Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 22, Number 11, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 October 1900 — Page 8

REPUBLICAN - R ALLY! DN--1 AT y RENSSELAER, Last and Largest Rally. Hon. James B. m BELFORD, OF COLORADO. Hon. Patrick O’DONNELL, OF CHICAGO, Col. R. DE HART, OF LAFAYETTE, Will address the people on the issues of the Campaign.

Prizes to Delegations. A large flag given to the township bringing the largest delegation. A Bass Drum given to the delegation making the best display of floats, uniforms and other devices. A large flag given to the township bringing the largest and Best Costumed delegation of Ladies. A large flag given to the Township having the largest percentage of voters in delegation based upon vote of 1896. A large flag to the largest delegation from outside of Jasper county. Parade of Delegations at 10:30 o’clockA. M Parade of Rough Riders at 4.30 o’clock P. M, GRAND. TORCHLIGHT PARADE~at 8.30 p. m. Music byßr ass andMartialßands andGleeClubs COMMITTEES. KEEP OLD GLORY FLYING Committee on Finance. F. B. Meyer, E. L. Hollingsworth, A. F. Long. . . Committee on ArrangementsC. M. Blue, Caleb Hopkins, R. B. Porter, A. G. Hardy, R. A. Parkison, M. B. Price, S. A. Dowell, Country Committee. rQm Charles G. Spitler, to select his aids. Marshals of Day:, T. J. Sayler, Fred Phillips, to select aids; Each township to select their marshal ' ■Sfeife A* . V v '

TO THE YOUNG MEN

Advice Which Is a Safe Guide in This Campaign. QUOTATIONS FROM M’KINLEY Address Made In-. '96 Applicable to the Pressnt Contest. * / Cause For Hesitation; By Young Men, As Well As Others, Before Giving Their Ballots to a Party Which Seeks to Create Hostility Between Would Lincoln, Grant, Logan and Garfield Have Stood Had Their Humble Surroundings Been a Bar to Future Success. An address by President McKinley to the first voters of Cleveland, Q~ delivered October % 1896 is so appropriate to the present campaign, in which are involved the same issues as then, as "to be commended to all those who want to start right and all those who want to keep right in the exercise ct the American’s most sacred privL ;,e. The President then said:

“You have witnessed the greatest progress of. science, mechanics and material development of any period in our history. Y’ou have enjoyed the advantages of the free and higher schools of learning. You have lived iu a period of the greatest opportunity for moral and intellectual growth, and enjoyed most favorable conditions for forming right opinion?. You witness only as you come to your sovereignty a reunited country under the old flag, blessed in natural resources beyond any other country and suffering only because of the unwise policies already inaugurated and the dangerous policies yet threatened. You approach the exercise of your sovereignty, therefore, under the most advantageous circumstances, free from predilections and prepared in calm judgment to consider without bias the issues on which parties are divided. You have-, in this campaign, as in no former campaign, the advantage o/ the most exhaustive discussion. Perhaps some of you, who have already started out for yourselves, have had, iu the last three cr four years, some valuable personal experience, which is quite as good a school in politics as in anything else. You come to your majority at a time when the people are engaged in a national contest w’hich w r ill settle some of the most important questions which ever confronted us, and settle them for long years to come. You are given the ballot at a time when its rf use for good or evil to the country was never greater. You assume this responsibility at a period fraught with as grave problems as were ever presented.

“So nation dan hold its standing be fore mankind that will depreciate its own currency, any more than a nation can stand before the world that will not defend its flag and honor. No nation can hold its position that will violate plighted faith or repudiate any part of its indebtedness under any guise whatsoever. No nation can command respect at home or abroad if it does not at all times uphold the supremacy of law and inviolability of its own sacred olTligation. Surely, every young voter, who has his spurs yet to win, his career to make, his fortune to build, will hesitate before that which seeks to create hostility between classes and sections, between the rich and the poor, between the mechanic and the manufacturer, between the farmer and the banker. He will cast his ballot to continue the equality of citizenship, of privilege, of opportunity, of possibility, which has been the boast of our citizenship and t-Is the very corner-stone upon which our free institutions rest. “No young man will want tq place weights upon his own shoulders or raise barriers to his/own progress, which hitherto have never impeded the progress of the industrious, honest, clean, ambitious young man. Away with caste and classes. Such a doctrine Is un-American and unworthy to be taught a free people. He who would inculate that spirit among our people Is not the friend, but the enemy of the poor, but honest, young mau, whose soul is fired with a worthy ambition for himself. “How would Lincoln, Grant, Garfield and Logan have stood" if, in their time, they had accepted the doctrine, which some knew how to teach, that because they were poor and of humble surroundings they must go off by themselves and shut the door of opportunity to the best impulses of their souls and the noblest aspirations of their minds? The ballot of tho young man, as well as thgt of the old man; the ballot of voter, as well as that of all voters, should always express the voice of truth and conscience. It should represent the calm and unbiased Judgthe voter. It should embody the welfare of himself, his home, his community and his country. It should never be false to his convictions or opposed to Justice and hdnor, either In public or private concerns. It should express on its'face the best hopes and highest aspirations as an Individual citizen, and always represent the greatest good to his fellow countrymen. '“May your votes, young gentlemen, be always given to preserve our unity, our honor, our flag, our currency and our country, and to save our blessed Inheritance always form lawlessness, dishonesty and violence. May your votes always be glvAi for a ffclidy that shall give us the widest development In our unmatched resources;, the wld-

eat incentive to th%, Invention, skill and genius of onr citizens; the largest reward to American labor and tbs highest welfare of the people, and promote the best deals in Ameriaan. citizenship.” V

THE CORRECT WAY.

Make a cross, with a bine pencil, Inside the circle which contains the eagle and nowhere else and you will vote a straight Republican ticket. Four ballots will be handed to each voter by the election officers, as follows: “The National and State,” on red paper; “the County,” on white paper; “the Township,” on yellow paper, and the “Constitutional Amendments,” on white paper.

“American Sacrificer.”

The largest crowd the Hon. Charles A. Towns? was able to draw in Kansas numbered 700 persons. For some iuexplicable reason the people are not flocking to hear the man who styles himself “the great American sacrificer.” """" ,v .

A Jad d Horst.

The I\liip May Spur Hun on For A Short Distance. When a horse becomes worn an ired he may be urged on by the whip in the hands 'of a heartless driver, but reason would say, let him rest and feed and give him time to recuperate, then he will renew his journey with ease and without fatigue. When the stomach becomes tired and weak from impure blood a dose can be taken that will stimulate it on to do the work of digestion, but it is only a stimulate, and soon the stomach becomes dependent on this assistance. The proper and only way to have a healthy stomach is to make the blood pure and the liver healthy. Knox Stomach Tablets are a new combination of remedies tried and tested. They purify the blood, make the liver healthy and cure nervousness, dyspepsia, billiousness, loss of appetite, catarrh, and constipation. A single box will restore the bloom of health to the uheek and send pure blood coursing through the veins. An immediate relief for indegestion and a positive cure for dyspepsia. If unable to secure them of your local druggist, send 50 cents to Knox Chemical Co., Battle Creek, Mich., and a full sized boz will be sent postpaid.

Notice of Letting of Contracts for Supplies. The hoard of Commissioners of Jasper County Indiana, will until 12 o’clock noon of Tuesday November 6th 1900. receive sealed bids for supplies for the Poor Asylum of said County for groceries, meats, drugs, wood, coal dry goods, clothing, hardware and s atlonery. All to be In accordance with requisition on file In County Auditors Office. And all bids to be accompanied by proper affidavit and bond as required by law. By order of The Boakp ok Commissioners.

Notice of FirstjMeeting of Creditors. In the District Court of the United States for the District of Indiana. In Bankruptcy: Before John 0. Bowers, Bankrupt. In the matter of ) No . 700 j n J.Phelps, and. V Bankruptoy John W. Phelps. J r J To the creditors of Mark J. Phelps and John W. Phelps of Remington, in the county of Jasper, state of Indiana, and district aforesaid, bankrupts : Notice is hereby given that on the 24th day of September, A. D. 1900, the said Mark J. Phelps and John W. Phelps were duly adjudged bankrupts, and that the first meeting of creditors of said bankrupts will be held at my office in Room 1. in the Daily News Block on West State street, in the city of Hammond, Lake oounty, Indiana, on the 31st day of October. A. D. 1900, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon, at which time the said creditors may attend, prove their claims, appoint a trustee, examine the said bankrupts, and transact such other business as may properly come before Baid meeting. John O. Bowbrs, Referee in Bankruptcy. Twelfth Referee District of Indiana, Hammond, Ind. Oct. 13* 1900. Notb— Creditors will please observe requirements concerning proeof claims. See seotion 57 of Bankruptcy Aot. 1868, and General Or der XXI.

Notice of Final Settlement of Estate. In the matter of the estate of y Jaceto Clouse, deceased: i]fl In the Jasper Circuit Coutt, November Term Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned as administrator with will annexed of the esJacob Clouse- deceased, has presented . anebßied his account and vouchers in dual settlement of said estate, and that the same ux> .l°F tbe examination and action t the 18111 of Novtime ail persons lnterestpreved C ° Unt and Toachtr * not be ap^ And the hairs of said 7 estat». at 6 all others interested therein, ane also reauired at the rime and place aforeeaW. to Lnlar and make prooi of tfieir heirship, or eialm so adv part of said estate- m aßyj JOHN F. adinr.. Oct. 19 26 Nov. 8; IMHO? ML STATE OK INDIANA k a , Jaspek Count* In the Jasper t ircuit Court, November Term JDOO Cause No 6003 William C. Kirk -i VSJesse H. Fordice and Susan M l . ! Fordice his wife: Susan M. Fordice widow of Jesse H. Fordice; Anderson I the unknown husband of i * Paulina Anderson: Edward ? J. Kirk and Mis, Kirk, his Wile, Mrs. Kirk widow of Edward ,1, Kirk, deceased; Mattie J. iFenwright and John Penwrlglit her husband, Bertha B. Kirk: Jennio B, Kirk, deceased, J 1 Ail of the unkn. wn adult and minor heirs de visees and legatees of any and a.I -of- the above named defendants, deceased; All of the unknown heirs, devisees and legaiees, of all the unknown heirs, devlsoes and legatees, of any and all of the above n-tned defendants. comes now the plaintiff in the above entitled cause and 11 les his complaint herein, together with an affidavit showing mat the defc dams are heliev.d to be non-residents of the state of Indiana. • Now, therefore, the said defendants are hereby notified tnat un'ess they be and ap pear on the 21st day of the November term of the Jasper Circuit Court, t > be nolden on the second Monday of November, a 1). tSKiO. -aid day being the sth day of December ]9oo,atthe court house In Rensselaer, in said county and state, and ai swer or demur to said complaint, tee same win be heard and determined iu their absence. In witness tvheieof, I hereunto ISEAL i set my hand and affix tbe seal of O said court this 3rd day of October. '•—'o v - sw ' A. l>. lttiiO. „ „ JOHN F. MAJOR, C. E. Mills. C:erk. A tty for p ff. OC. M 2 19. MBT HE. THE STATE OF INDIANA, ( Jasper County 1 Inthe Jasper Circuit Court, Novein'- er Term, J ]9OO. Mary Matilda Fonsler 1 vs J-Gomplalnt No. 6014 Henry Stair, etal ) Now come the plaintiff, by chllcote & ParkIson her attorneys, and flies her comp aint herein together with an affidavit that the defendants Henry Stair and Mrs. Stair his wife, and Mrs. Stair widow of said Henry Stair; John Stair and Mrs. Stair his wife and Mrs. Sta'r widow of said John Stair; Phillip Stair and Mis. Stair his wife and Mrs. —— Stair widow of -said Phillip Stair; William Reed and Mis. Reed his wife and Mrs, Reed widow of said William Reed; Thomas K. Tonner and Mrs. Tonner his wife and Mrs. Tonner widow of said Thomas R. Tonner, Jacob Miller and Mrs. Miller h s wile and Mrs. Miller widow or said Jacob Miller; Noah Edgington and Mrs. Edgington his wife and Mrs. Edgington widow of said Noah Edgington; Demetrius Edgington and Mrs. Edgington his w ife and Mrs. Edgington widow of said Demetrius Edgington; Pltill p Snider and Mrs. Snider his wife and Mrs. Snider widow of said Phillip Snider; Eleazer E. Noe and Mrs. —• Noe his wife and Mrs. Noe widow of said Eleazer E. Noe; Elzever N. Noe and Mrs. Noe his wife and Mrs. Noe widow of said Elzever N, Noe; and Mary K. Noe his wife: the Christian names of the wives and widows of the above named defendants being unknown, and all of the unknown heirs, devisees anil legatees of the foregoing name defendant- and all the unknown heirs, devisees and legatees of the unknown heirs, devisees a-d legatees of toe above named • efendaut. ore not residents of the state of Indiana. Notice is therefore hereby given said defendants, that unless they be and aprear on Thursday the 6th day of December 1900 the same being the 22nd judicial day of the November term 1900 ot the Jasper Circuit Court to beholden on the 2nd Monday of November A. D. I9uo, at the court house in the <ity of Rensselaer, in said County and State, and answer or demur to said complalut, the same will be heard and determined in their absence. in witness wherf of. I hereunto set /cl- hand anil affix the seal of said ( Jcourt, at K' neselaer, Indiana, this day ot October A. D. 1900. john f. major, oct. 12-19 26 Clerk.

Application for Liquor Litense. Notice 1* hereb given to the citizens of the town of DeVotte, and of Keener township. Jasper County, Indiana that the undersigned Reason M. Dunn a male inhabitant of the state of Indiana over the age of twenty one years; of good moral character and a man who fs not In the habit of becoming Intoxicated, and who lias been a continuous resident of said town and township for over ninety days last past, and who in respect to all legs' qualifications and requirements, Is a fit and proper person to be intrusted with th« sale of Intoxicating liquors and who will be the actual owner and pioprletotof said retail liquor business if license be granted him will apply to the the Board of Commissioners of said Jasper county Indiana, at their Nov, Term mo, said term commencing on the sth da X at the Commissioners court room in the court house in the city of Rennsselaer, In said countv and state for a license to sell and barter spirituous, vinous and malt liquors in less quantities than a quort at » Urn* with the nrvllege of allowing the same to be drank upon the nremlses where so sold and bartered. of the premises whereon said deslres to sell and barter and conrthct said retail liquor business. Isa one story frame butitling, fronttug on Railroad street, m sa d town of DeMotte, Jasper county. Indiana The precise location of said premises are more Dartlcularly described as follows: The ' ,? d buhdlng Is located on lot 14 In block three m the original plat of she town of DeMotte, ja*ner county, Indiana. The northeast corner ofsaid building being thirty (30) feet aud eight (8) inches west of the northeast corner of said lot and on the north line thereof, thence bv eutslde measurements south thirty (80) feet, thence west sixteen (16) feet, thence north thirty (80) feet, thence’ east sixteen (16) feet to place or beginning. That said described room and building Is separate and apart from any other business of anyklnd aud has no devices for amusement or music of any kind or character. That said building fronts to the uorth on said Railroad Btreet, having two windows aad one door on the north ena thereof and one door in the south end thereof and no doora or windows in either aide thereof. That said room and building can be securely locked and admission tbreto prevented and is so arranged with glass windows that the whole Interior can he viewed faom the outside and from the said street. , .. . . Sold license will be aake dfor a period of one year, commencing at the expiration of the license now held by said applicant for said premises. rBaSOH M DUNN.