Jasper County Democrat, Volume 13, Number 57, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 October 1910 — Page 2

THE well-dressed young man of today as we clothe him, is certainly worth looking at. He presents MLJU . a good appearance; he wears x l-i, clothes of good quality—we sell no other—they fit him well, they are J ~ ™ • made in good style. If the cut of his garments looks freakish, with a \ A / i fc of faddish ideas in the way the pockets are made, or any of the ggl g other foolish kinks that some clothes have, you may know he isn’t uVL \\\ i one of our customers. |J 1 I 1 make clothes for young men such as gentlemen of discrimination and f( ' I i n taste are glad to wear. I u A j Young men’s clothes like these have all the characteris- ■ tics which the smartly dressed young man wants. The coats BosV *1 are made with good broad shoulders; the lapels have long, // R graceful roll; the back is shaped in, and. down over the hips, II y \j\ y with a little flare to the skirts. The trousers are made from //M V A \ the moderate to the extreme peg-top style. ill WU\ /% \ \\\\ Y° u see these are merely characteristics of the young, vigorous, / vk \l\\ athletic figure, the type of the young college man. If a young fellow HJOLmhI has such a figure, he wants such clothes; and if he hasn't the figure, *2E 11 ■ ■ g y x r 1 i MHB mSBXH And here they are; made for us, of the best all-wool fabrics, with the finest of tailoring, by Hart Schaffner & Marx, the greatest of all clothes-makers. They don't make any but good clothes, and were i IEES glad to sell them because we know we're doing you a service in it. Suits, sls to $35 Overcoats, sls to $22.22 Copyright Hart Schaffner Sc Man . f ■ * THE G. E. MURRAY COMPANY

mt jisptii w omi f. [ aiw.wmww. official democratic paper of JASPER COUNTYEntered as Second-Class Matter June 8, 1908. at the post office at Rensselaer. Indiana, under the Act of March X 1879 Long Distance Telephone* Offico 315. - Residence 311. Published Wednesdays and Saturday. Wednesday Issue 4 Pages; Saturday issue • Pages. AdverstlslnK rates made known on application. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1910.

Every vote east in favor of the return of Mr. Beveridge to the senate is a vote in favor of the ship .subsidy graft and against an income tax. Beveridge voted for subsidy graft bill, and :.s

not said a word on that subject during this campaign. He still, stands If there is any tax-payer in this state who wants the ship subsidy graft attached to his pocket book he can get it by helping to send Albert J: Beveridge, back to the United States senate. He voted for the subsidy bill when it was up for consideration a year or sd-ago. Governor Marshall continues to insist that 80 per cent of the people are at heart Democrats. Perhaps so large a per cent of. them will not vote the way they feel oh November 8. but it looks as if about 60 per cent of the voters of Indiana will do so. This will mean a pretty big majority but it will be no greater thin it should be -under the circumstances.

Roosevelt came into Indiana to tell the people that they should return Insurgent Beveridge to the senate in order that he might reform the tariff. Then he hustle i ver to Massachusc is and told the people there that they should return standpatter Lodge to the senate .in order that he may prevent the tariff from being reformed. Which’ does he consider. fools and ignoramuses—the people of Indiana or the people of Massachusetts? Or is it both? A newspaper < -correspondent whd is friendly to Mr. Beveridge says that “If Senator Beveridge has failed to bring the masses to the belief that the only issue is between him and the bosses, then it is conceded by the leaders of his 'own party that he will be defeated.” Well, he surely has failed. H ; s attempt to make-‘■-he J ■•eop.c believe aay such rpijsensei

was ridiculous to begin with. It is known to every reading man in Indiana that Beveridge's only disagreement with the other bosses grew out of their refusal to allow him to be the sole boss, as he wanted to be. and as he finally became at the last state convention. No party has ever been so absolutely bossed as the Republican party of Indiana is now bossed by the Beveridge organization. Said Theodore Roosevelt at Indianapolis: “We are going to do the trick and do it well.*’ No other word so clearly illustrates the Roosevelt method as tbat lit-tle-word “trick.” He tries it out -wherever he goes. He tfninks the .people of Indiana' can be tricked into voting for Insurgent Beveridge and that the people of . Massachusetts can be tricked int&.voting for standpatter Lodge,

both of whom he is supporting. No man in America puts as low an estimate upon the intelligence of his fellow countrymen as does Theodore Roosevelt.

BEVERIDGE A NON-RESI-DENT.

Do the people of Indiana want a resident or a non-resident representative in the L’nited States senate? i Mr. Kern lives in this state. If elected senator he *will continue to live in this state. But it is -not so with Mr. Beveridge. He maintains a legal residence for voting and office holding purposes in Indianapolis but that is about all that can be said. He was elected senator nearly twelve years ago and since his election it is doubtful if he spent as much as six months’ time in Indiana. When congress was in session he was in Washington or somewhere else outside

of the state he was supposed ,to represent. When congress was not in session he was in Europe, or in the woods.” or the “New Hampshire hills" or on the “Atlantic edast’’—but never in Indiana. It was only when he wanted something that he came home—when he had a favorite candidate in a convention, or was a candidate himself, or felt that his confidential man, “Baron” Rothschild, needed some advice about giving out the federal offices. It will be different when John Kent is in the senate. /

The only place to buy your suit or overcoat is at Duvalls Quality Shop as we are exclusive Clothiers and Furnishers and can save you dollars and sell you better n quality.—C. Earl DuvalL -