Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 13, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 April 1884 — Page 1

volume ym.

THE OEMOCBATIG SENTINEL. , ' ~~ =i: -- . A DEMOCRATIC NEWSPAPER. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY, Jas. W. McEwen. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. One year ... gl.Se Six months 75 hreemonths .60 Advertising Rates. One uoiumn, one year. Ago 00 Half column, “ 40 #1 Quarter “ ae oo Eighth - - . io Ten per eeot. added to foregoing pjjic.e if •Svertisements arc set to occupy more than 4ncie mlmid width. Fractional parts of a year atequitable rates Business cards not exceeding 1 inch space, a year; $3 for six months; $ a for three .^ii 1 ?*? 1 ® 0 *!® 88 and advertisemeats at es‘ablished statute price. Reading notices, first publie&tion 10 seats j line; each publication thereafter s cents a nse. Fearlv advertisements may be changed quarterly (once in three months) at the optlon of the advertiser, freo of extia charge. Advertisements for persons not residents or Jasper county, must be paid to* in advance of first pnblic vtion. when less than one-quarter column in size; aud quarterly & advance when larger.

MORDECii F. CHXLOOTE, Attorney-at-JLaw BensßEL4.be. .... Indiana Practices Hn the Courts of Jasper and adoinlng cmintiee. Makes collections a specialty. Office on north side of Washington street, opposite Court House- vmi . B.B.DWIOOINS ZIMBI DWIOOINs R. 6. & Z. DWIGGINS, Attorneya-at-Ijaw, Beksselaeb Practice in the Courts of Jasper and ad counties, make collections, etc. tc Office west corucr Nowels’ Block. ni SIMON P. THOMPSON. DAVID J. THOM PSON Attornoy-at-Law. Notary Public. THOMPSON & BROTHER, Kensselaee. - . . Indiana Practice in all the Courta. ttABION 1.. BPITLER. Collector and Abstractor. We pay, irticular attention to paying tax.sellni}, and leasiag lands. , v2niß PIUNk u. a . coot, JL44o2ri2©gr Sit. IfiSLUB And Real Estate Broker. Practices in all Courts of Jasper, Newtoi Mid Benton counties. Lands examined Abstracts of Title prepared: Taxes paid. Coll®ctJ.o2a.e a Specialty. JAMES W. DOUTHIT,. attorney- at-law and notary public, bißhTingf Benssehferfind. Maieever ’ s ne^ EW. SMDER, Attorney at Law Remington, Indiana. Collections a specialty, ira w. yeoman, Attorney at Law, NOTARY PUBLIC, Real Estate and Collecting Agent, Will practice in all the Courts of Newton Benton and Jasper counties. Office:—Up-stairs, over Murray’s Cit’ ■lrug Store, Goodland, Indiana. * DD. DALE, • ATTORNEY-AT LAW MONTICELLO, - INDIANA. Bank building, up stairs. y. h.loughridoe. f. p, bitters LOUGHRIDGE & BITTERS, Physicians and Snrgeons. Washington street, below Austin’s hotel. Ten per cent, interest will be added to all accounts running uusettled longer than three months. vim # DR. L B. WASHBURN, .. Physician A Surgeon, liensselaer. Ind. Calls promptly attended. Will give special attei tlon te the treatment of Chronic Diseases. R. S. Dwiggins. Zixari Dwlggin., President. CasMer. Citizens 9 Sank. RENSSELAER. IND., Tl oes a , general Banking business; gives >J special attenilon to collections; remittances made on day of i'ii\nn-nt at current Fate ofexchangc:lni..:., t pr.irt „„ balances: certificates bearing: interest issued; exchange bought and sold. This Bank owns the Bu-glar Safe, which took the premium at the Chicago Exposition in 187*. This Safe is protected by. oaeof Sargent s Time Locks. The bunk vaultused Is as good as can be built. It will be «een from thn foregoing that this Bank furnishes as good sacUrlty to depositors as can be. ALFRED MOOT. THOMAS THOMPSON. Banking Mouse AF A. McCOY &T. THOMPSON, successors \J to A. McCoy & A. Thompson. Bankers Rensselaer, Ind. Does general Banking business Buy and sell exchaoge. Collections made sii all available points. Money loaned Interest paid on specified time deposits &c Office same place as old firm of A. McCoy & Thompson. aprU/si

The Democratic Sentinel.

THOMAS J. ML Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps,

ga te. IFEVERY BUR wmxfa m FOR SALE BY THOMAS J. FARDEN, 3 Doors East of P. O. Rensselaer, Ind. A complete lime ot light and heavy shoes for men and boys, women and misses, always in stock at bottom prices. In-_ crease of trade more an object than large profits. See our goods before buying.

Gents’ Furnishing Goods! N WARNER & SONS . DEALERS' IN Hardware, Tinware,, Stowes S«irih Side Washington Street, BJEWtSSIiiaASIL, - - INDIA?!,.: ■1 Ml, Dealers In G roceries, Hardware* Tinware, W oodenware, Farm Machinery, BRICK & TILE. Our Groceries are pure, and will be sold as low as elsewhere. In onr Hardware, Tinware and Wooden ware Departwill be found everything called for. Our Farm Machinery, in great variety, of the most approved styles. Brick and 1 ue, manufactured by us, and kept constantly on hand. We respectfully solicit your patronage. BEDFORD & WA EtNER. ■Mmw —— Mqlioiqi BITTERS n . . Wmm MDMBWfIUAUBm Dyspepsia, Chills and aaH pi. j Fever, Kidney Disease,>l|iiSjjnv D _l° liver Complaint, Bllßilli. Purifier. SSOO REWARD FOR ANY OF THE ABOVE GASES THAT THIS MEDICINE WILL NOT CURE OR HELP. S * ecreU ?’ e <> r ß«ns, * Heist, digestion, produce a healthy and laxative effect, and fl e t n ."l c '! lcnlat , e<l to under-mine tlie natural vigor ot the bodr. Their object 1* to B bl iJ d up , ,tle vltn J strength and energy while removing causes of disease, and operating as S g * 111 c ™ vlnce yuu ’ V* I

RENSSELAER, JASPER COUNTY, INDIANA, FRIDAY APRIL 25, 1884.

BHEhIFF S v ALE. BY virtue of a certified copy of a Decree to me <1 rected from the Clerk of the Jasper Circuit Court, In a cause whe-ein Marlon L. Spitler wag plaintiff, and James 11. W Hard, Sidney S. Hazeiton, Natl aHiel Cook, Kale C. Cook. James H. Cook, Fannie Crowl y. Robert Crowlev. Cvnthia S. Stanton, Alpheus Stanton, Cornelia Auk Arnold. * melir Parker. Oscar F. Parker, John E. Cook, Caroline c. Willard. James il. Tallman and Sns n Tallman were d feudant*. requirl g me make the sum of Two Hundred and Twenty Dollars and Twenty Cents [s*io 20) together with interest and * o*ts, 1 will expose nt Pub ic Sa e, on BATURDAY, THE 3rd DAY OF M aY, 1884, betweei the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o’clocx p. m. of said d y, at the door of the Court Honsein the T wn or Rensselaer, Jasper county, Indiana, the ren:s and profits, for a t rm no' exceeding seven yeais, the follow ngdescribed Real Estate, to-wit: .r T , h . e /^ ut . h ea * t ,, ( l ua / ter H of section twentyefght (38), township thirty-two (321 north, range seven (7) west, Jasper connty, Indiana. And should such rents and proßts not sell for a sufficient sum lo discharge said Decree, interest and costs, I wfll, at the same time and place, expose to sale the fee.simple of said Real Estate, or so much thereof as shall be sufficient to dlsc * a,rt Det ' ree > interest and costs. ,a - e b « made without relief, and wlti,. redemption, and lr. accordance with the order of Court in said Decree. April S,I6B4—eVWELL, Sheriff. aHKIUFK’S SALE. B Y •.ytHfled.copy of a Decree to me directed fra® the Cleric of the JaHper Cir* euit Court, in a cause wherein Henrv R. Bond, IndVftv 0 w h « a? U, i al 'in Trnat Co ’ waß piututm, and Fits; W Bedford, Elizabeth Bedford; George T. Beardsley, Myron E. Sears, Samuel kemingBllnhaloh Keiningtou, m 1 b ? ’ ?*|j lam , w -Hammeli, Walter A. Wood Mowing A Reaping Machine Company, C. Hibbard? B?Sui: 1 Aao ‘P bup E. Bartlett, Deere &, Mwisur Company, audßraziller F.Furglson were defendants, requrlng me to make the sum oi Third’s Ve WundrecT^and Forty lour Dollars and mil T c Xoa 0 "" (886 M 88,1 1 Wl)1 “P O -. al SATURDAY, THE 8d DAY OF MAY, 1884, between the hours of 10 o’clock a. in. and 4o’ clock p m. of said day, at the door of the Court House, in the lown of R nsselaer, Jasper county, Indiana, the rents and profits, for a*t«rm - ot Re C alEs D ta g te®towr rß ' th ° ,ollow ‘<f deßCllf > od & TiK-SSMi a: tW(i i lty nlne (20) north, range six andfortvri<my rn^H^ ln« thence east one hundred and lorty [140) rods, thenc ; north one hundred and twenty six and one-half fl2B!4) rods, (hence west one hundred and fortr (140) rods to the west Uneot said section, thence south on west line of said section one hundred and twenty-six and one-half (126>/ 2 )rods t, the place of beginning a 8l^ h and P l ’°« t « not sell for a sufficient, sum to discharge said Decree, interest and costs, I will, at the seme time and place expose to sale the fee-simple of said Real cL*Z ■‘““‘"-roof as shall be suffidcntTo dll' cha ge said Decree, interest and costs. C Tpr,ls, 1884--OT W p^WELL,BhsU.‘

• NON-RESIDENT notios. State of Indiana, Jasper County, ss - Elizabeth U. Clifton. David 8. Clifton ,T™r.t N Clifton, Thomas M Clifton, Samuel S.'cnZi Daniel L. Mallatt, Nettle E. Mallutt, Charles Mallatt, Richard Mallatt, iiThomas J Mallatt The Union Central Life inanranee Company of’ Cincinnati, Ohio, and Edwin Clark are hereby th’e'wtn thßt L Clark, Administrator, wi h the Will annexed, of Estate of Thomas L. t llfton deceased, has filed his petition in the Circuit Court in and for said county, prayingfo? an order to sell Rea: Estate of said decedent, to pay debts, making thorn defendants. Said petition will stand for hearing on the first day of the next regular Tem of said Court, commencing on Monday the lid day of June, 1884, nnay ’ i , Witness the Clerband Seal of said , seal. 1 Court this 2d day of April, 1884 ‘—~ ' CHARLES i. PR/ce; Clerk April ~ 188,.-,« *. Jsrper Circuit Court NON-RESIDENT NOTICE. State of Indiana, Jsspcr Coun.ty, ss: Jacob H. Frank, Frank, his wife, Reuben ?• p r a " k - Frank, his wife. Abraham Kuhn. Jacob Ncttcr, S mnel Kuhn and Solomon Lobe are hereby notified that Ephraim Fleming, has filed his complaint in the Circuit Court, in and for said county, against them asking for a decree qniet'ng title to certain Rea] Estate. Said cause will stand for trial on the 2d day of the next regular Term of said Court, commencing on Monday the 2d day of June 1884. ( i Witness the Clerk and seal of said ] Seal k Court, his 3d dav of April, 1881. •—a— ’ CHARLES H. PRICE. Clerk „ „ . „ _ , . Jasper Circuit Court. D e w K } Sglns. plff’s att'ys. April 5,1884“^5 » NON-RESIDENT NOTICE. State of Indiana, Jasper County, ss: Maggie Castleman. Castlemnn, her husband. Rachel Patrick, and - Patrick, h r husband, ate hereby notified that Denuls McLaughlin has filed bis complaint in the Circuit Court, j Id and for said Couuty. asking for the Foreclosure of a Mortgage against them, and others. Said cause will stand for trial on the second day of the next regular Term of said Court, commencing on Monday, the 2d dav of June. 1884. , i Witness tho Clerk and seal of -. Seal, a said Court this 9d day of April. 1884. < 1 CHARLES H. PRICE, Clerk j, a . „ „ . , Jasper Circuit Court. . «• 8; * Z. Dwiggins, plfTs att'ys. April 5, 1884.—85. LEAR HOUSE, J. H. LEAR, Proprietor, Opposite Court House, Honticello, Ind Has recently been new furnished thronsh •at. The rooms are large and alry.tho loca non central, making it the most convenlea and desirable house in town. Try it THE NEW MMeIeIvIeIrMhB^UD IND. . OPENED. New and finely furnished.— Cool and pleasant rooms. Table furnished with the best the market affords. Good Sample Rooms on first floor. Free Bus to and from Depot. PHILIP BLUE, Proprietor. Rensselaer. May 11.18»J ts. J ohn W. BXedicus, Plasterer & Cistern Builder. All kinds of Plain and .Ornamental woOk done ip the latest style. Leave orders ut Tharp's urug Store.

THE PEOPLE’S PARTY.

A Notable Effort by a Distinguished Indiaiiian. Republicanism Has Made Our Government a Jobber in u ood-Pulp,Meta lie Blooms and Other Wares in tlie “Vaniy Fair” of Prohibition. Prohibitory Duties Mean Fly, Rust and Weevil for Wheat, and Inferior Demands, Secondary Markets and the Lowest Prices for American Products and Fabrics. The following very eloquent speech was made by Judge Turpie, of Indianapolis, formerly of this Congressional District, at the Iroquois Club, in Chicago, Tuesday night of last week. He spoke to the toast, “The Party of the People.”— He said: “Mr. President and • Gentlemen—The party of the people must abide with them. Its success, its failure, must depend upon how far it is. and continues to be, the true exponent of popular rights and interests. Power is constantly stealing from the many to the few; not always by the same course, or in the same way.— Hence the necessity at a certain period in the country’s history to read aloud with emphasis to make prominent some particular chapter in the charter qf liberty; at another'time, another. The encroachment of unauthorized power must be met and repelled in the line of their attack. “It is said ‘the Congress shall have power to levy and collect taxes, duties, imports and excises.’ i axes and duties thus stand together; they are mentioned in the same section and line, as it were, in the same breath of the organic law The term ‘collect’ defines the purpose of this power. A levy without collection is a barren procedure. A spheme of taxation which brought no money to the exchequer would be jusly deemed unwarranted, idle and nugatory. " hat then must be thought of a scheme of dqties a great part of which is framed without even the purpose of collection, deliberately planned not to induce, but to prevent and prohibit, receipts by the treasury.” “The fiscal method of the Federal Constitution is plain, simple. It is that of absolute free trade as between the States: FAIR TRAD* WITH AI.L the world besides. J his mode of taxation, the imposition of duties upon imports, is expressly prohibited to the States, and althcfugh it is a very old and well-known incident of municipal authority, it is by consequence also prohibited to the cities, although it has been full} exercised by corporations of much less importance and much 1 connected with the general welfare. It was fOl bidden to the States and cities of the Union, but for the last twenty years, under the auspices of that party which is called “Republican,” this power has been in effect freely delegated to private corporations, even to partnership composed of ten, of five, in one instance of only three persons. To these bodies, politically wholly irresponsible; to these indescribably minute animalcules of the body politic, has been fully granted the power to impose duties upon imports, and they have used that power for their own profit and advantage, without a thought to the public interests. Under this system, the general Government of the United States, stopping from its high functions, has become a jobber, a salesman behind the counter, for holders and owners of ligneous pulp, metallic blooms, and a variety of other wares ' in the “vanity fair’ of prohi

NUMBER 13,

bition too numerous to mention. \ “National powers should be used for National purposes.— Any other use of them is an abuse which must sooner or later entail upon us the consequences of political and financial discredit and disaster.— Taxation, lawful and necessary, is not tyranny; but an unconditional and compulsory exaction for the sole end of private gain, is not taxation; # XT IS TRIBUTE. In reading very many of the clauses of the present enactment upon the subject of duties upon imports one. migh t well conclude the whole multitude of consumers had, by the terms of some former conquest, by the conditions of some former surrender of their rights, become hereditary bondsmen, tributary serfs of the lords and barons of the lobby of monopoly. And if a word be whispered of ‘reform’ loud remonstrance is heard; much anxiety is either felt or feigned concerning the effect of reformatory measures upon the business interests of the country. What, then, is the business interests of the country? The business of the country is that avocation in which most of it s inhabitants are engaged; its interest is that which may tend to the profit or advantage thereof The last census of our population shows that nearly one-half of the persons engaged in industrial pursuits of any kind are employed in farming. If this number be added to the number engaged in the handling (f transportation of farm products and in the manufacture and sale of agricultural implements and machinery, who are really as much engaged in farming as if they followed the plow—it will be found that • the number of those engaged directly and indirectly m the tillage of the soil vastly exceeds th'e number of those in any other calling, and very largely exceeds the numbey of those eng aged in all other inc ustrial pursuits practical among our people.— The marts and seaports of the world, the daly quotations upon the intei national price lists, the odium of that strange vernacular, almost become a universal language, the patois or Vits” and “calls,” of “options, margins and futures,” give the same account, make the same return. Wheat, cotton, com, the secondary products of beef, lard, pork; the production and sale of these arc the special business and avocation of the people of the United States. There is no gilded, romance of arithmetic; there is no kaleidoscopic array of numerals that can conceal the body of this truth, or disguise its character. How co’d or should it be otherwise? We have here a wide country, in its whole extent one vast plantation. The husbandman draws his furrow across a continent; the lands he works are WASHED BY TWO OCEANB a thousand leagues apart. No government of either ancient or modem times has included within its territorial limits an arable area so large, so fertile, so diversified in its productions. The orchards of this plantation would make principalities, the meadows kingdoms. the tillable acres subject to the dominion of the plowshare would make a continent like that of Europe, and moved thither would largely transmul e that historic sea,the Mediterranean, i t > dry land beside. Attica was not more distinctly the home of philosphy, Judea of theology, Italy of arms, than the United States is the home and sphere of Agriculture. ’Tis said, Brittania rules the sea;’ it may be said more truly, the great Republic rules the soil, keeps the new garden of Hesperides, | and guards the granary of the i world.

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