Jasper County Democrat, Volume 19, Number 50, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 September 1916 — Page 6
I The Opportunity of a Lifetime Sp^EFE^fT] I|| U 7 ||| On the Special Date printed below we will >ij Thi* Coupon entitles you to enter oar Free |? I I I Worth of Pure Aluminum Ware | conduct a Big Sale on f! v Counting Conte*. f 1 ■ 22 pieces 22. pieces ! ° ‘ <£)j You may win the handsome Set of pure (o? • When presented in connection with the V • * ¥ aluminum ware to be awarded the person M | 5K purchase of a Cole’s Hot Blast Morß WS f I SV O U U „ „ \\A counting the nearest correct number of ■ | VI Model Range during the date of our Big V/UIC O IIUL DISLSL M parts in the construction of Cole’s Hot I I Factory Stove Sale as printed below- M imXIIIgVO Blast Range. Counting takes place during II 1 ■ j *><*• The Best Range Ever Built for Family Use i our Big Factory stove Sale. I * S or r amity Use S I I 1 I We Invite the Entire Community To Visit Our I Big Factory Stove Sale I I Large crowds intend to visit this Big Sale. In order that you may ] I U; ikiMßSSltaiiiiil y receive the personal attention of the factory expert we remind I I ir,,!. . f<e•a.i.iiMiMi our customers and their friends that the Sale starts I I 111 BEsSSI promptly at 9a. m. It continues both morning and j [ JkdlUsMfegp-afternoon. Come early Remember the I Everybody | Saving combustion. Cole’s ' “ " ' « - itusniui J (Smokeless and Odorless Broiler and Toaster that broils meats to ' a queen s taste, Cole s Automatic Fresh Air Oven that bakes fl evenly on all sides, and the many other Special and Exclusive Features, pH*' - ilia gyifery 'mjß make Cole’s Hot Blast Range the most durable, the most economical, Es .'%W 1 and the greatest time and labor saving range ever placed on the market. s I ftQk | Thursday, Friday, Saturday, September 21, 22, 23 j /gjQ|, | LSSJ WARNER BROS. |^sH
INDIANAPOLIS NEWS LETTER
(Coninued from page two)
•where the influence of any class in all our history has brought about so many laws for the good of the country as the pressure of labor.” That the common school system of the United States today stands as a monument to the pressure of labor. ‘‘As soon as the managers of the present flip-flop campaign policy of the Republican party realize that the people of the country appreciate what a beneficial part thb ‘pressure of labor has played in writing the laws of this nation-—why our Republican friends, will hop again, change their hues, raise their cries, and like the Hunia bird keep on the wing.’’ He said that the vacillation of Hughes in jumping from one campaign issue to another reminded him of the famous old railroad ditty, also an Indiana production, ‘‘Off again, on gone again, Finnegan.’*
One of the greatest ovations of the evening came when Governor Glynn finished his address and VicePresident Marshall arose to speak. The vice-president referred to the great progressive movement of IPI2 and the repudiation by the .people of a leadership which had made of the Republican party “the perquisite of the few." He declared that this movement was organized with as much enthusiasm as any of the and its campaign was waged along campmeeting methods." Describing the results which followed, he said, in part: More than three years of the most fateful history in the annals of mankind have elapsed. Xow the leader of the Progressive crusade has turned his back on the hobland. As he runs he cries that the great mission of the Progressive Party has been accomplished and that it is now time to turn the country over to the very men he condemned. If the mission of the Progressive party has been accomplished then to the Democratic party belongs the honor, for what has been written; what has been done, it has done. Fairness, however, compels the statement that the nomination of Mr. Hughes fulfilled the promise to recall the judiciary. The evangelist has pronounced the benediction and adjourned the campmeeting sine Deo.” He said further that among the side issues of the campaign ‘‘are those Republicans who can live, but who do not thrive out of office. They have become so accustomed to
listening to their prophets that they really believe, in the face of the records of 1873, 1877, 1897 and I 1 907 that prosperity demands upon Republican rule. So they tender to the voter a side issue phrased somewhat as follows: ‘Temporary prosperity is not essentially permanent. You may die tomorrow. Prepare to meet your God.’
“This cry comes from those whose speeches fairly ooze with protestations of their faitli in the brotherhood of men. But in the midst of their apostrophes to the flag as the emblem of liberty, fraternity and equality, the far-reaching hand of temporary prosperity clutches them by the throat and chokes them into semi-insensibility while the spectre of a one-legged or one-armed remnant of the European conflict, a blood brother under God, keeping himself from starvation by se'lina some article in America, rises before them.
“The honest business man no longer dreads a panic nor doubts that with good security his credit will remain indefinitely unimpaired. Who would repeal the income tax amendment which was too broad to suit the Republican candidate for President when as governor he was advising the New York legislature?
"Who balks at good roads, rural, credits, agriculture education and federal aid for the betterment in every way of men and conditions? What then is the ground upon which the Republican party bases its hopes of a return to power? Surely not trpon ,?inything it says it would have done or will do. It carefully conceals from the voter any view upon the real issues of the campaign while it seeks by insinuation to provoke a prejudice against the President. The real issue of this campaign is that thought which goes? with the father to his work or business, which engrosses every mother, wife and sweetheart, which sitsdown with them at every fireside and goes to bed with them in every home—and that thought is, ‘Gan the President of the United States continue to so patiently manage our international affairs as to maintain honorable peace?’
“The one bright, peaceful spot under th£ sun this day is America and it is so because the President pleads guilty to the charge of using words rather than shot and shell and shrapnel. Three years ago we thought that the age of brute force had passed and that the brain and heart of man were to rule the world. Impartially and in accordance with
our treaties and the principles of international law, the President has used mere words, For this the exigencies of a political campaign demand that he shall be criticized. If America is to lead the world toward that now seemingly far-distant goal where brute force shall be bound by wisdom and conscience in fetters which it can never again break, then these are the hours for mere words. Parties come and parties go. Politicians and partisans strut their brief hour and disappear Socrates drank his cup of hemlock but philosophy lived on. The spirit of Savanarola - went up in smoke from the market place in Florence but religion remained the supreme hope of the human heart. Mocked at, misunderstood, misjudged, Lincoln went to his martyr’s crown but the republic was reunited and still fives. In this hour of world darkness, I have faith that humankind is going
upward to the heights, not downward to the vales. The judgment of the American people is not to make a martyr of the man who brooded over the republic in storm-stressed times and by mere words spoke peace to the troubled seas of international politics. “Not for additional honor, but in the hope that I may assist in the re-election of Woodrow Wilson, who has not walked where the path has led, but who has walked where there was no path and who has left a trail, I accept this nomiation.”
Our Jitney Offer—Tills and 5c DON’T MISS THIS. Cut out this slip, enclose with five cents to Foley & Co., t hicago, 111., writing your name and address clearly. You will leceive in return a trial package containing Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound, for coughs, colds and croup, Foley Kidney Pills, and Foley Cathartic Tablets. Sold everywhere. —Advt.
WE PROGRESSIVES.
He Was Worried and Hopeless “For 10 years I was bothered with kidney trouble,” writes T. F. Hutchinson, Little Rocs, Ark. “i was worried and had almost given up all hopes. I used Sve boxes of Foley Kidney Pills and am now a well man.” Foley Kidney Pills drive out aches, pains, rheumatism and all kidney trouble symptoms. Sold everywhere.—Advt. The purchase by Cleveland interests of the Nickel Plate railroad is made remarkable by the fact that the whole line was bought to get control of terminal facilities in Cleveland. O. P. and M. J. Van Sweringen, two young men who have been enormously successful in recent realty deals in Cleveland, arc at the head of the buying syndicate. The whole project involves a terminal plan which may give Cleveland a union station comprising also steam and electric transportation and a suburban development scheme.
—New York World.
STATE HAPPENINGS RECORDED IN BRIEF
News Items . From All Over Indiana. MALARIA IN INDIANA CAMP Epidemic Hits Llano Grande Resulting in 65 Guardsmen Being Sent to the Hospital—A “Quinine” Brigade Has, Been Formed.
Indianapolis, Sept. 15. —A malaria epidemic, resulting in 65 guardsmen being sent to the hospital, has brokep out in the camp of the Indiana National Guard at Llano Grande, Tex., according to dispatches received here. A. “quinine brigade” has been formed, each soldier getting live grains a day with his rations. Swampy places tire being oiled and ail soldiers are required to sleep under mosquito nets.
Park Boards to Meet. Indianapolis, Sept. 15. —The park boards of 12 Indiana cities were invited by Mayor Bell and the Indianapolis park board to meet here October 7 to plan a revision of the park laws of Indiana. Through the conference it is hoped to draft changes in the law’ which will meet the requirements of each city, The chief change desired by the local park board is the creation of a park bonding district so that the cost of much park work may be thrown on future generations. Among the cities named in the call are South Bend, Gary, Fort Wayne, Terre Haute, Hammond and Richmond. Town Marshal Arrested. Sullivan, Sept. 15. —Steve Dooley, town marshal of Carlisle, was arrested on a charge of assault and battery with intent to kill following trouble with Dr. G. W. Pirtle. Dooley gave SSOO bond and was released. The trouble between them occurred in Doctor Pirtle’s office over an account, it was said, and Doctor Pirtle alleges the marshal drew his revolver. Dooley denied the accusations. -Si General Wilder at Reunion. Frankfort, Sept. 15. —With tears in his eyes Gen. John 11. Wilder, eightysix, told the surviving veterans of Wil-. der’s Lightning brigade that he did not again exepect to greet his comrades at a reunion. The old general came here from his home in Tennessee to attend the two-day reunion. Many affecting scenes were enacted as the farewells were said to General Wilder.
To Seek More Converts. Plainfield, Sept. 15.—Greater evangelistic efforts during the coming year were urged at the western yearly meeting of Friends, after a report had been presented showing that $60,000 was spent in evangelistic work last year, but that the number of conversions had decreased. Greetings were received from the yearly meetings of Dublin and London. Warden Finds Seine. Columbus, Sept. l.">. —Frederick Eiders, deputy fish and game warden, found a 120-foot seine hanging in a hog pen at the home of Samuef Oaks, cast of here, and he confiscated the seine and arrested Oaks. Oaks pleaded guilty in the court of Justice Whitehorn and was fined $5 and costs, which he paid. The seine was burned. Preacher Gets “Fight Up." Clinton. Sept. 15.—Rev. William Brandon, pastor of the Methodist Episcopal church here, got his “fight up” following the reeipt of an anonymous letter Saying: “You good citizens better attend to your church and let other things alone.” Rev. Brandon declared there would be no let up in the fight against "blind tigers.” 1 ft Married the Other Fellow Kokomo, Sept. 15.—Gusta Seton, the twenty-year-old daughter of James Seton, a prominent Kokomo merchant after promising Anthou Markon, a 1 eru merchant, to whom she was engaged, that she would meet him to se<uie a marriage license, eloped with crank Sansone, her brother-in-law.
Hurt Playing Horse. Jeffersonville, Sept. 15. —Johnnie and Jimmy, members of the Jeffersonville Orjhans’ home, both about nine years old, were playing horse in the yard and ran against a corner of the building. Each suffered a long gash across the front of his forehead. Several stitches were required to close the wounds. Sanitary Drinking Fountains. Oakland City, Sept. 15.—Sanitary drinking fountains of the bubbling variety have been erected in this city by the W. C. T. U. The fountains will be ice-cooled. A public dedication of the fountains will' be held Friday, the occasion being the county convention of tile W. C. T. U. Fish Life Impossible. Indianapolis, Sept. 15.—The water of White river, from the packing plants in Indianapolis, a distance of 12 miles south, is so polluted that fish life is impossible, chemists of the state board of health said in a report. Train Kills Man. Gary, Sept. in.— John Blaine was killed and Samuel Harris injured when a Pennsylvania flyer struck a motortruck at Ambridge Crossing.
