Democratic Sentinel, Volume 7, Number 29, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 August 1883 — Page 8 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Teachers’ Institute!
The annual session of the Jasper County Tearchers’ Institute will open according to announcement, at the Court House, on next Monday, Aug ust 20th. All necessary arrangements effected for making the work an entire success. The lessons in each of the common branches will form a series of connected links and teachers will therefore find it to their interest to be present from the start. Mos| of the trustees of the county will visit the Institute at some time during its session, and the (County Board of Education meets on the Saturday following its close. This will furnish a good for teachers to arrange for schools during winter. A full attendance is desired. D. M. NELSON, County Sup’t
Baptist Association.
There will be an Association held by the Old School Baptists, comprising the Paint Creek Association with Union Church, four and one-half miles north of Rensselaer, commencing on August 24th, and closing Sunday evening, the 26th, 1883. The place oi meeting will be on Riley Nowels’ farm,one-fourth mile north of his house,.in the grove selected for that purpose. To reach the grounds it will be necessary to go in at the gates west or south of his house, and pass through barn-yard from which there is a lane leading direct to the grounds. Everybody invited. The New York World puts the condition of things in a very encouraging light when it says: “There are now Democratic Governors in 25 States Of the Union, Republican Governors in 12 States and a repudiation Governor in the remaining State, Virginia. * * * If the Republicans should retain all the States they now hold includinglndiana, Ohio, Illinois, and Wisconsin, and should ®4eem Connecticut, Massacldjietts, Pannsylvania, Michigan and Nevada, they
would still leave the Democratic President with a majority of seventeen electoral votes Instead of redeeming all these States the Republicans are likely to lose Indiana, Ohio, Oregon and Wisconsin, ana probably Illinois. The signs of the times all indicate that the country, especially on National issues, repudiates the republican party. The people have made up their minds that “there must and shall be a change.” It does look that way to a man, whether up a tree, on the f in an editor’s sanctum looking over the “exchanges.” The electricity as it runs along the wires says “there must and shall be a change.” The telephone shouts “hello!” .just to remark “there must and shall be a change.” The cy- < clones as they gyrate through Kansas andj lowa, scream “there must and shall be a change.” The rivers as they flow and the winds as they blow,every star that glows and all the com that grows, declare “there must and shall be a •hange.” The N. Y. “World” is indorsed from lake to gulf, from ocean to ocean, from center to circumference. The peoplejsay “there must and shall be a change.” Barnum’s offer of SIO,OOO for the identical brogans used by Hayes & Sherman when they kicked Arthur out of thbNew York Custom House has not not been accepted. The statement is that the brogans are worth as much as was paid for Stanley Eathews.’ Everything seems to indicate shat the coming Fair at this ollace will be the very best ev--3r held in the county, the citizens,. generally speaking, man.resting more interest than evu* before, and the officers of he As aociation working with i will that must insure success. Sup’t Robinson and Marshal Welsh are devoting their time x) the Fair grounds.
