Rensselaer Journal, Volume 12, Number 20, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 October 1902 — Page 4

Ed In time. Sold by druggists. HI friifmff-NtiiTy

The Rensselaer Journal Published Every Thursday >'y LESLIE CLARK. P * SUBSCRIPTION BATES. One Copy One Year 11.00 One Copy Six Months 60 One Copy Three Months 25 Bntered at the post office at Rensselaer Ind., as second class mail matter.

THE STATE TICKET.

Wtont&ry of State — DANIEL E. STORMS. pSaflttor of State — DAVID E. SHERRICK. Stoeasurer of State — NAT U. HILL. fUtaroey General— CHARLEB W. MILLER. pPsrit Supreme Court— ROBERT A. BROWN, bkotrlntendent of Public Instruction—i F. A. COTTON, tffette Statistician— BENJ. F. JOHNSON. this Geologist— W. 8. BLATCHLEY. #Bflte Supreme Court. Fifth District— JOHN H. GILLETT. JlMfes Appellate Court— FRANK R. ROBY. U. Z. WILEY. W. J. HENLEY. JAMES R. BLACK. D. W. COMSTOCK. J- W. E. ROBINSON. DISIRicTIICKET. For Congress, EDGAR D. CRUMPACKER. For Judge 30th Judicial Circuit, CHARLES W. HANLEY. SFar Prosecuting Att’y. 30th Judicial Circuit, JOHN D. SINK. For Joint Representative, JESSE E. WILSON. COUNTY TICKET. For Auditor, JAMES N. LEATHERMAN. For Treasurer, SAMUEL R. NICHOLS. For Sheriff. ABRAHAM HARDY. For Surveyor, f 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, CHARLES T. DENHAM. For County Councilmen, ** district JOHN HAHN and district HARVEY E. PARKISON jrd district JOHN MARTINDALE district WALTER V. PORTER f .ED. T. BIGGS At Largei . .ERHARDT WEURTHNER ( ANDREW J. HICKS The man who would abolish the protective tariff to destroy the trusts would likewise cut down his apple tree to kill the grub which is injuring Us growth. Attorney Gkneran Knox is asking a change of Congressional aaethods. He insists that the trust problem can be solved by the passage of common sense laws. This is almost too much to ask.

S“ woman le would ;r health rould tell choicest he world it. What rings to shrunken i to light lowed by requisite General as its orile delicate 1 the genr restored, aefits ease of Dr. escription ine’s perdiseases. ity, dries is inflamand cures asure to be i regard to s Favorite en Medical ora Arn, of "I was does after nother. At life I was infill perirain which id unfit for me so thin ne but skin id became Ule of * Fahe mw the one he rot used those a, and I beapidly.” n ” makes h women stiute for )rks wonfor weak in.

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 1 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.M a bottle. All drufilats. If your druggist cannot supply yon, send us one dollar and we will express yon a bottle. Be sure and give the name of your nearest express office. Address, J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass.

To vote a straight Republican ticket make a X within the circle which surrounds the eagle, as the one above is marked. Make no other mark on your ticket. Any other mark than the X will spoil your ballot and will lose your vote. Use nothing to mark the X but the blue pencil that will be given you by the poll clerk. Should you by accident make any other mark on your ballot, return it to poll clerk and get a new one. Before leaving booth fold your ballot so that the face cannot be seen, and so that the Initial of the poll clerk on the back can be seen. DON'T BE A STAY-AT-HOME. . BE SURE AND GET OUT TO VOTE.

Of course, if the laborers and worfeing men of America feel that they need a vacation without Day, and a period of rest, they have only to support the Democratic plan of low tariff and Democratic office-holding. Boston now has a live turtle weighing 600 pounds and estimated to be 400 years old. If that ancieht turtle could but talk what pleasant times it might have swapping reminiscences of the days of Columbus with those mass back “anti-imperialists” of Boston. Senator Carmack’s auburn locks will grow silvery in the service before he will convince the American people either that our army in the Philip pines is composed of a crowd of military ruffians and brigands, or that we should abandon the islands to native anarchy and haul down the stars and stripes. Campaign orators are finding it difficult to convince their hearers that “free trade would open our markets to benefit our own country” as the Democratic campaign text-book pro claims. If the Wilson law, which was as near to free trade as we hope the United States will ever come, almost ruined the country’s industries, what would the entire measure of free trade do? The great bandit] Jim Younger, who a few dayß ago wound up his ca reer of crime by suicide, left a note in which he declares Wm. J. Bryan to be the brightest man this country has ever produced. This statement might be answered as settling the matter, had not Jim, in the same note contended that Bryan had made one great mistake in not openly embracing socialism, as he, Jim, did. So as Bryan made this mistake which Jim, in his superior wisdom avoided, it follows that Jim Younger was the brighter of the two.

Baer a Democrat Still.

The following communication recently appeared in the Chicago Chronicle: "McGregor, la., Oct. 4.—lt la reported that President Baer of the Reading road is a Democrat. Ab he appears to be the meanest of the entire lot, I am inclined to believe that the assertion is true. Can the Chronicle give us any information on the subject? "READER." To this The Chronicle replies: "He used to be a Democrat." And it might have added, he Is a Democrat still, and unlike Mr. Hill in the campaign of 1896 declines to be “very still.”

A Mighty Poor Game. Getting even le the poorest game ever played In politics.— Madison Cottier.

SHORT HISTORY OF THE STATE DEBT.

WHEN the Republican party came into power in Indiana In 1861 It inherited a state debt of $10,179,267. From 1861 to 1870, a period of Republican control, despite the unusual expenses incident to a war period, Republican fiscal management reduced the state debt to $4,167,607.02. During the succeeding ten years, from 1870 to 1880, a period of Democratic control, the policy of debt reduction was abandoned, and the debt was actually increased $830,671. A two-years’ period of Republican control ensued, during which the debt was reduced $121,570. Then twelve years more of Democratic management, and the state debt was Increased from $4,876,608.34 to $7,520,615.12. Then seven years of Republican administration, with the result that nearly $6,000,000 have been paid on the state debt, with the certainty that every dollar of that Incumbrance, excepting some deferred bonds unpayable for some years, will be wiped out during the term of Governof Durbin. Could anything be more certain to the tax-payers of Indiana than that a vote for Republican legislative candidates Is a vote against the state debt?

No Speeches by Democrats.

The Democratic party has not had a speech In Madison county this compaign, and, so far as evidences indicate, is not intending to have any. It is understood this is the plan of the Democratic state committee. Chairman O’Brien of the Democratic state committee Is conducting a gumshoe campaign. He goes to one place in the state and then to another and behind closed doors has a conference with a few of the select He tells them that the party has no particular issues this year, but in time to come it will have issues and pending that time he enjoins them to see that the tickets are elected. It is the old-time gum-shoe style of campaign. The party offers nothing to the people and finds no particular fault with the party in" power. The slogan is merely "we want the offices.” The Anderson ring is in sympathy with the Indianapolis bosses and with Chairman O'Brien, who was put in place by them, and are following his instructions. This method of campaign is not fair to the people. The people are asked to vote for a given set of candidates who are supposed to espouse certain principles of government and they have a right to know whether Mr. Truesdale is for sound money or free silver, for protection or free trade, for expansion or contraction; they have a right to know how the legislative candidates stand on state matters and how county candidates propose running county affairs. It is only Just and fair in a party to take the people into their confidence and tell them Just what they propose. The Republican party can always be found treating the people squarely and the Democratic party, when in the hands of men selected by the mass of the party, can be found frank and open In its position. It Is only when a party is taken over by a bunch of ringsters who have designs that won’t stand in the light of day that itß position 1b not made plain to the people. At the present time a coterie at Indianapolis have a hold on the Democratic party and if they can tighten their grasp by success at the polls, will swing it back to Cleveland and Hill. And the coterie at Anderson who have the city axid county organization bound and gagged are working with them. This year there are no issues, the Democratic party declares, to put to the front There may be issues some day, but in the meantime the word goes down the line "get the offices.” — Anderson Herald.

Mark Hanna's Watchword. In 1900 Senator Hanna said: "Let well enough alone,” His motto waa right and the prosperity of the country and the people since the re-election of William McKinley has proven It so. That same motto la Just as appropriate now as In 1900. "Let well enough alone.” Keep the Republicans In power as long as they keep things going as they have since 1897. Take no chance on a change.—Franklin Republican.

“I have great faith in the American workman, and I think he understands without the aid of many campaign speeches at this time."—Senator Hanna.

Dizzy ? Then your liver isn’t acting well. You suffer from biliousness, constipation. Ayer’s Pills act directly on the liver. For 60 years they have been the Standard Family Pill. Small doses cure. A nd3&u<«. Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black ? Then use BUCKINGHAM’S DYE filter. _BO CTB. or Druggists, on R. P. Hall A Co., Na»w>-. N. H.

NO BACKWARD STEP

Should the Republicans of Indians • Take This Year. ' . IMPORTANT QUESTION INVOLVED la Whethor or Not the State Bhall Suffer Prestige In National Affairs— Not Only the Senatorehlp but the Future of Republicanism In Indiana Involved In the Election of Novenv ber 4th.

The prestige of Indiana In the greatest of the world’s legislative bodies—the United States senate—ls Involved In the election of members of the legislature on November 4th. This In Itself is sufficient reason why the Republicans of Indiana should do their whole duty. Not only is the re-election of Senator Fairbanks involved, but the reapportionment of the state for legislative purposes. Should Democratic leadership secure control of the Indiana legislature, it would beyond question proceed to the enactment of such a gerrymander as that under which Senator Turpie was elected in 1899, when, with a Republican majority of more than 10,000 In the state, a Democratic senator was sent to represent Indiana in the United States senate. In all her history Indiana has Md no more faithful or useful representative in the upper branch of the national legislature than Senator Charles W. Fairbanks. Cautious but not cowardly, conservative but yet in touch and in sympathy with the most progressive political thought of the period, Industrious, conscientious, thoughtful and forcible, he has Impressed himself upon the great body In which he has served his state so well, as one of the leaders among American publicists. Few men In American public life have risen to substantial national prominence within a period so brief. In 1897 Senator Fairbanks was elected senator——the first public office he ever held. The year 1902 finds him In the fore-front among the leaders of that great body of law-makers, his national reputation as a statesman reflecting credit upon the commonwealth of Indiana throughout the Union. Senator Fairbanks came into the responsibilities attendant upon a seat In the greatest legislative body in the world, at a time when the country stood upon the thresbhold of a new era in its affairs—an fra in tfrhlch the country has not only attained a prosperity unexampled in the world’s history, but in which the American name has attained a new dignity and the American nation a new place In the family of nations.

Potent FactorJn Legislation. In the momentous developments of the past five years, Senator Fairbanks has been, not a passive spectator, but a potent factor. With the historic administration of William McKinley he was intimately and conspicuously identified. President McKinley was a rare judge of men, and that no man, even in the president’s official family, stood higher in the confidence and esteem of the martyred president than did the senior senator from Indiana, is significant of the character and ability of Mr. Fairbanks. Alike In temperament, similar In their convictions and their attainments. It Is not surprising that there existed between President McKinley and Senator Fairbanks so strong a friendship, nor that the president so Implicitly relied upon the Judgment of his friend. It is a fact not generally known, even by the friends of Senator Fairbanks, that for weeks preceding the declaration of war against Spain, and during the trying months which ensued before the fall of Santiago, the senior senator from Indiana was almost nightly at the White House by Invitation of the president, to talk over with him the momentous problems which were arising from day to day. The people of Indiana will not hesitate to express their confidence in a man whom William McKinley so implicitly trusted. Indiana Has Fared Well. As a representative’of the state at Washington Senator Fairbanks has been faithful and untiring in his activity for its welfare. The local Interests of Indiana have never been more loyally looked after. As an evidence of this efficient activity the results of the first session of the 57th congress, recently closed, may be cited. Never has Indiana fared so well at any single session: and in no slight degree this is due to the great influence exerted by Indiana’s senior senator in the upper branch of congress. The ballots cast for members of she legislature this year are not primarily voteß for this candidate or that seeking a term in the general assembly, i Every such vote, no matter what the motive, must, in the nature of things, be a ballot for or against Senator Fairbanks. Despite the declaration in the Indiana platform in favor of popular election of senators, it is impossible to say in whose behalf an adverse vote would count. It might result in the preferment of any one of a dozen comparatively obscure men, but in any event the effect would be a great diminution of the prestige now enjoyed by Indiana in national affairs. Such a backward step will be Impossible if, laying aside petty personal considerajtions, every Republican will do his duty from now up to and including 1 Tuesday, November 4th.

Ratified Hanley’s Nomination.

At a meeting of the Newton county central committee at Morocco last Saturday 0. W. Hanley’s nomination forjudge was unanimously ratified by the committee. Thirteen out of the eighteen members constituting the committee, were present. This course would have been taken long ago, only for Chairman Little’s refusal to call the committee together. This action was made possible Saturday by the reassembling of the county convention to make nominations for clerk and commissioner.

What Theodore Roosevelt Says.

An article on “The Presidency,’’ by Theodore Roosevelt, to be published in the November 6th issue of The Youth’s Companion, will be of great public interest. When the article was written Mr. Roosevelt had not even been nominated for the Vice-Presi-dency. Nothing was then further from his thought than that he would so soon exercise the great powers which are entrusted to the President of the United States. In view of the circumstances the article possesses an importance more than ordinary, and it will be eagerly looked for. The number of The Youth’s Companion containing it, and all the subsequent issues of 1902, will be sent free to new subscribers from the time their subscription of •1.75 ip received for the 1903 volume. The new subscriber will receive The Companion Calendar for 1903, lithographed In twelve colors and gold. Full illustrated announcement of the new| volume and sample copies of The Companion will be sent to any address free. THE YOUTH’S COMPANION, 144 Berkeley St., Boston, Mass.

His Life in Peril.

“I just seemed to have gone all to pieces,” writes Alfred Bee, of Welfare, Tex., “biliousness and a lame back had made life a burden. I couldn’t eat or sleep and felt almost too worn out to work when I began to use Electric Bitters, but they worked wonders. Now I sleep like a top, can eat anything, have gained in strength and enjoy hard work.” They give vigorous health and new life to weak, sickly, run-down people. Try them. Only 50c at A. F. Long’s drug store.

Heal Estate Transfers.

Lorenze D. Marion to George W. Axe, Oct. 14, eK nw se 8-SO-0, Barkley, sl. q. c. d. Harrison Warren to William E. Moore, Sept, 1, sJ4 ne 12-20-7, Marion, $6,220. John Pearson to Lewis N. Cottingham et al, Oct. 18, ne nw 26-20-5, ne 26-20-5, w*4 nw 25-20-5, Hanging Grove, $16,800. James H. King to William King, May 20, 1001, und It 5, sec 85-88-7, 54.80 acres. Wheatfield, SBO. Samuel Burling et al to Herbert Powell, Oct. 4, Its 7,8, 0, bl 15, Remington, SI,OOO. John N. Wilson to Lemuel Stockwell, Apr. 8, It 12 bl 11, Rensselaer, Leopold’s add, S4OO. William Trentenberg to John W. Reed, Sept. 22, It 1, n*4 of It 2, bl 1, DeMotte, A. S. McDonald’s add, se se 28-82-7, $2,000. Benj, J. Gifford to Francis M. Reed, Aug. 20, Its 7,8, bl 1, Gifford, $125. Geo. F. Meyers to William B. Austin, Oct. 15, its 4,5, bl 6, DeMotte, sl. q. c. d. Maude E. Spitler to Judson E. Maiues, Oct. 15. Us 0, 10, 11, bl 14, it 12,18. bl 14, Rensselaer, Weston’s 2nd add, S4OO. Michael Schultz to Ansel Schultz, Oct. 15, ne 11-80-7, Union, SBOO.

The Hirst Thing the Doctor Does Is to ask how your bowels have been and then prescribe a laxative. He knows that most all diseases come from constipation, which clogs the liver and fills up the system with filth and poison. Take Bailey’s Laxative Tablets, cure your constipation and yonr other troubles will vanish. 10c size-20 tablets. 250 size-60 tablets. Chocolate coated. Lakeside Med. 00. Chicago. Sold by A. F. Long.

FIVE PER CENT FARM LOANS.

One Per Cent Commission. W. B. Austin, Rensselaer, has a special fund to loan at 5 per cent interest and one per cent commission. No delay.

Forty Years' Torture.

To be relieved from a torturing disease after 40 years’ torture might well cause the gratitude of anyone. That is what DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve did for O. Haney, Geneva, O. He says: “DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve cored me of piles after I had suffered 40 years.*’ Cures cuts, burns, wounds, skin diseases. Beware, of-counterfeits, A. F. Long.

Central North Dakota Lands.

Where one crop flax will twice pay for the land. 160 acres near Steele, the county seat, at SI2OO cash. 8o acres near Steele, at s6oo cash. 160 acres near Steele, at siooo cash. 443 acre farm 2 miles from Dawson, largest county town, at $10.50 per acre, J cash, balance to suit. 640 acres, 6 miles from Dawson at $7, terms to suit. i 280 acres same locality at same price. 3000 acres 12 miles out $6.50 per acre. 560 acres adjoining Dawson at $lO per acre. 160 acres adjoining Dawson fenced at $12.50. 270 acres adjoining Dawson at sls. And many others up to 50,000 acres at $5. One half-fare from here and return, Write or call on JAMES M. RAIT, 511 Bank of Commerce, Minneapolis, Minn.

Deadly LaGrippe Caused Heart Trouble, Nervous Prostration and Dyspepsia. My Friends Know Heart Cure Cured Me. ° is 'l 8 W ’ Th L rd St 7 Muse*. ~» T U known throughout her w,U> . severe cue of nervous SjSF SSfOSlhT** u reath » ? num bness of my body and hot flashes with pain. I will tell ™ I am constantly telling my friends thl. at iwk' M j? 8 ’ Heart Cure cured me so disagreeable symptoms left me. - tmiihiu 1° n rtriokeo down with heart in bis twentieth year. For two mcmths we got no sleep with him at night. gjflw l to J** Dr - Miles’ Heart S,T e a a “ d Nervine with the Nerve and Live" SSKJsm&iuk te tone. and nervous headaches and I have found anything that would relieve «e Dr^n^S?

' . h-.y .rgu - -bmevi'A' MM TIME TABLE NUMBER 3, (In Effect June 2, 1901.) NORTH BOUND. | SOUTH BOUND. No 4. 4.30 a m Nc 5 10 55 a m No 40 7.31 a m N 033.. 1 46pm N 032 9.55 am N 036 615 pm N 06.. 3.30 p mNo 3 1125 pm No3o ,6.32 pm N 045 240 pm +No3B 2:57p m tNo3l 449 a m No 46 9.55 a m ♦Dally except Sunday. tSunday only. tFlap stop.

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