Rensselaer Republican, Volume 17, Number 4, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 October 1884 — Page 4

THE REPUBLICAN. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, Frniestwtai cam*.s& perannum lor 6 linos or rss :5o cts. tor each additional line, laical notices, 10 cents perltne for first insertion r cents per line for each snbseinicnt'insertion. Special rates for choice places in the paper, and f.or advertisements wider tuan one CQbftiui. Bills of recqlar advertisers payable Quarterly ; tansient to lie paid in advance .Job J*ki xt j n <s .—AI arge assomnejU o f lyre a iffother material for poster, 'ja.npluet, circular and ifunired work. Prices low.

REPUBLICAN TICKET.

FOH I'RESIDENT* JAMES (1. BLAINE, of Maine. FOR VKK-IMIKsiIiKNT. JOHN A. LOGAN, of Illinois. FOR GOVERNOR. william h. calkins; Of J.a Forte Co. FOR •EIKfTENANT GOVERNOR, EUGENE BUNDY, Of Henry. Co.. FOR SECRETARY OF STATE. ROBERT MITCHELL, Of Oib&on Co. AYHrifLriFW si vTi'r BRUCE CARR, Of Orange Co. ’ FOR TREAM REI! oK STATE, ROGER R. SIBKLi . (if Mm inn Co. ~ FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL. . WILLIAM C. WILSON, Of Tippecanoe Co. FOR .H IFiE OF st FREMKAOVRT. EDWIN V. HAMMOND, Of .Jasper Co. FOR REI’OKTEU OF SC t*IIEME COC RT, WILLIAM M. ITOGGATT, , Of Warrick Co. FOR SOFT. OF-rt IG.iC INSTP.Vi TION, BARNABAS C. HOBBS, Of l’arke Co. fou.congßessm.vn, TENTH 111 strict, WILLIAM D. OWEN, of Cass county. roil jl i»ge, noth .ir lVic'i al t j i:cc it, I’EIT.K 11. AVARTJ, of Newton county. v Frosecntiug Att’y. SOtli j.utVigial Ciicuit, JIATTHEW.iI. WALKER, of Bent on Co. ForiState Representative, I. D. DUNN, ” of Jasper county. covnty 'Ticket: For Treasurer ,■ . JOHN W. HOWELL. . ; .. . . of Marion towitshi-p. For Sheriff SAMUEL E. YEOMAN, of Newton township. For Surveyor, J.C, THRAWLS, of Marion township. For Coroner, PHILIP BLUE, _©f Marion townslrijn For Commissioner Ist District, ASA C. PREVO, ' 2 °f Gillam township. PHtiicl, U. P. TABOII, es Carpenter township.

'• h there oni/.e/ooi? reason why Iffrutrichs - "tii. hr sefee(ed front fnrty-jlre inttlions •'■ }!>■■,])le t" be the possible lead c.f rr Qof-. *ni,tienf which he ifiif his best fr. ./rxfron.'' : ■ Q»:o. W. CruTJs in 1876; < ‘ '*/ hnre carcMJy ohseeveil fir altitude 9»nl mprtpmits of the Detnocratie party ‘C twenty yeans. In viy judyntetif it has ■emrd nothing and forgotten noth', up. Sg •M A Ican1 can ‘t is not only swqyej, the satnc principles, ttnK fa n la ear c.r . d‘>d, guided bp the same weir —President C pen, ot Turi'e College. Mass.

TliVrd' P/irtt I ffifi? bn* not. to vot?+ "{imlsto voted ~>;<? / I, tli'd him. It mas not me that I dled hi in—it mas the j,i ■/,/. If J had not th en a Democrat I would not how Ldhd hhn. If iras not wt\l,vt tin I } < moe ratio pa. ft/: and note if tin par'd K a mind to throw me ojT. d—n *nch ft V urtp." —H. AYhecler, of'lTnrlelvurst, Mu-y, afterwards elected Marsr.nl by the Democratic piirfy. ‘•I hefty no personal grienanee with Gov. f.' reload. I sita.ll spent, .from the recO/sf, 'not I trill ash fob* ostracized from nil l r>ft soeiefy if I can not point U, corruption -tollmn straight tojhc il'iur of the e.rli afire mansion and Inochim; at the door hitd corning out of the door, ir/f4 alt shot uwrnpdoM sought at (he expense of the profile. h I tan nos prove that hieihea i.ntavn fpfait in the Assembly in I SV;> lrrrc fdatn st#» 'near Mr. Cleveland that if he •Lues not hare, the money he can petit at nop time—if l ean not prove that 1 put not what I profess to 6e.’ , -*-St ( .ie Senator Wradjrx before the Tammany Committee, H, 18U,

W« an eonfrented with the Demoerntie party, very hungry, end, fee you any well boHove, very thiroty, a pVj7 without a single definite principle; a jparty (Without any distinct national policy which it dares present to the country; a party which fell from powet as a conspiracy against hpipan rights, and now attempts to sneak batjt ,to power as a conspiracy for plunder and spoils.— Gro.; W.m. (’I'KTIS, June 1881.

“I have just now received the atrocious libel of the Indianapolis Sentinel. The story is utterly and abominably false in every statement and in every implication. Political slanders I do not stop to notice, but this editor assails the honor of my wife and children. I desire you, without an hour's delay, to employ proper attorneys and have the responsible publisher of the Sentinel sued for libed in the United States Court of Indiana. It is my oply remedy, and I am sure honorable Democrats, alike With honorable Republicans, will justify me in defending the honor of my family, if need be with my life.”-Ars. Blaine's Telegram. Aug. 14.'

Our brilliant and high minded young candidate for Congress, W. D. Oweu, will speak at OeMotte, on Saturday, tbe 11th. His presence there will-be made the occasion for a big rally, on that date. . lAMLLJ ; ju The Hon. Samuel lb Mason, one of Pennsylvania’s best orators will speak for the Fepublican men and measures, at Rensselaer, Thursday evening, October 9th. Don't forgot it. The \Y. C. T.—lb convention fov the 10th Congressional district, will be held on Thursday and! Friday of next week, at the M. E. church, in Rensselaer. The first session begins at 7 o’clock p. m. Thursday.

The Hon. Samuel R. Mason, of Pennsylvania, one of. the most dist inguished non-resident orators now ; canvassing Indiana, will speak m Rensselaer, next Tiiursfl»y m-opjpgj Oct. Bth. Mi•-.- Mason is especially strong -on questions; of finance and the tariff, and should be heard by all who desire to hold correct views on those great questins. Mr. Mason speaks at Remington on the .evening of the Bth.

Cleveland Should Not Be Supported.

New York Sun. We were Dug deceived in Mr. (Ti \eland. His high }nelcusions — ami .solemn assumptions of pare n in:s an \ Unsellisli patriotism imposed upon us. But after bis nomination, which we strenuously opposed, a more caivlnl • scrutiny of his character and afitecedents became mdispensable, and ever since then we have dealt with him. not "sternly according to his deserts, but mildly and forbearing]}', though decisively. At last the whole truth seems to be revealed respecting Mr. Cleveland. He stands forth as a coarse person, unworthy of confidence, and, above all, most unworthy of high political preferment. At one time vve thought it- possible to support him as a candidate; still, later we thought he should be preferred to Mr. Blaine: but now we see that both these views of him were mistaken. He plight not to be supported. GrqveT Cleveland should be withdrawn as a candidate by the indignant voice of a deluded and outraged Democracy.

Some Friendly Commcnt

Tenv Haute I'onVoernt ; 1 >em. Ihe following letter was marked personal and received yesterday: Indianai-olis, Ind., Sept. Kith, ISS4. —io tiie Kditor, Sur— Will you favor us by giving one insertion of appended .notice and mailing us a marked copy. Any friendly mention you mav add will be appreciated. The Indianapolis Sentinel will issue about September-*) a large supplement containing a history of James <-. IHalne’s suit against it. and a volume of facts coiiemiing [ private as well as public record" I snowing the truth of the Sentiuel's publications regarding him. Price of supplement, post-paid: Single eopv 1U cents; threb copies, *'> cents: bight copies, -Vi cents: twenty copies, si. Special rates to committees, clubs and newsdealers. Address CIIAS. V. SuoEAIAKEIi, • . Sentinel Office. Indianapolis. “Yes, you can have a ‘•friendly i mention . Any newspaper that will j stab the virtue of<A toother to gratify j the , gravings of a putrid brain can •have plenty of ‘-friendly mention". | Any newspaper that goes into moral j-bankruptcy to drown in tears the re--1 spect of children for a mother can have plenty bf ‘•friendly mention” from the editor of the Democrat: some of it may be hot. but it will be --friendly mention'’ all the Same. Any news- ; paper that advertises itself by fattening the bats of moral polluteness on the exudences of depraved and rotien brains can have a ••friendly nientiou” by tne editor of the Democrat. Yes, Charley, 1 will mail you a copy. \ ' *• . ' I ' . ' • ' ..

CLEVELAND'S IMMORALITY.

What Would! Happen If Ills Example Were Widely. Imitated. “.Justice'' in New York Sun. The offense of Mr. Cleveland strikes at the foundation of society itself. With his example widely .imitated; and his conduct generally _-practiced; the entire fabric of our.social life would be saturated with rottenness, and the whole structure would totter to its fall We punish murder, and treason, and other crimes as threatening the existence of the body politic. But society is no safer where offences of the Clcvela ml class are condoned, and especially where those guilty of them are exalted to high and honorable official station. It may be seen in the Livening Host a venial offense to seduce a woman under promise of marriage. To be sure, under such circumstances, outraged kinsmen" sometimes , take the law into tlieir own hands, and occasionally the outraged woman herself shoots tuc offender. In such cases the community has come to regard the homicide with toleration if not with favor. But with the “lewd fellows of the baser sort" whom the Evening Host and its candidate represent, the matter is made the theme of ribald jest. Under the moit solemn pledges and assurances, Mr. Cleveland induced Maria Halpin to become to him a wife in all but the name. He seems to have been so much in earnest about it us to con-, template open marriage after morethaja three years It ad passed in that manner. But his chosen companions argued him out of it and laughed him out of it. lie was a putty in their hands, as his later conduct has shown. He discarded his victim, sending her child to the almshouse and herself to a madhouse. This is chapter 1. in ‘'The Bake's Progress." But a greater crime has been hinted-at. By a recent decision of the' Court of Appeals, rendered by. Chief Judge Folger, -a- nmmage-agree-ment entered into in good faith, though without a witness, is nevej'fheless a valid contract. Ts it true, then, that Matin Halpin, wronged and belied as she has been, is at this moment Grover Cleveland’s lawful wife? Cireimtstanttal evidence certainly seems to tell in that direction. In such case live criminality of Iris conduct is too enormous to permit of condoning. A woman of honest repute, laboring to support her children, is led to. believe herself a wife, till the man whom she had trusted abandons her, and then is turned adrift and— imprisoned in a lunatic asylum, y This is l the story in a 'few words'. Let fatliers read jt to -their wives ahd daughlers: let ' brother® and citizens consider it. and remember that the hero of this tale is a candidate for their suffrages as President. Should he, reeking thus with infamy, be elevated to the chief magistracy of the Nation, what condition of things, would exist in the White Housed Would any virtuous woman tolerate this moral leper who lias violated the family tie in every form? Bather will she not shun the betrayer of Maria Halpin and of her child as she would the touch of contagion or the embrace 'of death?

What a Great Preacher Thinks About It

Tiie ReV.- Jolm Alabaster, the leading Methodist minister of Indianapolis, and pastor of .Meridian Street M. E church, in that city, preached a ser . ipon ou the sin of adultery, last Sunday evening, and strongly advised his hearers against voting for Cleveland. In the course of his remarks he said: God forbid that I should be ready to believe evil of any man. much less to say it. But if there is any ground for the repeated stories concerning one of ti.e candidates for the "Presidency: if thirty ministers in his own city are hot liars, then this Nation is to-day disgraced. With the great political party which nominated him I can sympathise. on the supposition that these ' things are true, but were then unknown. But whether all is true or not; tlie party have the right to insist upon the withdrawal of such, a candidate, aud the people .of this great Christian land have the right to protest against holding up such an example before the young men of America. This ' is not a questi'on of party, it is a question of common dscenev. It is a question that touches every home in the land. touches every pareht, every young man: every young woman, every wife, and every* daugliier. F say it plainly, the man for President of this great .Republic should, 1 in matters of chastity, be* like Caesar's : wife 1 . :)Uove suspicion. The temper- i anefe question, the tariff question, 'and all otner questions are secondary'to the question ofinire homes. The bare possibility of lodging a libertine in the White House otight to send a shudder through ttery family in the land. As 1 husband, as parent, as son of my \ mother, aa lover of my Country, as a ; friend o{ all that is pure, and a i Christian Uitltiater, I stalet»nly jtrtjt-tat : against such a possibility j

■•ad Honey by American Express Co. money Orders. Receipts given. Money refunded if Orders are lost, :Sold at all offices of the Co. Payable at 6,500 places. RATES: $5-sc: *lO-8c: S2O-10C: S3O-12C: WO-150: mm. Bueklen’s Arnica SalveTiif. Best Salve in the world for Cuts, 5 B ruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever $-ores,-Tetter, Chapped Hands Chilblains,: H orns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles or no p«y required. -It is Kuarnpteed to give perfect satisfactionor money refunded. Price-25 cents perj per box. For sale by F. B. Meyer. , 1 b-8-lyr. THE IIBV. geo. H. THAYER, of Bourbon And., says: “Both myself and wife mve our lives to SHILOH'S CONSUMPTION-CURE. ARE YOU MADE miserable by Indigestion Constipation, Dizziness, Loss of Appetite, -Yellow Skin? Shiloh’s Yitalizeris a positive WHY IVILL YOU cough when Shiloh’s Cure will give immediate relief. Price 10 cts. JO cts. arid 81. HILOIPS CATARRH REMEDY—a positive ■cure for Catarrh, Diptheria and Canker l 011 Hi, For sale bvM. L. Hot tier. Feb 885 - r . - Tixe Rensselaer, Tkd. ~ rUSTOPJiiM'IH. Newly furnished Cool and pleasant rooms. Table supplied With the best the market affords. Good Sample Rooms on first floor. Free Bus to and from Depot. PHILIP BLUE, xv -35-t'f. 5 Proprietor Rosy to use. A certain cure. Not expensive. Three months' treatment In one package. Good for Cold in the Head, Headache, Dizziness, Hay Fever, <tc. X Fifty cents. By all Druggists, or by mail. - E. T. hazeLtinb, Warren. Pfc PISO’S REMEDY FOR 1 CATARRH Has been thoroughly tested during the past five years with such uniformly good results that the medicine is now offered for sale. '-with -a certainty that it ——7; — will prove to be the Remedy for Catarrh which has been so long sought for - Easv to use. A certain cure. Not expensive. Threp months' treatment in One package. Good for Cold In the Head, Headache, Dizziness; Hay Fever, &c. Flfty-cents. By all Druggists, or by mail. E. T. HAZELTINii, W»rren, PA For Sale By M. L oPITLER, Druggist, Rensselaer, Rensselasr Insurance and Collection Bureau.

IAIMI iOA.\S, f "00, to SIO.OOO, '• to 10 years' full terra or partial payments.. Low interest., and reasonable commission. Fife Insurance ih Six Gampuhiefr. Life and Accident Insurance . in the old reliable Travelers, and .A-etiia Life. Policies written immediately on application. The Lowest Rates, and PERFECT Security, —0 ■ «««- • COLLECTIONS on all points in the U. S FRANK W. BABCOCK, Proprietor, Wm. IV. Watson, Solicitor. CAKTOiS CURE Sick Headache and relieve all the troubles incident to a bilious state of the system, such as Biz-, tineas. Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating, Pain in the Side, Ac. While their most remarkable success has been shown in curing SICK H''adaehe.j®t Cartrr'sLittle Liver Pilisare equally valuable in Constipation, curing- and preventing this annoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders of the stomach, stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. Even if they only cured HEAD Ache they would be almost priceless to those who euhVr from this distressing complaint; hat fortunately their goodness does not end here, and those who oncatry them will find those little pills vn’nable ii\eo many ways that they willnot be willing to do without them. But after all sick head ACHE Is the base of to many lire* that here is where we make our creat boast. Oar pUU care it While Others do net. Carter's Elttlo liver Pills are very small and very easy to taka. One nr two nil's make a dose. They are strictly scgcUblS and do set grips or put**, but Wy thetv gen ms setlaa pijaro ajf who pspthetn. »V« for 4fr kW by 4r-iiigi<(s svsryvuws, w **ct V* CABTKR MEmCIKB CO , ¥*r*u

V 9 .» • , Groceries, AT C. C. Starr’s. Largest f&tock, Lowest Prices, Grreatest Variety, Of this class of goods ever before offered in Rensselaer. —; Majolica and Kalomeda wares, Fancy Stand Lamps and Hanging lamps 25 to 50 per cent, discount from regular prices. Roasted Coffee, and Strictly Pure, Ground Spices, from our own Steam Coffee and Spice MillsUlff ' . - - —. ' —. J. C. PORTER, will pay you the lOTig'lxesjt Frices For all kinds of MARKETABLE GRAIN. Has all kinds of HARD and SOFT COAL For Sale. fA?*Warehouse and Coal 3 ard on fiailroad, north df Creamery. ' -4 'in-i.i-Tr;';-S mm sw -NOWEL'S BLOCK,Hardware, Implements, Tinware and l 1 inning; The Boss Twibe Bind er of the world f tlieMinneapolis, manufactured by J. F. Apleby, the .li'.veiitoi' of the only liinder in use to-day. Machines warTanted. Also the Triumph SelfRake Reapers, and the Clipper Mower, all in the front as to superiority, also Champion Corn Planters, Advance Hay Rake, Fiirst & Bradly Plows, Harrows and Cultivators; also the Hapgood Sulkey Plow, guaranteed to be the lightest draft sulkey in the market Tbe Flying Dutclimaa not esceptecl. \We also keep a full line of Pumps, Iron ;pni M ood, at cl, in fact, every thing usually kept in >- Hardware Stock. Tin Spouting* put up, and in a manner that will not have to be repaired or looked after immediately. Barbed. Wire. (tiie Celebrated Gt.iddkx,) best on the market. In Stoves, ouf .stock has been selected from the best maru facturies, for their known merit; among them may be■ found the “GARLAND COOK” A better Look Stove lias not yet been made. We Vv arrant all our* Machines and Stoves .to give satisfaction, or no sale. Warrant the 16 inch SiAkey Plow to run with less draft on the team than a II inch walking plow, if* it doift, \ve give the Sulkey to tile one who beats it. We propose to sell bur goods at fair prices, - and try to give satisfaction to all bur customers. Call and look tbroagh. Always glad to have yon investigate and compare before purchasing. BT V. Cleaver* UHm»s»?b»er» April 22,