Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 16, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 May 1884 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
GALL-COMMITTEE MEETING. Headquarters Democratic Cen- ) tral Committee of Jasper > County, Indiana. ) Rensselaer Ind., May 16, 1884. To all the members of the Democrat ic Central Committee of Jasper Cnautv, Indiana: You are rea nested to m <'t at. the Committee Rooms, in Rensselaer, on SATURDAY, MAY 31, 1881, for the purpose of consultation* and the transaction of business of importance. Let every member feel it his duty to work for the advancement of Democratic principles, and fail not to be present on the 31st. EZRA C. NO WELS, Chairman James W. Doutuit, Sec’y. Grant & Ward, in New York, failed recently for $10,000,000. Radical class and tariff legislation have created the millionaire aristocracy of the land. One hundred and fifty Democratic members of Congress voted in favor of tariff reduction. — Cyrus H. McCormick, the man who made the first successful reaping machine, died in Chicago on the 13th. Randall, ot Pennsylvania, support* ed by forty Democrats, captured one hundred ami eighteen Republican members of Congress and defeated the tariff bill. It is bow in order for the republican members of congress, iu the lead of S.. J. Randall, of| Philadelpuia, to move for a reduction of the revenue by striking tue tax from wnisky and tobacco.
The Crown Point Star bluntly admonishes its Republican co-laborers that “they can’t hurt Hon-Thomas J. Wood by punching him.” Ah, well, never mind. They can’t forgot —nor yet forgive—the ‘‘punching’* Torn gave DeMotte. It is now Famed that during his entire term of office as Senator, Eds munds has been a railroad attorney* and at $5,000 a year, like Sherman and Blaine, has amassed a princely fortune. Such is Republicanism every time. The people will, In due time, decree that the rascals must go. — Indianapolis News, Republican;— How do the republicans intend to re* ward air. Randall for saving the day for them ? Are his services not worth at least a secoud place on the ticket? And Converse, of Ohio, who seemed to understand, and obeyed the prompting of Kasson, of lowa, he should not be forgotten. In speaking on the great issue or tariff relortn the Louisville Democrat says: “The Democratic party proper is itself now poeitivel ana gallantly pledged to it. Under the leadership of Carlisle. Morrison Hurd, Hewitt, Dorsheimer. Wood and* other able men,the party stands boldly out for tariff reform.” Gen. Tom Browne, jepublican con gressman from 'his State, is in favor of allowing Chinese cheap labor to come to the United States as they please. He was one of 13 Republicans to vote against the bill forbidding the importation of the pauper labor of China. They favor tribute from the poor to the rich; and com petition of our workingmen with" the pauper labor of Europe. In 1856 when Richard W. Thomp son, now a delegate at-large from Indiana to the Republican National Convention, headed the Fillmore (Know-Nothing) electoral ticket, he paid the following glowing tffibu e to the Democratic party: “Some tnc-n say thaf*l am canvassing in the interest of the Democratic party. If I am, lam canvassing in the interest of a party whose principles are grounded in the Constitution of the oountry, whereas, wore I working in the interest of the Republican party, I should be stuffing blows to rend the Union asunder.” Correct! But “Richard Is not himself,” just now.
