Democratic Sentinel, Volume 4, Number 6, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 March 1880 — Page 2 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Slsrlalsll €3 ; -OF THE—nDvnnnnoDii inr £ jf{| Odcl Fellows’ Block, Del jjii, Indiana , }]i^ uni truuuui nmuL. W ould invite the attention of the ? ” citizens of Rensselaer, and Jasper County, to their Splendid Stock of Dry Goods, NOTIONS, and Which they offer at greatly reduced prices to close.
1880 THB! 1880 Indiana Weekly STATE SENTINEL. Bwlarg 1 Improved. 81.00 Per Annum ■ THE PAPEIi FOR THE PEOPLE. PROSPECTUS FOR 1880. The coming presidential year promises to be the most eventful and thrilling in a political sense that we halve ever witnessed, and (will determine questions of the most vital importance to every citizen of the State and nation. It is not irnprob* able—indet d it is almost certain that, upon the determiuati on of these questions, will depend the perpetuity «>f our present system of free government. These qwestiens will be thoroughly discussed during the present session of Congress. The Sontlael lias arranged for a hr.-', class, experienced, special correspondent at Washington, and in addition to giving a true account of aft the general proceedings in that body, will gist the leading speeches of our most prominent states men, and without depriving our patrons of the usual amount of reading mutter. Tlio Sentinel will hereafter contuiu supplement,lmaking in ull Sixty Coj.umns of composition. In a word, it. is the purpose of The Sentiucl, as a steadfast watchman of public intelligence, to do it* whole duty in affording information to its subscribers upon all these topics of such vast moment. As in ’ft) so in "80 Indiana will be called upon t» take a lirst position in the front of the great contest, and upon the success or failure of the great and gallant Democracy of our State will depend the fate of issues the most portentous ever submitted to the arbitrament ol a tree people. We shall also specially call attention, from day to day, as occasion may require, to an entirely New I'hase in the politics of our State—we mean the forced emigration for temporary partizan purposes of pauper negroes from the South into Indiana. The managers and leaders of the Republican party, in our State and at Washington, are now engaged in this nefarious work, and are attempting liy every means in their power to promote its advancement. They have failed, utterly failed to convince our people of the correctness of their political principles, by reason or argument; their appeals to hatred and prejudice have fallen harmless: their lavish and corrupt expenditures of public and private moneys have proved wholly futile. They propose now by an African invasion of worse than a vandal horde of beggars and mendicants to override the voice of the people of the State, and to drown the Democratic majority. The last resort, the forlorn hope, the assaulting party, the picket assaulting corps of Republicanism in Indiana is thus mane up—not from the Hunters, Harrisons, Heilmans, or Shacklefords of the State; not from the intelligence or ability of that party, but is composed of a motley, parti colored jjung wretched field negroes from the South. The froth and scum of this worthless importation are made use of to destroy the free franchise of resident citizens, and to tax our means of home labor and domestic subsistence for the support of the political tenets of a defeated taction. The sleepless Sentinel, upon the heights of popular rights and popular liberty, predicts that this movement will also be a failure. With respect to this before unheard of method of manufacturingjjartv majorities in a State, wo shall at all times ivethe latest and most reliable intelligence. The American Democracy, the Federal union, the rights of a tePeople and the States, one and inseparable—now and forever. The merits of The Sentinel as a genetal newspaper are so well known nmong tne farmers of this State, especially those of the Democratic persuasion, that commendation of it is considered superfluous We will add, however, that the man agement has arranged and fully determined that no paper shall furnish so great practical value to its Dairons for the money. In its news, its editorial, its literary and miscellany—in a word, in Its general reading it shall not be surpassed by any papercirculated in the State. It will be particularly adapted to the family circle. We do not believe that any reading, thinking man in the Stato can afford to do without the Weekly Sentinel at the small cost at which it Is furnished.
RENSSELAER Marble Works HaslelSa Howland, I jJEATiF.iI in ;*nd Manufacturer of Monuments, Head-Stones, Slabs, Tablets, die., FROM THE BEST krmkM&oMs kfcdti Slate and Marble mm, ns i mi, Washington Street, Rensselaer, Ind. Nearly Opposite Ranking House of MeCov & Thompson. McCollum & Turner WIDEI -A-AA^A-ICEi Looking out for Cash Customers to sell their NEW STOCK * OF »• Goods chea/er than ever before! CAMUS, HOT, m, And a full line of AMERICAN Clothing, BOOTS & HATS! We sell the justly celebrated TIFFIN SHOES, And warrant every pair togive satisfaction! Give us a call and wo will show you the cheapest stock in the market. MCCOLLUM & TURNER. Montieello, Ind,. August3o, 1878—ly.
New Meat Market! Washington St., Opposie KannaVs Drug Store. Rensselaer, Ind.. ALEX. PEACOCK, Proprietor. BEEF, Pork, Veal, Hutton, Sausage, Bologna, etc., sold in quantities to suit purchasers, and at the lowest prices. Only the best stock slaughtered, and the highest cash price will be paid for &t cattle. Cash for Fresh Butter and Poultry for the Retail Trade. All who need anything in my line will find it to their interest to give me a call. ALEX. PEACOCK. March 5, 1880. FRUIT TREES! T'HB undersigned has now on hand as good a lot J 1 of Apple Trees as there is in Indiana, whieh, for Soring Delivery, will be sold at the following rates: Per hundred, .... sls 00 Per dozen, - • - - - - 300 Single Tree, - - - . - 030 Also, Pears, Cherries, Grapes, Raspberries, Strawberry Plants, Roses. Flowering Shrubbery, Evergreens, Shade Trees, ffic., at correspondingly low rates. My Trees are giving good satisfaction, and are worth from 50 to 100 eer cent, more than Foreign Trees. Call and see onr Trees before buying. As this will be a good Spring for transplanting Trees, we would recommend setting off part of your orchard in the Spring. Nursery at Rensselaer, Jasper County, Ind. JOHN COEN, Proprietor. Rensselaer, March 5,1880.
i premium mam Every subscriber to the Weekly State Sentinel’ at $1 39 per year, will receive a copy of The Sentinel’s very able law treatise, by James B. McCrellis, Esq., entitled THE LAW OF THE FARM. The information contained in this little work is invaluable to every farmer, while any business •man can consult it with profit. Rose Darner and Name Writer, a valuable device that retails for SI.OO, for attaching to machines, by which you can readily write your nage or mouogram on any woolen, silk or cotton article, or you can darn a hole in table or bed linens, underclothing, handkerchiefs, etc., neatly and expeditiously. We also offer “ROPP’S EASY CALCULATOR,” in connection with the Weekly Sentinel. It embodies a new system of calculation, by whieh a vast amount of figures and mental labor required by the ordinary methods, and fractions with their compleqities, are absolutely avoided in practical calculations. TB3R.2WIS: -Weekly. Single Copy without premium $ 100 A Club of 11 for - - - 10.00 Sentinel and Law of the Farm 1.25 Sentinel and Darner and Name Writer, - - - 1.25 Sentinel and Ropp’s Easy Calculator, .... 1.25 Sentinel and Map of Indiana. 1.25 Will send the Weekly Sentinel and the acts of the last Legislature for $1,50. Daily. 1 Copy one year, - - SIO.OO 1 Copy six months. - * 5.00 1 Copy three months, - - 2.50 1 Copy one month, - - - .85 Sunday Sentinel, ... 1.50 Agents making up clubs may retain 10 per cent, of the Weekly subscriptions and 20 Der cent, of the Daily, or have the amount in additional papers, at their option. bend for any information desired. Address . IMDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL CO. Indianapolis, Ind.
