Rensselaer Republican, Volume 17, Number 46, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 July 1885 — Page 4

The REPUBLICAN. Thursday, July 23, ISSS. ■ ■■■*'»■■— ■■■« *■■■■ ■ " IBa-taa Of ■A.i.-trattiKlE.g:- * t l*«3xessi<>«ai cat4H»4s.»sr snuun*. lor 6 (mes «r ’ess : SO <its. tor each additional line. Local notices, loeents perttne tor first insertion •■cuts per line for each subsequent insertion. - Special rates lor clioiee places in the paper, and advertisements alderttiauone column. fßUrof regular advertisers payable quarterly ; taii'ient to be paid in advance .Job MtlNTiNO.—Alarge assortment <*t typeand lottier material for poster, pamphlet . circular and Sindred work. Prices low.

We have not received the Highmore, (Dak.) Vox Populi for last week, aud we begin to fear that it was “knocked out” by the late 'cyclone in that town. It is rumored at Laporte that Gen. Jasper Packard will soon start another Republican paper in that city. It is to make its tb'st appearance some time this month, and number one is to be a sixteen ■page publication. — Rochester Siritivd. - ' ■ , v • The revelations of the Pall Mail Gazette made the Prince of Wales, mad and lie “stopped liis paper”. An obscure allusion by the Gazette to a “prince of. the royal blood” seems to have fit so close to the royal rake that he applied it to himself at once. 4,movement has been inaugurated In New York to make Saturday afternoon a “half-holiday”. The movement has met with such success that already 100,000 employes are released from duty on that half day. The plan is a noble one and well deserving of indefinite extension. - wztMTin. B 1 Our exchanges, almost without exception, when they mention a case of wife-beating, express a desire to see the whipping post established for that class of offenders. It is the only logical and efficient punishment for that offense, and the newspapers are only giv ii)g voice to a general public sentiment in demanding it. The worst enemies of every good cause are. always its fool friends. If only now all the temperance people of this state would be of ■one mind, and the unreasoning dues would desist from fighting their best friends, and striving for what is, for the present at least, unattainable in Indiana and impracticable if attained, laws could soon be secured which would entirely prohibit the liquor business in more than half the counties of the state, and diminish by more than half the evils of the business m the rest of the st ate. The Indianapolis Journal of Monday, publshes, in full, a remarkable address, delivered in Crawfordsville, Sunday evening, by the Eon. W. D. Owen, the scholarly congressman from this district. The address is in answer to Rev. Beecher’s evolution theories, as set forth in the notable series of; sermons on evolution, lately delivered by the great Brooklyn preacher. As the. Journal well says: “Mr. Owen ns one of the ablest speakers in Indiana, and this discourse is one of his bc-sffproduetions.” /* B is,one of the foundation prin ' eiples q£ the law that a man shall not be compelled to do impossibilities. The democratic administration, in the‘hopes” of makiffg • n litfcie party capital, have ruined John Roach, and thrown twentyfour hundred men out of employment, because he could not perform wnat was impossible. Tim law under which the construct! -a of the L’Cipnin was contracted tor provided that the boat should have * sea going speed d? pot less thau ti» teen knots per hour. Tire same law also provided that the ocat must be built upon the lines and liter plans to be famished by the Naval Advisory Board. With this latter pfovision of the law Mr, Roach had no, alternative but te comply. He bui]t the vessel in exact accordance with the diree■ions of the Advisory feoard. Now it , so happens, as anyone who tnows anything at all -about ahip'djßding. weil knows, it is hupos- • •> ; -

sible to tell beforehand just what rate of bpeed a proposed vessel Tan attain; and more especially is this the case when the vessel is built upon new models. This last was the case of the Dolphin, and on trial it has been found that she can not always be depended upon to make cpiite so great a speed as fifteen knots an hour. The ship was built in jCjompliance with the orders, of the Advisory Board, aud the highest scientific authority of the country pronounce her to be as noble specimen of naval architecture; but the democratic administration was determined to find some manner of throwing discredit upon the Republican administration and could find no other way than by committing an act of flagrant unjustice against Mr. Roach. Another; great Democratic victory! Let the faithful rejoice and the discouraged take heart. Party capital has been made at the expense 6f John Roach, the head and front of whose offending wes that he built and repaired boats under a Republican administratidn. He is downed now, and his last boat has been rejected, and as a consequence his ship-yard at Chester, Pa., must soon close., A special dispatch to the New York World says that the outlook there is “tar from promising”. About seventyfive men, principally machinists, were discharged on Saturday, and the scene at the yard is one of in-1 activity as compared with former j times. The dispatch concludes.? “Shortly the great ship-yard wißi have to be closed, as all the old j contracts are rapidly running out/'., 1 This is an achievement of which j the administration may be proud. The largest of American shipyards, and the only one of its kind, i closed and its 'employes scattered, j But that’s all right. The 'Demo-| era tic party had to find something j somewhere to' make capital of, and j failing to find rascals anywhere, j it angrily assailed Mr. Roach,-tod make it appear that the vessel lie i had just finished was not built ac- j cording .to contract. , The point j has been carried; the Attorney. General, who does not know the difference between a dispatch-boat and an Arkansas river store-boat, has decided that the Dolphin is not seaworthy, and that the naval board is not bound to accept her. The conspiracy is a success, the Republican party has been “rebuked”, and the largest ship-yaid j. in the country is closed at a time j when it should be busy , building j new iron-clads, in accordance with j an act of Congress providing for the strengthening of the navy. Mr.! Roach, will probably attempt to j obtain justice at the hands of the gentlemanly thugs who, for a purpose, have casfcyliscredit upon his work. He might as well not try j it. They have determined to ruin | him, and will fight till they emceed. — huiianop'ii • Journal.

Hard on the Hendricks Discipics.

Tlie Chicago Times, lade pen- j dent with Democratic proclivities, j administers a deserved castigation, to. that office -hungry bo.iitlfof ! patriots, the democratic editors of ; Indiana, in the following article: U lie Times Las been invited to pub- : lisle au address that was. read at some | place in Indiana, that. 'endures the'i hideou t name of Maxinkiu keel Vv V-.a president of an alleged vdeimunh.: !<• editors’ asSoeiatio■>*' t The invitation ipnot accepted for” sufficient; I The document alluded to is/diifalm in'" ! lioasep -e and drivel that.it would ■ ;ti'.: no human being to read, ‘"and Iha: ration ti persohs would read .without ; w.ondeting why’the T*nm« -jlioX'.' : room to such rubbish. By tvits of hi si ■ hying these not over •eonapljraeatari,' observations, a few passages, fr-ora tin- ! Maxim: uekeo essay nvill he chad-t • “The dem.ierafic pvfss bounded the bogie call; it made prfri.; from. oeeaw to ocean the nantft of, ;cieve'and and drieks; its cohnims contained Uie glad 1 news that victory and success had Jin. ally come to take th& place of lain re and disaster. For twenty-live years men have toiled and labored to orirur about that result’' To bring abdiit what result? Simply a change of the label on the back-side oi a president Trom the letters nacilbbper to tarcomed? Or lg,it the signi-

flcatlon of this gush of resonant bathes that.the Maxinkuckeo . orator is onp of those rural .organ blowers* that look upon the post offices as “their meat?” -‘•Who can tell what they suffered, be fore being permitted to hang out their dags and join their glad shouts with hose of the victorious hosts. But if they should Dot get the post offices, would they take in their flags anyone can tell? .Doubtless; for a little further on. the Maxinkuckee orator said: * f- •' , . - “To place the democratic party in power meant to place Democrats in office, that political service reform might be everywhere inaugurated throughout the laud, and it that is not done, then the democratic victory in November last becomes a delusion. The democratic press ought not to be content with anything less than the most comprehensive results of that victory. The removal of ten or twenty thousand of those same republicans from oflice will not not, and ought not, satisfy the democratic press. The supreme uemaiid is political service relorm. That can be had, and only had by placing democrats in power; anything else rails below the requirementsof the times’ This suffices to show what the socalled “democratic editors, association’’ Is. It is,a company of idolatrous fanatics that have made to themselves a graven image and endowed it by their superstitious fancy with .the attributes ol a deity. They call it ‘-‘the party”, and suppose it to be a divinity of the neuter gender. It is a hideous object, to all but those who worship it with the blind and foolish adoration of the Maxin kuekees. Its- head is the appointing power, its deformed and disgusting body the spoils system (to "which the MaxinkuckeS orator give the new name of “politeal service reform”) and its arms and legs the party organs striking and kicking ; frantically for the post offices. But.to this hideous image of all the vices, corruptions and villainies that have degraded our political life, this symbol of the most corrupting, loathsome and dangerous disease that • can,infect a popular constitution, the Maxinkuckes bow in adoration with all the marks, signs and characters of superstition and fanaticism that arc found in the lovYest fetiffinsm of primitive savages, and forward to the Times, a "mass cl' verbal ‘‘hog-wash” on the disgusting-subject, expecting that-this independent journal of news anti ideas hasten to spread it before a gaping world. But it won’t. ——— —rr- ' ~ J Ts* 1 T ~

The Hew Read Law.

The last Legislature passed an important, law, the provision of which are but little known, but which are of interest, to every taxpayer. Under :iha, old law the trustees have no money in tuo township treasury to use for road purposes, and no matter how- small the expenditure they have been compelled to go to the county commissioners foran appropriation, for improvements in the way of culverts and bridges, while there are ho funds to be had from any 'source for the repair or improvement of the road bed. The now law authorizes, wind will be known as the “Special Hoad Levy,” which the trustees are to make as any other levy and to.be collected the same, ■ This levy must bo paid in cash and cannot be worked out as the regular road loyy, which is still in.force as before, in addition to this special levy and poll tax. The funds secured by this “special road levy” are to be. need by the township trustees in constructing culverts and’putting grayed upon thwrpads . add as naturally follows, the higher tliclevy the more money, and the more money, .more gravel roads.' In many cases this year the commissioners uddud this levy to that o! many of the trustees, as few nudtrsluod the law ar.d made none .—Lx. «•*# ■The American nation lias a double ■'■ birthright— liberty and land. Its liberty it lias guarded jealously, but tin til very regent years it seems to hat e been indifferent to the loss of its landed estate add ignorant of I'tie methods by which it lias, been diminished. ,A veteran legislator, the Hon. George \V. Julian, who. lias given special attention to the acts disposing of bur public lairds® tells 'the . story in brief in a contribution to the VL t l > A titcricwt; J:«rar for • August. In the same number five medical, authorities disey;s sthe qm s ion. ’ ijEhtdera 1 w Ayerted ?” Helix L. Oswald contributes a suggestive article on “Thp Animal Soul’,; and thodiev. M. J. Savage, in “A Profane Y iew of the Sanctum I */’ brings !yh indict men t against., the daily | press. The other articles are one on “The price of Gas,” by Charles H. Botsford, ofie on “Temperance Reform Statistics,” by Prof. W J. Beecher, and the. chapter of “Comments/ by . various writers,, on articles in *previcus numbers. T / j,.. Ayer’s Ppis. promptly rrtlie.p.nu.ttffii, errret'i iou! brq.fb -:oid sit unpleasant ffistc, nod euro constipation. r

anVbodySSS - I’late I’fttcess. < For 50 ota. we will send post-paid Itocbe’s Manual for Amatcitrs. which gives full instructions for making the pteiwes. Outfits wc furnish from $lO, npwarils. Our “PHOTOGRAPHIC BULLETIN.” cditel by Prof. ('has. F. Chandler, heml of the Chemical Department ol the School of .Mines, Columbia Colic ire, ntiblisheil twice a month for only $2 per annum, keeps PliotoprofessipnM or , Ornately, fully posted on all improvements, an d Answers all questions When difficulties arise. A Circulars and price lists free. E. &l H- T. ANTHONY k CO-, lannlactnrers Of Pbotograpliic Apparatus and Materials ILTe. 531 NEW YORK CITY. Forty Years established In this line of business. ' 17-29 ... s Our readers for'fa cts. in postage stamps ■ to pay for mailing and wrapping, and jg names of two hook agents, will receive K Free a Steel Finish Parlor Engraving of all It Otllt PRESIDENTS, including Cleveland, fe size 22x28 inches, worth SI.OO. Address ELDER Pub- Co., Chicago 111-9 MEgBgSBSBMBH3effIaHMQaBg!g3—BH — SfceSif Vs Sale. XJ Y virtue of a corfilied :copy of a decree to > nit directed from the Clerk of the Jasper •Circuit Court in a cause wherein John Rockwell, Trustee of the Equitable Trust Company, was plaintiff, and James Benson, Eleanor Benson apd Daniel O'Bricn, .were defendant*. re<liming me to make the sum of Eleven hundred and Beveqty-seve,ii dollars and Sixty-eight cents ($1177.4)8) together with' interest and costs. I . will ex pose to public sale to the highest bidder for cash in hand, ou Saturday, the 25111 day of July, f3B£*j - between the hours of 10 o’clock a, m., and £ o’clock . p. nil, of said day, at the door of the Court House, in the town of Rensselaer, Jasper -bounty, -HnliUivji, (lie reinarsuft"prollts,"for a, term not exceeding 'seven ■ (V) years, by the ycar.-,the following described real estate to-wit; Tlie East half Oi) of the NortHsefist quarter ('ll. and the North east quarter C.f) of -the Southeast quarter (*4l of section (5) in Township twenty-seven (27) north of range seven (7,i west, containing one hundred and thirty seven and fixty-s}x one-liuhilmlths, acres ’all in fi asper county, iudiana. And should such rqlVts and profits liot sell fora su'Jlisieiit sum to discharge said decree, interest and costs, I will; at the same time and place, and in the mauiier. aforesaid, expose at .public sale the fee simple right of said defendants in and to said real estate, or so rough thereof as shall he sufficient to discharge said decree interst and costs.' Sind sale wilL.be lUliila without anv relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws and in accordance with the order of court in said decree. SAMUEL K YEOMAN, Sheriff.. II S, Tticiyyinx, Atty. for I'lomtlif. • July 2-H-i<>-23. I’l-css fee $ " r ~* IMIII I®. OTATE OF IXDI ANA,) -In Justice , Jasper County. i 00. Court. Charles «>. Speticer.i Colli plaint for Sixty ..vs A Dull iirs before El am James Carroll,. .) I>. Fairchild. Justice of tlitr Peace, Keener Township, Jasper County, Indiana. jji'GTI.CE is herehv given that on the litli day of July. 1885. on complaint; of the wiaint-UL a summons aiuLA'drit ofAtllachment, aMd-squunwiis in .garnishment. Was by me iS- ; slied in said case. And on July. 10th,■ 18.8.7,,'5aid siuimisils-vviisA-cturnGii (not served defendant not in my county.) And the NVi it ,ot attachment was also returned showing that property .of-sai 4 4of end ant had boon at tac hedr - -NOTICEgis-ilierofore given that <m the sth rtav.ot heptember. Ih'H.i, at urn o’clock -in the toVenoon, at my ollico in Keener Township, Jasper county, iudiana. 1 will proceed to hear and decide upon the claim of the- said Charles 0. .Spencer; whereof the said James Carroll, and all others interested will take nofeie®. EL AM i). FAIRCHILD, -— : »——— Justice of the Fence. Keener Township, Jasper county. Indiana. II: IF. Marshall.A tty- for I‘Uiintif. . July-T(i-^o-:;0-Aug.-7. ’ ■ _’ • _ ~T' ' __ x l pRIQ^ I^CREAM POWDER MOST PERFECT MADE j Prepired by a physician with special regard ,- | to health. No Ammonia, Lime or Aluin. ,‘‘l H®) »I blfSfelllsliil i flpjlli IN FBAN.CE' Gathering Grapes for Making Cream of Tartar for DS PRICE’S CREAM BAKING POWDER. SPECS AL {SPECIAL ' _ crroACT • t I MOST PERFECT MADE I Purest and strongest Natural Fruit Flavors. Vanilla, Orange, Almond, Rose, etc., flavor as delicately and naturally as the fruit. j PRICE BAKING POWDER CO., CHICAGO. BT. LOUIS,

m si mm Tra,d.e 2FsLlsk.ce u-' _ . ■ —- '4*. t. • , F 77 _ I —:—A_4i——' . t ——. •- ——- Opera House Block. • , ) "S ±Senssela,er - - - - - Znd.la.rx3,. • Dry M% Carpets, ui Upholstery Sods, ■ Mens’ and Boy’s Readymade Clothing, . "■ '' . tv*. “ ---T— , ■“‘T , ' — HV Boots, Shoes, Trunks and Valises, Gents’ Furnishing; Goods, Choice New Things for Spring Wear are now arriving daily. - » WfflSWr mm 4'KVHRBS. A and an endless line of MMMMMHEM __________ _ ‘ * ~i 5 \ ‘-33X01SSJS GOODS!Just opened. Spring importations of Novelties in Dies fabrics, French and Domestic Dress Goods, in choice combination colorings, with plain goods to match. -JPlo/icl GroodsThese are very popular and: stylish. We have them in Ladies Cloths, Cashmeres, Cheviots, Mohairs, Alpacas, and in lower grade dress fabrics, from sc. per yd., up. S'B@ elur 6«lSßiat«l Yaluss Tn Black 6haghm@i©s' Mm ,te NEW EMBEOIDERIES. Cambrics, Nainsook and Swiss Edges and Insertions, all over Embroideries, in white, red, blue, with edging to match. The best in the market. — “ i ‘ r— ' — : “• I Carpels ara ■ Cheap! Ingrains and Tapestry, Brussels, lower than ever known. Body Brussels and Velvets are within the reach of everyone. Oil Cloths, Mattings and R.ugs ■ •#* *' ■ ■—l. i , -- ■ ' ’ - I. I .11-1 - . m it sa m i wm RUBBER GLOTHING of all kinds. Lake’s & Gent’s Gossamers, Warranted ’ Berfect. • . -a..' * » * .-. V 3 .' ' , : v hinsim and ©9ffl§.iM@ BfS deeds, • ' .. d'; -'S' Of all kinds, at the very lowest prices V for good goods. Mail Orders Promptly and Carefully- attended to. ... v ' . j ■•' . ; . - v - ’• Trade Palace ; Rensselaer, Ind. 17-33-ts . -A. ;v\ 1