Jasper County Democrat, Volume 13, Number 67, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 30 November 1910 — Page 2
IBE JASPER CW DEMOCRAT f. I.MBCOMIIMIMNBU® OFFICIAL DEMOCRATIC PAPER OF JASPER COUNTY. Entered as Second-Class Matter Jude 8, ISOS, at the post office at Rensselaer, Indiana, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Long Distance Telephones Office 315. - Residence 311. Published Wednesdays and Saturday. Wednesday Issue 4 Pages; Saturday Issue 8 Pages. Advertising rat--« made known on application. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 30, 1910.
MOORMAN'S VERSION.
Defeated Candidate for Congress In 13th District Says It Was '. * ■' Beveridge. ’ khn .L. M-> >r.-nan. editor of the Sta-ke G ilnty Republican, w?.. was clekrt'.vd for congress in the Thirteenth district in the recent Upheave!, gives his version of ;v\ ? y went McGinty in -lie following words' . “When a par.y is led astray so easily -as the Republican party was led could it help but be beaten? “Wh re i- th .e one now so poor as to do him reverence? “He conducted a personal campaign ignoring all the old things. “He endeavored to force'his own plans upon the v. hole party no matter whether . here was agreement and harmony or not. < • “The falsehood and -njisrepresen'tation of the Beveridge campaign was simply monstrous. . •“He lied, about the. issues. “He tried to force fake doctrine on the party. ’ “He preached hit alleged righteousness when he should have been drawn from the'ticket for his political fabrications. “He betrayed the republican party o* .this iti his work in regress. ' ■ “Indiana is a tariff state arid he bolted the caucus of his party. “He catered t ore to the importers of < hicagu Iv. L supported his campaign) than to the Republican party ■“The whole i.-vrd of the Republican campaign'... kom the April *con-ver-.&n t. a j“i.-ble of misrepresentation. • : t was Beveridge's year and the -ma Lies' Republican organization or tag p;v’,y was turned over to him to do with z as he pleased. At any sta ■ of .1’ g.’.i .e‘the Republican coriro’ CGuld h ,v e. been kept from his dutch s. I should have been, but it was r. ••. It was confceeded to him. Readers said: Let him run it’, ami we al; know how he did iL> Neatly every. Republican wished hint well in the start. In January he had every coheeiEidn. There was.no atiem >t to nr si from him a single i-jt - of' | '.wer. In April he sfcatthe pat y full o f h. me- in his speech at the -ta'e • ’. -z rr. H • was allowed, ta muzzle ’i;.* platform and put ur< a th- party a "cbta and a lie. Ths*. cun'.V n ' !is’(: - d coldly to his attack on the party. Beveridge paj -is deceived the., people when ■ they d flared B veridge's speech was we' s received. It ws ■ not. TTie s e hos Mr. T * vt ridge drove home in cisgus: the biggest and best Republicans that we have. They began to hate the political upstart then. the r'-a’rrv- . .ring .every- act' of his. ’ . r G “Beveridg- h.-bnelit Mr. Lee from Cincinnati to run his campaign. Mr. Le an undertaker, who knew nothing of Indian?, polities, who was in Ohio waff o‘ the time The matches- f‘> t 1 •■hijean organization was turn*:! over to y»-. Lee and he moved not a peg unless B ss Beveridge directed. '/ ' i,“Eee:was told over and oyer again that ruin was coming’ ; o the party. Mr. Lee's re-1y was. ‘1 turn you OVPR- •<> the .. ;:i : u Mr. Beveridre.* ■ ■ ' , , . “The *r. i~ ■ t ticket demanded fair play thorn Mr. Lee, 'We wan* Fairbank- Wa’ - >t». Hemenway. Dur bin, Goodrich. Simms. Hunt and the experienced leavers of Indiana to help us.’ . •’‘Mr. L ; .- he plied; ’I refer you to the man higher U|e-Mr. Beveridge.’ “Newspaper meh and leaders besought Lek and urged him not to impose ar insurgent campaign 01 Iraiara. His only rebly was: I re for you •o the n;:in higher up—Mt Beveridge.’ \ “The reord of failure was daily made and there was never any show of sneces . Evansville, Indianapolis, Terre. Haute lahl dll the cities of the; state went headlong to the Democratic bow-wows. De*eat has followed the T-crty f;rom Michigai City to Evansville. “Bevefidge tried to- drag the 'party 'bodily from its. old fashioned anchorage to ‘right principles’ into a sea of false doctrine so silly and mon.isirous that iebeiiicn broke out a’.' ove' the commonwealth. Rank hypocrisy was his doctrine of ‘Ma.-j and the Vine Clad Cottage.’ “His mountebank advocacy was not a bit improved by the introducHou of the curly haired rhetorics blatherskite, , Fred Land’s. No ia deed. It was a farce—a ridiculou*. .-peciacle. Who could expect Lamlß to lead the people into the joy where aianra could fall heaven, and where Mary could have a new shirt waist'every day? “Landis would shriek and cry and mumble his words and tear his hair. Then Beveridge would cry too. The audience was entertained and laughed gleefully, sure; the boys were having fun with their vaudeville, but all of it at the expense of the great Republican party. , “So, when the curtain went down on the last act (up at Bicknell) we have our handwriting plain. They couldn’t fool the people. The people knew they were political mountebanks and so the people put them gently and finally and soundly to
sleep in the attic of the where we hope the dust of ages will cover them forever _ « __ “But at what cosTf “Every congressman gone! “Legislature gone! “Supreme court judges turned out! “State ticket wiped off the' faeje of the earth! , 1 J -'- “Every ,city in state-Democrat-ic! ■ '> “County organizations swept out Of power, where never before, and all on account of the personal ego of one man-—a man who the party gave the best it hgd— the party honpre.t with the best it had for twelve years! : . ' •This is not a government of parties.’ Beveridge shrieked,; 'it is a party of Citizens'* So said Marat in a former ceiiturj Marat labeled all- his followers ‘citizens’ arid if ;h-'e- ! the Laiiye they <UeL.tot: the c riin'iiie. B-ve idye , : ri—i to label In.lianians ‘citizens' and not P. publicans, but he not only refused to wear the Beveridge badge,, but declined to be politically guilotined and a Republican majority of our yi.tis ago ot Sb.’ibO for secretary of state was converted to a Penkocratic plurality o 25,000, or a chan r of nearly 60.000 with thirty ; er cent of the Republicans staying at home in disgust. If they had vot- • L th? stat* would havp'gone Demo'•raric by 100.000 or over. “Hal e doctrine did it. “Doctrine of the liar and the cheat.”
GALLION GOT HIS.
Deputy Game Warden “Soaked” On Wife Desertion Charge in Ohio. Frequently, somebody asks us what has become 1 f <iallion. the ■'thunder-pumper" game warden n.ii'i made himself obnoxious in this county a few years ago, li ere’s the latc-t— a quotation from George AV. M iles,: state fish and game commissioner: “A. M. Gallion is. the fellow who was taken, to Ohio on a requistibn frotn Governor Mar-hall, of that state, for non-support of his wife and child. After a month or so in jait there his relatives and others managed to raise money enough to get him out*—-sortie I am tola. I refused to let him go to work a ea he came, back, and he a t- >■; ward boa t’ d that he would even’ and would put my departn nt out of business.”
•e be< day’s work Mr. Miks h; > done since he took office was ■a hen-he tied a can to the pigheaded ! .billion.'—- I’ulaski County i ’em’oerat. ■
INTERESTING RECORD.
Founder of Town, War Veteran. Gold Seeker and Twice Homesteader. ! • amw ‘ll'l. Ind.. Nov. 28. -edi. in Hal* lead, age ninety, f under f-f the t« \vn pi Lowell. j '■< d up .320 acres ‘of land • ar :'arri*- >ii. Neb. He did the i rk himself.' Halstead's career : - I ,-e;i remarkable, lie entered! a homestead in Lake county w'wn Chicago was I't, Dearborn, *an one of the first grist mills in lii liara ami built b e first church aU'd schoolhouse in this part of the slate. Halstead went to the California gold fields, by Way of Dam n a. in 1849 and crossed the cnoinent in search of adventure ten times before 1860. lie is a *. eteran < i the civil war. and his ealth is perfect.
DRESSED IX “BLACK AND YELLOW.” Not ” Foot ball Colors” but the color of the carton containing Foley’s y and. Tar. the best an ' 'safest cough remedy tor all coughs and colds. Do not accept a substitute but see that you r 'get the genuine Fo 1 ey’s Honey an'djTar in ayel 1 ov> rarton with black letters. Sold by A. F. Long. . d ' Send in. your subscription renewal to 'i he Democrat and get the National Monthly a full veai free gratis. DROP IN ■ • : ■ JF '' JP~'r-> $ IE «§<SjB%S r: ' . z --. t fw; - . 2c >■' x ■<-• ■.':■•*• i -»K>Ti :•*■ ’K- • v- . X And see us about those LETTER HEADS Work Perfect Price Right
GANDERBONES FORECAST
FOR DECEMBER. i Copyright by C. H. Reith, 1910.) Tom; Tom. the p-ip.« r',s Thought to .'s >al a,notf »-i one. ' ■ - ■ But v> bi n. .with Lacon ,10 Cents, I!- .t upon the. eon.--qu- twe, Ami what he probably would get In case he. landed in the ra t. Th* lawyers- he would have to hire To ’■)-.•■ hhn from the Lutcher's ire, - !h< n-oftey (■• <;.il.y v.ot;.'l *;>'rd To push it to the bitter • nu. 'i h* Ucgs coiietTn of Swift. - T<> see he v.as not.set adrift, Air, .-a-. 11 be lied, • ’ offet for him live Or dead,. .-a<! I;o-,v the unforgiving hist • » t • ng* at”•< uou.'d movO tn*? trust To ir.?!:‘ vSarr.pte oi him lest Son.* other piper's son protest .'■gains: .oik thoj s at thirty Hat, And pici-e i. pigs', feet selling at Six-bits a dozen, souse a bit. And- sai.sag- s' even close to it— When Tom considered it. in brief. And also how mueb more a thief He would 1>• this time-than before, lie w •se-v passed, the butcher's door. Rejob -d that seif bad stood the its:', And went on hoping for the last. December is from the Latin decern; meaning ien. It was originally the tenth month of the rear, but ow ing to the w idespread unpreparedness for Christmas it has been slewed along from time to time, until it occurs now as far back as we have been able . get it. Ceasar, who Was in? the habit of making each of his soldiers a present, even suggested pushing it further al<ihg still and having fifteen months in the year, blit the Rpman merchants protested that it Was impossible to sell holiday goods except in very cold weather, and Brutus, Cassius and several other Roman business men finallv stabbed, him.
Tire custom of giving presents was originated by the Greeks, and they had such a faculty for getMng the better of it when they ‘exchanged presents with anyone that the expression "Beware of the Greeks bearmg gifts!” becgine Itistoric. It was on a Christmas- day when all of the ireeks were >ln*w;ing what they had gotten ami were laughing . b. ut it that Diogenes, who maoe a practiced criticising the niitonal iaultsjn some amusing way set out on hi> famous search for an honest man. . The Persians one time resorted to arms in an efts rt to get their presents back, hut. they were badly defeated at the battie <*i Maratjh.on. and n > -eri ms attempt to get present*back has ever been ma le fr<m that time to t? is. ■ d The colt will Lmriow in the stack, and the festive colt will ircli his back and gamb< 1 at a icarild gait to 'make his ichordircn’aie. The Bear will slumber in bis bed and dream that Roose-’ veil is dead, and'the W inter night will worry through with t.he wolf ki-yi-ing down the due. The wind will push against ti e -.!»»or. ami our old friend Boreas will roar and* fill the. W inter night ami tell with samples of his college yell. Ihe price < I eggs will feel imbued to beat the mark for altitude, ami butter Ivilli cavort qrotind abwpt two miles above the ground.
( > happy man that has his h <4 slicked up against the W imer’s c: I I. ami has no urgent need -to reck how many storms ma\ -weep his deck. Who has !:> scuppers bulging kraut and ; things si ip-shape in and < lit. an i all the pro.luct> of his clime rig's, at the port i (des at the time.
() happy _ day ti.at fixed our pick upon this land and 1-ri.de unstick our ! d\V-horn Colors in the ground and claim the country ly ing 'round I And cheers, moreover? one, two. three, for ; freedom’s .aborigine, who 'did n c prove so awful- stout but what we all could throw him- out !
It is' the place and no’ mistake, .tor- raising provender to bake, and giving steely to the least ew stmtial to a Christinas feast. A bug or so is on the job and the weather generally plays hob. but on ,'lie whole and in the sum we re dog-gone happy that we come
On the 21st of December the sun will cross the Tropic of Capricorn. which will give the trusts the ball on our five-yard line, one down to go. They will go over the next play, and Mr. Rockefeller. who is playing greenback for the trusts this year, will kick goal. The features of Christmas will be that Mr. Roosevelt won't have any. He isn't taking any chances on Santa Ciaiis even handing him anything else this year. ’
Our Mr. Morgan will revert To hanging up his spacious shirt. And tying up the tail to pot Whatever Santa Claus has got. O ’woe is us! How tough it is To hang our stockings under his! \ But faith is hope, and hope is trust. And some fine day the tail will bust.
DdnGfni’H’Q Formerly the 99. Cent ndlldlUlU 0 Racket Store Dfiportmont Store R E N"S SELAER ::: INDIANA - ■ - r ' . - - . - - I ' - • J - ' ■■ ■ ■ . ' ’ .... .. .... ' * ','C C/. . • ... ■ ■■■ ■ • • Ope® t) p. in. Saturday ' 1 Night -Il ’ Tvzo large ' f/ ■ rooms filled -z with all the latest i ' 7 and “P -1° - date '■ /> Merchandise that / money can buy. We are headquarters for hoi- / *day goods of every description. We will have '' the largest line we have • - ever carr fed since being in bus-’ V iness in Ibis city. You can find f ; almost anything you are looking f° r right here and cur prices are marked in plain figures so a child can tee price of same at a glance. It will be a busy place from now up to January isC so do not delay getting in early and making your purchases and avoid the rush. Besides the stock in every dejflOjilljl partment is all on the ground floor and We are Pl ac l n g same as test as we can. Come in and see one of the finest displays of goods ever brought to Rensselaer. We % know you will find that little something you want. We will be glad to wait on \ you. Watch our windows for special sales and remember we are Santa Claus' headquarters for everybody. mil • . - . W a tch for Our Grand Opening We shall give every Lady a beautiful souvenir on ’ ■Eg December 8th —afternoon and evening only one to a family. It will pay you to come to this Grand Opening. We do not ask you to buy anything. Just come and look until you are satisfied beyond a doubt that we have the largest stock, the lowest prices and the finest display of any other house in Northern Indiana. Then after deciding to your own satisfaction, if you think we should have the Grandest Holiday Business in this part of the country for our pains and hard work, all well and good. It > s up to you. Remember the Grand Opening, Dec, Bth, 1910. YOURS FOR TRADE ..... M RansfordsDepartnientStore — Formerly The 99-Cent Racket Store Rensselaer Indiana
