Jasper County Democrat, Volume 18, Number 97, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 March 1916 — Page 6

Farms for Sale on Easy Terms. ■ 1 5 40 acres on main road, 25 acres black prairie land, 15 acres timber. Owner will sell on terms of S2OO down or take live stock as first payment and long time on remainder. Price $45. 100 acres. 75 in cultivation, 25 In timber pasture, seven-room house, outbuildings and fruit; this farm lies near stations, pike road and dredge ditch. Price $37.50. Terms, >BOO down. Might take live stock. 98 acres. This farm is all in cultivation. Good corn, wheat and clover land, clay subsoil and lies on dredge ditch that gives fine outlet for drainage. This farm lies in good neighborhood near station, school and pike road. There is a good fiveroom house, fair barn, fruit, good well and 15 hog tight. Terms, $1,500 down, and good time on remainder. 160 acres. This farm lies on main road near station and is all level black prairie land in .cultivation and blue grass pasture. There is a large ditch that runs along one side of this farm which gives outlet for drainage. There is a six-room house, large barn, large silo, chicken house, hog house, cribs, fruit and good well. Buildings new and in good condition, good well and several hog lots Price $75. Terms, $2,500 down Might take some trade. 35 acres. This is a nice little home and well situated. All black prairie land, lying on pike road, It F. ~ telephone line, with school and station across the road. There is a good two-story six-room house with porches and pantry, small barn, crib, _ summer kitchen, and some fruit. This farm has outlet for dralna< and is well tiled. Price $87.50 Terms, SSOO down and good time n remainder. Might take some live stock. 120 acres pasture land, on main road half mile from pike, is fenced but no other improvement. Price $27.50. Terms, SSOO down. Possession can be given on any farm on March 1, 1916. FLOYD MEYERS With G. A. Williams, over First National Bank. 30 DAY HOLIDAY BARGAINS On Farms That I Can Give Possession of March Ist. 97% acres—Good 6-rooin house, new barn, % mile from R. 11. town in Jasper County; all in cultivation, good drainage, good black soil, clay subsoil. SBO per acre. $2,500 cash, balance terms. 80 acres — 4y 2 miles northwest of Remington, Ind", on pike road, good 5-room house, good barn, all in cultivation, level land-. Price SBO per acre. $3,500 cash, balance terms. 80 acres—ll miles from Rensselaer and 3 miles from another R. R s station, 4-room new house, fair barn, all in cultivation except 3 acres timber; level black land and a real bargain at S6O per acre. $1,500 cash, balance easy terms. 20 acres—nice home 3 miles out from Rensselaer, on pike; good 5room house, good barn, large orchard, all in cultivation, well drained. Price $4,500. $2,500 cash, balance $250 per year until paid. 140 acres—lmproved farm near Bowling Green, Mo., for sale or exchange at a real bargain. HARVEY DAVISSON, Rensselaer, Ind.

A BIG VALUE The Jasper County Democrat and The Cincinnati Weekly Enquirer Both One Year for ONLY $1.85 Mail all orders to THE DEMOCRAT Rensselaer, Ind.

Use it Every Working Day I ■■■■■■■■■■■■l miwM ft/’T’C Mogul 8-16 <j*£7C <pO • O Kerosene-Burning Tractor spO 9 O’ Mogul 8-16 can be used every working day, and it can be used with profit. 1 You can fill the tank with kerosene, inspect the oiler, and be headed for the field while the horses are.being curried. You need not consider the effect of heat nor of hard work the tractor is tireless. You need not stop the plowing, threshing, or shredding at noon Unless you want to. The Mogul 8-16 will do just as much work between seven and eight P. M. as from seven to eight A. M. It don’t get tired, and it saves money on every job. . Give your horses the jobs they are fitted for, and hiten the Mogul B-16 to the hardest work. The price tractor, you will say it is worth the money. Come in and look it over. EDWARD HERATH RENSSELAER, INDIANA

GREATEST BALLOON ALTITUDE

Italian Air, Craft Went 104,082 Feet Above Actual Ground. According to the geographical institute at Pavia, Italy, the highest altitude so far reached by any balloon was 105,000 feet, or slightly over 18 miles above sea level; and 104,082 feet above actual ground. The balloon was of rubber and was filled with hydrogen gas. The actual distance traversed measured 1 16,m14 feet. At a height bi' 59,1*96 feet the • temperature fell to minus 43 degrees and maintained lint figure all the balance of the way tip, with only slight variation. The aviator, Giacconto Piccolo, vas compelled to utilize his oxygen inhalator utter he reached the height of two miles, and reached groupd in a collapsed condition nevertheless. * , Prof. Pericles Gambia, in the AnUali di. I T fficiO, states th a t the bene-, ‘its to science from that ascent were incalculable, as it proved mainly two things: That the assumption of a 1 5-mile atmosphere above the ground is erroneous, and that the theory of ether outside of that limit is not admissible, "if it does not altogether do away with the etliqr theory at any height.” The word “ether” has been formed to express the medium for light beyond the assumed atmosphere. This ascent establish es beyond peradventure j hat the medium is uniform after,; the height of about 50,000 feet , was reached. If the atmospheric consistency remains the same 55,000 feet after that altitude, the assumption is that it will remain the same further up reaches the dignity of a presumption.” < The Annali suggests that the data furnished by this ascent must, Imperatively, be substantiated by further ascents before definite conclusions should be drawn from this one alone.—St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

Changeable Weather Brings Sickness. The changeable weather of March pauses coughs, colds, croup and grippe. There is no such thing as a ‘’light cold”—none that a person can safely neglect. Foley’s Honey and Tar is a safe and reliable family medicine that heals inflamed, congested air passages, stops coughs and eases breathing.—Sold Everywhere.

New Sterilizing Agent.

German scientists have found that glycerin is a valuable sterilizing agent. Various deadly germs, when heated in it to a temperature of 248 degrees Fahrenheit, w*ere completely killed in one minute. This process is particularly valuable for sterilizing surgical Instruments, for the reason that the metal is not attacked nor is the temper affected. Rubber tubes can be sterilized in it, and, Instead of being injured, the elasticity of those which have become brittle is restored by the treatment.—Chicago Journal.

An Ideal Spring? Laxative A good and time tried remedy is Dr. King’s New Life Pills. The first dose will move the sluggish bowels, stimulate the liver and clear the system of waste and blood impurities. You owe it to yourself to clear the system of body poisons, accumulated during the winter. Dr. King’s New Life Pills will do it. 25c. at your Druggist.—Adv. It is estimated that the annual loss to agriculture in this country from the depredations of insects and rodents alone is $10,000,000,000 — about $1 a month for every man, woman and child in the United States. zv

THE FIRST CHRISTIAN MARTYR

Actx 6.9, B:2—Jfank 5. Faithful St. Stephen<S-His Eloquence and Zeal For God and Truth Stirred His Enemies—They Hated Him For the Qualities They Should Have Admired. “H< thou t'lithfiil tinfb dr-ath^fiini' I icill git* -i <■></!' « '>/ life.’’—ll'ercWi'jn 2:10. STRICTLY speaking, our Lord .Jesus was the first Christian martyr; but the first of His followers to endure death because of Joyalty in preaching the. Gospel of Jesus was st. Stephen, one of the seven elected Deacons. Seemingly he was a man of great power and a lover of the Truth, highly estimated because of Ills purity <>f character and life. History says that at that time there were four hundred ami sixty synagogues in Jerusalem, It is supposed that St. Stephen had formerly Seen attached to one of these, and had gone th 11 he r to nice

upon his associates i the Message that 1 Jesus was the Mes j siah. it has been assumed, wit h apparenlly good reason, that Saul of Tarsus attended the same syn ago g ue, and was one of the disputants over whom St. Stepheti. by tbe ,

Lord’s grace, seemed to have an advantage in these debates. Thus bitter feeling was aroused. To the Jewish rulers this Message respecting Jesus as the Messiah and a Jewish responsibility for His death and respecting God’s favor in raising Him from the dead was a gross error, which was likely to arouse a popular spirit of resentment against themselves as rulers and to be subversive of all law and government in Palestine. Indeed, these Christians claimed that because of this rejection of Jesus the Jewish nation had been rejected from God’s favor, and that dire calamities were coming. St. Stephen's second battle was the one which preceded his death. The Sanhedrin, angry with him, suborned witnesses—bribed men to make complaint, charging him with having bias phemed, with having declared Moses and the Law obsolete, with declaring that the Temple was no longer God's Temple. These witnesses had pnt together certain isolated sayings of St. Stephen which, thus patched up, madthe truth appear false, blasphemous. St. Stephen's Defense.

After these paid witnesses had given their testimony, charging blasphemy—the penalty for which was stoning—the Sanhedrin, with a show of fairness, permitted St. Stephen to reply. This he did in a masterly way, by taking up the t hread of Jewish history, showing his implicit faith in Gods promises to Abraham. In orderly manner be brought the thought of his hearers down to the time of Moses and' the giving of the Law, and reminded them that Moses had said that in due time God would raise up a greater Prophet than he. (Deuteronomy 18:1*. 19.) This greater Prophet, he allowed them to infer, was Jesus: and since Moses ha<l particularly referred to Jesus thus as greater, it could not bidisloyalty to Moses to accept that greater Prophet. Thus one feature of tlie charge was overthrown. As for the Temple, he reminded iiis hearers that God first established the Tabernacle in the wilderness, and later bad provided, the Temple in its stead. It was no disrespect to the Tabernacle for them to believe in Solomon’s Tern pie. God had now provided that a still higher Temple should take the place of the building made with hands. The higher Temple was spiritual, to !•<» composed of God's people, who as iiv ing stones would be builded together as a habitation of God through the Spirit. As it was not blasphemy accept Solomon's Temple as instead of Moses’ Tabernacle, neither should it be considered blasphemous to accept this higher, spiritual Temple, of which Jesus is the Foundation, as instead of the typical Temple of wood and stone. So convincing were St. Stephen's words that his hearers realized that

Forgive my Murderers.

death. The moment came. St. Stephen. preaching Christ and the blessings yet to, come through Him, was radiant in face. Looking toward Heaven, he exclaimed, “Behold, I see the heavens opened, and the Son of Man standing on the right hand of God." This was the signal for the Sanhedrin to raise a cry of blasphemy and to rush upon God’s messenger. We may be sure that a mob was ready to follow the Sanhedrin’s sug gestlon. Pushing Jesus' minister outside of their gates, the crowd threw their clothing at the feet of the young man, Saul of Tarsus, who thus became their authority for the stoning: and they stoned Stephen to death. This was his climax of victory—faithfulness unto death.

St. Stephen's Defense.

their cause was coming out second: best. It is assumed that Saul of Tarsus was a member of that" Sanhedrin. Their only hope uo w was that they could fasten upon something that St Stephen said as being blasphemous and rush him to

SCRAPS

England, with her colonies in all latitudes, is far ahead of the United States in knowledge' of tropical diseases and medicines, although the success of pur sanitary officials at Panama and elsewhere has been so great. Sir Henry Francis Lowell, who died recently, was dean of the London school, of tropical medicine, an institution to which this country can offer no parallel. The Leeuwenhoek medal of the Netherlands Academy of Science, awarded to Surgeon-General Sir David Bruce, F. R. S., A. M. S., has been presented to him by the Netherlands minister to Great Britain. The r edal was founded in 1875, on the occasion of the Leeuwenhoek celebration in Delft, and is presented every ten years. It was awarded to Ehrenberg in 18 75, to Ferdinand Cohn in JS*-"-. to Louis Pasteur in 1855. and to Beyerinch in 1905. The annual mineral Output of Brijsh Columbia is valued at approximately $30,000,000. The figures for 1913 exceeded that amount, while the product last year was some $4,000,00(1 short of that of the previous year. The decrease in the minerals produced in the province last year,* as compared with 1913, was due to the European war, which disturbed the metal markets throughout the world, producing a depressing effect on the industry in British Columbia.

The town of Nottingham, England. disposes : of its sewage on a farm of about 2,000 acres lying a short distance away. Rags and coarser materials are screened out and the sewage isi applied to the soil as a fertilizer. Most of it is given to the soil in a liquid state by means of ditches. This requires a thorough system of under-drainage. This farm not only solves the problem of disposing of the town’s sewage, but it also nets a good profit: the income from the sale of its products during the last fiscal year was SIOO,OOO.

The English correspondent of OfAipliances writes from London: "Women and girls enter the industrial field in increasing numbers every week. All the old ideas about women’s work are being knocked ini the head. Conventions go by the board and the nation is benefiting.” Concerning the liquor problem the j sam- ■ orrespondent says: “Crime and drunkenness have dropped tremeiidously in this country since the i war began, the latter, of course, ■j largely as a result of restricted hours that now prevail for the selling of intoxicants, and the legal abolition of the old-time custom of ‘treating’ to “drinks, buying intoxicants on credit, and the compulsory lowering of the alcoholic strength of spirits.” Sir Charles Cheers Wakefield, who. recently took office as lord mayor of London, is a man of large business affairs and directs the operations of one of the great English oil companies. Since 1895 he has lived in London. He started on the long road ( to high office in 1904. when he was I elected member of the court of com--1 mon council. He has been decorated by the president of France, the king of Belgium, and. in other and different days, the kaiser. He has traveled greatly, and has written a

, book called “Future Trade in the j Far East." The new lord mayor , has always been deeply interested in charitable works and prizes high- ; ly decorations of the Order of Mercy and the Order of St. John of Jerusalem, of which he is a knight of grace. He i< also a keen art collector. The United States bureau of plant * industry has carried on for a number | of years experiments designed to insure better methods of cultivating l end utilizing drug plants, and notei vorthy results have recently been recorded, says the Scientific American. About 150 species of drug and related plants are now under experimental culture on heavy clay at Arlington farm, and on the sandy loam near Glenn Dale. Md. At Arlington permanent plantings are being made, which will furnish material. now badly needed, for standardizing crude drugs. One important line of Inquiry is in regard to the relation of special feeding to the development of the active principles in medicinal plants. A new strain of belladonna has been obtained by the bureau through breeding and selection, which has a greatly increased alkaloidal content and points the way to a notable improvement in the quality of this drug noW found on the market.

RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR. To half pint of water add 1 ox Bay 601 ° f Compound, and %ox of glycerine. Apply to the hair * week unUI it becomes the desired shade.. Any druggist can put l this un or rou raa mix It at home at very little cost Fud directions for making and use comBarbo Compound. It will gradually darken streaked, faded gra> hafr, and removes dandruff. It is excel lent for falling hair and win make harsh £*’, r ** t wffl not color the scatp, » not sticky or greasy, and not rub off.

Notice of Primary Election Precept for the March Primary Election. 1916. J State of Indiana, Jasper County, ss: The State of Indiana, to the Sheriff of Jasper County, Greeting: You are hereby commanded to give due and legal notice to the qualified voters of Jaspfcr County. Indiana, that a Primary election will be held at the various voting Places in said County on Tuesday, March 7th, 1916, between the hours of 6 a. rn and, J p. nj. for the purpose of expressing a. preference of candidates on the Democratic, Republican, and Progressive party tickets for the following offices in the United States, viz.: ► , One candidate for president on Democratic ticket One candidate for president on Republican ticket. j One candidate for president on Progressive ticket One candidate for vice-president on Democratic ticket One candidate for vice-president on Republican ticket Gre candidate for vice-president on Progressive ticket And also preferences for the. following offices in the State Of Indiana, viz.One candidate for United States Senator on Democratic ticket Owe candidate for United States Senator on Republican ticket One candidate for United States Senator on Progressive ticket One candidate for Governor on Democratic ticket One candidate for Governor oil Republican ticket One candidate for Governor on Progressive ticket And also for the purpose of nominating candidates for Representative in Congress for rhe Tenth (10) Congressional District of the State of Indiana, viz.: One candidate for Congress on Democratic ticket ; One candidate for Congress on Republican ticket - One candidate for Congress on Progressive ticket One candidate for Prosecuting Attorney for the Thirtieth Judicial Circuit on Democratic ticket One candidate for Prosecuting Attorney for the Thirtieth Judicial Circuit on Republican ticket Also for the purpose of nominating candidates for the following offices in Jasper County, Indiana, viz.: One candidate for Representative, from Jasper, Newton and Benton Counties on Democratic ticket One candidate for Representative from Jasper, Newton and Benton Counties on Republican ticket One candidate for Representative from Jasper, Newton and Benton Counties Progressive ticket One candidate for Treasurer on Democratic ticket One candidate for Treasurer on Republican ticket One candidate for Sheriff on Democratic ticket One candidate for Sheriff on Republican ticket One candidate for Surveyor on Democratic ticket One candidate for Surveyor on Republican ticket One candidate for Coroner on Democratic ticket One candidate for Coroner on Republican ticket One candidate for Recorder on Democratic ticket One candidate for Recorder on Republican ticket . One candidate for Commissioner for Ist district on Democratic ticket One candidate for Commissioner of Ist District'on Republican ticket One candidate for Commissioner for 2nd District on Democratic ticket One candidate for Commissioner for 2nd district on Republican ticket And also for the purpose of electing six delegates to the Democratic State Convention: Eight Delegates to the Republican State Convention, and three delegates to the Progressive State Convention. And for the further purpose of electing one precinct committeeman In each precinct of Jasper County in Indiana for each of the democratic, republican and progressive parties. - : : ; —— —----- _—.. ... - —l. The names of the respective candidates on the various tickets for the various offices with their postoffice addresses appear below: .

DEMOCRATIC TICKET. President—Woodrow Wilson, Trenton, New Jersey. Vice President —Thomas R. Marshall, Indianapolis. U. S. Senator—John W. Kern, Indianapolis. Governor—John A. M. Adair, Portland, Indiana. Leonard B. Clore, White River Township, Johnson County, Indiana. Congressman Tenth District—George B. Hershman. Crown Point, Ind.; Rheno M. Isherwood, Lafayette, Indiana. Prosecuting Attorney Thirtieth Judicial Circuit—C. Arthur Tuteur, Rensselaer, Indiana. For Joint-Representative Jasper, Newton and Benton Counties—Carl Lamb, Grant Township, Benton County, Ind ; John A. McFarland, Rensselaer, Ind.; John A. Wildasin, Goodland, Ind. County Treasurer—Stephen A. Brustiahan, Parr, Ind. .County Recorder —William D. Bringle, Rensselaer, Ind, County Sheriff—John G. Culp, Moody, Ind. . - County CCronef—Alfred P. Rainier, Remington, Ind. County Surveyor—DeVere Yeoman, Rensselaer, Ind, County Commissioner First District— William Grube, Jr., Wheatfield, Ind. County Commissioner Second District —Robert J. Yeoman, Rensselaer, Ind. Precinct Committeemen. East precinct Barkley township, W. H. Barkley, Moody, IndWest precinct Barkley township, Sam Scott, Rensselaer, Ind. East precinct Carpenter township, C. W. Harner, Remington, Ind: West precinct, Carpenter township, James C. Wood, Remington, Ind. South precinct Carpenter township, Alfred P. Rainier, Remington, Ind. Gillam township, A. D. Hershman, Medaryville. Ind. Jordan township, Frank . Fenwick, Goodland, Ind. Kankakee township, Nickoli Rasmussen, Tefft, Ind. Keener township, C. W. Gilmore, De- - Motto, Ind. Marion township. First precinct, Edward Herath. Rensselaer, Ind.; James E. Walter, Rensselaer, Ind, Marion township. Second precinct, Dolph Day, Rensselaer, Ind.; William R. Nowels, Rensselaer, Ind. Marion township. Third, precinct, F. E. Babcock, Rensselaer, Ind.; Conrad Kellner, Rensselaer, Ind. . Marion township. Fourth precinct, Joseph Nagel, Rensselaer, Ind.; Wilson Shaeffer, Rensselaer, Ind. Milroy township, John Mitchell, McCoysburg, Ind. Newton township, Carey L. Carr, Rensselaer, Ind. North precinct. Union township, O. A. Brouhard. Fair Oaks, Ind. South precinct, Union township, Frank O. Harriott, Fair Oaks, Ind. Walker township, William Hershman, Medaryville, Ind. Wheatfield township, Bert Vandercar, Wheatfield. Ind. Delegates to State Convention.

First district, composed of Keener, Union and Newton townships: Felix R. Erwin, Fair Oaks, Ind,; Robert J. Yeoman, Rensselaer, Ind. Third district, composed of WheatFeld, Kankakee and Walker townships: Simon Fendig. Wheatfield, Ind. Fourth district, composed of First and second precincts of Marion township, Milroy and Hanging Grove townships: O. K. Rainier, Rensselaer, Ind. Fifth district, composed of Carpenter township: Alfred P. Rainier. Remington, Ind. REPUBLICAN TICKET. President—Charles W. Fairbanks, Indianapolis, Ind- ■ ; U. S. Senator —Harry S.‘New, Indian-' npolis. Ind.: Arthur R. Robinson, Indianapolis, Ind.; .Tames E. Watson, Rushville. Ind. Governor- —James P. Goodrich, Winchester; Ind.: Warren T. McCray, Kentland, Ind.; Quincy A. Myers, Logansport, Ind.' Congressman Tenth District—Nelson I. Bozarth. Valparaiso, Ind.;'William R. Wood. Lafayette, Ind. Prosecuting Attorney Thirtieth Judicial Circuit—Reuben Hess. Kentland, Ind.' Joint Representative Jasper, Newton and Benton Counties—R. Lyle Constable, Grant Township, Newton County, Ind.; William L. Wood, Parr, Jasper County. Ind. County Treasurer —Charles V. May, Rensselaer. Ind. County Recorder—George W. Scott, Rensselaer. Ind. County Sheriff—Ben D. McColly, Rensselaer, Ind. County Coroner—Cecil E. Johnson, Rpnsselaer, Ind. County Surveyor—Edgar Nesbitt, Rensselaer. Ind. County Commissioner FirsL District— Henry W. Marble, Wheatfield, Ind. —County Commissioner Second District —Daniel S. Makeever, Rensselaer, Ind. Precinct Committeemen. East precinct Barkley township, John F. Payne, Rensselaer, Ind.

In testimony whereof, I have hereunto subscribed my name and affixed the seal of the Jasper Circuit Court this 16th dav of February, 1916. f JUDSON H. PERKINS, Clerk Circuit Court. SHERIFF'S PROCLAMATION ; The legally qualified voters of the several townships of Jasper County, Indiana. aye hereby notified to appear at the seceral voting precincts of their respective townships, on Tuesday, the 7th day of March, A. D. 1916, for the purpose of selecting, with their ballots, candidates for .the parties named in the foregoing for the above mentioned offices, and for expressing preferences for other offices above named. , 'r' . ", Witness my hand in the City of Rensselaer, this 16th day of Februarv, 1916. BEN D., McCOLLY, Sheriff of Jasper County, Indiana.

West precinct Barkley township, Ralph Johnson, Rensselaer. Ind. East precinct Carpenter township, Charles H. Peck, Remington, Ind. West precinct Carpenter township. George H. May, Remington, Ini South precinct Carpenter township, Charles Hascall, Remington, Ind. Gillam township, S. C. Robinson, Medaryville, Ind. Hanging Grove township, Charles W. Bussell, McCoysburg, Ind. Jordan township, Charles G. Kissinger, Rensselaer, Ind. Kankakee township, Charles Stalbaum, Tefft, Ind. Keener township, John Greve, DeMotte, Ind. I First precinct Marion township, WoodI hull I. Spitler, Rensselaer, Ind. Second precinct, Marlon township," True D. Woodworth, Rensselaer, Ind. Third precinct Marion township, Clarence P. Fate, Rensselaer, Ind. Fourth precinct Marion township, Charles Morlan, Rensselaer, Ind. Milroy township, George W. Foulks, ■ Monon, Ind. I Newton township, George A. Daugheray, Rensselaer, Ind. ] South precinct Union township, Geo. H. Hammerton, Parr, Ind. North precinct Union township, Newton A. McKay, Fair Oaks, Ind. Walker township, Harry B. Brown. Knlman, Ind. Wheatfield township, Albert S. Keene. ' Wheatfield, Ind. j Delegates to State Convention. i First district, composed of Kankakey, Gillam and Walker townships: Harry [ B. Brown, Kniman, Ind. ; Second district, composed of Wheat- . fielq and Keener townships, Henry W. ; Marble, Wheatfield, Ind.; John Greve. DeMotte, Ind. Third district, composed of Barkley and Hanging Grove townships: Wm. Whited, Newland, Ind. Fourth district, composed of second I and fourth precincts of Marion township: J. D. Allman, Rensselaer, Ind.; Geo. H. Healey, Rensselaer, Ind. Fifth district, composed of third pre1 cinct of Marion, Milroy and Jordan townships: Clarence P. Fate, Rensselaer, Ind.; Moses Leopold, Rensselaer, Ind. | Sixth district, composed of Carpenter township: Charles H. Peck, Remington. Ind. Seventh district, composed of First precinct of Marion, and Newton township: Jesse Nichols, Rensselaer, Ind. Eighth district, composed of Union township: Walter S. McConnell, Fair Oaks, Ind.; Fred Iliff, Parr, Ind. PROGRESSIVE TICKET.

U. S. Senator—James B. • Wilson, Bloomington, Ind. Governor—J. Frank Hanley, Indianapolis, Ind. Congressman Tenth District—John G. Brown, Motion, Ind. Joint Representative Jasper, Newton and Benton Counties—George W. Hobson, Hanging GrOve Township, Jasper ounly, Ind.; Edward A. Perkins, Goodland. Ind.; Ward A. Smith, Boliver Township Benton County, Ind. Precinct Committeemen. West precinct Barkley township, Elias Arnold, Rensselaer, Ind. East precinct Barkley township, William Folger, Rensselaer, Ind. East precinct Carpenter township, W. C. Smalley, Remington, Ind. West precinct Carpenter township, Will A. Smalley, Remington, Ind. South precinct Carpenter township, 3. 11. Cornwell, Remington, Ind. Gillam township, Herbert Faris, Medaryville, Ind. . Hanging Grove township, Geo. W. Hobson, McCoysburg, Ind. Jordan township, E. L. Fidler, Rensselaer, Ind. Kankakee township, W. S. DeArmond, Tefft, Ind. Keener township, Jacob A. Hanaway, DeMotte, Ind. First precinct Marion township, B. J. Moore, Rensselaer, Ind. Second precinct Marlon township, Chas. M. Blue, Rensselaer, Ind. Third precinct, Marion township, F. M. Haskell, Rensselaer, Ind. Fourth precinct Marion township, W. R. Brown. Rensselaer, Ind. Milroy township, George L. Parks, Remington, Ind. New’ton township;, David L. Halstead, Rensselaer, Ind. North pxficinct Union township, H. J, Dexter, Rensselaer, Ind. South precinct Union township, Sol Norman, Parr, Ind. Walker township, Chas. A. Walker, Gifford, Ind. Wheatfield township, O. D. Brown, Wheatfield; Ind. Delegates to State Convention. First district, composed of Keener, Wheatfield, Kankakee, Walker, Union, Ea-kley west precinct, and Gillam lownsh'i i: Harry E. Gifford, Gifford, Ind Second district, composed of East Barkley and Marion townships, Schuyler C. Irwin, Rensselaer, Ind. Th’rd district, composed of Hanging Greve, Milroy, Jordan, Carpenter and Newton townships. Lee Alison, Remington, Ind. \ .