Jasper County Democrat, Volume 15, Number 18, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 June 1912 — Page 2
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fHE JASPER COUNTY DEMOCRAT OFFICIAL DEMOCRATIC PAPER OF Jasper county. Advertising rates made known on application. Long Distance Telephone* Office 315. Residence 311. Entered as Second Class Matter June 8, 1908, at the post office at Rensselaer, Indiana, under the Act of March 3. 1878. Published Wednesday and Saturday. Wednesday Issue 4 Pages; Saturday Issue 8 Pages. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 1912.
DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET
For Governor 1 SAMUEL M. RALSTON, of Lebanon For Lieutenant Governor WILLIAM P. O'NEILL, Of Mishawaka For Secretary' of state LEW G. ELLINGHAM, of Decatur For Auditor of State WILLIAM H. OBRIEN, • ■ of Lawrenceburg For Treasurer of State WILLIAM 11. VOLLMER, of Vincennes For Attorney General THOMAS M. HONAN, of Seymour For SUpf. of Public Instruction CHARLES A. GREATHOUSE, • of Indianapolis For State Statisticiain THOMAS W. BOLLEY, of North .Vernon For Reporter Supreme and Appellate Court PHILIP ZOERCHER, of Tell City For Judge of Supreme Court First District JOHN W. SPENCER, of Evansville For Judge of Supreme Court Fourth District RICHARD K. ERWIN, of Fort Wayne For Judge of Appellate Court, Southern Division JOSEPH H. SHEA, of Seymour? ' COUNTY TICKET. For Treasurer EDWARD P. LANE, of Newton Township For Recorder STEPHEN D. CLARK, of Wheatfield Township , For Sheriff WILLIAM I. HOOVER, of Marion Township For Surveyor r ' DEVERE YEOMAN, of Marion Township For Coroner DR. A. P. RAINIER, 1 , „ .of Remington ' For Commissioner 2d District 1 CHARLES F. STACKHOUSE, of Marion Township ' For Commissioner 3d District ' ALBERT H. DICKINSON, ' of Carpenter Township.
So far as learned, Jasper county will have no candidate for the democratic nomination for state senator, but it is reported that both Newton and White will have a candidate, and perhaps Starke, the other county hooked up with us on senator. Jasper county stands ready to help elect any good, well qualified democrat who may be nominated, and the fact that the “woods are full' of candidates” would indicate that the outlook for democratic success is considered mighty good. Abe Halleck, the present incumbent, is
understood to be in a very receptive mood for re-nomination, in fact wants it awfully bad. Four years ago his total majority in the district was 111 ton; 28 in Starke. A. J. Law. the democratic candidate, carried White county by 1. The date for the democratic convention hah not yet been decided upon.
THE PRESIDENTIAL LINE-UP.
The line-up of delegates in - the presidential race tp date, as it anpears, is as follows: Republican— - Taft, 48S; Roost-veli. 452; LaFoilette. .36; Cummins. 16; uninstructed, unc’hs’sified and uncertain, 70. Ihe total number of delegates in the republican convention will be i 078; necessary to nominate 540. I alt .-tiil needs 52 and Roosevelt 88. T here are yet to be chosen l 22 delegates—Arizona ( June Cl 6; Ohio, delegates at large iJune 3> 6; South Dakota IP. On the democratic side Clark still leads with 349; Wilson. 228: fnderwoed, 85; Marshal:. 30; Baldwin (Gov. of Connecticut) 14; Burke (Na. l)ak. 10; Harinoh, 5,3 ; uninstructed and uncertain 179. The total number ol delegates.in the democratic convention Will be 1,094. ; and the successful candidate must i have two-thirds o: these to be n-..m- ---' inated. 1 here are yet to be chosen ' 146 delegates—Arkansas (convention June 5), 18; Hawaii. 6; Idaho • June 31. 8; Louisiana (June 4 I 20; Minnesota (June 6), 24; Nevada. 6; Nprth Carolina (June GI. i 18; Ohio. (June 3. six delegates at i targe), 6: Philippihes, 6; South Dakota (June 4i, 10; Vermont. 8; West Virginia (June 6), 16.
ROSEVELT MEN BOLT
Walk Out at Tucson When Taft Supporters Reject Compromise I Offer. I ' | Tuesotk Ariz., June 3.—The I Roosevelt delegates in the regular ! state republican convention bolted today because the Taft men. who I were in control, refused to comI promise the fight for the national I convention delegates. Six contesting [ Roosevelt delegates from Arizona j to the national convention at Cnicago ( were elected. The Taft, forces re[mained in the hall, selected six 'delegates and instructed them to ‘ vote for rhe President.
MAN MANGLED BY TRAIN.
Falls From Patlform and Is Jiilled When Returning From Picnic. Hammond, Ind., June 3.—The bodV of Stephen Murine, age nineteen. badly mangled, was found on the Pennsylvania railroad's right-of-way in Wiiting yesterday. Murine had attended the 'lndiana Society picnic at Culver. He lived at 6257 Calumet avenue, Chicago, and a passenger on the special train carrying the Indiana Society members home to Chicago. The body was identified by cards (found on the clothing. He was employed ir. the office of the' Pennsylvania company at Fifty-fifth street. His brother is employed by the city of Chicago, Murine is believed to have , fallen from the platform!
WHAT COL. ROOSEVELT DID
Record as President of the Man Who Now Seeks to Be Elected Again. When a man has held office for seven and one-half years, and still wants more office, it is proper to ask what use he has made of his term of power. What he thinks, talks, wishes or hopes does not count. He had a chance to do: What did he do? Mr. Roosevelt was president for almost two full terms. What did he do that another term should be given to him in violation of the nation's tradition against third terms? He' protected his friend? who own the Sugar trust from prosecution, while that trust was stealing millions of dollars from the government by means of loaded scales. He ran up the expenses of administration to double what they had been a few years before. He brought on a panic which caused hundreds of thousands of workingmen to be out of employment for months and spread rujn and bank rupfcy all over the country. He'permitted the Steel trust, in direct violation of law, to buy up Its only important competitor. He tried to revive the alien and sedition laws to abolish a free press and free speech. He allowed the infamous tariff rob bery to continue, not only unchecked but unchallenged through his entire term. ' ' > His most intimate friends and his most trusted advisers were standpatters and beneficiaries of the robber tariff. He was the best president for, Wai! street that Wall street ever had. And yet, in some mysterious manner. Mr. Roosevelt has persuaded the country to believe that he is just the reverse of what his record reveals.
“As Clear as Day.”
Is it possible for Mr. Roosevelt to tell the truth about any matter in which he is personally interested? Take as an example the statement he made in his Worcester speech about the third-term tradition. Mr. Roosevelt said: “Therefore, it is as clear as day that it Is and can only be a consecutive third term that violates the tradition. I had this in view when I said that the custom regards the substance and not the form.” Mr. Roosevelt knows that previous to the time he broke his own solemn pledge the third-term Issue had arisen only once in American history. That was In the case of Grant, who retired from the House March 4, 1877, and whose follower endeavored to nominate him for president again in 1880. The Grant campaign was the campaign that definitely established the third-term tradition. It was not a consecutive third term, but the kind of a third term that Theodore Roosevelt Is seeking. These are all elementary facts known to the most casual student of American history, yet because they relate to his own candidacy Mr. Roosevelt is incapable of telling the truth about them. ’
Democratic Opportunity Here.
It must be clear to most people that so-called Republican progressives who at the drop of a battered old hat surrendered all their principles and hurrahed for autocracy, as the inhabitants of Rome many centuries ago applauded Julius Caesar, are not of the stuff of which modern reformers are made. They never have controlled their party and they are never likely to do so. By their colossal folly, however, they have taken the most effecthe course to rid the country of a corrupt and oppressive political organization which is the greatest stumbling block in the way of true progress. We trust that Democrats from one end of the country to the other will not fail to note the fact that- the very stars in their courses are fighting for them and that circumstances have designated them unerringly for a great and glorious Work. | The hour for progress has struck and Democracy alone is prepared. If it would be an efficient instrument in’ the enforcement of the people’s will it must profit by the blunders and crimes and Weaknesses of the party that is now about to disintegrate.
View of Wall Street.
Wall street and many business men of New York now regard the election of next fall as already decided. It is the view that the Republican party is split wide open. For that reason these men are persuaded that the Democratic party will be triumphant, no matter who the candidate may be, and that the victory will be so sweeping that the Dmocratic majority in the lower house will be greater than in the present house; dnd that as soon as state elections for United, States senators can take place, the Democratic party will be in a majority in thp upper house—Holland, in the Wall Street Journal. >
“The Outlook, which speaks from an inlook into the purposes and policies of the Claimant, insists that the tariff is not an issue between parties at the coming presidential election. The tariff does not interest the Claimant. It is a sore topic for his clients, the trusts.
The reference in a recent speech of the colonel to “my attorney general” attracts some attention. But as the attorney general named was Charles J. Bonaparte no one seems disposed to claim adverse possession.
NOTES From MEADOWBROOK FARM
By Willam Pitt
Do not make too violent crosses, j Select a type and stick to it. It is not so much the make of incubator as the man who runs it. Air-slaked lime is a valuable disinfectant in the poultry house. Variety is always good, but sudden and abrupt changes are dangerous. It pays in more ways than one to be on friendly terms with the heifers. The sort of seed corn to select is the kind that produces bushels per acre. Correct sour or acid soil with one to five tons per acre of crushed limestone. To maintain normal soil fertility the supply of humus must be conserved. The business hen is the hen that puts her daily credits in the egg basket. The only proper way to replenish the flock is to save the best lambs each year. A common cause of slow churning is an overfilled churn. Half full Is about right. Dirty collars are probably as responsible for sore shoulders as Illfitting ones. . Keep the horses well cleaned, but remember that you can be cruel with the curry comb. The hopper system of feeding is a good one. but put only one kind of feed in one hopper. The fault of too many dairy farmers is failure to make the cows produce up to their limit. Too much corn has caused the loss of many a fine litter of pigs, and often the loss of the sow as well. In raising horses for one’s own use it should be done as intelligently as if it were to be a regular business. Spraying is one of the unavoidable tasks of the farmer who would keep his orchard in desirable condition. Arsenate of lead which is held over from the year before will be good if it has not dried out and become a hard lump. When turkeys are penned up to fatten for market, good results are not obtained if they are cramped for room. Now and then put a little brine on the straw, it acts as an appetizer, and the sheep clean up the straw better. A heifer may give as much milk in proportion to the food eaten as a mature cow, and make some growth in addition. A paint brush that has become hardened with paint can be made soft and pliable by immersing it in boiling Vinegar. It is just as easy to multiply defects in breeding as it is to strengthen good points, and many people are doing the former. The colt crop on the general farm may be made a by-product that will cost very little, but swell the bank account considerably. i
Seed corn? Of course you have it all in good shape and ready for the germination test. Do not plant a grain unless you know it comes from sound stock. The best medicine jn the world for poultry are dry, clean quarters and lots of sunshine. Better lose every other poultry recipe known than to forget this. The great need of the day is educated dairymen, men who understand the care and feeding of the cow as well as the successful marketing of her products. Test the spray hose several days before needed for spraying. Try it wtth the highest pressure you will use. If It bursts easily or leaks, make the needed repairs in It, or get a new hose. It will save delays at a critical Mme. Something similar to a scantling, a foot or two from the ground, is the only proper perch for turkeys. This allows ' the breastbones to grow straight, making the nent or two more cc? ’ -■> ‘ market
IllWlWMt [Under thia head notices w.U be pub e< L tor 1-cent-a-word for the firs'. ,^' cent per word for each additional insertion. To save book-keep-ing cash should be sent with notice. Nc notice accepted for less than 26 cents, but short notices coming within tht above rate will be published two oi more times, as the case may be foi 25 cents. Where replies are sent in The Democrat's care, postage will be charged for forwarding such replies to the advertiser.] FOR SALE For Sale——A good 16-foot store counter. —THE DEMOCRAT. For Sale—A swinging typewriter stand tp attach to desk. —THE DEMOCRAT. Seed Coin—A few bushels cf fine seed corn lor saIe.—MOSES SIGO, Remington, Ind. bor Sale—Nice Sweet Potato plants, 1 mile south of Parr—HARSH BERGER & CH UPP. 1-ggs For Hatching—Barred Plymouth Rock eggs for sale by M. I. ADAMS Rensselaer. ts I-or Sale—Good 8-room house with 5% lots 50x150, good new barn; §1,850, on Elm street.—-H. DAVISSON. I-or Sale—-I have No. 1 Hungarian seed for sale; also hay at sls per ton. —Globe Onion Farm, ALF DONNELLY, Phone 548-B. jlO Bee Supplies For Sale—Sections, starter, hives, and everything in the bee supply line.—Phone 518-A or address JOHN KOLHOFF, Rensselaer, Ind. jyj For Sale—Rose Comb Rhode Island Reds, first prize pen at Rensselaer poultry show; Ist, 2d, 3d and 4th prize pullets in pen. Eggs 75c tor 15.—GLS YEOMAN, Rensselaer, R-3, phone 78-C, Mt. Ayr. For Sale—Bo acres of land in Keener tp., fair improvements, for quick sale only $26 pen acre; half cash, balance on time. —HARVEY DAVISSON, Rensselaer, Ind. For Sale—The Democrat has for sale several good, well-made counter drawers, about 20x30, 8 inches deep, walnut front, with pulls. Will be sold at 50c each singly or in bulk. For Sale—Lot 75 ft. front, with a fine modern residence, located right up town, with electric lights, city water, bath, toilet, and good barn. $2,200. Easy terms.—H. DAVISSQN.
Nice eight room, two-story house city water, electric lights,, two lots, small barn, on improved street, cement sidewalks, sewer, etc., all paid for. Is now rented at $lO per month. This property is almost new and is a bargain at the price sl,500. HARVEY DAVISSON.
For Sale—s acres 40 rods from city limits, on stone road, R. F. D. A good small house, good well and fenced with woven wire. Will sell at a bargain if sold soon. Will also sell in five or ten acre lots any part of the Monnett 80 acres, being on. the west side of gravel road, half mile of city limits. Price $165 and up.—G F MEYERS.
Farms For Sale—l have a number of farms for sale in different parte of this county and adjoining counties, and I have made up my mind to devote my time to the business. Therefore if you have any farms or town property to sell or trade give me a chance and I will give you a square deal.—JOHN < O’CONNOR, Ex-sheriff Jasper county* Knlman Ind.
Pulleys and Shafting—The Democrat has for sale very cheap the following, all in excellent condition: 5 feet 1 11-6 in. shafting. 1 4-cone pulley 13 to 18 inch cones, 3 in. face to each cone. 1 2-cone pulley 16 to 18 inch cones, 3 in. face to each cone. 1 14 inch pulley, 8 in. face. 1 10 inch pulley, 6 in. face. (All the above are iron pulleys for 1 11-16 shafting.) 1 110 inch wood pulley, 5 in. face. 1 6 inch wood pulley, 4 in. face. 2 15 inch iron pulleys, 2 in. facei The above will be sold separately and at almost your own price, as we have no use for them since installing electric power.—THE DEMOCRAT. WANTED Wanted— Parties desiring to sell their farm or town property to list same with me.—HARVEY DAVISSON. 1 Wanted— Teams to plow by the acre for corn. Call or write as soon as possible.—JOHN O’CONNOR, K'niman, Ind, Wanted—Good steady boy to feed job press and make himself "generally useful about printing office. Must be 16 years or older.—THE DEMOCRAT. Wanted—We offer all summer’s job to three middle-aged men in this county. No boys or foreigners need apply. If you are the man we want, will start you immediately at $16.50 weekly. References required.—GLEN BROS., Rochester, * Y - jyi FOR RENT. For Rent— The third floor hall in The Democrat building, 25x75 including tw’O ante-rooms at rear. Fine light room suitable for lodge purposes or for light manufacturing,
such as shirt, overall or sunbonnet factory. Will lease for term of years.—F. E. BABCOCK. Storage— I have rooms for light storage on second floor of The Democrat building.—HAßVEY DAVISSO2\. Ladies, Attention—“ Salome,” the wonder of the 19th century for washing, can be had at Long’s drug store, or of the agent. Mrs. w. N. Henkle, R-2; price 10c a bar or 3 bars for 25c. Try Ht once and. vou will never do without it. agio LOST, ESTRAYED & FOUND. Lost.—Saturday evening either in Rensselaer on the north gravel road an E. O. S. gold badge pin. Finder plea.-e return to Democrat office. j 5 Strayed—A black mare. wt. 900 a light bay mare colt, strayed' from farm about 20 days ago. Reward. Notiiy A. FARNEY, Remington. Ind.. R-3. .- e u b FINANCIAL Farm Loans—Money to loan on farm property in any sums up to SIO.OOO.—E. P. HONAN. Ha th A Without D eiay nr r Without Conim -ssion Uu 11lv < W ithout Charges for Hj Making or Recording Instruments. W. H. PARKINSON. 1 I'l-H'l X -I—l-I- I-l—!■ J Rosebud Farm and Mill, two ’' ± miles east of Parr Phone 507- “ 4- B (Jasper Co.) Rensselaer Es- ” •j- change, P. O. Parr, Ind. IF'or Sale—Some good serv- * ‘ iceable Duroc Jersey and O. '• I. C. boars; Younger stock of either sex. fur- ' * nished. —AMOS H. ALTER & SON.
Glasses flitted by DR. A. G. CATT Optometrist Rensselaer, Indiana. Office over Long’s Drug Store. Phone No. 232.
The KITCHEN CABINET
B F STRAWBERRIES be not in season, buy them not at a great price. It is neither art not courtesy to invite your friends to be “eating money,” as the saying is. A guest should be led to think always that her meal tasted pleasantly, never that its cost was disagreeable.
PRACTICAL DESSERTS. During the season of fruit, and for that matter, that is ail the year round, fruit provides a dessert that is easy, usually Inexpensive and decidedly wholesome. All fruit will not do in dessert making, so we like a variety of reasonably inexpensive dishes for everyday use. There is a large variety of fritters and hot cakes that may he served with various sauces and are quickly and easily prepared. The fat kettle Is carefully covered and set away and can be brought out to heat while the fritters are being prepared. Apole Fritters—Sift together one and a third cups of flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder and half a teaspoonful of salt; beat an egg. add twothirds of a cup of milk and mix all together, adding two sour apples cut in small pieces. Drop by spoonfuls in hot fat and fry a delicate brown. Roll in powdered sugar and serve with currant jelly sauce. The sauce is prepared by boiling together a cup of sugar and a third of a cup of water five minutes; add four tablespoonfuls of currant jelly and when boiling hot the juice of a lemon; strain and serve, if a very nice sauce is desired, with a handful of candied cherries. Baked Bananas (Porto Rico)—Put rather green bananas in the oven and bake until the skins burst; serve with butter. Souffles are another form of dessert which may be varied in endless ways. When baking, a shallow pan should be used, as the weight of the mixture tends to break the cell walls. When the, dish seems to be too shallow, line it with a band of buttered paper that stands up above the dish. Always set the pan into water to equalize the heat in baking. Coffee Souffle.—Cook together three tablespoonfuls each of butter and flour, then add a cup of black coffee. When thick add salt and a third of a cup of sugar; cool and add the beaten yolks of three eggs, and then add the beaten whites. Turn • into buttered dish and bake until firm. Serve with whipped cream. ' '
The Democrat office is well
