Jasper County Democrat, Volume 15, Number 19, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 June 1912 — Page 2

Children Cry for Fletcher’s

CASTORIA

The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of —■ and has been made under his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. , All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good »» are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children —Experience against ExperimentWhat is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of ConstipationFlatulency, "Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTOR IA ALWAYS The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years

1 JSSPER COUNTY DEMOCRAT f.f.BABCQCLEDIIOR<KDPUBLIXHEB. OFFICIAL DEMOCRATIC PAPER OF JASPER COUNT r. ' Advertising rates made known on application. —T— . ; Long Distance Telephone* Office 315. - Resldence 311. Entered as Second Class Matter June », 1908, at the office at Rensselaer, Indiana, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Published Wednesday and Saturday. Wednesday Issue 4 Pages; Saturday Issue 8 Pages. SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1912.

DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET

For Governor 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. O’BRIEN, of Lawrenceburg * For Treasurer of State WILLIAM H. VOLLMER, Of Vinceniies For Attorney General THOMAS M. HONAN, of Seymour For Supt. 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 DEVERE YEOMAN, of Marion Township ‘ For Coroner DR. A. P. RAINIER, of Remirigton For Commissioner 2d District CHARLES F. STACKHOUSE, of Marion Township For Commissioiner 3d District ALBERT H. DICKINSON, of Carpenter Township.

To Our Patrons.

Out of town poultry buyers are in this section buying poultry and we ask you to call on us before selling them any chickens. It is our jfolicy to give a square deal in weights and the highest possible market price. Deal with your local house and then you will know that you are getting a square deal. —Rensselaer Producing Co.

An armful of old papers for a nickel at the Democrat office.

MERCHANTS MUST ADVERTISE

Every Issue of Local Newspaper Should Contain Some Mention of His Goods. business man in any town slrbuld allow a newspaper published in bis town to go out without his name and business being mentioned somewhere in its columns, says an exchange. This applies to all kinds of business—genral stores, dry goods, , groceries,, furniture dealers, manufac- I luring establishments, automobile ,i dealers, mechanics, professional men, j in fact all classes of business men. ■ This does not mean that you should have a whole or half or even a quarter of a page ad in every issue of the paper, but your name and?, business should be mentioned if you do not use more than a two-line space. A stranger picking up a newspaper ! should be able, to tell just what kind of merchants the town has by a glance a •he. advertising. This is the best possible town advertising, .1 The man who does not advertise his business does an injustice to himself and Ins town. He is the man who expects the newspaper to do the most free boosting for his town. The man who insists on sharing the business ; that comes to a town but refuses to j advertise his business is not a valu- j able addition to any town. The life ' of any town depends upon the live, wide-awake and liberal advertising business men.

PLAN CHURCH “AD” CAMPAIGN

American Missions Will Spend $50,000 for Newspaper Publicity Next Fall. Fifty thousand dollars’ worth of newspaper advertising space is to be purchased next fall by the American Home Missions council in order to present current social and religious problems fully and frankly to. the people of the United States. The money has been appropriated by the home missions council, comi posed of the twenty-seven general boards engaged in national home mission work and the council of women for home missions, which has nine constituent women’s boards, national in their scope, these organizations repre- ' senting practically the entire Protes- , tant home mission forces of America, j ’The campaign is to be under the direc- . tion of the Rev. Charles Stelzle of the I bureau of social service of the Presbyterian church. Th-e campaign will begin early in the fall,' culminating in “home mission week” from November 17 to 24. I Committees will be organized in the 2,500 American cities having a population of 2,500 or more, these committees to become responsible for the campaigns in nearby towns and villages.

Only One Kind of Honesty.

It is the liar who is ham stringing the body politic today. I believe that the day Is coming when the law will prohibit untrue advertising in Amorica, as it does today in Germany.. No man can be permanently successful unless he is honest. In spite of the fact that some men seem to think there are fifty-seven varieties, but one kind of honesty, the good, old-fash-ioned 'kind remains.—Hon. F. w. Heron. *1 ry a box of our Wild Rose or Homespun linen finish note paper for your correspondence. Only 35c and 40c per box, 102 sheets. Envelopes to match at 10c per package.

Physical Exercise

THE coh-mon-sense point of view, it seems to me, is that as far as the working people, under present conditions, are able to benefit from gymnastic exercises, just so far they are valuable to them. That, of course, applies to any other class of people as well. All of which simply means that to a vast number of working people it is a matter of minor importance or of utter indifference because their principal need is for, industrial conditions which are safe, and for higher wages and shorter hours, which would give them opportunity fojr mental and moral education as well as physical. Id educate oneself in any way means the expenditure of energy, and one must riot only have the energy to expend* but must also have enough good sleep and happy leisure, which is not active, in order; to replace the energy used in work and active plav. I i the question is whether the large part of working class women have these things, the answer must be that th v do not. I he object of expending energy is in the hope of getting something one wants; one’s living, one’s health, some one or other form of happiness; if the struggle-of life is too hard, then the lessened energy is used to secure the greatest instinctive desire, one’s bare existence, and often there is not' enough energy for that. 1 o use a part of that small and J>r ious fund in active play appeals, I think, very little to the working class :hht is, to that part of it which expends most of its energy in making a living. They craye something to relax the nervous sion, something which is “done to them” without much effort on thvir part. Ifence it Ss.JLat there is so much drinking, loafing in cheap theaters and so many vices of various kinds. However* I would not in any way undervalue tlie Usefulness of physical exercises for the many persons who are enabled by them to throw off morbid conditions and to pull themselves out of anemic conditions and get fresh starts in life. Ihe only objection, I should think, is the tendency to make them into a fad, and to give the impression that, given gymnastics, we have cured the sorrows of the world. In other words, we must not put the cart before the horse, but remember that poverty and ignorance are the real evils to be coped with and we can have no real health while we have these. Anything, however, that will strengthen us for the time being to play

whatever part we have to play in the world must be corm ted as useful.

Method for Making Business More Rushing

By F. N. BLANCHARD

up more and more profits, and as they are in the minority and the workers compose the vast majority, the workers’ proportion of obtainable money must necessarily diminish as fast as the wealth of the capitalist increases. When a panic comes the position of the capitalist is somewhat like that of the monkey who put his hand into a jar of nuts arid got his hand so full that he was unable to withdraw it. The gnore selfish and grasping the money kings (and humanity at large) will become the oftener we will have times of depression and panics.

Should Not Seek to Acquit Guilty

By CHARLES C. HUNTER

is true, a lawyer owes a duty to his client, but if he knows the client is guilty he has fully discharged his duty when he has made clear all extenuating circumstances, if any there be, connected with the crime, and has made a plea for as light a sentence as the court can’pass for the crime committed. While the lawyer owes a duty to his client, he also owes a duty to himself, to his profession'and to society; he can best discharge these duties by laboring to obtain absolute justice for all.

Mirth is Truly God’s Own Medicine

By R. W. REICH

man machines and they drudge from morning till night and wear out their lives before their time. ' "7 7 And there are others less fortunate even than the human machines, those poor souls that lost their jobs because work is slacking and there is no bank roll to back them up. They do not feel like being cheerful about it. They have desperation written on their faces. And I am sorry to say that many of these have not the education or ability and perseverance to better their condition.

Of Great Value to Many Morbid Persons

By SABAH S. PERKINS

The manufacturers and other business men of this country would like to have businessmore rushing and not so quiet as it is at present. They can easily bring about such a condition of affairs, as it is a simple matter. All they need to do is to increase the wages of the producers so they will have the money to buy back more of the things they have produced. That would' relieve the present stringency and times would become easier. Those who own the machines that the workers use for producing certain articles are all the time storing

A lawyer should only seek justice for his clients. By obtaining an acquittal for a guilty man he has defeated justice. Suppose a lawyer knows his client is guilty, and if convicted the sentence must be imprisonment; but he obtains a verdict of acquittal. The client is turned loose on society, and commits other crimes while he ought to have been serving time for the first crime, is not the lawyer partly responsible for his crimes? The knowledge that they can hire great lawyers to defend them has given encouragement to criminals all over our land. It

Dr. Orison Swett Marden is perfectly right in saying that mirth is God’s medicine; but how about those to whom this is denied, those that live within the limits of privation and even at that do not really live but only exist? For those I do not believe there is any fun. When people battle with misfortune every day in the year, every day in their lives, how can they laugh in the face of fate and say, “We won’t concede that we are beaten ?” When everything looks dark in the future that is an impossibility. For some unfortunates the sun never shines. They are hu-

rid ward P. Honan,— — • ■ - . ** .... ■ ■ ■ ATTORNEY AT LAW. Abstracts, , Real .Estate Loans, rtili practice in all the courts. Office -»er renuigs fair. . RENSSELAER, INDIANA. J. F. Irwin. S. C. Irwin, irwin & Irwin, ■jhw, Real Estate and Insurance 6 Per Cent Farm Leana. Office in Odd Fellows Block. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. Over State Bank Phone 16 John A. Dunlap, LAWYER. (Successor to Frank Foltz) Practice In all courts. Estates settled. Farm Loans. Collection department. Notary in the office. ' Renssolaer, Indiana — ■ ■ - - n Arthur H. Hopkins, Law, Loans and Real Estate. Loans on farm and City property personal security and chattel mortgage 3uy, sell and rent farms and city prop -rty. Farm and city fire Insuraiiee attorneys for AMERICAN BUILDING ■AN AND SAVINGS ASSOCIATION Office over Chicago Department Store. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. F. H. Hemphill, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. .-special attention given to diseases of Women and low grades of fever. Office In Williams block, opposite Court House. Formerly occupied by Dr. Hartsell. Phone, Office and Residence, 440.

S. Herbert Moore, H. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. All calls will receive prompt attention night ar day from my office over the Model Clothing store. Telephone No. 251. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. E. C. English, Physician & SurgeonOpposite the Jasper Savings & Trust Company Bank. Office Phone 177. Residence Phone, 110. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. H. L. Brown, DENTIST. Office over Larsh’a drug store. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. Dr. F. A. Tur Her OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN. Graduate American Softool of Osteopathy, Post Graduate American School of Osteopathy under the founder. Dr A. T. Still. Office Hours—9-12 a. tn., 1-6 p. tn. Tuesdays and Fridays at Monticello, Ind. 1-2 Murray Building - Rensselaer, Ind. RENSSELAER, INDIANA. Dr. J. H. Hansson VETEUNARY SURGEON—Now at Rensselaer. Calls promptly answered. Office In Harris Bank Building. Phone 443.

Millions to Loan!

I We are prepared to take care 3 of all the Farm Loan business In th I. and adjoining counties at n Lowest Rates and Best Terms, 8 regardless of the "financial strln- g gency.” If yO u have a loan cos - S 'ng due or desire a new loan It wIM 3 mt be necessary to pay the ex- r g cesslve rates demanded by our 5 S competitors. ' FIVE PER CENT. J iMI commission - Promoi service | J Irwin & Irwin I 5 Odd Fellows Bldg. Rensselaer. S 1 A Book on Patents T**>*i& Sent on request Send sketch for Free Search RICHARDSON & WOODWORTH J enifer Building Washington. D. C. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Clear«.« and beautifies the hair, luxuriant growth. Never Fail, to Restore Gray f sl ir t<» it? Youthful Cblor. b" l ® 9 i hair tailing. __SOc.and<l.r.;at Druggirts

Buttermakers’ Attention!

Another big shipment of 54;000 of those genuine parchment butter wrappers just recieved at the Democrat Office. We sell them in any quantity desired, newly printed or blank. This is the only proper way for handling butter, and if once you use parchment wrappers and, see the advantages derived therefrom besides the better price that the store keeper will pay you for butter put up in this style, you will never do without them again.

'Qnnwnw Chicago to Northwest, Indianapolis, Cincinnati and the South. Louisville and French Lick Springs. RENSSELAER TIME TABLE. Effective December, 1911. SOUTH BOUND, No.3l—Fast Mail (daily).. 4-4« i o N 0.37 Chicago to Ind’polis. 11:51 a* m —Louisville Mail (daily) .H;2O a' m' No. 33—Ind’polis Mail (daiivt i "ss Da " No.39—Milk Accom (dkhyL i : O2 n No. 3—Chicago to Louisville. .ii;os p,’ NORTH BOUND. No. 4—Mail (daily) 4 53 a m —Ali.k Accom (daily).. 7 '35 J?* £°-?“ Fast Mail (dai)y>.... a" m’ N 0.38 Ind polls to Chicago.. 3:03 a' m No. t> Mail and Ex. (daily) ’f-'is »»' m " No.3o—lnd’polis to Chi. Mail 5'44 n‘ Passengers for C. H. & d * nninS* ail , p *? inta beyond Indianapolis should take train No. 37 from here as Indian tnd 33. 1S D ° W the termina f for Nos j No, 4 will stop at Rensselaer to let off passengers from points south of Monon, and take passengers for Loweli Hammond and Chicago. x-oweu, Nos. 31 and 33 make direct connect tions at Monon for Lafayette oonnec- • BEAM, Agent, Rensselaer.

OFFICIAL DIKECTUKI. CITY OFFICERS. Marshal ' V' Q ' F ' IffiSET::::::::::::: B - ?1«‘ cW"' J Osb ”“- Councilmen. ?nri George Hopkins 3rd ard, .Harry Krpsiar At LargeC. J. Dean, A. G. Catt JUDICIAL. Circuit Judge Charles W. Hanley Prosecuting Attorney Fred Longweb Terms of Court —Second Monday In February, April, September and November. Four week terms. COUNTY OFFICERS. a{ erk MCharles C. Warner W. I. Hoover Auditor ,j. p. Hammond Treasurera. A. Fell Recorder.. fc ...J. W. Tilton surveyor. .W. F. Osoorne Coroner w. J. Wright Bupt. Public Schools Ernest Lamson County Assessor John Q. Lewis Health Officer E N Loy

COMMISSIONERS. Ist District Wm. H. Hershman 2nd District Charles F. Stackhouse 3rd District Charles T. Denham Commissioners’ Court meets the First Monday of each month. COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION. Tpk stees 1 Township Wm. Tolgarßarkley Charles May Carpenter J. W. SelmerGillam George Parker Hanging Grove W. H. Wortley . Jordan Tunis Snip Keener John Shlrer ixankakM Edward Parklson Marina George L. Parks Milroy E B Lane Newton Isaac Kight.Union Albert Keene.Wheatfield Fred Karch.... Walker Ernest Lamson, Co. Suptßensselaer K. C. English, Rensselaer James H. Green. Remington Geo O StembelWheatfield Truant Officer..a B. Stewart. Rensselaer TRUSTEES’ CARDS. JORDAN TOWNSHIP. The undersigned trustee of Jordan Township attends to official business at his residence on Mondays of each week Persons having business with me will please govern themselves accordingly Postoffiee address, Rensselaer, Ind R-3' W. H. WORTLEY, Trustee. NEWTON TOWNSHIP. The undersigned trustee of Newton township attends to official business at his residence on the First and Third Thursdays of each month. Persons having business with me will please govern themselves accordingly. Postoffice address, Rensselaer, Ind., R-R-3. E. P. LANE, Trustee. UNION TOWNSHIP. . The undersigned trustee of Union township attends to official business at his store In Fair Oaks on Fridays of each week. Persons having business witn me will please govern themselves accordingly. Postoffiee address. Knir Oaks. Indiana. ISAAC KIGHT. I IIMB M PfflltC IS o at REASONABLE RATES o o o o Your property In City, Town, O ,'’V age or Farni < against fire, <► o lightning or wind; your live- 0 o stock against death or theft, X an d <► o YOUR AUTOMOBILE 0 o o < ► against fire from any cause, < , theft or collision. ■ o M ritten on the cash, single j o note or installment plan. All o < k Losses Paid Promptly. 4 ► Call Phone 208 or write for o o a good policy in a good com- <► o pany. o RAY D. THOHPSON H < ► Rensselaer, Ind. < * ■ ' I j ‘ DEALER IN ’ [ l| I lli II Ml Hl |i | CH. I If RENSSELAER, IND. J[