Rensselaer Republican, Volume 20, Number 33, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 April 1888 — Page 4

IflE REPUBLICANThursday, April 19,1888. ♦ r - '• - Of Pnm»ko»*i tarns. $s Jgt annum lor e lines er •na ;So cts. tor each additional lute. Local notices. to cents perllnofor first insertion cent* per line tor each subsequent insertion. Special rates lotchotcc places inthe paper,aud or advertisements ividert nan oufe column. *> filth of regular ad vertise rs payable q uarteely ; undent to lie paid in advance job Pbintinu.—AUrseassortnifiHol tvp* and other material tor poster.uaaiphlet,circular and fctodrcdwork. Prlces'ow.

Annoanconicnts of Candidates FOR COUNTY SHERIFF. PHILIP BLUE’. We are authorized to aunonuce the name of Philip Blue as a candidate for the ofiile of Sheriff of Jasper county: subject to the decision of the Republican nominating convention. A. G. HARDY. We are authorized to announce to the Republican voters of Jasper county that A. G. Hardy, of Carpenter town ship, is a candidate for the office of County Sheriff, subject t > the decision of the Republican nominating convention. ER.USTU3 PEACOCK. Ehjtoh Republican: I’lp.ast apnounce the name of F.rastus Peacock, of Marion tp., as a candidate for the office ot County Sheriff. Subject to the decisiomof the- Republi can County Convention. -- GEO. W. PAYNE. Editor Republican: Please announce that the undersigned is a can didate for the office of County Sheriff, of Jasper county, subject to the decision of the Republican county convention. Geo. W. Payne. Barkley Township. O. A. YEOMAN. Editor Republican.— Please allow me through your pnptjr to announce to the voters of Jasper county that 1 will be a candidate for the nomination to the office of County Sheriff subject to the action of the Republican nominating convention. In making this;, announcement, I respectfully ask the support and co-operation of all my friends m a friendly contest for the nomination, if deemed worthy thereto. Respectfully, O. A. Yeoman.* ' GEO. .). DEXTER. We are authorized to announce the name of Geo J. Dexter as a candidate for the office of Sheriff' of Jasper county, subject to the decision of the Republican nominating convention. COUNTY TREASURER. J. B. WASHBURN. We are authorized to -announce the name of I. B. .Washburn as a candidate, for re-nomination for County Treasurer, subject to the decision of the Repub liean county convention. COUNTY SURVEYOR. JAMES C. THRAWLS. Tho undersigned would respectfully announce to the voters of Jasper county that he is a candidate for re-election to the office of County Surveyor. Subject to the decision of the Republican Conn tv Convention, Jas. C. ThkawlS.

Call for Town Convention.

The Republican voters of the Town of Rensselaer, are requested to meet in Mass convention, at the Court House, on Monday evening April 30,1888, at 8 o'clock, to nominate candidates to be voted for at the ensuing corporation election, as follows: Trustee for the First District. Trustee for the Second District. " Trustee for the Fourth District. Town Clerk. Town Treasurer. / Town Marshal. At the request of Many Republicans. «• rryr aHnanBWHMB Roscoe Conkling’s short but fatal illness terminated, in death, early Wednesday morning. He was one of the greatest men of his day and generation. Saturday afternoon, of next week, April 28, is the day appointed for holding the Republican township Conventions, for the election of delegates to the county convention. Republicans should keep this fact iu mind—if candidates give them a chance to forget it. ■aMaaßHonanai It was certainly consign* for the Democrats of the U. S. Senate to put David Turpie forward to oppose the admission of Dakota into the Union, for the reason that she would be a Republican state, and send two Republicans to the U. S. Senate. Turpie was a “friend of the South when she needed; fiiends,"’ his own seat was obtain-i ed by a subversion of the will of the majority, through the infamous gerrymander, and it is fit that he be; the spokesman for the conspiracy Which has for its object the control of the government in all its de- j partments, in the interest of the j solid South. j

THE STATE REPUBLICAN.

With characteristic assurance and recklessness the Democratic papers of the state, under the lead of the Indianapolis- Sen- ! tinel, have been chaining that they carried the state, at the date township elections. Full returns jof the elections of trustees have ' been compiled and published by | Baker & Thornton, qf Indianapoj Its, the same reliable parties who compiled the entirely accurate returns in 1886. They give the names of every county m the state, the number and politics of its trustees. The summary shows that oil of the new trustees are Republicans, TOO are Democrats and 8 are Independent. Two years ago the number of Republican tiustees elected was exactly the same as this year. The Democrats then had 485, from which it will be seen that all they have gained in two years is the election of five democrats in place of that number of Independents, of two years ago. This election indicates a Ilepublicon majority of 10,000, the state.

Parlies and Temperance.

Philadeldhia Press; The high license law, with local option, now in successful operation in Illinois was enacted by a Republican legislature in spite of Democratic votes aud influence. The Scott law in Ohio, which afforded considerable protection against free whisky and unlimited' saloons, was enacted by a Republican legislature against the persistent opposition of the Democrats, nullified by a Democratic supreme court, and re-enacted in tfie Dow law by another Republiehn legislature, but was fought by the Democratsvto /before. In the interval the political complexion of the Supreme court was changed by the election.of another Republican judge, and the perpetuity of the first practical liquor tax law with local option Ohio has possessed dependsupon the Republican majority of that tribunal. In Pennsylvania we have seen an honest SSOO high license tax bill promised by Republican conventions, enacted by a Republican legislature, and signed by a Republican governor; against the determined, consistent, and unrelenting opposition of the Democracy, aided and abetted by the organized liquor interest,. Wisconsin enjoys a useful and moderately satisfactory high license system, secured to her by a Republican legislature in spite of the almost unanimous opposition of the Democrats. The same story is true of Minnesota, where the tax is 81,000 in the large cities antl|ssoo elsewhere; and Nebraska, where the tax is the same as in Minnesota, where high intelligence lias been crystalled into, high license by Republican legislatures against the futile protests and votes of their Democratic minorities. In Michigan and Connecticut where very successful local option and high* license bills have become laws the measures were supported almost unanimously by the Republicans, and as unanimously opposed by the Democrats.

is one page of the record. \ I The other is even more striking, i When the Crosby high license i bill was passed by the legislature of New York nearly every Hepublieen member voted for it, h;hl all but three Democratic members voted against it. The' 1 measure was vetoed by a Democratic gov- , ernor, ami the Yedder bill, which Embodies substanfial!y the same ‘ principles as the Crosby bill, is j now pending, with the party lines j drawn as they were on the' former | measure. ~~ - 1 - y; — i__ " -j—In l)e!awarc an-at-tempb-to—pttss~ J ■ a high license act was promptly j defeated by Democratic votes, and ‘ thr* advocates of teini>erance reu| ; fonirFavenotlnng To nope tor in ; that State n util high intllrgence ris- i es to control through Republican | ascendency. . ' i I here is no excuse for misnnder-! ing the attitude of the parties on the high license issue. Neither party has made any effort to con-' ceal its true position. The Rcpab- j ! licau party is, by pledge and,' per- j j formance, committed in favor of I ■ local option ami high license, while j .the Democracy is, by declaration j ayd deed, uncompromisingly opI posed to it. The line has been |sharply drawn, and it is strong, I straight and clear. The Repnhli-, can party proposes to face the issue and tqke the consequences, and it insists that the Democracy shall do the same.

Ingersoll on the Tariff.

There is another thing which I believe: I believe in the protection of American labor. The hand that holds: Alladdin’s lamp must be the hand of toil. This nation rests upon the shoulders of its workers, and I want the laboring man to have enough work; I want him to have enough to eat; I want him to have something for the ordinary misfortunes of life; I want lTipi tojhave the pleasure of seeing his wife well dressedyj••■want him to see a few blue ribbons fluttering about his children; I want him to see the flags of health flying in their beautiful cheeks; I want him to feel that thia.ia.liis country and the shield of protection is above his labor. And I will tell you why lam for protection too. If we were all farmers we would be stupid; if we were all shoemakers we would be stupid ; if we followed ope business, no matter what it was we would be stupid. Protection of American labor diversifies American industry, and to have it diversified touches and develops every part of the human brain. Protection protects integrity; it protects intelligence, and protec-' tion raises sense, and by protection we have greater men and better looking women aha healthier children. Free trade means that our labor is this world. And allow me to tell you that for an empty stomach “Hurrah for Cleveland!” is poor consolation. I do not think much of a government where the people do not have enough to eat. lam a materialist to that extent; I want something to eat. I have been in countries

where the laboring man had meat once a year, twice sometimes — Christmas and Easter. And I have • seen women carrying upon their heads a burden that no man in the audience could carry, and at the same time knitting busily with both hands, aud these women living without meat And when I thought of the American laborer I said to myself, after all my country is the best in the world, and when I came back to the sea and saw the old flag flying in the air, it seemed to me as though the air,,, from pure joy, had burst into blossoms. Labor lias move to eat and more to wear in the states than in any other country of this earth. I want America to produce anything that Americans need. I want it so that if the whole world should declare war against us, and if we were surrounded by walls of cannons, bayonets and swords; we would supply our human wants in and of ourselves. I want to live to see the American women dressed in American silks. The American man in everything from hat to boots, produced in America by the cunning hand of the American tailor. I want to see workingmen have a house painted white, with grass in the front yard, carpets on its floors and pictures on the walls. I want to see him a man feeling that lie is a king by the divine right of living in -the republic. And every man here is just a little bit of a king, you know. Every man here is a part of a sovereign power. Every man wears a little purple; every mail has a little crown and a little scepter, and every man that sells his vote or i s ruled by prejudice is unfit to be au American citizen. I believe in. American labor and 1 will tell you why. ' The other day a man told me that we produce in the United ; States one million tons of rails i worth $50,000,000; the value of | the ore in the ground was abqut 25 ! cents a ton. American labor twenty-five cents’ worth of iron in the ground and adds to it $59.75. AVe build a ship ’in the United j States worth $500,000 and the value iof the ore in the-earth, of the trees | in the forest, of all that enters into I that ship bringing $500,000 in

gold, is only 820,000; 8480,000 by Americans coined into gold Arner- : ican brains made-a legal tender i the world around. I propose to ; stand by tne nation. I want the | sky to be filled with the smoke of ! American industry, and upon that the bow of perpetual promise. That is what I am for. Where did this doctrine of a revenj&Aanff. “come'Troin? From tile south? The south would like to stab the prosperity of the north. They would rather trade with the people who were willing to help them in the war than those who conquered the rebellion. They knew what gave us our strength in waiu They know that all the brocks, creeks and rivers of New England were putting down the rebellion. They knew that exery wheel that turned and every spindle that revolved was a soldier in the army of fr|gi man progress. It won’t do. I don’t wish to belong to the party which succeeds only when my country r falls. I don’t wish To belong to the party 1 whose banner went up with the baniierof rebellion. I belong to that party

which is not poor when the golden billows are running over the seas of wheat. I belong to that party which is prosperous when there .are oceans of corn and the cattle are upon the thousand hills. I belong to that party which is prosperous when the furnaces are aflame, wdien you dig coal, iron and silver; when everybody has Enough to eat; when everybody is happy; when the children ( are all going to school, and when joy covers my nation as with a 0 garment. The party which is prosperous then, that is my party. And that is the party of protection, the grand 'old. Republican party.

The Delphi Convention.

The Tenth District Convention to elect two delegates and two alternate delegates, to the National -Republican Convention, meets at Delphi, to-day. The prominent candidates for delegates are Judge. Field, of Crown Feint; Bills, of Monticello and Tomlinson, of Logansport. Field will, undoubtedly, be chosen and Tomlinson, probably. The delegates to Delphi, from this county, chosen last Saturday, are O. M. Yickery and E. B. Yondersmitli, of the Third Commissioner’s district, and Vs. W. Watson, ValSeib.E.P. Hammond, and Clark McColly, of the Second District. The delegate to the Indianapolis convention is M. F. Chilcote. The delegates for the First District are 1. D. Dunn, E. T. Biggs and L. Shortridge, for Delphi, and I. D. Dunn for Indianapolis.

Call for Township and County Conventions.

Notice is, hereby given to the Republican voters of Jasper county, that a county delegate convention will be held in the courthouse in Rensselaer, bn Saturday, May 5, 1888, at 1 o’clock p. M., to nominate, candidates to be voted for at the Sensuing November, ” 1888, election, for the following offices. - County Treasurer, . :■ County Sheriff, County Surveyor, County Coronor, County Commissioner for the First District, ’ County Commissioner for the Sennnd District. County Commissioner for the Third Distiict. Mass conventions of the Republican voters of the several civil townships and, voting precincts of Jasper county will be held on Saturday, April 28,1588, at two o’clock p. m., to elect delegates to the county convention above called, at the following named places: In Marion township, South Precinct, in the court house, in Rensselaer. In North Precinct, Marion township, in the Opera House, in RensJ selaer. In Carpenter township, West Precinct, in Exchange Hall, in Remington. In East Precinct, Carpenter tp., -in Qhio street school house. In Wheatfield township, in the Wheatfield school house. In ail other townships, in their respective voting places. The ratio of representation will be one delegate for each ten votes cast for Robert S. Robertson, in 1886, and one delegate for a fraction of five votes or over, apportioned as follows: Vote. Delegates. Hanging Grove 5S 6 Gillani 85 9 Walker 64 6 Barkley 113 11 Marion, N. Pre. 207 2.1 Marion, S. Pre. 121 12 Jordan 55 6 Newton 59 6 Keener 86 9 Kankakee 51 -.5,, Wheatfield 33 3 Carpenter E. P. 154 15 Carpenter W. P. 124 12 Milvoy 24 2 Union 75 8 Done by order..of—the JasperCounty Republican Central Committee. M: F. Chilcote, Chm’n. -4r:-fir-MxgSHAtX7 SVCy.

State <>;•• Ohio. Cit y ok Toledo { , Lucas County, sS. y Frank J. Cheney makes bath that lie is the senior partner ot tiie firm of F. .1, Cheney & Co. doiny business In the city | otTOlUdo, county and state aforesaid. \ amt that said tuna will pay the sum ofj one hundred dollars for each and every ca->e of catarrh that can not ba cured by | the use of Hall's Cataerfi cure. Frank J. Cheney Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this sih day of Decern- j bcr.A.D.FB6. A. W i Gleason, I j SEAL. « i Notary Public, j Halt’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally ami act directly upon the blood and blood and mucus'surfaces of the system Send for testimonials, free. T. J. Chenet & CO., Toledo. O. BS*"Sold by druggists, 75 cents.

Our Prices Astonish the World. Yet if the world only knew of the energy, grit and enterprise we hav6 displayed in collecting such a *?• jjteei It would not be surprised. We have the finest stock of Dry Goods & doling Ever brought into this .city and we are going to sell at prices away below anything ever heard of before. Coupled with this we give CHOICE from a LAIIGE ASSOIStIiE^T 'And we have no hesitation in saying that it contains the Latest Spring Styles Brought here direct from the centres of fashion. If is a PROFUSSOM of HfQVELTIES And we would respectfully invite every lady to give us an early call and inspect it. WILLEY dTsiGLER, Rensselaer. Ind, YEQMMr&HEMPKIiL ——DEALERS IS WAGONS AND BUGGIES, . EMPIRE Movers ail Safa, ■imnnHß'i Ml httii'MD ■ l T~ir itbmiin r i ‘Tin- n-1 nnirtr-r-irraii ■"irnrrnn A~nn ~-|iiTTßnnMnrTn-nmiiTini~nr>i mm in n ■!—ll—im ■■ THE LATEST and MOST IMPROVED Plows 9 Harrows, CULTIVATORS, sfe SULKY ALSO THE CELEBRATED Mil 111 TBOTH mSI ail 1011, Uiiei. One of tlie most useful and economical [farming imple--u ments ever invented. All- kinds ~oJ 3 LAGESMITHITC and WOOD RBPAIROT© will be done promptlf, in the Best manner, and as reasonable prices. YEOMAS & HEMPHILL.

Sheriff’s Sale. • r. ' L_ -r— —J T}Y VTitTttßTrtn certified copy of a decree Jj niul execution to me directed froiji the i ‘lorfc of 11 if film if Conn, in'-jr rjTiWW No. 8138, wherein Benjamin W. Lawson was plaintilt' and Eliza J. Cooper. Cornelius Cooper and Thomas i'arrer were defendants, requirmg. me.to.iiiakgthe.suni..afJ>iie tlmnstwl and eighty-live doUarsaud six. cents ii i,nnTiO&h4p- > r,ouet.jik-.UL— and ■CT>ct*,."l*Wttf , f t XTio*e af~ public side on . Saturday, the 28th day of April 18S8,. . between the hours of 10 o’clock A. SI. and J o'clock r. >l. of said day, at the door of the Court House, in the Town of Rensselaer. ,fr.sper County, Indiana, the rents and probes, for a term iH)t e\c(Nnnng r yenrse brythfi year, of thcfoUowtng described real-estate, to- . "wit; Lot three (8> of fractional northwest quarter (4) of the northwest quarter i of section ten (10). township thirty-two (ii'J) north, range seven (7) west, also northwest quatterjiy) of , the nofßienst quarter t l *), of station fifteen t!3). town-hip tliirtv-two CM) north, range seven (71 wait. in .laspet county. Indiana. And siioula such rents and profits not Sell Tor a sum sufficient to discharge said copy of decree niuj execution, interest aiut costs, I will, 1 utthe same time and place, aud in the manner aforesaid, expose at public sale the fee sin pl« right of said defendant in and.to said railejtate or so much thereof as shall lie suflirient to discharge said copy of decree and execution, interest and cost*. said sale will be iaadcwTthout relief and ill accordance with the order of Court in said copy of decree and execution. '* SAMUEL E. YEOMAN, Sheriff Jasper Oouaty, Xnd. W. H. H. Graham. . Attorney for plaintiff. Meh. ’

Sheriff’s Sale. T) Y VlHTUivof.a certified copy-nf-ailec.Tee 1) and p.\eeuffon.lu_um. dil a ted from—44m~CT<wk of the Jasper CiteiHi Court, in a cause i Xo. <1787 wherein Eli Cox wu&..,plaintiff and ! Kruik A man, George C Anmu. Susan Anian, • Charles IV Kuntz, Elizabeth Kuntz, M. J. .Kuntz.John 11. Gwm. A. J Baker were de-fta.ulaptfe.rffiEmuiaag--ifteVit*v mrUi» the awnr of’ TtiurlTundre.l'and nine iloliurs mid thirtytwo cents ($409.:e») together with interests iind costs, I will expose at unUUe^aleon A - - the sth day of May, 1888, ' between the hours of 10 o’clock a. in.''and 4 I o'clock p. m. of -aid daw,"'lit t|ie door of the ■.. Court IHmisjJ indite town of Bcnawlaer, -Jasper IOHUtv. Indiana, the rents and profits. Torn term not ,pxceed|ng seven (II years, by tlm 1 year, of the following described real estate, to- ! wit: The north half '(% )of the east half Oil of the j south west quarter (*.ii of, section Jtour (4) in township thirty 1(30) north range six (UVwe’t, containing 40 ntres more or less, cotnity stale o! lodiana. And should such rents anil profits,not sell ■ for a sum sufficient to discharge satdj copy of l decree and execution, interest and costs. 1 \\ jl), iit.tlie slime time and jil.iee, and in tlie miinni-r aforesaids expose at pviniic sate the fee simple right of surd defendants in and to saiilreal estate, or so li,urlrthereof as shall be sufllcicnt to discharge said copy of decree and execution, | interest and costs. Maid sale will lie made with relief and In accordance with 1 the order of Court in said c*>py of decree and txedition. . . -cr- NAMI EL E. YEOMAN'. Sheriff cf Jasper Coimtyjndtana. Thompson & Bro., . Attorneys for plaintiff, Marsh JO,IB-8. “ ' ——