Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 34, Number 88, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 July 1902 — REPUBLICAN TICKET. [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]
REPUBLICAN TICKET.
i THE STATE TICKET. ■MTU try of State — , DANIEL E. STORMS. Aatfltor of State — . DAVID E. SHERRICK. ■Baaaurer of State—- . NAT U. HILL. OManey General — . CHARLES W. MILLER. Owt Supreme Court — , ROBERT A. BROWN. Superintendent of Public Instruction— F. A. COTTON. ■tat. Statistician — , BENJ. F. JOHNSON. ■tate Geologist— W. 8. BLATCHLEY. ■btffe Supreme Court, Fifth District—- , JOHN H. GILLETT. OMgee Appellate Court — | FRANK R. ROBY, j U. Z. WILEY. | W. J. HENLEY. JAMES R. BLACK, f D. W. COMSTOCK. | W. E. ROBINSON. DISTINCT TICKET. For C ongresß ID6AB D. CLUB PACKER, Valparaiso, Ind For Judge 90th Judicial Circuit, CHARLES W. HANLEY. For Prosecuting Atty 90th Judicial Circuit, JOHN D. SINK. For Joint Repreeentat ve, JESBE E. WILSON, county ran. For Auditor, JAMES N. LEATHERMAN. For Treasurer. SAMUEL R. NICHOLS. For Sheriff, ABRAHAM G. HARDY. For Surveyot, MYRT B. PRICE. For Coroner, W. J. WRIGHT. For Commissioner Ist District, ABRAHAM HALLECK. For Commissioner 2nd District, FREDERICK WAYMIRK. Tor Commissioner 3rd District, X CHARLES T, DENHAM. For County Councllmen, Ist districtJOHN HAHN Sat district.....—.. HARVEY E. PAI.KISON srddistrictJOHN MARTINDALE Sth districtWALTEß V. PORTER ( Ed. T. BIGGS At Large- ERHARD! WIVRTHNER ( .... ANDREW J. HICKS
The Tilden dinner at which President Cleveland delivered his now famous reorganization speech was intended to promote the prospects of Hill, but it looks at this writing as if the woid must be spelled with an “e.”
What has become of the Godgiven ratio 16 to 1, and the crime ©f *73? Dead, buried, forgotten, never to be resurrected. It seer is, too, that the children of Miss Democracy die in infancy. The only living child she has is Free Trade, and it has been slighted and buffeted about until it is very pony and will have to be nursed carefully for some time before it will cat any figure. One of the bouse Democratic leaden said in a speech on the floor the other day that the second election of Mr. Cleveland as president was the greatest calamity that bad befallen the race Since the fall of Adam. The second election of President Cleveland occared only ten years ago, and the leader in queaticn stumped the state of Missouri against Harrison. If he and his party knew no better, a decade ago, than to bring on the country the greatest calamity since the fall of Adam, and this period, be it remembered, includes ths crime of ’73, bow are they going to convince the American peothat they have learned enough
