Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 259, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 October 1910 — Page 4
Classified Column. ■M*^**aa«na<T=s========r Kjv KNOWN VALUES PUBLISHERS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ASSOCIATION PAPERS t WE MMMIII mi Piptn in all paeia al the Statas and Panada. Your aranu .supplied—anywhere any time by the beat metisua in the country. Oat our mamberahip Hats—Check papers yea want. Wa do the rant. Publisher* Olaaaided AArertUing Ataoclaties. Buffalo, N. Y. " “ U ' *" ' ‘ ,Jl '» " FOB BALE. Fsr Sole—Or will trade for stock, 1998 5-passenger Bulck automobile, Model F. George W. Terwilleger, phone 525 E. For Sale—Good Jersey cow, fresh soon. Geo. W. Terwilleger, phone 625 E. Fer Sale—For ten days only, thoroughbred Duroc Jersey male pigs, eligible to registry. Will sell or trade for butcher stock. Fred Waling, R. D. 3, Rensselaer; Mt. Ayr phone. For Sale—Barred Plymouth Rock cockerals, fine ones; $1 each :f taken soon. Phone 536 D, or address A. J. McCashen, Brook, Ind. For Sale—loo acres pasture land, all tillable, well fenced, good well, 5 miles southwest of Rensselaer, cheap. Address Jos. A. Luers, R. D. No. 4, or phone 529 D. For Sale—Six-room cottage, electric lights, good drilled well, double chicken park; two 75*187% foot lots. Address or call on E. L. Hammerton. For Sale—A good wagon for corn husking. Phone No. 22. For Sale or Bent—One fine residence property in south part of Rensselaer; modern in every respect; 5 acres of ground. Mrs. A. Gangloff. For Sale—A range and a baseburner. C. Earl Duvall. For Sale—A first-class base burnei: only used two years. Inquire of B. F. Fendig, at Drug Store. For Sale—The Erhardt Wuerthner farm, in Newton township. For particulars apply to J. M. Sauser, on the John Goets farm. N Fer Sole—Good seasoned cord wood and fence posts. Emil Johnson, phone 21 S, Mt. Ayr, Ind. v FOB BEST. Fer Beat—Flat over McKay laundry. Ia fine condition. Inquire at Republican office. AUTOMOBILES. The quality will be remembered long after the price is forgotten.— MAXWELL. ESTRAYED. Strayed—One 5-year-old bay pacing horse, high and weighing about 1,000 pounds; both hind feet white. Please communicate with the owner, P. W. Clarke. MONEY TO LOAN. Moaey to Loan—lnsurance company money on first farm mortgage security. Inquire of E. P. Honan. 10.tf REAL ESTATE. Beal Estate—List your property for sale with the undersigned. Prompt sales made. Chas. Fox. :: P. W. HORTON i: - :: < > Plane Toning and Repairing < > j \ A Specialty. 31 * > .. 3 3 Rensselaer, - . Indiana. 3 3 < < > FOB SALE AMP EXCHANGE. 6 acres on cement walk, five blocks from court house. _ 10 acres, all flue soil, close In. 21 acres, cement walk, well, close In. 25 acres, all tillable, five room house, |1,200. 80 acres on stone road, four miles .»*. 165. 69 acres, Washington county, Improved. Want farm here. 160 acres, Polk county, Ark. Will trade for land or property and pay difference. 631 acres, well improved, in Dickey county, N. D., to trade for land or property here. 99 acres, all good soil, in cultivation, six room house, stable, orchard, good well, on large ditch, near school and station. Will sell on easy terms at 850 G. F. MEYERS. Lecture Dates. * Nov. SO—The Schuberts, a mixed quartette of singers and entertainers. • Dec. 9 —L. B. Wickersham, popular lecturer. Jan. 19—Booth Lowrey, humorist. March IS—The Beilharz Entertainers. ~ : Extra Number—Byron King, last Veer's favorite, whose date has not been set. n Republican Speaking. Parr, Nov. 2nd. DeMotte, Nov. 3rd. Wpeatfield, Nov. 4th. Speakers at the latter places to be announced later. u You get your sale bills when YOU want tih«n, when ordered at The Republican office. v V- ".f"-"?... ■ ■ fc.V **
CHICAGO LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN MARKET.
CHICAGO LITS STOCK U. S. Yards, Chicago, 111., Oct. 31. Receipts of live stock today: Hogs, 28,000; cattle, 33,000; sheep, 48,000. Hogs 5c to 10c lower. Mixed, 88.15 to 88.80. Rough, 87.70 to 88.10. Light, 88.30 to 88.90. Pigs, 87.75 to 88.50. Bulk, 87.95 to 88.60. Cattle steady to 10c lower. Beeves, 84.50 to 87.50. Cows and heifers, 82.25 to $«',.40. Stockers and feeders, 83.15 to $5.75. Westerners, $4.50 to $6.75. Texans, $4.40 to $5.50. Calves, SB.OO to SIO.OO. Sheep weak, $2.75 to $4.15. Lambs, $4.25 to $6.85. Estimates tomorrow: Hogs, 17,000; cattle, 7,000; sheep, 25,000. CASH GHAUT Wheat No. 2 red, 91 %c to 93c. No. 3 red, 89c to 91 %c. No. 2 hard, 91 %c to 94c. No. 3 hard, 89c to 91c. No. INS, $1.03 to $1.04%. No. 2 N S, SI.OO to $1.02%c. No. 3 S, 95c to sl.Ol. _ Cora No. 2, 48 %c to 49c. No. 2 W, 49c to 49 %c. No. 2 Y, 49%c to 49%c. No. 3, 48%c to 49c. No. 3 W, 48%c to 49%c. No. 3 Y, 49c to 49%c. No. 4, 47%c to 48%c. No. 4 W, 47%c to 48%c. No. 4 Y, 47%c to 48c. Oats t No. 2 W, 33c to 33%c. No. 4 W, 31%c. Standard, 32%c to 32%c. rUTTJHES Dec. May. July. Wheat Open .... 90%90 96%% 94% High .... 90% — 96%% 94% Low 89% 96 94% Close .... 90% 96% 94%% Corn Open .... 45%% 48%% 49% High .... 47% 49% 50% Low ..... 45% 48% 49% Close .... 46%% 49%% 50% Oats Open .... 30%% 34—% 33% High .... 31%% 34%% 34% Low .... t- 30% 34 33% Close 31%% 34% 34% XEWSSELABB QUOTATIONS Wheat—B6c. Corn, new—3sc. Oats —26c. Rye—6oc. Butter—lßc to 32c. Roasting chickens, 4% lbs. and over, and hens—9c. Chickens, 4 lbs. and under— fin. Old Roosters —sc. Ducks, white—9c. Ducks, dark—Bc. Turkeys, young, good weight—l4c. Turkeys, old hens, gobblers—l3a Geese—6c.
In December, 1906, John B. Peterson had relations with railroads and other corporations that fhrbid him taking up any private law business. In fact, his time was so entirely taken up in corporation work that he was not looking after other business. Mr Peterson is the democratic candidate for congress. The democratic party has been throwing up its hands in horror of the corporations for a dozen years and early in the campaign assured the people that Mr. Peterson was not a corporation lawyer. The Republican has never felt so very titter toward corporations and realizes that the great employment institutions of the country were made possible only by the combinations of capital that has confidence in the future and has builded with the belief that the American people were appreciative of their work. They have legal requirements that must be represented and they get the ablest lawyers they can to represent them. In Lake county various corporations have found Mr. Peterson to be the man. He has made good as their lawyer and has been so occupied by his attention to their work that as far back as four years ago he could assist in no private work. Mr. Peterson was doing his duty in the matter of building up personal success, but he was not shaping himself as a worthy man to represent in the law making department of the government, the very people whose cases he could not take against the corporations. If he chose to be the lawyer or corporations and for years trained himself for the defense of corporations, he has doubtless, although perhaps unconsciously, become biased toward corporations to an extent that makes it advisable to restrain him from becoming the representative of the people. If he is the lawyer of the Standard Oil Co., of the Standard Steel Co., and of various railroads, you or I would not expect to secure his services against the men he has been working for, for years. We would not ask him, would not want him, and would not trust him. There is every probability that the corporations who have him employed are seeking his election. That is the usual method they employ for getting their kind into the law making departments of state and government and it is the duty of the people to keep him out If he were a republican every democrat in the district would oppose him because iff his employment, and we feel confid® that there are enough democrats who would be honest in their opposition to oppose him now, when be is selfconfessed four years ago as being so connected with railroads and other corporations that he can not accept private employment *
TAGGART AGENTS PEOPLE SLANDER
Democrats In Retreat, Under Bosses, Losing Tempers. CMPAIGN OF DEFAMTION ON Old Methods of Taggartlsm Revived In Most Brutal Forms As Desperate - Expedient In Effort to Btem Tide Towards Republicanism In Indiana— Republicans Continue Argument And Appeal to Velars On Grotinds of Decency and Progress. The Republican campaign In Indiana has made such splendid strides toward victory in the last two weeks that the Democratic retreat already is on the point of rout. The Republican campaign has been made on a high level of argument If the truth has been harsh, It has been the truth. It is not often the voters have an opportunity to hear living issues so .clearly, fearlessly and honestly presented as in the Republican discussion of 1910 in Indiana. Col. Roosevelt made a positive appeal to the people for support and gave reasons in logical order, for expecting his cause to be considered by the voters. ___ Not a word did Col. Roosevelt say of the Democratic predicament in Indiana. Not once did he refer to the bossism of Taggart, the bribery charges made by John Kern against the friends of Senator Shively. Not a word did Roosevelt say to embarrass Democrats. He made a broad, high plea for progressive Republicanism and for Senator Beveridge as the embodiment of that idea. For Home and Country. Senator Beveridge has gone to the voters asking them to vote for their homes and for the country and to think of party afterwards. He has gone to the front on a showing of worthy achievement, and is asking the voters to consider his work, if it be good. Such a campaign, of course, is sure to win with Indiana voters. And doubts'the Democrats may have had as to the outcome have been blown away by the wind that fills the sails of the Republican ship, victory bound. Taggart men have been rendered desperate by developments. They have been unable to keep their own party men in line. They have made blunder after blunder. They have fallen into trap after trap. They have been led Into error, and the rank and file Democrats refuse to follow and become entangled with the unfortunate Democratic bosses. Taggart’s political motor car has broken down and mired, far from home. He has been deserted by one chauffeur after another. In such a time of desperation it is the nature of such a boss as Taggart to stoop to the slime where his machine is marooned, and in his rage to hurl mud at passers-by. That is exactly what is going on in the Indiana campaign today. Failing in argument, the Taggart crowd is using slander. Republican candidates all along -the line are being assailed as to their personal characters. Nothing is too mean or vile to be concocted Into lies and peddled about by Taggart agents In the effort to injure or defame good men in public life. Slander at Work. Candidates for county offices in counties adjoining Marion county have returned to their homes from Indianapolis to find Democratic workers spreading slanders in their absence. The Taggart campaign has taken the place of the Marshall-Kern-Shively-Lamb-Bryan campaign. In place of oratory the people are given muck from the Taggart batteries. In the place of argument the voters are forced to dodge filth and falsehood. It is as William Allen White, the great writer, predicted many months ago, when he told how the fight would be made against Senator Beveridge in Indiana. Mr. White said: "The fact that Beveridge has stood unafraid and unshaken has meant much to the people. Naturally the interests that he has rebuffed and has helped to keep within bounds are after him. "They will use money in Indiana. They will use political trickery in Indiana. They will use every scheme and dodge that the wily politician knows in the high degree of that craft. “The people of Indiana have to vote through a legislature in order to return Senator Beveridge, so it may be expected that every Republican candidate for the legislature will be assailed, not because he is for Beveridge —not at all! Spreading Lies. “The candidates will he attacked ‘on personal grounds’; local issues will be manufactured, stories will be spread, every inducement will be held out for the average voter to vote for the Democratic legislative candidates. "It will take a political Intelligence and purpose rarely demanded In American politics for the people of Indiana to sustain the champion of Indiana people, but the whole nation is watching the result, and the good will of every honest citizen of every state ia with Senator Beveridge in his fight The Indiana cause this year is<he nation’s cause.”
(Beautiful Pictures Like Cut ) Given Away ;■ ~ When your purchases amount to $lO and sls at Ransford’s Department Store Formerly The 99-Cent Racket Store Opposite Courthouse Rensselaer, Indiana . / •, .. • ' | ------- ~ ~ ,'*■ 1•_ -■, r ;,7~— -; 0 ■ v - X - We handle almost everything and sell same goods for less money or more and better goods for same money, besides giving you a beautiful premium free. Come in and see our mammouth stock. The Greatest Bargain House in Northern Indiana. Ransford’s Department Store, RenS9e,a indiana. —- sn«M«sii ■ -h ir« . i. ■ ■■ ■■ ■■
SIDE TALKS ON PUBLIC AFFAIRS
By Old John Henry.
To the Editor: I do not know that the Indiana farmer needs any political advice this year, but I shall address a few words to him, anyway. One thing most of us resard as first, Is the matter of voting, in itself. Get out and vote. See that your neighbor votes. The right to vote carries with it the duty to vote. ) The citizen i» the government. Don’t be a foolism sovereign or a sulky sovereign, and stay at home when government is in the making, and when policies are being shaped for your weal or for your woe. Mr. Partner, you are for the protective principle or you are against it. Put yourself on record for or against. You are for the existing prices or you are for lower prices. Put yourself on record, one way or the other. Our ,frlends, the Democrats, say prrlces are too high. Republicans ask you to compare the prices you get today with the prices you received in 1806. Republicans ask you which you prefer. What is your answer? Record that answer at the polls. If you want to go back to the era of low prices, vote the Democratic ticket and accept the policies which promise low prices. If you desire to continue the era of good prices and good times, with the millions at work and your markets constantly expanding, vote the Republican ticket and boost Republican principles such as we operate under at this time. .You, Mr. Parmer, having bought more land, under the good promise of lasting prosperity, are interested in having the value of that land increased, or sustained, rather than decreased or cut down. You know the value of your land lies In the value of the crops that come from the land. Your wheat land Is twice as valuable when it gives you $1 wheat as It was when it gave you 45 cents wheat in 1896. Your corn land keeps better value when it raises 70 cent corn than it did in the days when corn was 15 to 23 cents and you burned it for fuel. Thirty-five cent oats means better land values than 20 cent oats. Hay at $16.50 a ton, as it is this year, lends part of its value to the land, and it is better for you, Mr. Parmer, than $8.60 hay, —under Democratic prices. Take hogs at $8.85 to $9.15 a hundred, and it is worth while to raise corn to fatten them. The hog crop, In Iti turn, makes fanning more profitable, and farm land worth having. It was not so In 1896, under Democratic prices, when hogs were $3.16 a hundred In the Indianapolis market - It Is a good thing for the fanner to
think beyond through the prices he gets for his products, and to consider the comforts and advantages that accrue to his home and family as a result of his profits. Now we all admit the farmer’s prices are fair only; that he is justly entitled to partake of prosperity in full measure, and that he is getting no more than Is coming to him today. Does he want a change? And if there is to be a change, does he desire to take what' Democrats propose, a revenue-only tariff, uncertainty, agitation, and lower prices for products? How about It, Mr. Farmer? Does it not look to you as If the vote Ip the box November 8 ought to count “one” for the continuance of good times, expanding markets, Just prices, fair profits, and opportunity for the children? OLJP JOHN HENRY.
Postmaster Watson, of Cayuga, Vermillion county, who is also a hardware dealer, was Friday fined $5 because he sold a cheap revolver to a minor, Carl Gillis, 18 years old. Gillis, in turn, was fined $5 for selling the weapon to Patrick Pugh, only 13 years old. Following the disclosures made in court young Pugh was taken into custody by the probation officer on the charge of stealing the $lO which he paid Gillis for the pistol. In a report of the field examiners of the state board Of accounts, filed in Indianapolis Friday, William H. Freeman, secretary of the state board of forestry until July 1, 1909, is severely criticized and charged with failure to keep his accounts properly, wastefulness, and neglect of duty. There is still a total of $1,028.12 due the state, according to the report. The first fatality in the Interstate iron and steel plant at East Chicago, which for fifteen years has employed one thousand men, occurred Thursday night, when Vincent Bernoski, age 25, was caught in the machinery and literally torn to pieces. * Bernaski was a millwright, and at' the time he was caught was greasing a sprocket chain in a feed roller. What was the most successful and profitable convention of the Indiana State' Federation of Clubs has ever had closed at Richmond Thursday night, Indianapolis being selected .the next meeting place. Action was taken that will' result in the celebration of the birthday anniversary of James Whitcomb Riley, both by the clubs and the school children of the state. The congregation of the First Met'»r cdist church, Mishawaka, has purchased a site for a memorial church, which will be erected by J. C. Eberhart, E. G. Eberhart and F. G. hart, citizens of the town. Thorite cost SIB,OOO, and the proposed church will cost SIOO,OOO.
A Classified Adv. will sell It
RRE E ! A regular full size 10c FACE CHAMOIS To all Ladies who purchase a » box of the celebrated LA DELICA Complexion Powder Gives to the ugliest skin a beautiful, natural glow, without that powdered look. Rensselaer, Ind. A. P. LQNG.
NEWS IN PARAGRAPHS.
As the result of an investigation by detectives brought into Wabash by Prosecutor Carpenter, fifteen affidavits have been filed charging illegal sales of liquor. Billy Papke, who claims the middleweight championship of the world, Wednesday knocked out Williams, champion of Victoria, in the sixth round, at Sydney, N. S. W. In a fire that destroyed the farm house of Albert Jarrett, near Economy, ind., Tuesday l , his one-year-old daughter was burned to death. The child’s father and mother were both away. Thomas M. Herrold, of LaPorte, has Entered into contract for furnishing the B. & O. with 1,000 piling for, use in renewing the bridges between Wellsboro, Laporte county, and LaPaz, Marshall county. Ellis E. Sands, aged 21, of Utica, Ky., was refused admittance to the United States army at Evansville Wednesday because he had reduced his weight by attending forty-one dances this year. The only woman bartender in Vigo county has renounced-her profession and is suing her employer, John Whalen, of Terre Haute, for $75 back pay. Her name is Mrs. Anna Douglas, a Ludiwich woman of Austria-Hun-gary. Senator and Mrs. Robert M. LaPollette left Rochester, Minn., Wednesday for Madison, Wis., their home. Senator LaFollette has completely recovered from his recent operation at a hospital in Rochester. The feminene craze for wearing rats in the hair is having such a serious effect on the fancy comb business that the largest comb factory has announced a curtailment. „ Women who used to wear large back combs now hang a cluster of puffs and wear a barette instead of a comb.
