "has but one meaning. It Is this: hgre qre mllHonß of human beings. Not one of these millions asked to be born, yet horn we were without our consent. Not one Of us asks to die, yet ffle we must without our cohsent. And in the brief space between birth and death all of us except the favored few have a hard enough time. What can be dohe to make the load of all these millions lighter? That Is what ciVlirzhttbn means to me. What can be done to help the American people give an examnla m all the world of the orosru*

Jurors for the April Term Of the Jasper Circuit Court.

The following grand and petit jurors were drawn for the April term of the court which convenes next Monday, April 11th: Grand Jury. George W. Davisson, Barkley. Rowley Moorehouse, Wheatfleld. Brown, Barkley. John H. Sommers, Milroy. John E. Alter, Union. Charles Erb, Hanging Grove. Petit Jury. John C. Maxwell, Barkley. Thos. A. Spencer, Milroy. John N. Baker, Barkley. John R. Phillips, Hanging Grove. Bert L. Brenner, Marion. Joseph Groom, Barkley. Geo. T. Spangle, Newton. W. R. Shesler, Marion. Geo. W. Terwilleger, Marion. William Grube, Jr., Wheatfleld. Charles F. Stackhouse, Marion. Marion Freeland, Newton. John Farabee, Carpenter. Samuel C. Wing, Carpenter. Alva D. Hershman, Gillam. Charles E. Kersey, Keener. The grand jury has not been called.

Large Audience Witnessed Production of “Tony, the Convict.”

A large audiedice witnessed the production Monday evening, of “Tony, the Convict,” which was given by members of the parish literary society. The play was well presented and gave the greatest satisfaction to the large audience who cheered the performers at several stages of the play. The glee club from St, Joseph’s college sang several songs which were received with appreciation, and Prof. Alphonse Staeger gave several piano selections with equal delight to the audience. About $25 was cleared for the benefit of the pastor’s new residence.

Church of God Services.

Preaching next Sunday morning at the usual hour of service, if health permits. A full attendance of members and friends of the church is desired, hoping that then, and thereby, some definite action will he started to. secure preaching regularly by some one able to render the service. The present arrangement can not longer be depended upon for regular service, from lack of strength and health, which have already, pretty much entirely prevented service during the winter.

D. T. HALSTEAD.

The regular monthly dime social of the. ladies of the Presbyterian church will be held at the home of Mrs. Charles Warner, on Friday afternoon of this week, April Bth. A cordial invitation is extended to everybody and strangers in the city especially invited. The largest hog ever raised in Bartholomew county was sold Tuesday morning to Boschen & butchers of Columbus, by George Strock, of Flatrock township, who raised the hog. The hog, which was 5 old, weighed 760 pounds and the price paid for it was SBO. Here is a hummer. Read it. 200 pairs long pants, sizes 28 to 33 waist, 29 to 34 lengths. All good, dependable materials, but they are not peg-top. We’re going to close them out. The price w'il do it. SI.OO pair. Better and cheaper than overalls. MODEL CLOTHIERS. S. LEOPOLD, Mgr. J. T. Ham and wife, of Loreburn Sask., Canada, who have been visiting relatives here for some time, left this afternoon for Mt. Ayr and will go from' there to Kentland and thence to other places. He does not expect to return to his home until about the middle of Maj. Mr. Ham has succeeded so well in Saskatchewan that hq has been plied with inquiries since he was here about the opportunities in his country. He is not a land agent and has no land for sale, but he is very confident that any man can succeed who will go there and file on a claim of Canadian land,' or who will buy at the prevailing prices.

ot civilization and human contentment? ,s all P u *>Uc life means to me The success of a party as such means 1)111 success of a party as U is the agent of human welfare means everything. I want the Republican party to be that Instrument. It nrnst be. It shall be. It will be. It Is. Away with suggestions of Individual power, pro lit or career! Awhy with for P art y advantage! Up with the banner ot Justice! Ud with the flgg of human rights! And let us carry Tt to the endof the eon diet knowing that the tyelfare of the people Is the only thing worth workingfor, wqrth living tor. and, as our fathers have shown us, the only thing worth dyln* for. Up with the banner i'jxwum;. sx: lata victory.

pjessional Cards DR. E. C. ENGLISH PHYSICIAN AID BUSOBOI Night and, day-galls--given -prorne*-et-tentlon. Residence phone, n#. tSfflce phone, 177. Henaaeteer. lad. PHYSICIAN AV9 SURGEON Makes a specialty-, of Diseases of t&s Henaaotter, Xnd. Rooms 1 and 2. Murray Building, Rensselaer, Indiana. Phones, Office—2 rings oh 300, residence—3 rings on 300. Successfully treats both hahte said chronic diseases. Spinal curvatures a specialty. DR. E. N. LOT Successor to Dr. W. W. Hartsell. HOMEOPATHIST Office—Frame building on Cullen street, east df court house. OPFXOB PHONE 89 Residence College Avenue, Phone 119. Rensselaer, Indiana. F. H. HEMPHILL, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Special attention to diseases of women and low grades of fever. Office In Williams block. Opposite Court House. Telephone, office and residence, 442. Rensselaer, Ind. FRANK FOLTZ Lawyer Practices In All Courts Telephone No. 16 J. F. Irwin S. C. Irwin IRWIN & IRWIN HAW, REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE. 5 per oent farm loans. Office In Odd Fellows’ Block. Rensselaer, Indiana. ARTHUR H. HOPKINS LAW, LOANS AND REAL ESTATE Loans on farms and city property, gersonal security and chattel mortgage. uy, sell and rent farms and city property- Farm and city fire insurance. Office over Chicago Bargain Store. Rensselaer, Indiana. E. P. HONAN ATTORNEY AT LAW Law, Loans, Abstracts, Insurance and Real Estate. Will practice In all the courts. All business attended to with promptness and dispatch. Rensselaer, Indiana. H. L. BROWN DENTIST Crown and Bridge Work and Teeth Without Plates a Specialty. AH the latest methods in Dentistry. Gas administered for painless extraction. Office over Larsh s Drug Store.

A PROMPT, EFFECTIVE^^ ■ REMEDY FOR ALL FORMS OFB rheumatism! I Lumbago, Sciatica, Neuralgia, I Kidney Trouble and I ■ Kindred Dlaaaaem, ■ I Applied externally It affords almost ln-H ■ stant relief from pain, while permanent I ■ results are being effected by taking it in- I ■ ternally, purifying the blood, dissolving ■ ■ the poisonous substance and removing it H ■ from the system. H I DR. C. L. GATES 1 ■ Hancock, Minn., writes: ft *'A little girl here had such a weak back caused B by Rheumatism aud Kidney Trouble that she H ■ could not stand on her feet. Tho moment they H ■ put her down on the floor she would soream H B with pains. I treate l her with “5-DROPS” and B ■ today she runs around a i well and happy as can B B be. I prescribe * 5-DROPb” for my patients and B B use it in my practice.’ 1 ■ Largo Size BoOlc “5-DROPS” (800 Doses)B S SI.OO. For Sale by Druggists H I SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURE COMPANY, I MDept£olH Lake Street, Chicago.l f s piuuf N i ■ Act quickly and gently upon the .■ ■ digestive organs, carrying of! the B B disturbing elements and establishing B B a healthy condition of the liver, “H jB stomach and bowels^ ■ Joi?»H?!! J K Heartburn, belching, Uver B Trouble, eto. m tl Cents Per Box B AT ORUOOISTS

James Norris, of Morocco, a brother of Marsh Warren, of Rensselaer, was bulled this afternoon. His death was caused by consumption. He leaves a wife and four children. Workmen digging a trench at Ft. „ Wayne unearthed four human skeletons, all in one “pocket.” When buried, the bodies had been piled one updn the <rt&er. 9f4 settleita beHeve' " that the bones are those of Indians killed in the fighting with “Mad” Anthony Wayne," more than a century ago. The bones are larger than the average Size. . Horse Bills at The Republican office.