Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 35, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 21 October 1902 — Page 2
THE REPUBLICAN Official P«M r ®’ <*»M r Coairty. DBm tn Republican building on the corner of Washington and Weaton Streete. AND FRIDAY BY GEORGE E. MARSHALL EDITOR AND PUBLISHER. f.rmi of Bub»crip«io» One Year.ll.so Six Months -75 Three Months.... - r .. • .50 Tuesday, Ootober, 21, 1902.
REPUBLICAN TICKET.
TIE STATE TKXn. Secretary of State DANIEL K STORMS. Auditor of States DAVID E. SHERRICK Treasures of State (NAT U. HtLL. Attorney General CHARLES W. MILLER. Clerk Supreme Court ROBERT A. BROWN. Superintendent of Public Instruction F. A. COTTON. State Statistician BKNJ. F. JOHNSON. State Geologist W. 8. BLATCHLEY. Judge Supreme Court. Fifth District JOHN H. GILLETT. (Judges Appellate Court FRANK E. ROBY U. Z. WILEY W. J. HENLEY; JAMES R. BLACK fFMTBOMSTOCK " W. E. ROBINSON s DISTRICT TiaET. ForOoaamuC aDGARID. CEUMPAOKKR, Valparaiso, Ind. For Judge 30th Judicial Circuit, CHARLES W, HANLEY. For Prosecuting Atty 30th Judicial Circuit, JOHN D. SINK, For Joint Representative, JESSE E, WILSON. COUNTY TICKET. For Auditor. JAMES N. LEATHERMAN. For Tramm ner. SAMUEL R. NICHOLS. •. For Sheriff, ABRAHAM O. HARDY. For Surveyor, MYRT B. PRICE. For Ooroaor. W. J. WRIGHT. For Commissioner Ist District, ABRAHAM HALLECK. For Commissioner 2nd District, FREDERICK WAYMIRE. For Commissioner 3rd District, CHARLKB T. DENHAMFor County Ccmncilmen, Mt districtJOHN HAHN Sod district HARVEY E. PARKI3ON 3rd district ... JOHN MARTINDALE Sth districtWALTEß V. PORTER < JOHN F. PETTIT At Large' EttHARDT WEURrHNKR * I FRANK J. BABCOCK
To vote a straight Republican ticket make a X within the circle which surrounds the eagle, as the one above Is marked. Make no other mark on your ticket. Any other mark than the X will spoil your ballot and will lose your vote. Use nothing to mark the X but the blue pencil that will be given you by the poll clerk. Should you by accident make any other mark on your ballot, return it to poll clerk and get a new one. Before leaving booth fold your ballot so that the face cannot be seen, and eo that the initial of the poll dork on the back can be seen. DON’T BE A BTAY-AT-HOME. BE BURE AND GET OUT TO VOTE.
8.0. Gard nsr’t Real Eatfte Agency Call on B. O. Gardner if you wish to buy or .aeli labds, oan suit you. Parti#? hav«og laud to sell please list them with me Also agent for fine farm and.ranch lands in Sooth Dakota located in good part of the atate ranging in price from B 7 to lipper acre,., Kxouraion svary I*# , weeks. prices advancing. Lanrb for ecohauga. * Office over Makes ver’s Bank B. O iOanDhBB. Ooidi nudt tway if yon uaa kLra?ie%,Oold Prepared io non vacant qapauh form they are eaay to take and effect a speedy care of the moot obstinate oases. Price 250 cold by A. F. Loe •
RepnHim Meetings. • Jesse E. Wilson At Fair Oaks School House on Tuesday Oot. 21, 7 o’clock p. HL Jesse E* Wilson and A. HaDeck At DeMotte *■"' School House, Friday Oct. 24, 7 o’clock p. m. .rffl
Jesse E- Wilson and Moses Leopold At Center SchoobHouse Gillam Tp., Monday, Oot. 27, 7 o’clock p. tn. B F. Ferguson and Chas. M Blue At Kniman Thursday, Oct. 23, 7 o’clock p. m. B. F* Ferguson At Wheatfield Thursday, Oct. 30, 7 o’clock p. m.
Estil E- Pierson At J ones School House Carpenter Tp., Thursday, Oot. 23rd, 7 o’clock p. m. Duvall School House Jordan Tp., Monday, Oot. 27th, 7 o’clock p. m. Egypt School House Jordan Tp., Friday, -y— Oot. 31at. 7 o’clock pm. Parr, Saturday, Oot. 25, at 7 pm. Valma Monday, Not. 3, at 7 p. m.
Hon-E-D Crumpacker At Rensselaer Wednesday, Oot. 29, 7 o’clock p m, G-eorga A- Williams At McCoysburg Wednesday, Oot, 22, at 7 p. m. Wheatfield Thursday, October 23, at 7 p. m. Williams & A. Halleck At Remington Saturday Oot. 25, at 7;30 p m.
Parkison & Leopold At Center Scteal Ome, Barkley tp Wednesday 'dot. 22nd. At 7 p. tn. Parkison. & Williams At Air, (Bruhwaed) Friday, OoL 24, at 7 p. m. Parkison <fc Halleck At McCoysburer, Monday OoL 27, at 7 p, m,
A “Gum Shoe” Campaign.
There is less than three weeks left of the campaign of 1902, fi campaign that has not had a parallel in the recollection of the oldest voter in the land. There never was a time since the birth of the Republic when there was as great a degree of general prosperity; as much general happiness, comfort and contentment; as many people employed and satisfied with their employment; as many people with bank accounts, with homes of their own—in short there has never been since the birth of Adam a nation in which the conditions were as satisfactory to as large a proportion of the people as we find in the great Republic of America today. Of course we have oar kickers, we always have had, we always will have. But in this campaign the “kicker” ba worn gum shoes or moved about with his lips closed and pillows on his feet. He has been merely a plotter, He went into the campaign with nothing to kick about that people would listen to; with nothing to offer that the people would take in exchange for what they already have. And so the only course open to the managers of the Democratic campaign was a “still hunt,” a campaign with nothing to inspire except the party name; with no appeal except loyalty to a party that means one thing in the east, another in the west and still another in the south, with no possibility of agreement on any of them. AU this quiet work and plotting on the part of the managers of the campaign is to have its sequel next week. The ground work has been laid and in every precinct in every school district every party”worker has his part and will attempt to carry it out. This county is no exception to the rule prevailing over the state. It has been one of the most skillfully conducted campaigns in the history of Indiana politics. The developments will come in the last ten days of the campaign. Get ready to meet them. - Delphi Journal.
Bryan Is Doing Well
Valparaiso Messenger (Dem. > A correspondent of the Philadelphia Record, who has been in Lincoln, writes of Col, William J. Bryan’s beautiful home und hie financial condition Hie information is that the colonel bae a place worth $40,000, besides $168,000 in cash in a Lincoln bank, and an income of $1,500 a week. This is probably an exaggeration, but Bryan has been doing well during the past six years. Before that time his wordly possessions amounted to less than SI,OOO In other word. Bryan is getting his full snare of Republican prosperity, and then some, but still his ' calamity howling machine keeps grinding away.
The Monej-back Congh Syrup Means a lot to people who are tired of experimenting with the “ordinary” oough preparations—yon are not out a cent if Dr. Geo. Leininger’s For mal-de-hyde oough cure does not please you. It will cure consumption and all serious and stubborn lung and throat diseases Sold at 25c on a guarantee by A. F. Long. Tues. nAM J T tobaccospit UvIN I **» SMOKE ■ * Your Life away I You, css be cured of Say form of tobsccs Seine ass ’snsja® cured. All druggist*. Cure ruarau teed. BookJj* and advice FRRK. Address STKU.I NG BJtMSDY CO., Chicago cr New York. <J7 Buggies for Further Orders ,-v— : .j ■ ’<4 I have just received another oar load of the slickest buggies and runabouts that ever struck the town. I didn’t buy them to aland here in the building to get duety and catch cobwebs with. : I am going to sell them. So if you are in the market for a new buggy and consider9s at 110 worth anything you will come and get my prioee before you buy. I have a house full to select which enables me to please yon without much trouble. M y terms are oasl time or trade. \ . u. Opposite court house, enet side square. D. M. Woelamd. InaMsesVswr Wwwses WKS QaeeawsWb OmmSy CMUhartta. eara MmatAMkiMh ■s-WA
Phohibitionists on McKinley.
Chicago Inter Ocean. “President McKinley,” declared the Prohibition party in national convention at Chicago on June 27, 1900, “has done more to demoralize the temperance habits of young men, and to bring Christian practices into disrepute than any other president the republic has ever had.” Then the platform woiit on to “charge upon President McKinley responsibility for disease, immorality, sin and death.” “He has outraged and insulted,” it added, “the moral sentiment of this country.” That platform, if not actually written in the office of the New Voice of thia city, was certainly inspired by the long-continued, abusive, scurrilous, obscene attacks of that journal, whose editor was nominated by the convention for the presidency. And when the result of the election was announced the Candidate of that convention issued, through the New Voice, a manifesto to the public, from which the following are extracts: CLOSE IN AND KILL!; Again I say rejoice! The country has gone Republican, it is true; the gin mill re-enters the capital in triumph! William of Jolo with his canteens and slaves and wines and concubines.- is defeated to a second term. Now for the campaign of 1904: we have the liquor traffic cornered in the White House For the honor of the church, close in and kill! JOHN G. WOOLLEY. Within a year a fanatic of another creed took John G. Wooley’s advioe to “close in and kill,” and the nation mourned another benevolent ruler and Christian gentleman foully slam at his post of duty. Now comes the New Voice and explains that its advioe to “does in and kill” was merely a “figurative expression.” The New Voice is very careful, however, not to reprint what its editor said under his signature last November. It hopes its readers will not remember that it described the martyred president as “William of Jolo, with its canteens and slaves,j wines and concubines.” “"*77* I **—7? The Prohibitionists of Jasper county are nice people, we believe without exception; but how they can vote with a party which is led and dominated and has its platforms dictated by such unspeak* able wretches as this Woolley, the advocate and instigator of murder, this rank insuiter of the purest and noblest man that has ever graced public life in any country, is one of the things that passes all compre heusion
If you have headaches don’t experiment with alleged cures Buy Krause’s Headache Capsules which will cure any headache in half an hour, no matter what causes it. Price 25c, sold by A. F. Long Ouroc Jersey Pigs. For sale two Duroo Jersey boar pigs, eligible to register. w4tp Sylvester Gray. Of Interest to Women. Women who have therjjielves suf. feted from the evil effect* of constipation and indigestion will be interested in the following letter from a father whose daughter was given up to die by two physicians: “My daughter has suffered from indigestion for the past five years and has tried nearly everything that she oould hear of for such trouble. She was confined to her bed when she began taking Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin and after taking one fifty cent bottle she is able to walk a mile at a time and during the day yesterday walked 3| miles. I feel like praising Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin because two doctors told me my daughter oould not get well and 1 feel that she is on a fair road to permanent relief, —Respectfully, J. H. M. Crocker, Nixon, Tenn.', Aug.-6,1900. Dy. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is sold in fifty oent and SI.OQ bottles, under a positive guarantee, by A. F Ixing
For Sale Cheap. 120 acres of as good and well located land as Jasper county affords. For particulars call on W. H. Churchill, City, or address M. A. Churchill, Cushing, Minn wt. - ---* Feeders for Sale. I have 150 feeders for saleym farm aear L JSJiblbjLi Ind. -freight 1000tq :j2OO ttmlhave also 900 stockere for sale. Good quality, Wm. B. Bbown, dwlaap Crown Point, Ind. . ’ L.... . . ...
FURNITURE CLEARING SALE!! *-**—*--. I, - 1 as Having purchased of Laßue Bros, their furniture Stock, in the Howels’ building 1 will con- ! tine the sale of the same at greatly reduced ! prices in order to make room for a new and ! more complete line of furniture. 1 have several patterns of Cotton and < K/WI Hemp Carpets, worth 20 to $0 cents ! Clearing Sale price 15 to 38 cents. p Dressers Clearing Sale Bea Lounges Clearing Sale price JMt to SIIW glass front Cupboards w r Clearing Sale price $9.01 Combination Book Casts worth t1J . 5 0 Clearance sale price $ll.OO Beds Worth 13 to 118, clearance sale $2 to $16.50 Cbairs Worth <7.50 to 8.50 clearance sale $6.50 t 057.50 Rockers Woith $2.50 to #5. clearance sale $1 to $4.00 Birdsell Carpet Sweeper priceaoo Also a fine line of Children’s Chairs, Rugs, Footstools, Bed Springs. Window Shades and Curtain Poles which will be sold at reduced prices. 1 I am also prepared to do all kinds of Picture Framing and Upholster work. Charges reasonable and satisfaction guaranteed. I invite the attention of the public and solicit a share of your patronage. Remember the place, in the Nowels Block, opposite new K. of P. Building. E. J. HURLEY, Prop.
Farmers Will You Read This A BULL SOLD FOR $9.000 | At a recent sale at Kansas City. Why ? Because he possessed QUALITY. I have no bulls for sale. But my line of goods possess ® quality and are Second to none. And the prices are O. K. J I handle a full line of the celebrated ? Studebaker Farm Wagons, i Carriages and Buggies. (I carry other lines o of buggies and handy steel farm wagons.) o McCormick Binders, Mowers, Corn Har- o vesters and Shredders. p A Shredder that will Shred | And requires no expert to run it, ♦ lam agent for Osgood Farm Scales, which are as 9 good as the best. Manure Spreaders; and repairs for 9 all machines, and every article of as good quality as the 9 19,000 bull. 9 Call and examine my goods which will cost you nothing. If J $ you can. be satisfied 1 can do it. ... Wishing you all a prosperous year and thanking you for yonr X berai patronage in the past, I remain sincerely yours. 5 On front St one door pi A HORIPH'TSI X north of Marble shop. V. A. XiVpffliJhXp 9 ►QeQ+o+o+QicMOiosuMceosooWfQeosososniosoepewso+oeQ*
It Yon Have Catarrh. There ia only one remedy that will owns it to stay cure—Dft Geo. Leininger’s For-maldv hdty Inhaler | drives all the Catarrh germs out of the body. This ia the oommon sense way ot oaring C»tanrh. Sold on a guarantee at 50c by A, F. Long, Tues. Fiva Far Cena. Farm fossM. Farm loans, without delay, at. five per oeat, and one to two per cent commission. -No need to pay three to five par cent, commission. V W. B. Austim, Rsnsselser, Ind.
t . Grip Germs Cannot Attack You .Jiijr-'t'. ■ i'xLV yon twill: nee Dr. ■ and port the extern in euch a condition of health sod Mot irity that new grip. germs entering cannot, lire And brwd.in ■ fn Connection with the Inhaler also ueeiDr. monta.— We always take pletmjre in reoommanding Dr. GW. Leininger’s , Forupal-de-hyde Remedies to oar ouctomen. A. 9, Long. »»w Aw Y«wr KMhseeV
