Rensselaer Republican, Volume 26, Number 49, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 August 1894 — Page 4
THE REPUBLICAN Thursday, August 2, 1894. ISSUED KVKBY THURSDAY BY , PUBUBHBB AND PBOPBIXTOB. OFFICE In Republican building, on Omer ol Waskitigton and Wes ton streets. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Ore Year $1.50 Six Months.. 75 Three Months.... 50 Official Paper of Jasper County.
CALL TO ELECT DELEGATES TO CONGRESSIONAL CONVENTION.
The Republican voters of Jasper county, or those who will be voters, and all other persons who will be voters and will co-opera-tive—with the Republican party, at the coming November election, will meet in mass Primary precinct, township or delegate district conventions on Saturday, AUGUST 18TH, 1894. at 2 o’clock p. m., for the purpose of selecting in each of such primary conventions one delegate and one alternate delegate to represent Jasper county at the Congressional nominating convention, to be held at Logansport, Cass county, Indiana, on the 22nd day of August, 1894, to name a candidate to represent the 10th Congressional district, in Congress. The basis of representation will
be 1 delegate for each 100 votes cast for Benjamin Harrison, in 1892, apportioned as nearly as is practicable,- Each precinct township or delegate district will meet at the places herein designated, and will each be entitled to one delegate and one alternate delegate, as above provided.
PjI.AC_S OF MEETING. Marion tp., South precinct, Rensselaer Town Hall. Marion tp., East Precinct, east side court house. Marion tp,, West precinct, west side of court house. Carpenter tp., South precinct, Remington Town Hall. • - Carpeid< r tp., East Precinct, Remington Town Hall. Carpenter tp., West precinct Dura U d ITidlr : Newton and Jordan tps.j School House south < f Lamsou bridge. Kankakee ai d East half of Wheatfield, Wheatfield school house, 'Keener and West half of Wheatfield tp., DeMotto school house.
Barkley tp., Center s.chool house. Walker tp., Kniman school house. Hanging -Grove and Milroy fps., M rlhc.-o school house. Union tp., Wild Lily school house. By order of the Jasper County Central C. mmittee. In the apportionment of delegates the old division of Marion township into three precincts, is followed. Thos. J. McCoy, Chairman.
C. E. Mills. Secy. _===== Valparaiso has . a court of Independent Order of Foresters named after General Milroy. A hero, like a prophet, is not without honor save in hisown country. Mr. Cleveland’s firm stand for free coal is, doubtless, due, in a large degree, to the fact that his personal and political friends would profit enormously by the free admission of Nova Scotia coal. Can it be that bis anxiety for free iron has a similar origin? It has tenme to light that the Cuban iron mines are controlled by the Bethlehem Iron Company and the Pennsylvania Steel Company, both of which were liberal contributors to the Democratic campaign fund in 1892, —Indianapolis Journal.
The official call for the electic n of delegates to the Republican congressional convention appears in this issue. Thei apportionment <1 legates in thjs county, and
the division into delegate districts together with the places of meeting, arei-the same as in the primaries for the former convention, except in the townships of Carpenter aml-Marion,—in-each of which the method of electing each delegate separately requires each precinct to meet by itself. These various places of meeting are specified in the call.
Senator Gorman, democratic leader,, says of the President’s letIn patriotism the democrats of the Senate had gone to work to save the country, to keep their party in power, when suddenly, in the midst of the struggle, there came the President’s letter. It was the most uncalled for, the most extraordinary, the most unwise communication “that ever came from a President of the United States. It placed this body in a position where I must tell the story as it occured. The limit of endurance has been reached.
This is Unkind.
Lafayette Call The nomination of Valentine Zimmerman by the democrats of the Tenth district as their candidate for congress, should, mske it po.-sible and very easy for the republicans to elect in that district. Judge Winfield and Charley, PollarcL both of whom are possessed of some brains and ability, were candidates, but laid aside for Zimmerman, in much the same way that many another bright and capable man has been ditched for some backwoods ignoramus who happened to reap the benefit of local prejudice and .that-unaccountable propensity of men which so often leads the mediocre to combine and prevent the man of real talent from taking the station to which his genius entitles him.
Ode to Vai.
[The Author has < seapod [ My name is Vai, Valentine Zimmerman. I hail from Rochester, Rochester on the banks Of the race that runs from Manila u To the soft and sinuous Tippeeaiofi. . At twilight when the sun goes down I listen, Listen to the wooing of the frogs And to the lowing of the kino. ’Tis music to mine ear; Ami it reminds me, Brings back old Germany - And bock and Schweitzer, And weinerwurst. That toothsome fruit. And li m burger, That.'poem. But I digresss. Those were happy boyhood days. But now ' ' I am a candidate for congress. Hank Barnhart
Says so And e Hauk knows. $ I beat Windy And the Cass county bar, Madejaine Pollard And Pat Keefe. Hank Barnhart Says so And Hank knows. I beat ’em all. And I am the nominee, Me '' ' ■ • Valentine Zimmerman Of Rochester. I am a democrat. Hauk Barnhart Says so And Hank knows. I am a democrat Because any man Can be a democrat And be consistent. Everything goes With democracy So you vote the ticket. If you want everything Vote for me, Valentine Zimmerman of Rochester.
And if you want to know * How I stand Ask Hank, Hank Barnhart, For. Hank knows.
WAS THE REVENUE SUFFICIENT?
Mr. Horace Wing, of Zainsville, N. T., propounds a question -4o Hon. R. G. Horr which has often been asked and which has received different answers according to political bias. The question is: - Did . the. McKinley tariff law provide money enough for the necessary running expenses of the Government during Mr. Harrisons administration. Mr. Horr answers in the New York Tribune in his usual terse and convincing manner as follows: “Mr. Wing has not asked exactly the question which he intended to ask. The Government of the United States has other large revenues besides those received from the duties on goods imported from foreign nations.
The money received from internal revenue taxes amounts each year ter a large sum. The post-office receipts are also very large. The question this correspondent no doubt intended to ask was this: ‘Were the receipts from the duties collected under the McKinley- law, ■tengethex -withthe' other revenues of the Government during the administration of MrHarrison, sufficient to meet the running expenses of the Government?’ , ; ‘‘l answer, most certainly they were. During the administration of Mr. Harrison, the Secretary of the Treasury purchased and retired over $250,000,000 of Government bonds besides meeting the jyinning expenses of the Government. The revenues of the Government began to shrink, however as soon as the result of the election of 1892 was known. Mr. Harrison was compelled to manage for four months with receipts growing less. He no doubt'pur-
chased and retired more bonds than he would have done had he known what was going to happen. The revenues arising from f,the McKinley law must be considered as at a time when the law was in full force, not as after the markets of this country had been injured by th® prospects of free trade and low tariff legislation. It is singular how the democrats attempt to show that the duties collected under the McKinley law were too small to supply the - needs of the Government. ■Why do 1 hey adopt an mOome tax, if it be not for the purpose of raising revenues so as to'make up for an unexpected deficiency under their new bill? The hue and’ery of these "gentlemen have -been for twenty-five years that protection collected too much money. When you want some one to blow hot and blow cold in the same, breath I woulcT refer you to the ordinary, plain, free trade democrat of Nor th America.”
The Flag Trailed in the Dust.
Rochester Republican. • - ' One of the cars of the special train that carried the delegates and Z:mmer man boomers to the Democratic" congressional convention, at Hammond, Wednesday, had a banner tacked on both sides of it, upon which was painted in large letters “Fulton County Democracy.” The banners kept their places all right going to Hammond, and during the stay at that place, but upon the return trip one of them seemed to be aslramed oL-Yhe-eruwJ-ftftJ-made a
desperate effort, to get loose and finally succeeded in severing itself from the car near Marshland station. The next morning a brakeman on a freight train discovered the banner, and after carefully examining the long piece of muslin and the inscription, he tacked it upon a double decked hog car, loaded with fat porkers for the Chicago market. Ob course “Fulton County- Democracy”-, attracted the attention of all beholders along the line of railway, and especially so at Hammond» where it was a familiar sight to citizens generally, who expressed the opinion that the Dems had come back for another -driahi - . . / .... "
Austin & Co., have private funds to loan on real estate at the lowest rates. No delay, no red tape, but if your title is good you can have the money in 5 homs.
Foreign Wages.
The weavers of Manchester, England, earn on an average $6.63 a week of fifty-six hours. The spinners average 38.53. Girls from 18 to 20 years of -age receive from 34.30 to 31.50. I’iecerS earn on an average 34.38 a week; bobbin boys from gi 76 tn SL9.V In France, the daily wage for fortyone hours’ work in Cambeesia and the Department de I’A i.-me is from 13% to 19% cents, for weavers. The representatives of a large German factory employing 1,500 hands and running 90,000 spindles reported inlß9 z the average earnings of girls and women at 31.45 for a week of six-ty-six hours. ' -k'. Japan is-taking away from both Manchester and Bombay and is monopolizing "the Chinese trade. Last year 360,000 spindlers were in operation in Japan and by the end of the present year the number will have been increased to ”50, 000. The Japanese factories are at Osaka. They have the advantage of cheap coal as well as cheap labor. The average wages at Osaka are 16 1-5 cents a day for male operatives and 8 cents a day for females.
The question of securing foreign laagket&for American cotton goods and also of retaining the American market for American manufacturers, under the Wilson bill, rests on the ability of American workers to accept foreign wages.—Seattle Post-Intelli-gencer.
Tariff Reform.
Sugar at Half Price.
The sugar planters of Louisiana must indeed feel proud of the attitude of their representative in the United States senate. These men were- recently elected to congress with specific instructions to care for the best interests of the state which they represent. Neither Senator Blanchard i nor Senator Callery has done so. | Louisiana can and will only .be thor- ■ oughly protected by the republican ■ party which represents protection. The two southern senators thought otherwise. They made a trade; they bartered away the certain prosperity of their state for a vague and and indefinite nothingness. They have as the matter stands now, deliberately voted to rob every sugar planter in the state of Louisiana of exactly onohalf of the amount of ■ protection which was given to them under the McKinley tariff. But cane sugar is not the only sugar, and on the broad lines of national
progress and prosperity something further must be said regarding protec-tion“txrthe-AmericajLsJigarproducing industry. Those gentlemen of Louisiana, who have-their every interest invested in the sugar business, if not content with the action of Senator Blanchard and of Senator Caffery, should by this time have decided that the voice of the Louisiana sugar planter be heard in plain and vigorous terms. If the Louisiana sugar industry must be subject to democratic barter, let it not be disposed of at half price.
Democratic Sympathy for Labor.
Results of Protection.
Many great American inventors have earned world-wide fame. Fitch and Fulton for stea,mboats, Whitney for the cotton gin, Evans for milling machinery, Whittemore and Jenks for looms, Hoe, Adams and Gordon for printing - presses, Stuart for sugar refining, Baldwin and Winans for locomotives, Pullman for sleeping cars, Collins and Boot for ax making, Ames for shovels, Woodwortn for wood machinery, Fairbanks and Howe for scales, Howe and Crosby for pin making, Knott and Mott for stoves, Terry, Ives and Jerome for clocks, Wood for plows, Lorillard for tobacco making, i Edwards for leather making, Blanchard for lathes for turning irregular, | forms, Spencer for geometrical lathes, McCormack and Ketchum for reapers, Colt, Spencer, Sharp, Smith and Wesson for firearms, Phillips for matches, Wells for hats, Goodyear for india rubber, Ericsson for naval construction and hot air engines, Howe, Wilson, Singer, Gibbs, Grover and Baker for sewing machines, Morse for the telegraph, Tatham for lead pipe, Whipple for screws, Chickering ahd Steinway for pianos, Burden for horseshoes, Yale for locks, Roebling for wire cables, Corliss for stetfm engines, Disston for saws, Stephenseh ic/T horse cars and Gatling for quick guns* —Baltimore Journal of merce, May 36, 1894. L
We Greet You With the First Annual CUiAKANCE SALE * of 1 THE MODEL This sale will last to August 10 th 1894. And Will be the GREATEST BARGAIN SALE’ in Clothing, Dry Goods, Boots and Sho; j s, Hats and Carpets. We have put the knife clean through Prices, cutting them in twain. Read a few Quotations!
CLOTHING! CLOTHING!! $15.00 men’s suits $11.48 $ 3.50 child’s J. & P. suit. .$ 2.75 12.50 “ “ 9.25 2.50 “ “ “ .. 1.50 10 00 “ “ 7.25 1.25 “ “ “ .. .88 7.50 boys’ suits 5.00 2.00 men’s pants. . 1.48 8.00 “ “ 5.50 1.50 “ “ 1.19 5.00 “ “ ~.. 3.00 1.25 « “ 98 Clothing Must Go. These Prices will show you that THE MODEL is the place to trade. i ■ Shoes and Slippers! __ Ladies Tan Slippers. ; . ...-.... .A.. r. . ..........:.. .. . .$ .87 Ladies’ kid button shoes 1.25 M en’s Bals shoes ..... 1.48 Men’s Congress shoes '. 1.48 Boys’ Congress Bals 1.25 Remnants 0 n r sale . \ I 1 Our REMNANTS will be U ATT! It* 1l fl 1 j Sold So Cheap, in order ilvlllllUill UM bJI.IJLJ.IJ clean up stock for fall. This Sacrifice Sale is made to make room for one of the best selected stocks for the Fall and Winter of 1894 & ’95, which must excell in Selection and Low prices, previous efforts by any merchant. TI-ZE &CODEL,. . WILL A. MOSSLER, Manager.. Rensselaer, Ind. “
REPUBLICN TICKETS.
STATE TICKET. Secretary of State, WII.UAM IK OWEN, of Cass. Auditor of State. AMERIC'US C. DAILY, of Boone. __ X teas un; r .ut State,F. J. SCHOLZ, of Vanderburg. Attorney-General. WILLIAM A. KETCH AM, of Marion. Clerk of the Supreme Court. ALEXANDER HESS, of Wabash. Superintendent of Public Instruction. DAVID M. CEET! N(I, of Jefferson. , !•*• r- _ State Statistician. SIMEON J. THOMI’SON, of Shelby. ——State Geologist. : W. S. ULATCHLEY, of Vigo. DISTRICT TICKET. * or State Senator, ISAAC H. PHASES. of Benton County, For Prosecuting Attorney, •T. C. ANNABAL. For Joint Representative, MARION L. -SPITLEK, ol Jasper County. - ■ : COUNTY TICKET. For County Clerk, WILLIAM 11. COOVER, of Carpenter Township. For Connty Auditor, HENRY B. MURRAY, OfJßarkley Township. For County Treasurer, JESSE C. GWIN, ■* of Hanging Grove Township, For County Sheriff, CHARLES W. HANLEY, of Walker Township. For County Surveyor,' JOHNE. ALTER, of Union Township. For Connty Coroner, TRUITT P. WRIGHT, of Marion Township.
Commissioner—First District. WILLIAM DAHNCKE, of Wheatfield Township.
Cominiss'onei— Second District, JOlfS C-.MAiiTI N’DAT.K, of Newton Township. Commissioner—Third District, DEXTER it. JONES, of Carpenter Township. A. McCOY & Co’s Bunk is pen pared to make farm loans for the present at 6| per cent, for 5 years, with the tisu'il privilege of partial payments. (.’< mmissions os low as elsewhere. JT j-fit fire in lived of a loan, call and see ns, or address us a letter stating what jott want, and we will cheerfully ariswtr. Vve can furnish the money promptly. W Jr A RETIRED BUSINESS WOMAN. A Page From Her History/ The important experiences of others are Interesting. The following is no exception: "Ihad been troubled with heart disease 25 years, much of that time very seriously. For live years I was treated bv one physician continuously. I wits in business, lint obliged to retire on account of my health. A physician told my friends t hat I could not live a month. My feet and limbs were badly swollen, and I was indeed in a serious condition when a gentleman directed my attention to Dr. Mlles’ New Heart Cure, anil said that his sister, who had been afflicted with heart disease, had been cured by the remedy, and was again a strong, healthy woman. I purchased a Dottle of the Heart Cure, and in less than an hour after taking the first dose I could feel a decided improvement in the circulation of my blood. When I had taken three doses I could move my ankles, something I had not done for months,and my limbs haa been swollen so long that they seemed almost putrlfied. Before I had taken one bottle of the New Heart Cure the swelling had all gone down, and I was so much better that 1 did my own work, On my recommendation six others are taking this valuable remedy."—Mrs. Morgan. 569 W. Harrison St., Chicago, 111. Dr. Milos' New Heart Cure, a discovery of an emlneht specialist In heart disease, Issold by all druggists on a positive guarantee.or sent by the Dr. Mlles Medical Co.,Elkhurt, Ind., on ■» receipt of price, fl per bottle, six bottles for *5, express prepaid. It Is positively free from all oplutes or dangerous drugs. r For Sale by all druggists. Baby carriages all styles and prices at Williams.
