Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 50, Number 44, Jasper, Dubois County, 17 July 1908 — Page 1
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Jaspeb, "Indiana, Friday, July 17, 1908.
Vol. 50.
ßRYAN and KERN! ! BRYJW WAIN IS BIGGES! IN HISTORY. i . TT7T71"n TT "X T "" H iTTTk T A m -r-i
VV JJXJl IN UMilN ATMJ. Lastina One Hour aal Tfiirlu-Twn mm
Bill Senator From Oklahoma Set off the mine in a Speech. Neb York Oele alion was Only Delegation (Met,
... v . - WW V. lIlLLil l.nii lIVJ J I F "'m. va
,r , -would be the choice of the party for the second! n ' ,jAMiU1AW1, ) .'. Thomas R. Marshal, Democratic candidate fori Denver, Colo., July 9. A scene which not .;or cf Indiana placed Kern in nomination. Mar-.word PamterPf word painters, W. J. Bryan, i
NO. 44'
veil tne nominations lor President and Vice-Presi-tlvj Democratic convention at Denver last week, i rumination of Bryan for first place has becm n fWJ
nclusion for sometime, and most of the interest lav I
even that
I - - - A. W LA 1 A I .1 J t I II I 1 1 I I
1 r lorinrr IT oi'n in nmviinnh'nn ...... t OUfttGIV nftSPl'ihP JYlJlViVfiil tn 1 1nmnof In nnfiA!
f oral oi y. It was as follows: aion Wednesday afternoon and the cause of the remarkaMarshall's Speech. iD,e demonstration, for such it was in every sense, was the
i live at me instance oi Honorable John ö. Lamb llYllrul1 Ui Wlü Iiai,ie 01 iVil
.üana. to irreet the reDresentativs of n nfiim: rin 0" senator irom UKianoma
' . V- " i
iut l.cvir dismayed ciemocra -united aid confident uemoci
; -crs i.f a new Mjrmirtime in the caiiije of the neonle; these said raps, with chier credit to the Taft
i'.stitutiw.al go
e hoiv : to th i
iven. ll is
Jul thing to end wc'i
Decrease of Selooos not Greai Last year. A VOIinMf lliof inwittltf rA f .... Cll...1-1- H.r 1 . a -
onH Pniilrl Uni On flhnnhnA i.i T . J, luary OLU00S iVIOOre. cniei Ot and Mil HOt B8 CiieCKeOJthe Indiana bureau of statistics, shows that thp pmn ,nf
I . - w v W A A U
or money received in the state for county, city and town "censes in 1907 was about the same as that received in lyOo and that about the same numhpr
1 rM! . 7 ' "Vuiioi-O HC1C ICS sued, lhe report gives totals only as 10 the number of county licenses issued. The numhpr in 1007 ,oc sou
and the number in 1906 was 5,253. The amount received
&a i ,yS CI ty anü cown ,lcenses m 1907 was SL 444.639.58 and the amount in 1906 was $1,415,9S6 59 An idea of what proportion the fees received from liquor licenses are of the taxes levied for all purposes of af-
nocrat, t3 join the delegates Pe Secretary laft a gentle irnf)crhcv: to hail von ass he had rapped President Roo
springtime in the caiiije of the people fhese said raps, with chief credit to the Taft rap, Qvernment. rAnnlnnP proved the undoiiier of the nroud record of thp. RpnnhhVnn
ipturs declare that no man who nuts' national convention for continuous cheering forty-eiffht
lcv and looketh back is fit for the kinorlnm minutes tor Iheodore Roosevelt when Senator Lodire de-
a good thing to have begun well, it is an cjared the President to be the most hated and at the same end wc'i itlme te best loved man in lhe country.
a hau adoiAed a platform that meets with the ap-L Gore' ,in Praisinff the Oklahoma constitution, declared
1 ot every man who claims to be a democrat. (Ap- Joosevejt maae remains aooist it not suitable for publica- .) It is a platform that does not recognize the'110"- ''Taft,ured lts ejection, Bryan its adoption."
of any man except the right that is given to him by! saying this ne touched oft a mine of enthusiasm
his American citizenship. It is a nlatform that vnicn Voum na.ve caused tne wans ot the Denver auditor-
110 man's rights in this country of ours. ilul t0 nave llen were it not a new building.
A.'
Ol
poses durmer the last vear is mmv than nho aaa
lhe report compiled bv Mrs. Mnm-P cVinme oi -un.
1 , , 1 . . , , , o enow biiau inj state is making rapid strides toward the water wag-on
ine num oer ot saloons affected by remonstrance and closed m 1907 was 297. F. S. Shumaker, of the Indiana anti-saloon league examined the report. It compares well with figures 'that have been gathered by the league show that 60 saloons were affected bv remonstrance ir 1907 th cfof;of;i
port snows thar 297 saloons vp?-p pfnalhr wi xr
or the saloons vhich, as shown by the league's report, were affected in 190. were not on,i 1 fu,v i '
a last we have come to understand that it is not the 14 ?r 0110 Jon hour and thirty-two minutes thrown in iorl-fSJ 10ÄS1 Sm8 ,ws also thai durinff the first six
K? traouinirs that make the democrat, but the inside ooa measure, men and women cheered and waved flaes. 111 TL"? VA iwinbwereanectea oy remonstrance.
cations ihat speak for him, and upon this linminn teA n mnn mhn cfnnrlc fni oll f
lit.. V 4 wwv w itlltl I MilU kJVUilUlJ IUI Uli Ul 1 V I i. lyl I lJL ' 1. rt ' J v ..ww.w A S A v T:to the oravetv of the occasion, namrled amunrl Mir Imii nn
- say of the nominee of this convention as Webster i tl! then mounted the stage and mingled with the i of Massachusetts: 'There he stands, look at him., notables when not tooting their horns to add still more , lau.se.) jspwe to the situation. Several women fainted but all l come from Indiana. (Cheers.) The winds of hea- were soon revived.
never lanned. tne circnn&r sun htrht never snnnner the ! viui qia oiAiivb oilkmt.
v never iannea, tne circling sunngni never spanned the1 m, wl oiaij oissl: ' ders of a better land than our own Indiana. (Applause) lhe ?.nlv states wmch cll(1 not join in the demonstration . ime from a state where every man is a politician and e1re New ,Yrlc New Jersey, Connecticut, Minnesota, icre every man is either an author or an orator. (Lauph-'1'6 and Georgia.
i
lo buar to you this nattering unction tor your souls, 1IU taiiuiudte u thnmrh wfl have hnpn nf times flefenlerl in TivK-.mn to show any sympathy
. mi it' fliic rriTUfonf inn will lioln nloncn flrA iMonr ma clolecrates iormed
and applause.) I come from the banks of the Wabash.' Obviously there was no politics m the attitude of the
olause.J 1 come to bear to this convention greetings iinnesoLa aiia ijeieware delegations. The tact that Johnson and Grav are still m the. nrPQirfonKnl runni'nrr
i the ashes of the dead democracy of Indiana. I theoretically, at least, is sufficient reason for the non-com-
to breathe again over this convention the blessing mittal attitude ot those delegates toward Bryan. iinizen of Hendricks, McDonald and Voorhees. I TTT1?e hostility of the Georgia delegation was a surprise.
l tneir own, tne "uracRers retused toward Brvan. Half a dozen Oenr-
a Cordon of defense thnh snvorrolv ro.
e will come aeain into our own. ;oiotcu an cuw iu put tue ueorgia suanaara m rne pro-
. utlemen, I said to you that it was, advisable that,ceon or Bryan jolhhers. uld end well the work of this convention. Do not Throughout the long and tumultous demonstration, Mr.
l that Indiana nas ceasea to oe a potent lactor in tne 111 11,0 iWlllc llCtlL j-wicuhi, nau ins ear at a receiver al history of this country. Let me tell vou what ancl listened to the cheers that came to him over 500 miles
1 cs know, that eighty per cent of the people of ot telephone wire as he ate watermelon. His friends here
.iht we wage is the world's old fight. It is the fight Jievfir in the history of national conventions, has there v many against the few. It is the fight that must been as long ä continuous demonstration in honor of any . 1... ,i l1 it 11 i a. nno rmn
a?e ov every buecciuinu KeiiLTatiun. li is a nirnt i1"4" . ...
!u at 2:01 ov
called arti fl
it to ner-
1 1 ti i -1 i- I t Tj 'mir nr rnn nmi"iAi?mnnr fhnf 1 ai 1 mt-i
ill Indiana. 11 is more man ueoataDie irrouna. it 111111 vA t,lc cu,i"uJ ,"c' -"e nujccuvc.
.v t back to its ancient moorings. It can become a1 Proud Daughters Witness Scene. 1 1 Mr. Brvan's dauorhter. Mrs. Ruth Brvan Tieavif.h jib
4 ill ciiw v. Vj Vi (.iiifju w v. v - luii vkj wjl liviii till ; ill 1 : . country. cended to the stage and her face was a picture of .varying , e have within our borders a man of riant intellect, emotions. In the great crowd of spectators sat Alice
nt-up Utica contracts his powers. There are some Roosevelt Long worth, who only a few weeks ago wit'.i enough to cover a township, some large enough I nessed a similar demonstration in honor of her own illus- , r a county, some great enough to fill a state, quo- trious father. t ars magnus sum, and there are some men who leap! . And all the time the remarkable ovation was in progress ' nmls ot state lines and cover the country. I pro-: tne picture of Grover Cleveland, a mammoth oil lir.hgraph, . nresent to this convention the name of a man who' looked down from the wall as if in silent recognition of
attir than the srreatest man in Indiana. the well-known attitude of the dead chieftain toward
. . i 1.1 . t
v,iv4o anü w uiere are Drewnes In Marion countv where the Indinnnnlic Pt-nnri nn .
and others are situated, the
In Allen county, the home of the Berghoff Brewin-com-pany, the amount naid was $43,850, $27,200 of this sum being paid in the city of Ft. Wayne. In Clay county, adjoining Vigo, the amount paid was $21,200, and in Vitro
Ä?nJhÄe Äfe company,
raiiaoo r v.dul"urg county the amount paid inm ? Uffl'-?i,oln o akT C0U?fcyj S139'394-; in Madison county, $Dl,02.22: St. Joseph countv. ssi ov a
pecanoe county, 521,76824. r--,,
The Republican national nlatform
steamship subsidies and to amend the anti-tust law so th.- v-n
roads may organize pools, but it promises to guarantee "resonable profits" to the trusts. Even body knows what thn frCfC e
, . . uw iura JL a reasonable profit" ls-cverything that can be squeezed out of
the people.
in. i . .. ...... ... i
He is a man grounded in all the doctrines of dem-' , While other states stances were being carried about v. He is a man of power and influence upon the the hal the New York standard was held by strong hands ii T-Tq ic n mnn itnoiit nnf. ni lilpmich imnn hielill its DulCe. W hue every other person in the trreat audi-
actor. He is a man who ran twice for governor of tonum was on his feet, fifteen of the stalwart New Yorkma, and twice ran 12,000 votes ahead of his ticket, ers sat in their seats, as immovable as the rock of GibralI tar. Among those who remained seated were Charles P.
.date for vice president of the United States. ?rPhy whose. face w?.rc: a
1 . ntlemen of this convention, beware how you close ! aia nc oecray in uw sngntest . u 1-.OC 4-u 'must hnve rnn-en in his nosom!
'liVfULlUll. xulio vuui vuiiv iiao iiiut tue UIJU1U-
4-1.., .1 . niT t- ihA iav V. y-v -x ... I.
ucmiiuc uuit;L e-urebbiun tnat
egree tne emotion that t7 A ' " V A I " 1 UM ss Thomas F. Grady, who1 f All it AU 11 V Hi! I d Dan Cogalon, another, a-tt
w -.- -tv -.-- Y S4V - 't -.' -
w. xiy si
nAv ! ' -
Vfin Muutvüu öuiJiciuciv iiirKuotcu, aiiu uju vjuiiaiuii, ciiiuuier Jyh- . 4. if4.i i i : 7LT 1... Jl
it in a way that will make democracy successful. forju'ö Vilu "fw?fcS,y wwwmg gum. lviurpny ae-; last hope' of a people is democracy.' As the liiHa-!dJired his delegation had not caucused and this was the -f the mother is to her infant child, as the golden ruiepason Jt did not join m the demonstration. j
the gospel of the man of God, so the doctrines of
'cracy are to the ever recurring wants of human kind. so on behalf of this state of Indiana I present to this
ention a man who, it he take your banner, will unturl ' on the uppermost battlements, of conquest, will bear : ravely and loyally to the end, and your hearts will be k-'dened with the acclaim with which he is greeted by people of America. , On behalf of Indiana I give to I his convention if it will ; him, John W. Kern." Great applause, in which the rdiuna delegation took a leading part J
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