Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 14, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 May 1884 — Page 1

VOLUME vm.

THE DEMOCRATIC SENTINEL. A DEMOCRATIC NEWSPAPER. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY, by Jas. W. McEwen. RATES OP SUBSCRIPTION. bieyear sl.sn ix months 75 hree months 50 Advertising: Rates. v » One column, one year, SBO 00 Half column, “ 40 $i Quarter * go oo Eighth “ 10 90 Ten per eeot. added to foregoing pglce If Jvcrtisements arc set to occupy more tha* ngle celnmn width. Fractional parte of a year at equitable rates easiness oards not exceeding l inch space, 5 a year: $8 for six months; » J for three |AH legal notices and advertisements at esrolished statute price. Reading notices, first publication 10 cents line; each publication thereafter s cents a dr. < , Yearly advertisements may be ehaaged uarterly (once in three months) at fche opon of the advertiser, free of extia charge. Advertisements for persons not residents ( Jasper county, mxst be paid for inadftnee of Arst pnblio \tlon, when less than ne-quarter coiumn in size; aud quarterly i advance when larger.

IkORDECAI F. CHILCOTE. ■ Attorney-at-Law ■ ENSSELAEK. - - - INDIANA ■ raotices fin thb Courts of Jasper and ad■Hnlng counties. Makes collections a spe- ■ alty. Offlccon north side of Washington ■ Jeet, opposite Court H Ouse- vlnl I 8-DWIGOINS ZIMBI DWIGGINs 1 R. s. & Z. DWIGGINS. ■ Attorneys-at-Law, ■eksselaeb ~ a - Indiana ■jraotiee in the Courts of Jasper and ad *ming counties, make collections, etc. t« ■Office west corucr Nowels’ Block. v„ nl ■mONP. THOMPSON, DAVID J. THOM PSON ■ Attorney-at-Lsw. Notary Public. ■ THOMPSON & BROTHER, ■tUSSEDAEIt, - . . IndiaNa ■ Practice in all the Courts. B CAR IO PI L. SPITLER. B, Collector and Abstractor. ® > trticular attention to paying tax- ■, selling and leasing lands. V 2 nts B FRANK w. u,. COCK. i-ttoracy at liane ■ A,,d Real Estate Broker, ■notices in all Courts of Jasper, Newtor ■ d Benton counties. Lands examined ■Detracts of Title prepared: Taxes paid. ■ Collections a. Specialty. B JAMES \V. DOUTHIT, ■TORNEYsAT-LAW and notary public, Maieever ’ 8 ne w ■Litouney at Law B Remington, Indiana. ■OLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY. B IRA w. yeoman, Attorney at Law, B NOTARY PUBLIC, I Real Estate ana Collecting Agent. ■ill practice in all the Courts of Newton If Beaton and Jasper counties. ■ Office:—Up-stairs, over Murray’s Cit* ■tug Store, Qoodland, Indiana. ■ D.DALE, ■ • ATTORNEY-AT LAW ■ KONTTCBLLO, - INDIANA. ■ Bank building, np ptairs. ■ H. LOUGHRIDGE. F. P, BITTEBS B LOUGHRIDGE & BITTERS, ■hysicians and Surgeons. ■Washington street, below Austin’s hotel. ■Ten per cent, interest will be added to all ■mounts running uusettled longer than Kree months. vlnl B DR. I. B. WASHBURN, B Physiolan & Surgeon, B licnsseluer. Ind. B*B® promptly attended. Will give special after ■ tion to the treatment of Chronic Disease*. B- S. Dwigglns. Zimri Dwiggins, B President. Cashier. i Citizens’ Hank. I RENSSELAER. IND., ■toes a general Banking business; gives ■ ' special attention to collections; remit- ■ nees-made on day of payment at current B lt !i°„-; int* 1 ■ t p-Jdfip balances: B'rtl ticates bearing interest issued; ex■nnge bought and sold.' - ■ This Bank owns the itu'glar Safe, which B'Ok the premium at the Chicago Exposition B l 1878 This Safe is protected by one ot ■argent s 1 ime Loqks. The bunk vaultused B™ as ca P be > Kllt - Jt will be seen ■om thntoregoing that this Bank furnishes ■; good sacuriti to depositors as can be. B*FBEP MOOT, THOMAS THOMPSON. Banking House B»F A. McCOY&T.THOMPBON, successors ■’ to A, McCoy & A. Thompson. Bankers, ■ensselaer, Ind- Does general Banking bu■ness Buy and sell exchaoge. Collections ■ ade sn all available points. Money loaned ■iterestpald on specified time deposits, &c ■fflcc same place as old firm of A. McCoy & ■tompson. aprt4,’«l

The Democratic Democratic Sentinel.

THOMAS J. rUDBL 4 Bools, Shoes, Hals, Caps,

\j^-SHOES k v Weyery mu warrant'd \BL * 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. Increase of trade more an object than large profits. \ See our goods before buying.

Gents’ Furnishing Goods! / % N WARNER & SONS . DEALERS IN Hardware/ Tinware, Stoves South Side ‘ Washington Street, XLEMSSEjuAER, - - INDIA*?.;, BEDFORD & TUB, Healers In Groceries, Hardware, Tinware, W oodenware, Farm Machinery, BRICK & TILE. Our Groceries are pure, and will be sold as low as elsewhere. in our Hardware, Tinware and Woodenware Department, will be found everything called for. Our Farm Machinery, in great variety, of the most approved styles. Brick aud 1 lie, manufactured by us, and kept constantly on hand. We respectfully solicit your patronage. BEDFORD & WA EtNER.

OOVEB.T»S ■■■§ IMIOIDIOICI STOMACH BITTERS wux roemvKLT evu Dyspepsia, Chills and Btt\rsA Fever, Kidney Disease, .„. liver Complaint, WKmm Purifier. * FOE ANY OF THI ABOVE CASES THAT THIS MEDICINE WILL NOT CURE OR HELP. * n< * f? lcr ß7 while removing cnuses of disehte, and operating as ** * preventive ot all classes of similar ailments by building up S tbe willconvince vou FrJrsl'lfthv makl - n(? 11 E roo J against disease. X)ne bottle alone - wiMaioN’s 11 l t ~ c coV > g r sv c "i.’i tr 1 lfc "^ Mll * ll irrri rll ■■ 1-11-11 —I rmm— l -■ ■ - * --- "

RENSSELAER, JASPER COUNTY, INDIANA, FRIDAY MAY 2, 1884.

SHERIFF'S KALE. BY virtue of a certified copy of a Decree to me d recteit from the Clerk of the Jasper Circuit Couk, in a cause whe.ein Marlon L, Spitler was plaintiff, and James H. W Hard, SidneyS. Hazelton.Natt aH'.el Cook, Kate C. Cook, James H. Cook. Fannie Crowl y. Robert Crowley: Cynthia S. Stanton, Alpheus Stanton, Cornelia Ana Arnold. Amelir Parker. Oscar F. Parker, John E. Cook, Caroline c. Willard. James H. Tallman and Sus: n Tallman were d fen Jan ts. requlri g me to make the sum of Two Hundred and Twenty Dollars and Twenty Cents [$ 9SO SO) together with interest and < osts, I will expose at Pub.ic Sa e. on . SATURDAY, THE Brd DAY OF M aY, 1884, between/be hour* of 1(> o’clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. x. of said dr, at the door of the Court House la the T wn of Rensselaer, Jasper county, Indians, the ten:* and profits, for a t rm no. exceeding seven yeais, the follow ngdescribed Real Estate, to-wit: The south-east quarter 14 of section twentyeight <*»), township thirty-two (Ml north, range seven (7) west, Jasper county, Indiana. And should such rents and profits not sell for a sufficient sum to discharge said Decree, Interest and costs, I will, at the same time and place, expose to sale the fee.simple of said Real Estate, or so mnek thereof ss shall be sufficient to diechares sa 14 Decree, interest and costs. Said sM«iU he made without relief, and wltl.i •! redemption, and ta accordance with the order of CourtTn said Decree. ApHI B , M B4- B t J O OHNW - POWELL ’ Bher,ff ’ oHERIFF’3 SALE. ?4*fertlfled copy of a Decree to me directed from the Clerk of the Jasper Cireuit Court, in a cause wherein Henry R. Bond, Tra *L**®L th . # *9«itab:eTrust Co., wa« plaintiff, and Fits W Bedford, Elisabeth Bedford!_GeorKe T. Beardsley. Myron E. Sears, Sarauol ReiningUn F, Spencer, Aaoiphn* E. Bartlett, Deere & Manenr Company, sudßraxilKr F. Furglson were defendants, requring me to make the sum ol £r. e i“ y .,! lvtl Hundred and Forty lour Dollars aud S-L r ,. v l h^ ee Cenu (5 2544 1 will expose at JrQblic oale, on SATURDAY, TnE Bd;DAY OF MAY, 1884, between the hours of 10 o’clock a. m. and 4o’ clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the Court tl°Tiiritlni h ?h ToiV “f 0f R . nßßelaer . Jasper county, ludiana, the rents and profits, for a term not Real Es?a g tef?o wU:‘ M ’ th ° lollowt “ described «^?i ttraen . c * n “ t r* lo s °nth-west, corner of the H&' t^. We6t v, < i Ua . rler Bectlun twenty-nine IJPj,township twenty nine (29)north, range six .md forty ri I !mw 11 li nf iK thenct ‘ uaßt oue hundred [140) rods, thenc j north one hundred and twenty six and one-half [12814) rods, thence hundred and forty (140) rods to the west 4 80ction \ thence south on west line sa i ,4 w. e / < ;^ll >! , l , one hundred and tweniv-slx and one-halt (186‘A)rods t.» the place of beginning. » J ho . uld HUch I? utß a, l d P ro >lts not sell for a sufficient sum to discharge said Decree, interest and costs, I will, at the seme time andplace, expose to sale the fee.simple of said Real Estate, or so much thereof a» shall bo sufficient todlscha ge said Decree, interest, and costs, bald sale wU. be m-de without relief, and in accordance with the order ( f Court In said De“rpnifi, iß^?“ nvv POWKLL ’ sheHff -

NON-RESIDENT NOTICii. State of Indiuna, Jasper County, sb: Kiiznoeth B. Clifton. David S Clifton .Tamos N Clifton. Thomas M Clilton, Sum*ei S Ciltiun Darnel D. MaHatt, Nettie E. Mallatt, Charles Mallatt, Rickard Mallatt, AThomaa J Mallatt The Union Central Life Insurance Com pan v oi Cindnnati, Ohio, and Edwin Clark, are hereby fw ’mi ® ll Bzra Clar k- Administrator, wi h the Will annexed, of Estate of ThomasL. ‘ lifton deceased, has filed his petition In the Circuit Courtin and for said county, prayingforan order to sell Real Estate of said decedent to pay debts, making thorn defendants. Said petition will stand forbearing on the first day of the next regular 1 j oo w ,IRSSWSi" a r gf;U[“ M ' —* CHAKLES H. PHICE, ClZrk April 5, 1884.—50 25. J “ 8 P erC *™it Court. NON-RESIDENT NOTICE. State of Indiana, Jssper County, ss: Jacob H. Frank, Prank, hie wife, Reuben H. Frank, Frank, his wife. Abraham Kuhn, Jacoo Notter, S muel 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 askingfora decree quieting title to certain Ren) 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 Juuft. 1884. . ( ) Witness the Clerk and seal of said •] Seal V Court, his 3d dav of April, 1884. ' —' CHARLES H. PRICE. Clerk t, a n , , Jasper Circuit l ourt. . R - 8. & Z- Dwiggins, plff’s att’ys. April 5,1884 —S 5 NON-Ri< NOTICE. State of Indiana, Jasper County, ss: Maggie Castleman Castleman, her busband, Rachel Patrick, and - Patrick, h r husband. aie hereby notified that Denuis McLaughlin has filed bis complaint in the Circuit Court, in and for said County, 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 1 Witness tho Clerk and seal of - Seal. , said Court this 9d day of April, 18f4. 1 —v— > CHARLES H. PRICE, Clerk t? « e-7 n i « g P er Circuit Court. Aprinwsw.-'jsl* “** P a “ y ’' LEAR HOUSE, J. H. LEHR, Proprietor, Opposite Court House, Honticello, Ind Has recently been new furnished throngh out. The rooms are large and airy, tho loca tton central, making it the most conveolen and desirable hoose in town. Trr it THE NEW RENBSELAEB, IND. JL* B . OPENED. New and finely furnished.— Cool and pleasant rooms. Table furnished with the best tne market affords. Good Sample Rooms on first floor. Free Bus to and from Depot. , PHILIP BLUE, Proprietor. Rensselaer. May 11.1888 ts. John W. Medicus, Plasterer & Cistern Builder. All kinds of Plain and Ornamental woOk done ip the latest style. . Leave orders at Tharp’s Drue Store.

HON. FRANK HURD'S SPEECH

Against Restoringthe Duty on Wool— I The Question as Decisively Discussed in the House of Representatives— His Remarks in Full. The following is the complete report of Mr. Frank Hurd’s able and comprehensive speech that settled the fortunes of the wool question in the House: Mr. Speaker—d oppose this motion because it proposes to restore the duty on wool, and thereby increase the price of that commodity. It does this directly by. increasing the price of foreign wool required m domestic manufacturing The question thus plainly presented is: Ought the price of wool to be increased by legislation? There are three classed interested in the answer to this question—first, those who consume articles made of wool; secondly, those who manufacture woolen goods; and, thirdly, those who produce the raw material itself. The manifest effect upon the first class—the consumer—is to increase the price of his woolen goods, for you can not add to the price of the raw material of which the article is made without increasing the price of the article itself Ought, then, to the consumers of this country, the price of woolen goods to be increased? To this question, Mr. Speaker, there can be but one answer. At all times and under all circumstances in our Northern climate wool is an indispensable article of daily consumption. It is shelter to the housjj less, covering to the shiverinjl and fuel when the light of til fire is extingushed. The ljJe of the workingman, the amsan and. the mechanic without the protection of woolen clothing would be insupportable while they toil, and tlieir fate without it would be miserable indeed, after their daily toil is ended.

If these remarks be true, ordinarily, how painfully true are they now. This has been a winter of unexampled severity. More than half a million men are out of employment. In debt, without wages, strong men everywhere are seeing their families suffer because thefy can not get the work they are anxious to do. Has this House of Representatives to these. sufferers nothing more to say than this, that the necessaries of life to them shall be increased in expense? The very proposition is,a mockery of their misfortune. The passage of this bill wouldbean unforgivable wrong to millions. It is not an auspicious time to make clothing dearer to the poor.— If bounties are needed for any industry, in God’s name take them out of yoUr overflowing treasury, not out of your suffering poor. (Apj plause.) ! Secondly. What is the effect upon the manufacturer of the proposed legislation? Jhat interest everywhere is in a state of depression. Many have reduced the hours of labor. Many have shut up for a time. Few are ruifning all the time and to the full extent of their capacity. In the midst of this embarrassment among the wool .manufacturers does this House propose to add t4> their burden by increasing the price of the raw tnaterial. One of the chief causes of j the presei l depression is the high prkx oi ioreign wool. — The duty, even as it stands now under the present tariff, with the cost of importation added, increases the price of foreign wool to the American manufacturer nearly 60 per cent, above what it is at the port of shipment. In 1880 the American mills consumed 300,000,00( pounds of wool. Of tliese*7s,ooo,ooo were imported. Nearly one-fourth of their con-

NUMBEB 14.

sumption was of foreign production. They have the power in these mills to consume nearly twic3 as much as they do. io be able to manufacture to the extent < f half of their capacity they have been obliged to import 75,000.000 pounds of foreign wool with the increase of price which the tariff makes ihe mills of America can manufacture 600,000,000 nounds annually, 'lhe wool growers of America produce 300,000,000 pounds annually.— Your high duty disables your manufacturer from getting the wool he is required to have in order to supply deficiencies of heme production. And by this very tariff, too, you have robbed these men of the markets of the world. England, with free wool, sells abroad $120,000,000 worth of woolen goods annually. America, with high duties on wool, sells abroad scarcely *400,000 worth. . Pass this bill and increase the price of foreign wool and you add to the embarrassment of every woolen manufacturer: you compel a further reduction of the wages of their operatives and lock still more ’tightly against them the doors of the markets of the world.

Mr. Speaker, this wrong to the consumer, this wrong te the manufacturer is attempted to be justified on the ground that the American farmer will get a better price for his wool. This is a delusion. Who makes the market for the American farmer? No man buys wool and takes it to his own home to spin and woave it into clothes. It is the American manufactui er who makes the market for the American farmer. And just as he is prosperous or depressed is the price of wool high or low.— [Applause.] It is natural that # man in prosperity w* 11 pay a better price than the man whb m adversity has overtaken. And right here to-day you find this astonishing situation —a high duty on foreign wool, and a low price for American wool. And I charge here now, that this low price of American wool is largely attributa** ble to the high price of foreign wool.

There are three grades or classes of wool in the market: (1) The superfine or the Silesian wool. (2) The intermediary or combing wool, and, (3) The coarse carpet'wool. Of these America does not. produce the superfine wool or the carpet wool, and it can not produce them, 'therefore no duty on them can be of any benefit to the farmer of this country. He does not grow them. * As to 1 he intermediary grade this is the situation: ‘he wools of the foreign countries have a fiber and texture which our wools do not possess, and the American manufacturer needs them to mix with American wool to produce the best results. No man can make a good suit of clothes from American goods alone. From England, from France, and othet&parts of the world, we want the wool with their fiber to make the best product for our manufacturer in his work of supplying the home demand. You see to-day, Mr. Speaker, that the whole supply of foreign wool which is imported is because of the necessity of manufacture. Let foreign wool come in free, or let the duty be further reduced, and you will bring in more foreign wool to commingle with tne American wool to enable our manufacturers to make the best cloths. I believe every pound of foreign wool of intermediary grade that comes into this country will make more valuable every pound of wool raised hei e. *he basis of my proposition on this point is that the foreign wool does not come into America in competition with American wool, but to supplement its deficiencies.

(Conti cued on Eighth Page.)