Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 36, Number 91, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 July 1904 — Page 4
Tie Republican. Official Papar sf Jasper County. MUM In Republican building on tho corner of Wuhlujtoa aud Weston Streets. . ISSUED EVERY TUESDAY ANDt FRIDAY BY GEORGE E. MARSHALL EDITOR AND PUBLISHER. # r rerun of Sabeeriptioe. . One Year $1.50 Six M0nth5....... >75 Three Months. 50 Bntered in the Office of the Librarian at as secondclass matter. Friday, Ally 6, ISB£
President Eoost-yelt, of oourss, not satuißo.ury to the Dem jsntio politicians, bui sojfar ue has the satisfaction of knowing tbit he has not been berated bs Lincoln was or as Grant was, or even as McKinley was. At least we have seen nothing so far indicating an approach to charges that were made against McKinley, It wonld be well for the Republican voter to keep this in mind all the while —the fact that Linooln and Grant and McKinley, about whose biers the world has wept have been libeled and slandered and that these libels andj slanders have been confessed; if not confessed by the libelers and slanderers themselves, at least by their posterity, Whatever may be said in opposition to the president today therefore should be (considered with these things in mind, and the friends of the president should stand all the closer to him*for that season.
NOTICE OF^SURVEY. ttf the Lands Hereinafter Described; and Being in Keener, Wheatfield and Kankakee Townships, in Jasper County. Indiana. Notica is hereby given to the following named persons, towit: Frank Miller, Nancy B Dunn, Frank Boyer Fred Holmes, Francis Powers, John Hackshaw, Nary Muchler, Benj J Gifford WilliamDitman, Rowley B Moorehou.se, _ Andrew J Bush, Nelson A Lyon, „ John Mttffley, William B Austin, ■Simon Hufford, Anna Walton, > Horace Marble Pearl R James, L G Howell, W J Howell, John Harper, Ida May Haefer, William H Myers, Charles Schatzley, Albert Watcholtz, Johnonna Frierika Kunow Andrew P Hansen, John H Schatzley, Veter McDaniels, Andress Crawford, .'Harrison Folsom John W Sweney, Margaret LHamilton, N L Agnew, Lenuert Mat, Anna Swartz, JBogene Lang, Henry Feldman, John B & Mary E Tyler, LaMotte Hubbard, -*ola 8 Hubbard, Peter Brooks, JPeter Klein, B W Harrington, John & Mathew Wilson, Allie M & John A Sigler Chester Sweney, Susanna Bierma, - :: Alie Bierma. Peter S Peterson, William H Tyler Thomas Abring, Maatje Rinsard, Jacob Smysor George & Albert Terpstra, ■Tenze & Jacob Terpstra, Nicholas Bierma, William Hazecamp, John Binsaard, Alfred B Barr, North-End Gun-Club Everett D Rynberk, James W Spindler, Peter Nomenson, B L Hollingsworth, August Maybaum Abraham Dekoker Jelle A Roorda, Joseph Wesley Spitler Libbe De Vries. Bike DeVries, Henry Mclntosh, : Sander Van-Wyngaarden, s Gerret GrevensCuk, AbbyJ Kenny on, Joseph Bunch, Tunis Snip, William Van-Wienen, David Gleason, Peter Tysen, Bverett & Anna C Benkhoff ' 'Oscar M Morgaart, < Ire FBrainard, John Morrow, Bay D Thompson, Marion L Spitler, ■John Alyea, William & Dan King, heirs, Charles G Spitler Alice Punter, Kankakee Township for public highways ■tad for lands belonging to same for Common Schools. Wheatfield Township for public highways and for lands belonging to same for Common Schools. Keener Township for public highways and for lands belonging to same for Common Schools, and to all other parties interested, That we are the owners of from 20 acres more or lees to 040 acres, In the following described sections, in said county and state. Sections six [o], seven [7], eight [B], and nine CM, In township thirty-two £32] north, range five [(J, west in Jasper County. Indiana. Sections two [2], three [B], four [4], five [6], aiz [6l, eight [B], nine [Ol, ten [lo], and nineteen [l9], in township thirty-two [B2] north, rr-zesix [6] west, in Jasper County, Indiana. 1 -ions one [l], two [2l, ten [lo], eleven [ll], Ive [l2], thirteen [lß], fourteen [l4], fifteen ', seventeen [l7], eighteen[lß],nineteen [l9], oty [oo], twenty-one (21),twenty-three(2B), oty-four (04), twenty-five (25), twentyi (29) and thirty (80) in township thirty(B2) north, range seven (7) west, in Jasper ity, Indiana. utiona twenty-seven (27), twenty-eight (28), * / ity-nine (29), thirty (80), thirty-one (81), * 1 y.-two (BC2), thirty-three (88), thirty-four *-i thirty-five (85), tnirty-six (86) in township y-three (88) north, range six (6) weet, in ■ir county. Indiana, and sections thirtyand thirty-six (86) ip township thirty’’•Winorth, range seven [?] west,in Jasper hat we will proceed, with the Surveyor < roer county, Indiana, to make a legal surf those sections, to establish our oorners ines and to re-locate and perpetuate the * "ftment Corners, to divide and sub-divide - 'J lands in said county, or sa much thereby be necessary to establish the corners * es of Bald land*. survey to begin on the 18th day of Mr lo d to continue from day to day until * -ed. avara* Indiana Land Coicpant, Sf . Phicb, Incorporated. 1 unty Surveyor -V >* * Wilson, Atty.
Theodore Roosevelt
A STUDY OF THE MAN
“Ho hu qxeant every word ho said and tho people hare believed evdfy word ho said, and with him this c6n* ventlon agrees because every worfl baa been gound Republican doctrine.” When Chairman Root uttered these words at the opening of the Chicago convention he included and suggested many of the facts that nominated Theodore Roosevelt for president long before the delegates met at Chicago to hold a national convention. “Ho has meant every word he said.” This one quality has characterized the utterances of Theodore Roosevelt ever since he first entered public life, and that was years ago, for the ink was scarcely dry on his college diploma until he had been given preferment by his follow citizens. And it is reasonable to suppose that this knowledge of the man was one of the things that contributed to his success at the outset. The people knew that they could safely depend upon him. He would not deceive them. Th# individual and t&e world like a man they know they can “put a finger on him.” Given this one quality and there are others of a similar nature that go to make the desirable friend, the trustworthy business man, the useful citizen, the competent office-holder, and the foundation stone of a useful oareer has bsen deeply laid. But let a man lack this one quality and there is no other—no combination of other quakes—to serve as a satisfactory substitute for it. For this include! strength and the determination to use this strength. BUII more, it means determination to tile this strength for the right, for othonrise, however lofty his purposes, he could not be depended upoh to crystaUlze thefa into achievement. ‘The people have believed every word he said," continues the chairman of the conVention. Why T Because they -have come to know him. They net only "believe hut they feel tfcat he Is sincere. And they naturally and reasonably warm to such a Again, however, we have something *dd_ed to sincerity, for a man may be sincere and still be misled. But Theodore Roosevelt id not'a theorist
PRESIDENT THEODORE ROOSEVELT.
or a vtslonaire. His aims are lofty, he has high ideals, but he lives as far from cloudl&nd as any man that has evtTr been in public life. This suggests another quality that m|kes Theodore Roosevelt a rare map. For ages there has been a plroeptible distinction between the tinker and tlm door. Plato and JJotiHtes were thlnkcrt ami the world has their thought today; but Pericles both and did things, and however we may revel in the sublime realms of Plato and Socrates, it was Pericles who contributed to the glory of Athens that which chiefly appeals to us today. We suspect that a Bismarck appeals more to the average human being than a Gladstone, the one was a man of deeds, the other an orator. But Theodore Roosevelt combines the two qualities, that of the thinker as well as that of the man of action. He writes an essay on “American Ideals” in which he treats of the things vital to a great republic. Here he is the thinker; but civilization has been waging for ft century for tb? Panama cSnal, andhe makes that great world highway a possibility. Thomas Jefferson wrote well and reasoned about the rights of man, and set down abstractions with a wonderful clearness, but he bought Louisiana Teyltory, and he will be remembered In history chiefly because of this one thing that he did In opposition to the theories set down in his abstractions. This suggests another distinguishing trait in Theodore Roosevelt, because he is not required to violate his own theories in order to record achievements. His pv[bllc acts are in accordance with his published principles and the country approves and applauds because the people feel that both his theories and his deeds will withstand the test of actual experience. This is why Chairman Root was able to add the third element in the sentence quoted at the beginning of this article —"with him this convention agrees because every word has been sound Republican doctrine.” And this suggests a striking analogy between the life of this man and the We of this party sat has Just placed him la nomination for an office the highest that the world bag to bestow. The Republican party came) into existence half a century ago because the times then demanded a oar
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Sheriff’s Sale. By virtue of a certified copy of decree and execution to me directed from the Clerk of the Delaware Circuit Court, In a cause wherein George N. Moyer was plaintiff, and Benjamine F Mason was defendant, requiring me to make the sum of fourteen hundred and fortynine dollars and fifty cents ($1449.50) cents, and interest and costs accrued and to accrue, I will expose at publio sale to the highest and beet bidder, on Saturday, July 23, 1904 Between the hoar of 10 o'clock a. m, and 4 o'clockp. m. of said day, at the door of the Court House of Jasper County, Indiana, In the City of Rensselaer, first the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following real estate hereinafter described, and If said rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree and execution interest and cobm, I will at the same time and place expose nt public sale the fee simple of said real estate or so much thereof as may be necessary to discharge said decree and execution and interest and costs, to wit: The undivided one half (X) of the north east quarter (NEM Section) twenty-six (26) In Township thirty-one (81) north, Range nae (5) west In Jasper County Indiana. Said sale will be made without any relief what ever from the valaation or appraisement laws of the State of Indiana. A. G. HARDY, Sheriff Jasper County. Baughman & Williams. Attorney for Plaintiff. June 80-Jul7-14
DIRECTORS A. Partaeon, President R. L. Hollingsworth, Cashier ■T John M. Waseon, Vice-Preeident Janies T. Randle <P George B. Murray jfc THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK, , % , North Sldo Public Square, RENSSELAER, INDIANA. - ... . ' " jk JF —LOANS MONEY • • • Hp on all kinds of good security on City Property qjj S* and on Farms at lowest rates, pays interest on £ sr* savings, pays taxes and makes investments for jjF customers and others and solicits personal inJH. terviews witn a view to business, promising ev- «E 2* ery favor consistent with safe banking. *ba y MFLOA.NS A SPECIALTY-e--o* » » w • » ♦»> f REME MB E R ;; ° n JayJ W, Williams :i :: : - " - .. ° o; * Furniture and Carpet ~ ji Dealer, Rensselaer, In- <» f diana, has on hand a O ■: - < . k new and Complete ’ '* 4 I < 4 Stock of , t '* « i 3►: ’ < l 44 4 4 4| I Furniture and Carpets ;j * ; ~ if 44 * * ..c t 4 4 <* " -4 4. Latest Styles o Lowest Prices <►. 44 ° 44 " H 44 ° l Don’t forset lo call and see hm ;; 44 * 46 FRUIT AT THE BREAKFAST TABLE Nature Provides its own remedies which, if used Judiciously, insure perfect health at all times
Aside fratn the pleeeare of eating eeaeonable fruits before beginning the first meal of the dey, this custom has undoubtedly arisen Cram the well knows feet that nearly all fruit and more particularly plums and TRUNKS contain natural laxative principles which act directly on the stomach and bewela. Constipation, that dread and troublesome complaint which la undoubtedly the basic cause es nino4enths of tbs dyspepsia. Indigestion, biliousness, ete., so prevalent among car people to-day, and, which If neglected, surely leads to more complicated and serious organic diseases, caa surely be prevented, and when not too fat advanced, can be afceolately anted by the Judicious use of tbs modern laxative and cathartic California Prune Watea. “wva*- «*--'• nay an not a peteat medicine la the ordinary sense of the word, being compound etffrom Crash California Proses, which every UUelUxent person knows is truly nature’s !&*t&: A dainty little waftr, always the same.
FRUIT IS NATURE'S LAXATIVE • California Prune Wafers • A Natural Dissolvent and Cure for Biliousness, Constipation, Dyspepsia all Bowel Troubles ======== Far Better than Pill or Purge 100 WAFBRB, as CENTS J. A. Larsh, Druggist.
$3.55 for the round trip to Indianapolis Jnne 27th and 28th< Return limit July 15th, 'For your stomach’s sake” take Dr, Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. Cure constipation, indigestion, troubles.
compounded In a highly conceatratad form 1 from fresh California Prunes, they are a natural dissolvent, acting on the cmltnti of tha stomach and bowels and not on tbs organa themselves. ( They regulate the liver and Stomach, 1 Cleanse the System and Parity tbs Blood, Cun all Bowel Troubles, Biliousness, Bad Breath, Bad Blood, Wind on the Stomach, Bleated Bowels, Foul Month, Headache, Indigestion, Pimples and Dlaxlntss. 1 Svery household should hen Its finally package of CALIFORNIA TRUNK WAFKRS, and at the first signs of approaching Illness, or when trader tha weather, take a couple qf waters, and tha doctor’s Mila will . todu es arach smaller than they an now. 1 You can oat what yon please If yan follow each areal with a CALIFORNIA PRUKB WAFRR, which quickly dissolves the meat lndlgsstfida food, and helps to sany It 1 thnugb and out of the system la a gentle and healthful matter, without tho slightest, pala, griping or nausea. 100 Wafczs far !
The oheapeet plaoe to bay yoar oarpets, rugs, lineolam ana floor oil doth is I. J. Porter & 00. A new thins in the way of barn door traok ana hangers at Lee & Poole’s MoOoysbnrg Ind.
