Rensselaer Republican, Volume 19, Number 8, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 October 1886 — Page 3
THE REPUBLICAN. Il' 11l 11..11- ■■■■ II maul ■ t I ■— ■„ ■ » -F;Tltwicvii(.clitwALßArr>CmcAgo«rW : ~ / ALWAYS ITS PATRONS The Fiji Worth of Their Money by tri »T'>M nJ'yr Taking Thom w SafelyaodQuickly I, H I between S- w Ijd m • i Ne'»Lrl Chicago <? • Lafayette Indianapolis Cincinnati- > I niiisitil PULLMAN SLEEPINb CARS ELEGANT" PARLOR CARS ALLTRAiMSRUH THROUGH SOLID Tickets Sold and Baggage Checked to Destination. JMTGet Maps and Time Tables if you want to bo more fully informed—all Ticket Ag-entfa at Coupon Stations have them—or address ;WM, S. BALLWIN, Gen. Pass’rAgt Chicago. Condensed lime Table of Passenger Train, in effect Aug. Ist 1886. SOUTH-BOUND. , 2 : No. 2 J.| No.i *;no.oj >S »>a LW.LLB. ; Exp.; Exp. Fast M .JHICAG4 , I.vi (iosani! 7 30pin:8 35am Hammond “■ r 12 '■ ■ 885 “ • “ sbelbv “ 832“:9 47 '• «1042 -‘ Rose Lawn . P .1.844..“...: 9 55-; “ Fair Oaks “ : 855 “ :10 07 “ :1100am Surrey “ i 909 “■ : “ : “ JSeaaasexaex -. •• . 9.21 i.lO 31 •• :1120 “ Pleasant Ridge “ ; 932 “ • “ : “ Marlboro “ : 9 418+“ : “ : “ Monon “ ;1000 “JO 05 11150 " Lafayette “ 111 2i) 1220 am; 1245 pm Greencastle .‘S i 2 23pm: 235 “ : 251 “ LOUISVILLE Ar “ 800 “•7 20 “ INDIANAPOLIS “ “ 330 “:3 45 “ CINCINNATI “ '“ : .8 00 “ , 745 “ NORTH-BOUND. 1 Ss-hq-M ansi ■ i 3 * ■No 5t ftbauiwua. : Exp. : Exp. I Fast M CINCINNATI Lv : 73da>n|-. t>4ftpm• 735 am INDIA NAPOLIS ill 50 “ :]] 15 “ill 50 “ LOUJSVILL.’I - “ : 609ai»: 730 “■: 745 “ Greencastle “ 1225 pm 1215 am 1225 pm Lafavette “ 330 “:■300“ :235 “ Monon “ ■ 155 “ : 405 “ : 330 “ Marlboro 518-;-“ : “ Pleasant Ridge “ : 525 “ ! “ : “ S.e3assela.er “ ; 58(1.“ : 4 39 “ : 402 “ surrey “ . 548 “ : ' “ • “ •Fair Oaks “ • 505 ;503“; 442 “ Rose Lawn “ ; 619 “; 5 16f“ ■ “ Shelby “ I <129 • : 524 “ • .Hammond “ ■ 755 “ ■ (>35 “ : “ CHICAGO .A r : 900“I7 40 “ : 650“ Trains marked wi'ffi a t stop oitly. when flagged. Those marked with (*) run daily.. Those marked with (t) r,i\n daily except Sunday. Trains are run on Central (Standa’d) Time-. Solid Trains, with Pullman Sleepiag Cars on night train ami Parlor Cars on day trains, are Chicago and l.oui3ville. , [Through Coachesand Pullman Sleeping Cars between Chicago, Indianapolis and taneinnati. sold and Raggage Checked to all For tickets ana further information, apply to C. Wren., Agent, Rensselaer.
RUCTION E ER £ E. EA a NOWEES. , t n ' Will ary p üblic sales in Jasper and adjoining counties. Residence RENSSELAER - - - - INDIANA. D. WIDD3B, GUN and LOOKSMITH Shop on River south of School House Renssllaxb, Indiana. -<) All kintie of Iron and Wood turning, and line Jlork.in Iron, Steel and Brass, on short notice and at reasonable rates. Give me a call. "wTblssenden & SONS, HOUSE AND SIGN PAINTERS, GRAINERS, KALSOMiNERS, and CAEHIAG-E FAESTTERS, ■'(Shop rrppwiitn IfuTTnFifrjts Livery Stable.) Rensselaer, - Indiana.* 0 Decorating, Fainting and Papcr-llangliig a Specialty 17-85-ts. \ Makeever House. Rensselaer, Ind. and pleasant,rooms. Tables supplied with tlie best the market affords. Good Sample Rooms ou first floor. Free Bus to and from Depot. PfHfjIP-HGUEr— KV-35-tf. Proprietor. PIONEER MEAT MARKE T Rensselaer, - - Indiana J. J. EIGDESBACH, Prop’r. BEEF, Pork, Veal, Mutton, Sausauge, Bo lognn, etc., sold in quantities to suit pur chasers at the lowest prices. Nope butthe best atock slaughtered. Everybody is invited all. —: ——* The Highest Price Paid for Good Fat Cattle. J. J. eiglesbach. “I had given myself up as lost because of inherited scrofula, Tried everything for purifying ihe blood without benefit until I used Parker’s Tonic, and can truthfully say that it has cuted me. I still use it for its spleudid effect on my general health.— K. H. Lynd, Chicago. -7' f ' - ■ ' ExcitementTexa?Great excitement has been caused in ihe vicinity of Paris, Tex., by the remarkable recovery of Mr. J. E. Corley, who was so helpless he could Dot turn in hwd,orTßHßelmhead4<wervbodv said he was dying cf Consumption. A trial bottle of Dr. King’s New Discovery was sent him. Finding relief, he bought a large bottle and a box of Dr. Kjng'gJkaw Life Pills; by the time he had taken two boxes of Pills and two bottles of the Discovery, he was well and had gained in flesh thirty-six lbs. Trials Bottles of this Great Discovery tor CoHSuniption free it F B Meyers’.
HOW DEMOCRATS LOVE THE GERMANS.
,/ ; : And What Treasurer Hoover Thinks Ought to be Done With Them Our German and Hollander citizens are requested to read the following letter before they make up their minds to vote for the democratic candidate for county Treasurer. There is no question about the genuineness of the letter. The occasion of its being written was certain complaints made by the auditor of Lake county over the largeness of the costs in the case of Kopelka vs Kvtpelkay tried in this county by change of venue from Lake county. The letter is written on the of-ficii-i letter paper of the county treasurer, and was mailed in one of his olheial envelopes. The foL lowing is the letter: Office Of Treasurer of Jasper Co Rensselaer, Ind., Nov. 19, 1885. Horace Marble, Esq., Auditor, Crown Point, Ind : Dear Sir: Yours of 14tli Inst., with Draft for $320.15 (part cost in cases of Kopelka vs. Kopelka) at hand, for which accept thanks, But 1 must.remind you that there is yet due from Lake Co. to Jasper Co- 35c. which I trust you will forward at once. Your mo-ion to retax _costs_is overruled. As to annexation, wo would not oppose the measure if we could get your “d—d old” county seat moved to God’s “Garden spot of the world” WJ SW-15 and’NW ] 21-32-6 now in the name of Horace Marble. But to be compelled to go to Crown Point we never would consent, Yoa ask for advise.,,iri your great affliction, I would suggest, If your German citizens are so much trouble, Hang the d—d Dutch the same as is done in other civilized counties. “Keep cool,” Kopelka vs, Kopelka is not yet end ed. A motion for a new trial is now pending and will be settled at Jany. term of Court, 1886. Yours truly, p William M. Hoover. Remember the gerrymander when you come to the polls next Tuesday.
The State debt has been increased by the Democratic administration $L160,000.00. Twenty-two hundred votes in Brown county ar« to have more power in the state senate than G,200 in Grant That’s Democracy for you. riUUn.' ' ‘ In eight months Mr. Cleveland vetoed over a hundred bills giving small pittance of pensions to old soldiers, and yet the Indiana Democracy in convention assembled indorsed the administration. Thus they endorse these vetoes. The chairman of the Marion--'county Democratic committee, Simeon Coy, is a saloon keeper, and last Sunday his saloon was open all day, in defiance of law. This incident illustrates the elements which control the_Democratic party in-the large cities. Hon. Isaac Dunn, the Republican candidate for Representative will be re-elected with scarcely no opposition. He has been an able and popular representative and his constituents are well pleased with his work in the State assembly.— Kentland Gazette. A man who is any Republican at all, ought to be one this year, of all others, and to deposit a clean ticket where it will do the most good towards rebuking the infamous Democratic gerrymander, which disfranchises more than one ; third of the voters of the state. The spoils management of State Institutions that abuses lunatics, and feeds them on diseased meat, ’ rotten butter and sour bread, and skins the bodies of dead prisoners to secure material for fancy canes, must go. It is inhuman, and the great heart of the people will revolt against it. What a gushing love the Democrats have for the soldier in the Senatorial contest. Tears stream ' down their war-time Democratic faces. Is it not the same old heart-breaking, soul-aching sympathy they felt when organizing the Knights of the Golden Circle for the purpose of betraying the soldiers into the hands of the enemy?— -Fowler Era.
$1,160,000.00.
THAT IS THE AMOUNT THE STA/E DEBT HAS BEEN INCREASED/ BY DEMOCRACY. The following figures are official, and show the condition of the foreign State debt for several years named: FOREIGN STATE DEBT. Fiscal year ending Oct. 31, 188051,093,395.12 ' Fiscal year ending Oct, 31, 1881 9713*25,12 Fiscal year ending Oct. <ll, 1882..... 971,822,12 Fiscal sear ending Oct, 81, 1883..;. . 007.82.5,12 Fiscal year ending Oct. 81, 1884.... . 607,825,12 Fiscal year ending Oct. 31, 1885 1,703,825.14 In 1881 the debt was reduced by the transfer of $340,000 Purdue University bonds to domestic indebtedness, and by payment of the Coughlin bonds (24) of SI.OO each. This was done under Gov. Porter’s administration. In 1883 the Republican administration paid otf: War loan bonds ...$139,000 Other bonds•.... 1,570 T0ta15140,570 There has been added to the public debt of the State during the year ending Oct. 31, 1885, the sum of $1,160,000 as follows: New temporary loans6oo,ooo New State house temporary loan 500,000 State University (Bloomington) loan .... 60,000 Total $1,160,000 These are the figures showing the increase for the year of the debt under Democratic auspices: $1,160,000.00 The Indianapolis Sentinel say s that this money —$I,l6o,ooo —was borrowed “to complete the statehouse and the new hospitals for the insane” now building at Richmond, Evansville and Logansport. Yet there are $120,000 of estimate allowances, allowed to the contractors for these hospitals, that are unpaid because the treasurer says there is no money in the state treasury to pay them, and the contractors have been compelled to shave this paper of the state at the rate of 7 and 8 per cent, in o’rder to get money to pay the workingmen who are working for the State of Indiana. where is the Money? During Gov. Porter’s administration, besides the transference of the Purdue University bonds, there were actually paid $164,'570 of the foreign debt- During the past year there has been only $2,000 paid of internal improvement bonds, and the debt remains as heavy as the above figures show. This is the sort of management the business of the State is having under Democratic administration.
The Question in Indiana.
Indianapolis Journal. Is there a naan in Indiana who believes that the liquor traffic should be compelled to pay the extra expense it puts on the people, the Democratic gtrrymunder proposed to put a plaster over Vis mouth, so he might not hope to make his wishes known in the State Legislature, Is there a man in Indiana wh goes further, and believes the traffic should be prohibited, bis mouth was to ■ be closed by the gerrymander. that he Dwight not make his wishes known in the body that is to make the laws of the State. Is there a man in Indiana who would like to man tain the measure of protection afforded by the tariff, he should have nothing to say about national legislation oh that question in the United States Senate, for the Democratic gerrymander proposed that no man not a Democrat should be allowed a voice in the election of a Senator, —Li there u.m an in Indiana- who wouldlike to know the truth about the condition of the State treasury, his mouth was to be sealed by the gerrymander devised by the Legislature that refused to let the people see into the treasury when it was slated, officially, that there was a probability of a large shortage. Is there a man in Indiana who would like to have the insane properly treated and ted on wholesome food and to know, just how things are conducted in the hospital for the insane, his mouth was to be stopped by the gerrymander so that it might be useless for him to vote for investigation. Is there a qwan in Indiana who believes that the election should be conducted on honorable principles and that one vote should count as much as another, the gerrymander was to tpll him to shut np, or to vote the Democratic ticket. Is there a man in Indiana who still believes in the principles of the National party, he must be made to realize that he is voting in the air in the, election to be held next month, for the j gerrymander wan to kill th* effect of his vote as effectually as though he ’ were not allowed to cast one. zz I Is there a laboring man who would like to see some of his own comrades elected, and some of the principles he believes in incorporated In legislation, he too must keep still in the presence of the gerrymander that was to nullify in advance ‘the effect of his vole'. 1
Isl there a man In Indiana who believes that the majority should rule in this as in other States; he is confronted by the fact that a viciAis and corrupt Democratic minority, so arranged the legislative districts that an honest expression of the majority might be out pf the question. ‘ The gerrymander was to do for the free and intelligent people of Indiana what the shot-gun did' for the States in the South; what the tissue ballot did for South Carolina, and fraud did tor Cincinnati and Onio. In the year 1886 it was to be made impossible that the majority in Indiana could get their rights at the election. It is a shameless anomaly without parallel, and if allowed to go unrebuked will work ines- j timable harm to the State and her vast interests of every description. This.is the leading question of the present campaign, in that it underlies all others. Without a lt>-e and honest election, without- each ballot being given au equal representation and equal eflect in determining the policy of the State, it is folly to talk about popular government in Indiana. Will the honest and independent voters of the State fail to do their duty in this most serious matter? Every man owes it as a duty to his country to go the polls next Tuesday and cast his vote in the Avay which he honestly believes is the best for the general good. Disfranchising a man because he is a Republican is just what the last Democratic Legislature did. Not satisfied with the outrage, they boast over it and flippantly remark that if the Republicans carry the state by 25,000 the Democrats will still have a majority on joint ballot and elect a United States Senator. How is I that for decency and honesty ? Maggoty meat, butterine, vicious and cruel attendants, are what an honorable committee report they I find at the Insane Hospital in i Indianapolis. The answer by the ' responsible parties in the Demo-1 cratic party is, “What are you going to do about it?” Let the thous- j ands of voters who are so unfortunate as to have friends at this instution answer with the ballot next Tuesday.' Senator Vorhees advocates the proposition that special taxation shall hereafter accompany pensioii legislation. Under that proposition all nension legislation will be defeated by disagreements on the accompanying taxation. Senator Voorhees was a violent and bitter opponent of the war income tax, denouncing it from every stump, and evading the payment of hi« share of it. - :
Ellis & Murray are showing a nice line of Dress Goods. The place to buy blankets and comfortables is at Ellis Murray’s. , ——• • • MONEY! Money!!— $20,000 private funds to loan on Real Estate. First mortgage security. Call at Citizens’ Bank. 6-3 t
Hemphill & Honan, B L, I® a i \ ... X. —DEALERS INBoots, Shoes, Hats Caps, AND Furnishings’. Ladies’ Fine Sta A Specialty. Rensselaer - - Indiana
LIVERY AND FEED STABLE. • ' .. > F C, PADCITT A BROi, Proprietors* Powell’s old stand. Carriages, Buggies, Truck Wagons and Teams furnished at allhouts, day or night, atreasonable prices, feeding and boarding a specialty; B®*Patronage Solicited.“‘§Btl , F. C. Padigtt & Br# RENSSELAER, - - - - INDIANA. ’ GOOD NEWS! “ Several good reasons why! will sell you goods at prices which ate in proportion to the prices at which you are selling yoiir prbdHce: I Sell Strictly for Cash! My expenses are much smaller than my competitors; I hire no' i clerks, doing my own work; have no drayage to phy; theretotb I Can; and will, sell you r GROCERIES as cheap as they can be bought any where in town Don’t believe thiA till vou have given me a call. Store close to Depot J W. KING. 18-26-ts. < Rensselaer, Indiana. LVMBEB I keep constantly on sale a full and complete stock of Lath, Sash Lumber Doors Shingles, Windows# Having purchased my stock for cash, I can and WILL offer superioi inducements to cash buyers. Give me a call before buying elsewhere. R P.BENJAMIM. 116-36 ts. THE OLD RELIABLE Brick and Tile Fsctory i About three-fourths of a mile west of Rensselaer, is the place to procure the best made, the hwt. burned Brick and |T’" the best prices to suit purchasers. Tile of all sizes and Common and Pressed Brick constantly on hand. Call and examine my manufactures before purchasing. JOHNT KOHLER.
C gRutW rv wfill B tU the largest oldest-1 Beptabli; bed, best-known ixurseriCM in the coun-i L try Host liberal terms. Unequnled facilities, fl Bwfceelow. Genevab’liTßery. 1 stabliMiedg THE LIGHT RUNNING J :■ I Hl SIMPLE “ ¥ * fOr •* Ltheonly sewing machine , k . THAT GIVES . -J
Uhas no equal"'] . FjwWi EwingmaScq ORANGE MASS. 30 UNION SQ.N.Y. CHICAGO ILL. 2 ST. LOUIS MO.ATLANTA GA. SALEBYFr- J] W. H. & C. RHOADES T PARKER’S I HAIR BALSAM I the popular favorite for dressing ■the hair, Restoring color when ■ gray, and preventing Dandruff. ■it cleanses the scalp, stops the ■ hair tailing, and is sure to please. fl Me. and tLOO at Druggists.
| PARKER’S TONIC
The best Cough Cure you can use, - And the best preventive known for Consumption,.tit cures bodily pains, and all disorders of the Stomach, Bowels, Lungs, Liver, Kidneys, Crinary Organs and all Femala Complalhta. The feeble and sick, struggling against disease, and slowly drifting towards the grave, will in most cases recover their health by the timely use of Pabkxb’s Tonic, but delay is dangerous. Take it In time. Sold by aU Druggists in large bottles at SLMk HINDERCORNS The safest, surest, quickest and best cure for Corns, Bunions, Warts, Noles, Callouses, &e. Hinders their further growth. Stopsail pain. Givesnotrouble. Makes tbs feet comfortable. Hlnderoorna cores wbeaeverjtUMr (fesfefe •tMtoUWMMitu. SiacoxaCOHS.*
ARE BY FAR THE MOST POPULAR COPWnpHl Till? la superior to whalebono. I IUK IlLl|i L c^nnotbo broken. I'j la flexible and easy to the wearer. Is used In d<? goods except those I tnado by Warner Eros. —=slo.oo REWARD=? FOR ANY STRIP OF CORAttNE THAT BREAKS WITH Si X .MONTHS ORDINARY WEAR IN A CORSET. AVOID CHEAP IMITATIONS BONED WITH VARIOUS KINDS OF CORD. ALL GENUINE CORALINE COFb6ET3 HAVE CORALINE PRINTED ON INSIDE OF 6TEEL COVER. For Sale by all Leading Merchants, r/l^ME^B^, 1414 cH?SSS 4 “ , ■ r- “ 5 la. i c. uib MANUFACTURERS DEALER® . A . XJT z-—' uIrNBSS, SADDLES. U C 4. ULARS, WHIPS, TRUNKS V A DISES. BDAXKETS, ROBES, CARRIAGETRIM MIIXGS. HARICESS 6 ID, et' DomeitlcaßidXew Torr singer Sewing MaeblneN HARNESS SHOP. OUTH SIDE OF WASHINGTON oTReI Rensselaer, ’
