Rensselaer Journal, Volume 12, Number 3, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 June 1902 — Page 4
The Rensselaer Journal Published Every Thursday by LESLIE CLARK. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. CteeOopy One Year.ll.oo Ctee Copy Six Months 50 One Copy Three Months 25 Entered at the post office at Rensselaer Ind.. as second class mail matter.
THE STATE TICKET.
Secretary of State — DANIEL E. STORMS. Auditor of State — DAVID E. SHERRICK, treasurer of State — NAT U. HILL. Attorney General— CHARLES W. MILLER. PD»rt Supreme Court — ROBERT A. BROWN. [Superintendent of Public Instruction — F. A. COTTON. State Statistician — BENJ. F. JOHNSON. State Geologist— W. S. BLATCHLEY. Budge Supreme Court, Fifth District— JOHN H. GILLETT. Budges Appellate Court— FRANK R. RCBY. U. Z. WILEY. W. J. HENLEY. JAMES R. BLACK. D. W. COMSTOCK. J W. E. ROBINSON.
DISTRICT TICKET. For Congress, EDGAR D. CRUMPACKER. For Judge loth Judicial Circuit, CHARLES W. HANLEY. Ter Prosecuting Att’y. 30th Judicial Circuit, JOHN 1). SINK. For loint Representative, JESSE E. WILSON. COUNTY TICKET. For Auditor. JAMES N. LEATHERMAN. For Treasurer. SAMUEL R. NICHOLS For Sheriff, ABRAHAM HARDY. For Surveyor, MYRT B. PRICE. For Coroner, W. J. WRIGHT. For Commissioner Ist District, ABRAHAM G. HALLECK For Commissioner 2nd District, FREDERICK WAYMIRE. For Commissioner 3rd District, CHARI.ES T. DENHAM. For County Councilmen, J3t districtJOHN HAHN and districtHAßVEV E PARK ISON 3rd districtJOHN MARTINDALE 4* districtWALTEß V. PORTER lED T. BIGGS At Large J . .ERIIARDT WEL'RTHNER (ANDREW J. HICKS
Th£' Kansas newspapers are cotn taenting upon the fact that not been a bank failure in K msas this year. It is, indeed, a sad day for Kansas calamity criers It would seem to have been a foolhardy piece of business for Mr Bryan io start a newspaper enterprise just st the time when the country is dashing to ruin both through the money and the imperial routes
A PICTURE Of health, we say of a perfectly health, ful woman, and it is a picture everyone loves to look upon. All the pictures of all the artists who have ever painted the glory and beauty of womanhood, are only copies and imitations of this picture. Never artist i'ii* luuifil i m i x ed a color ■ i on ijj s p a i e tte ■ 75 that can vie | ( = i with the hues JER I ■ s which tint a 2V I 3 : healthful worn- \ J X 3! an’s cheek. ■ ' 1 Why should ■ BBk vBT : t^l ’ s c h arm he ; sacrificed to : / sickness ? It : ; ; \ need not be |l I / [ save in rare i g i : cases. The gen- . S \ eral health of ; B i linked with the ■ local womanly - was ted cheek and sunken eye are in general but evidences of womanly diseases. Cure the diseases and the physical health is restored. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription cures the ills of women. It establishes regularity, dries weakening drains, heals inflammation and ulceration, and cures female weakness. Mrs. Mary R. Lewis, of Tanner, Gilmer Co., W. Va., writes : «I shall always recommend Dr. Tierce’s Favorite Prescription, * Golden Medical Discovery ’ and * Pleasant Pellets,’ for they cured Be when doctors and other medicines failed. For fifteen years I suffered untold misery. When I commenced taking Dr. Pierce's medicines, I had given up all hope of ever getting well, I could not lie down to sleep, ana everything I ate would almost cramp me to death. Was very nervous and could hardly walk across the room. I only weighed ninety pounds when I commenced taking these medicines six years ago; now I weigh one hundred and forty pounds and am having better health than ever before. My Mends all any they can hardly believe that I am the same person; after being sick so long X have changed to be robust and rosy cheeked." Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets invigorate fitamach, liver and bowels. _
The Indianapolis Journal says that “the last four years of Democratic rule left the country plunged in disaster and almost despair, but after six years of Republican rule, traffic is so congested that the greatest railroad systems in the world cannot handle it.” Theke was no “scuttle” in the sentiments expressed by Henry Wat terson in his remarks at the Sunday exercises of the Tippecanoe Battlefield Association celebrated on that historic battle ground, “We should go forward,” he said, “rather than backward. The Constitution in one hand, the Bible in the other. The flag overhead carrying to all lands and all peopleft the message alike of civilization and religion, the ark and the covenant of American freedom, along with the word of God.” The expression of such lofty and partiotic sentiments must come as a shock to those opposition statesmen who have been counting upon the brilliant Kentuckian as a bulwark of the antiimperialistic structure.
The proposition to change the date of the inauguration has become mixed up with the provision to at the same time change the date of adjournment of the short session of Congress, and on this latter point there has been some disagreement. There is no reason why the proposed inauguration change should fail to receive consideration at the hands of Congress, because an agreement cannot be reached at this time on the adjournment question. Every one has practically agreed that March 4th is an un safe and unsuitable time for inaugurating the President. Congress proposes to adjourn within the next five or six weeks. The two questions should be separated and prompt action taken to prevent a possible delay in action on the principal question of perhaps four years.
Dispatches state that the negroes of southern Illinois, in the section which is known as “Egypt,” are being shamefully treated, have had their churches and houses burned, and have been driven out of the country, A contemporary remarks that possibly Senator Tillman has recently passed through that section. And this calls to mind one of Secretary Hay’s early poems, in which the hero was a different kind of a Tillman. Tillman Joy returned from the war of the sixth s to this section of southern Illinois known as “Egypt.” He brought a negrd boy who had saved his life. Then, as now, the inhabitants of “Egypt” disliked negroes and they concluded to dispose of this negro lad. But Tillman Jov was faithful to his black friend, and as the poem goes, said: “Ye may resoloot till the cows come home, But if one of ye teches the boy, He’ll rastle his hash in hell to-night Or my name’s not Tillman Joy.”
A recent dispatch from Manila states that the bodies of five American soldiers who had been carried off by Ladrones on May 30th, have been found so mutilated by bolos as to be unrecognizable. Nine of the men who butchered the Americans have been caught. Now leaving the subject of an approaching Democratic campaign out of the question, what would Senator Carmack, for instance, do with these men if their disposition rested in his hands? Following his recent arguments, he would say that the same spirit of fierce patriotism actuated the brigands which burned in the bosoms of the American patriots of 1776; that these soldiers in the Philippines received what was their just due, and that their murderers and mutilators should be at once released to continue their patriotic labors. In speaking of this incident, the Chicago Tribune says that if Senator Carmack were in the Philippines and could the dismembered bodies of American soldiers, he probably would understand why the “water cure” has been administered, and why soldiers, goaded on by the sight of their comrades dismembered and weltering in btood, have forced confessions of the whereabouts of the murderers from conniving natives.
Nothing better indicates the prosFerity of the people than the patronage accorded to the newspaper. When Hard Times comes to a community the first place he hunts up is the newspaper office. There js significance in the fact that despite four years of exceedingly “hard sledding” for Indiana publishers during the deCade ending with 1900, there are now nearly twice as many wage-earners employed in the printing and publication of newspapers and periodicals in this state as there were in 1890. In 1890, 2,628 persons were employed in this industry; in 1900, 4,485;' in 1890 there was Invested in the business $3,589,513; in 1900, $6,093,191.
The state debt in 1895, when the Republican party gained control of the fiscal management of Indiana was $7,520,615.12. After seven years of Republican administration the state debt is today: > $3,887,615.12. 1
Sick Headache ? Food doesn’t digest well? Appetite poor? Bowels constipated? Tongue coated? It’s your liver! Ayer’s Pills are liver pills; they cure dyspepsia, biliousness. 23c. All druggists. Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black? Then use BUCKINGHAM’S DYE mt,. _SO cts. of Druggists, or R. P. Mall A Co., Nashua, n. m.
PARAGRAPHIC POINTERS
The Madison Democrat declares that congress could, in a single day, raise the wages of American workingmen by lowering the tariff. Congress tried that method In 1893 and raised something In this country other than wages. “There is one Industry that the tariff promotes always, and that is smuggling,” says a tartff-for-revenue journal. The tariff promotes smuggling In the same way that the law against thievery prevents stealing. That Is to say, If there were no law against stealing, taking what diu not belong to you would not be legally a crime. “The Oregon election comes as a message of good cheer to Democrats everywhere,” remarks the Indianapolis Sentinel. In view of the fact that the combined majorities of the two Republican candidates for congress in that state exceeded that given to McKinley two years ago, it is apparent that it is taking very little to coax a crow out of the Democratic rooster this year. The Democratic state platform of 1892 pledged the party “to remedy the costs growing out of legislation for the rich and powerful and in the interests of corporate wealth,” and declared that “trusts, combines and monopolies” were “the result of Republican legislation.” On such pledges and pronouncements the Democratic party won in the state and nation in 1892. Did it make any effort to fulfill the pledges it now repeats? The Democratic state platform declares that the Democratic party placed the penal and benevolent institutions of the state under humane and non-partisan laws, and that the present administration has viciously prostituted these institutions to partisan ends. The author of that plank would probably fall dead oi surprise if he ever came face to face with anything so unfamiliar as the truth. Under Governor Hovey a Democratc legislature seized the authority to appoint the officers of state charitable and penal institutions, and the result was a carnival of debauchery which caused, the state organ of the Democratic party to hold Its nose and cry for help. As the result of succession of Republican legislature, partisan control of the state institutions has become a thing of the past. Only one state institution is without Democratic representation upon its board of control. Three of the four state insane hospitals are under the superintendency of Democratic appointees of unquestioned efficiency. Contracts for supplies are let and subordinate appointments are made, honestly and on busines*? principles. The first platform pronouncement in favor of the erection of a state soldiers’ and sailors’ monument was that of the Republican state "onvention of 1884, which declared: “We favor an appropriation by the legislature for the erection of a suitable monument to the memory of the loyal and brave sens of Indiana who gave their lives to save the republic.” That desire has been fulfilled in the dedication of the most beautiful military memorial structure in the world.
Mothers Will Be Heard From.
Senators and politicians who are accusing and denouncing American soldiers would do well to remember that mothers of these young fellows live in all the states of this Union and they have faith in their boys. Blatant detainers will soon find this out. —Richmond Palladium.
Gray ? “My hair was falling out and turning gray very fast. But your Hair Vigor stopped the falling and restored the natural color.” —Mrs. E. Z. Benomme, Cohoes, N. Y. It’s impossible for you not to look old, with the color of seventy years in your hair I Perhaps you are seventy, and you like your gray hair! If not, use Ayer’s Hair Vigor. In less than a month your gray hair will have all the dark, rich color of youth. SI.OO a bottle. All druggists. If your druggist cannot supply you, send ua.one dollar and we win express you a bottle. Be sure andgive the name of your nearest express office. Address, J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass.
Senator Beveridge
On. .American -Achievements In f h e P h I I I p p l n • s
The opposition denies that a republic can govern dependencies. But we are governing them. Parallel, If you can, the progress we have made. England’s brilliant administration in India and Egypt pales before our work already accomplished in the Philippines. American civil administration was inaugurated less than ten months ago, and yet American schools have followed the American flag in every pacified province. Nearly 200,000 Filipino children are learning the American language. More than this! As American factories are working night and day in the republic, American schools are working night and day in the Philippines; and nearly 40,000 natives are now being taught in American night schools. Almost a thousand American school teachers already have followed the flag across the seas. Still more! Almost 4,000 Filipino teachers are being trained by American instructors, and are even now at work. More still! Even before our civil government began that tremendous task of education, American officers organized schools for Filipino children, and they were taught by American soldiers detailed from the ranks. The American flag! The American soldier! The American teacher! Together they march forward! Cheer their progress! Hold aloft their hands! Rally around them American voters!—they are the emblems and agencies of civilization’s noblest creation, the American republic. The Fruits of Government. The United States cannot govern? In every province where we have suppressed insurrection and shot brigandage to death, civil administration is operating, and for the first time in Philippine history, an unterrorized people are at peaceful work. Is not that government? Already roads are building, and all over the islands highways are being planned and surveyed. Within five years railways will connect Philippine valleys, mines and forests with sea-ports, and these in turn with every trade center of the globe. Are these not fruits of government? In Manila a model municipal administration has been built, and the American police of this ocean capital is unsurpassed in Europe or America. Municipal ownership has begun, and a modern ice-plant built and owned by the government furnishes ice to Manila at half the former price. Are these not results of government? A perfect public land system is being devised; and soon no native need be homeless. The best forestry laws of the world are those of Germany; the forests of Saxony pay much of her expenses. In the Philippines, forestry laws are being established perfect as those of Saxony’s. Mining laws made up of the best features of every nation and admitted by the opposition to be far superior to our own system; the grant of public franchises safeguarded as the franchises of only a few of the advanced cities of this country are safeguarded; courts in every pacified province, with appeals to supreme courts at Manila; for the first time in all the dark and bloody history of the archipelago justice to the meanest, poorest native “freely and without price, speedily and without delay” —is not all this government? I challenge an instance of a small fraction of these results during a like brief period in any land or at any time. And yet the opposition say that we cannot govern. Democratic Prophecies Discounted. Bui has the opposition’s word any weight as to what the American people era or cannot do? Even in the Demoyrratlc party’s sanest days they said that Americans could not successfully manufacture steel rails; today we sell steel rails to England. The youngest man now old enough to vote remembers the opposition’s scorn when McKinley said that America must manufacture tin; today America is the world’s principal producer of that universal convenience. “You cannot”; “you will fail” —has ever been the opposition’s wail to the American people. “The American people can, the American people will” has ever been the Republican party’s word of faith.
Nothing Commended.
Perhaps Mr. Bryan may find some consolation in the fact that the Indiana Democratic platform-makers were not in a commending mood. Denunciation was their long suit. —Washington Post.
The Trusts Should Be Curbed.
(From tl e Republican State Platform) We are opposed to all trusts or combinations of capital whose purpose or effect is to restrict business or control prices. And we especially denounce those whose tendency is to increase the cost of living and the necessaries of life. We favor legislation to prevent such abuses. We approve the sincere and determined effort of President Roosevelt to enforce the laws against Illegal combinations in restraint of trade, and demand that administrative officers, state and national, shall enforce all laws in tue most vigorous manner, so that legitimate competition shall not be embarrassed or destroyed.
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MONCN TIME TABLE NUMBER 3, (In Effect June 2, 1901.) ■SOUTH BOUND. | SOUTH BOUND. 5° 4.30 an> 5 10 55 a m 7.31 a m N 033 146 pm ,;° 3 - 0.55 am N 039...., 615 p m fNoM, ,6.32 pm No 45 2 40pm 'o 46 9.55 a m •Daily except Sunday. +Bunday only. Flag stop.
ukes pi&f * MICHIGAN SUMMER RESORTS. ■•w —r \ TIME TABLE ■ CTWCEN DETROIT and CLEVELAND Leave DETROIT, daily, . 10.30 p. m. Arrive CLEVELAND, . . 5.30 a. m. making connections with all railroads for points East. Leave CLEVELAND, daily, 10.15 p. m. Arrive DETROIT, . . . 5.30 a.m. connecting with D. & C. Steamers for Mackinac, Soo,” Marquette, Duluth, Minneapolis, St. Paul Petoskey, Milwaukee, Chicago and Georgian Bay also with all railroads for points in MICHIGAN and the West. Day Trips between Detroit and Cleveland during July and August. MACKINAC DIVISION Leave TOLEDO Mondays and 'Saturdays 9.30 a. m. and 'Tuesdays and Thursdays 4.00 p. m. Leave DETROIT Mondays and 'Saturdays 5.00 p. m., and 'Wednesdays and Fridays 9.30 a. m. •commencing June 21st. Send 2 cent® for illustrated pamphlet. : ADDRESS : : A. A. SCHANTZ, G. P. 4., Detroit, Mich.
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NOTICE OF DITCH LETTING. Notice is hereby given, that at my office, on Saturday, July sth, 1902, at one o’clock p. m , I will open sealed bids, received prior thereto, for the construction of 9200 feet of tile ditch and 600 feet of open ditch, known as Wm. P. Baker Ditch, No. 92, located as follows: Commencing 250 feet east of the north west corner of the northeast quarter of the , southwest quarter of section seven (7), township twenty-nine (29) north, range six (6) west, running in a general northeasterly direction to its outlet in the Iroquois river at a point 400 feet west and 300 feet south of the northeast corner of the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section five (5), township twenty-nine (29) north, range six (6) west, according to specifications on file in the County Auditor’s office. / Each bid must be accompanied by a bond in double the amount of the bid. Wm. C. Babcock. Auditor of Jasper County, Indiana.
