Democratic Sentinel, Volume 6, Number 20, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 June 1882 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Xawapaper Decision*1. Subscribers wb© do not give express notice o the contrary are considered wishing to continue heir subscription. S. If subscriber* order the discontinuance of heir periodical* the publishers may continue M end ucm nntll all arrearages are paid. S. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take their periodicals from the office to which they are directed thev are held responsible until they have settled their bUis and ordered them discontinued 4. If subscribers move to other places without informing the publishers, and the papers are sent to the former direction, they are held responsible 5. The courts have decided that “refttsing to take periodicals from the office or removing and leaving them uncalled for, is prima faeia evidence •f intentional fraud.” •> Any person who receives a newspaper snd makes use of it, whOther he has ordered it or not, is held in law to be a subscriber. y T. If subscribers pay in advance they arc bon n d to give notice to the publisher at the end of their time, if they do not wish to continue taki: ■ it; otherwise the publisher is authorized tc sen on and the subscribers will be responsive U '-)' an express notice, with payment of all a rea i* sent to the publisher.

Real Estate for Sals. Tlxompcion Id»x*o. Have for sale cheap lands. Buyers will do well to consult them before parchasing

Home, sweet Home!

Now is the time to buy a home.— Leopold is selling lots in his addition to the town of Rensselaer, that no one need be without a home. Terms one fourth down, and the balance in equal annual payments. On Tuesday morning lastj.Hon. G H. Brown, while engaged in shovel, jng at his new barn, cut a ’deep gash in his It ft foot. Plow Shoes. —A full line now open. We can give bargains in boots and shoes for we make them a specialty. Seo our stock before buying Campbell & Farden Doc. Hatnar has moved his jewelry establishment into cosy quarters just erected between Dr. Loughridge’s office and the old Austin House. Any make of Sewing Machine sold by C. B. Steward. Those in want of Fruit, Ornamental and Shade Trees, should give their orders to Mr. Johu '. oen, of llt-nssel aer Nunwries. He <**• supply anything desired in that line. Don’t send away and be liable to get what, you do not want.

Thu Town Trustees, on the sth day of June, A. D. 1882, re appointed M F. Chilcote.Ja School Trustee, to serve three years from time of appointment Mr. C. ha# teen a member cf the School Board for the past eight or ten years. R. P. Benjamin is tn? king arrangements to engage extensively in the musi’al iustrumen business this season. He is a good judge, and those wishing to invest in a Piano or Organ can do no better than to deal with him. Fresh Bread Cakes and Pies, at R E. Spencer & Cos, every day. ’Tn » pieiMntre v* icC6inir.e. , .’'Urig *1 ur-tuiaiina to our readers, bs mi iuw!w juttUrin. The muxiuiscroere auhio ». j.as a gu. rs.nt.-i. of its merit. It sells::!2s ills per bo;,. For particulars see Advt. For sale by Emmet lianuai. The latest styles watch chains and fobs at Kannal’s.

A Nefarious Result of the Reconstruction Poijcy.—One ot the nefarious results of rhe reconstruction policy and despotic rule of the Southern States by the Republican party, which we have been reviewing heretofore, ■was the Election Returning Boards to •enable Republican partis ms to change and control the results of the elections of he people in those States.— This was illustrated in the Presidential election of 1876 There is not a well-informed and fair-minded man in the United States, probably, of any political party, who does not know the fact that Samuel J. Tilden was fairly and certainly elected President by a majority of the votes of thepeo pie at that election. And yet, by political management and stratagem, the dofeaied Republican ticket was •declared to be elected, and Hayes in augurated as President. This was an overthrow of popular Government and a crime against the majesty of the people. When and how can this great wrong be remedied, and the supremacy of the people vindicated? '.This is a great living issue before the American people. The transaction, it Is true, is in the past, but the re j •ord and the preceden 1 are in the present.—American Register.