Star-Democrat, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 October 1908 — Page 4

STAR and DEMOCRAT

Four.c-' PVBUISHED FRIDA T Of f w-<?k by the Star and Demom ■ • m<r Corr yany, at 17 and 1* * *vv i. an.'K»or. B'reel. Oreencaatia lad.

r C TIIDEK - - - C. J ARNOLD Editors

nipniberej had bis cabinet one but throw the matter into the circuit Paul Morton, accused of grafting and court, there to be decided by law. not breaking the laws of the Tnited ‘ opinion Such promises as Mr HaaStates while a railroad magnate, and na is making are exceedingly rash that the president shielded him from and unfounded. If carried out it prose'/ution. It will be remember-d would only result in costs for the ['hat when he himself, was candidate county. To promise to sift ail en-

for president be induced Mr Harrs- dence and to refuse to grant a H-

l rrnaa of SubacrtprloB

te yes’, in advance

man to raise fii4c.000 for

*1.01)

the cam- cense where possible would be safe ‘undes’ 1 -- and sane To do otherwise is to

TAILCPED

paign. accepting from this ... , — — --i* a ie • zen" the money to » n his make a campaign based on the ere i IJ

Ae>rrua iiu Kaiv* I jtoe Apgitcatkoa e-• it will he remem-ered that t: •>- f •he people It s to mak'-

Roosevelt has personally stood be-' a campaign, laughable to thinking I*

And Osher Articles kieadc -to-NN ear

juid !

SUITS of Womens Apparel

op.eencastle herald

Zstabtisbed ItuS Tbs bv« dally paper of Pumam Oeeaty—eent to a:, y addrea* In tfce Culted for Ji i>8 a year—Pay-

able strictly m advance.

g elvprioc-

FOR PRESIDENT, William J. liryau of \ei»rask.a. FOR V. £ PRESIDENT. .. ^ol.u M, t\'m of iutliaua.

UKSU^mnc STATE TICKET

GOVERNOR, Tbomar K. Muj-sliaL, Colombia City LIEUTENANT GOVER.NCt, T raiia J. Mali, Ke-iirilie. JUDGE OK SUPREME COURT, ’" U. Lairi. Logatu>p<>rt. ATTORNEY GENERAL, Waiter J. Lett, Muaeie. SECRETARY OK STATE, Jau.e* F. Co», Columbua. AUDITOR OF STATE, Mar, ti Hailey, Ijtztoa. TREASURER OF STATE, John Ise*!herder, X. Maxubester. APPELLATE JUDGE. E. \V. I e!t, Ore*-nfleld. REPORTER SUPREME COURT, Curt New, Xortb Vernon. STATE STATISTICIAN, P. J. KeJleijer, lndianap>>Ls ■ 1 ATE SUPERINTENDENT. R-ee-rt J. Aiey, HI00101114^on. pi I N AM ooux rv TICKET

REPRESENT TIVB, I>. H. H)<eletter, TREASURER. Ji -pr-r Miller SHERIFF, Frank Ttroube. COMMISSIONER, THIRD DI3T, Ed Houck. CORONER, K. J «iill “pie, RVEVOR, Ate*. Lane. COMiLStiONER, 2nd LIST. Geor_ E. itaiu

JOIN f DISTRICT TICKET

KOR CONGRESS Ralpti .'d'ese FOR PROSECUTOR Jame<i p. h .gfiea. FOR .OINT SENATOR

F. C. i ii<J* i..

'' li-’j ’<lt L <4i ij-

ttvrized by S

-te CoatmilUse to re-

C* .

s for ue campaign.

Aii iLon-/ ! .

■ e j . .11 be forwared

to • i« I

' 'tale Committee,

to be

a'd fi strj.j .t-

re , aying the

*X^ afc

gi-.i*

of 11.00

*

J >e '• t t ;

jGtri / itors, anj tiie

ftEiOur

t

a

the

A Hr*-:.. * M

Col H r ■. f v

no? attempts to make political capital o'-t of the short-comings, not y*d proved, of a Democrat, It will be re-

twe- n government prosecution an i men, as was the statement of the

i

EiUsrod »s r.'cor.d tlass ma.l matter at cbe Grvenuao Ind Posiofflee

No 6*

serer-. guilty com' mationr. r.otab! -andidate fr 'r presidency on the Pro--* the New York and New Haven RaQ- | tion 1 ket when he declar- . J

• • that he would at once, when ina J

this mu who now raises the ques- : urated, call out the army and na S ■ -n of vomeky el Governor Haskell *o enforce prohibit km. He wmmtt • by so to take it for granted that the peo- J rr.any men whom he has attacked pie did r * n w • t v .i a-tny and 8 that his “liars club" has become o- wot Id not move when such a> J ites of the country. It will "all was issued contrary to all rights J

tested In the president, and that 8 r.uch action would only result in impeachment. Law is. after all. the _ only safeguard of our state and na- |8 t.on. To break It for good is as evil • as to break it for bad purposes. That { which weakens the law. even though 8

zoofi result, makes unsafe to that er. , j tent the rights, property and tappi- | *

c.

,W

to havd ste the

n

A T e ^ould be p’evoed to hive you c and

ict r ^e5t and best assortrnint

of

CLOAKS, SdlRI-WAlSIS

r.nrcc CUBIC

'A

WOMEN'S TAILORED SHIS,

i - '-f ♦

l>e remembered that t is man who alls for fair play and the square deal now renounces both, since be accuses the Dernoc-ats of corruption because they have on their National Committee a man now accused by the Republicans, his guilt yet unproven, while the Republicans hav" on their committee, as chief of the

bureau of public speaking, the pres- ness of each and every citizen.

dent of a trust now being prosecuted: have for their treasurer an appointee of Mr Harriman. declared to be an undesirable citizen: have for their spoake- of th** bouse Uncle Joe Cannon gra r t-— and obstructionist This man who believes in fa'r play accuses Governor Haskell of removing Toacbers from the State Uni

lersfty o' Oklahoma

reasons when not the Governor but 'he board of regents has control there. He Accuses this man of having sold ou' to Standard Oil when it appears that Haskell was hut carry-

ing out the articles

granted this company by Hitchcock T ren Se^r^tary of the Interior. Th man attacks his personal eaem,''

-*»

Rule of the People.

Republican papers all over the state are declaring that the passage of the county local option law is an example of the rule of the people While admitting that many people of the state did want county local option, we are. nevertheless, unable to

politic?i * ee aDJ v ?torr for the i>eople in the

methods used to pass the bill. As a matter of fact the question had been left to the people to decide. They were to vote upon the proposition at

AND DRESS SKIRTS Shown in Pjtnam C >nty.

<■'21

In Tiilored Suits are shown the new models in extrem" ar we v\ asfeon-ervative styles and in the colorings so well thought oi ^this season—

Prices ranje'from sr $ s and upwards.

<12. S I ^ ,

Ladies’ Cloaks Show Some Radi cal Changes in Style

From last season's models but they are all for the better.

the coming elections. Instead of al- ; J

f the franchise Towing the people to express them-18

selves the Republican party forced li the issue, compelled a number of J their own par:y to vote against their j 8

Foraker and forgets to men*— • • f more guilty than he. such notorious at *'***>inr-on compelled members

ship cur-

Jst FiHti

<i g lofat i 'nd h

Iftt

vlth

Cloak* are shown in al! qualities Pom the comparatively inexpensive modelup to the finer qualnies and there*' a Cloak here for every rur>e.

at Washington compelled

'ools of the trusts as Aldrich. Pen- *be party to vote for the rose. DePew and Cannon. It looks subsidy biH, Aldrich-Vreeland

ALLEN BROTHERS.

very much as : ? the president in h’s desire to win for Taft, was getting r,to a kind of po!iti"s that is sma 11 and mean, even f or people less high in government and the esteem of the people than Roosevelt, it shows the man in a light that has been hintei at by enemies before, but never c o pla'aly and undisguisedly laid before the people themselves. His cour'e ig to be regretted, not because o r any influence he may have upon

■»■**&*•■* jet* » r -1 sMqaaasavawataaaswaaasaatfBwaaaaiaixqaiiiB

M d t M :hl<

rency bill, and in the same manner that Uncle Joe Cannon smothered the Littlefield bill on interstate shipments of liquor from wet to dry territory. The passage of the bill as it stands was the triumph of ma-hine politics, not of the will of the people. The bill Itself was, we hope good That is, it will be good if It succeeds in doing what it promis r - which only time can tell. But It inot a triumph of the people. It is

"n every *:de the people who elected 1 im. His opposition to racetrack : ^ .-rilling is creditable and would ' ’’y . -*ify his election as Town ar:hal ou* his abject subservience eg» i interests 1* not credit- • ■ . fy his re-elec-

tlcn aA Governor. **

lieve the president right in ;pposing that such things made public would influence many votes. It is the very thine we want to know. We are surprised that the president should be reduced to such reasoning in defense of what is not defendable.

dll

the campa'en. but he "a ;se his action 8 case of the R^publ "an party decid-

distroys an idol, and lets politics, at !“as' for the Republican party, drop hack again into the mud of “anything to win" methods. We sha 1 d slike to remember Theodore Roos - ve’t as the author of these political policies/*

Tie- Situation. Now that the local option bill has passed the house, the senate, received the governor's signature and become a law. it occurs to us that true friends of temperance, those actually • n favor of :n"reused morality and not merely a party position, will cease vaunting themselves and do all In their p^wer to heal the bitterness caused >y statements already n ade. Tb it Republicans, through love of party and hojies of an issue, ave given themselves liberty of tog .<• t:,at w : t soen v « forzo'.’en, r one t ill deny. That many : per: • people, over-teal-c'i.?• snd r 'f ’ ■ ■; 't''** (i f Iion^st*' ’ nr ',f‘ drrmn^rl

ing what the people want and giving, . # . it to them without waiting to see gof ,

whether they are really in favor of it or not. It is a trick learned from "Uncle Joe’’ who holds that the people never do know what is good for them, and that they should never be listened to. Again we say that the law is no triumph -g the people, a triumph of machine politLs or. the

VL are quit® 'ire ‘hat the strain jef th* or • t gr felling on Presi- ; dent Ro.os*' elt for his latest effort (to Justify the rna'-:;ng public of cam-

election sounds

nieg cf the bruin. The

jp’e ident -.ays a - ibttance that con- . tr: utions should not be made pubhe , till after elect n for the reason that

i s& honest corporation con-

; T ■ ■ te a few hundred thon-ands to

the Republican fund.

the knowledge

peopl-, hut j 0 f this might lead blase 1 persons tr

part of a party struggling for mere ! the empbosls t s on - honest c^rp^raeilstance because of its n-rd. w Ah-; fJfCS ... We wonder If gj mg to use the law for po’itHal pur- tjon giving a hnn(Jr , tbo sand

poses, careless whether it accomp shes results o- not. and unwiliint' to wait for the people to express themselves on t v e party ar I the . question at the polls. i f

?

a campaign fund is honest. We be- boulders.

President Roosevelt seems surprised that o*nator Foraker ard M*. Bryan, whom he a'lsck^'i so furiously in soire of his most Anglo-Saxon vocabulary, have dared to reply In kind. W® c ay in kind though we must a dm/ ‘hat the -tatements thus .ar have i; .-:e j s :. •- of the furiousness that chare te: zej the president’s first staterrnnt. T1 - r ild Mr. Taft is especially - irprisefl. an d recalls with ?. chuddar that at one

- p'ed to appoint a

Standard Oil attorney to ‘he supreme bench. There was much truth in the live in glass ediflees should not hurl

flee as well as for the

I an I

ay

UI! I

r ' Hventy-four such letter; appear.ijB

pe

101 s—e who declare for Bryaa -y I y did not support him in preB ■ -1 'or e to the conclusion tha‘ the *«!•■ I It is apparent ti. it t -iP

i “tho enemy’?

■ ■

Judge Taft*' Opini. n*.

'••erf-i • ’ i:i l

0 ’ I

to Mr. B ■ L ' it is to --‘.I

r

Cl p,

- will take np anyt ngHr.l •• T Br 5' a n might say "worthy of notice,”!

' SC ■

• 7 ’ tr* T'.'M ~ far -11 That the Re: jh/can "a- - ’ ^ 0 s e of Bryan’s argn-

fraud Is retting down to d. ta is is! AtY«sl

evidenced by the smallnets of ?t: e of the s"are stories that ar« nov going the rounds. Democra's and doubtful Republicans on the rural rou'es ar-'- being as.sur* V in som.-' r-cf* s of the state, that the I, rno-

Go*>d Dcniocrata Over the

Political In Indiana

State Are Raying .Aboot And Else where.

Tiling?

as '.■■>en absolutely purll

M

diemo* rr,i«, I> fm A’*-or Guard.

On last Monday

to fool the

of b

tternesa new existing la i* nd of te; perance. Tb >th sides, and repetition ■ • • w : to’ *:d a

"rats are pledged to rhpeal rural free df-’ivery. Th ina‘es with ti:e postma - - community in which the 3i< the rural earri rs. The fa-tg andidates are pledged to do « thing possible for the farmer an

W "■«*> ft t. rr #

j interrlews with about

i kewpers of Marion an

- 'tance 0 f the state Rf-publ: an orvensr.g the ganization, now desires

.r- d alleged , people c f Indiana. Democrats everyw 1 er** in the

G’-ant Conn- shonld be on thefr aruard.

NVatch f r the Marlon Chronb

e tt. • !-»st Monday with the bogu^ |

on views from saloon keeper*

vernor as •• Cr sh th's de"eptIon -• —

1 »T#

F r ir.star.ee, th« ehi'.d assen |

■ n that Mr. Bryan brougb by his vote for the WiN

n I

I I

(Continued on Page ?•

.» ' s: its ri: \.- ns M •:«* I

ery-

• "r* n

d the o tb —

say

I Tot

ness.

I Ms-f

their busl-

- • *>r called up- - nc liquor deriif. r { n rd to that paper or anv

•1 and turmoil of

J in Washington t nT to Lewis Ne :d in Clinton tp...

: rlnting th

ho -

- ; ha* noralnaH d Mr

st« with the consummate skill of a trained corporation lawyer. He ha; 'rented public-service commissions.

» cannot believe that M

n !>oun<i by the law of the State rndiana* Ah long as li ense is aK red In the county, and a roan who i r "a the Jaw applies for licence which have spent by the millions th.- /- no recourse b » t 0 grant that money of the people, and whose only v : r, °' - ,0 /“dare service has been to protect corrupt h of i. /It ' aracte- torporatlons In the pillage of ‘he vt , a place of business people. Mr. Hashes vetoed the 2d' -inui to conduct It. cent railroad fare bill and the 5-eent Fhcrc- must be special proof oi un- Coney Island fare bill. He has profit: ' To ref. e to grant a license totted on every side the corporations j betauza of personal opinion wouldjw ilch own him and has overlooked

cf the state can be rti

deception.

of such dirty politics. On T:i' iday of t’ ' v Chronicle had rint I

bogu* interviews with

and America

idency a more exalted offi - Wnpvhip the world e\er kn bet feel regret to see the n thot high position descend url bib Testate >t •,)] ,

Fall eetir

pc c« JJV ^ ) rr beodnr re have

are

:f“ I:: announc our r i! o fall an! wlntst

*

i 1 -. the Fnotw’tf . iy for yonr cho siule it’s always “how .as aln;- s been t> fuf' satisfactor; - FoTweai

American has. we hop*- *■

in e «> :r pntr ns r i to 'me hi re t . -i ?, Acs and lo*

! not i d ice r^elr friends to come T t ■*

ttiis nlatform that we huilt 11 i* "nr large Shoe Business and up-

on th s platform th t we base oof

lopes for the future.

v, e believe an investigation will convince you that this store give*

nt no ’ten to Id. Yet forgets

i/4

* copie

of their Issue of last Monday con-1 reverence th** high om . tatnlng the bogus Interviews. There when the president him e] were shipped to the Republican state! the dignity due to his nos'Hnn

• ! V art ^ for dl -l p1 ?.”.** 1 «« ; ./re of j you'the be^ al? arSundThoe ». ihutlon over the state of Indiana, political denunciation and recrimlna- facllo “—best Shoes--best atylos " Not satisfied by trying to betray tlon like a Bowery boss nothing else and 1,681 prlce8 - w 13t d m w I 13t3» their own party workers In Grant .“ 8 n be expected but that the common rhpictlr'r C hnn CeAP?) County, the Chronicle, with the as- people wl H lose respect for the of.,UllPl$UG S SIlOG 510^