Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 32, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 September 1884 — Page 8 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Chicago Telegram: iheEng-l lish papers are taking bacd all the good they ever said ini favor of Grover Cleveland! They have found out that h« once volunteered his legal service in behalf of the Feniail raiders ■ A Walking Skeleton. 1 Mr. E. Springer, of Mechiniesburg| Pa , writes: ‘I was afflicted with lung! and absceso <m I nogs, u nd reduced, lo al walking Sk- letmi. Got a free trial bob! tie of Dr. King*-; S'ev Discovery fori ?<>nsiimptioo, wbie.ii did s<> much good! that I bought a dollar bottle. After! using three bottlec. ’. it .<1 m.edf oncl more a man, comp.et. ty restored t<fl health, will! a hearty appetite, and al gain in fl<-sh of 48 lbs.’ Gali at F. Bl Meyer’s Drug Store and get a free, trial! bottle of this e’taiu cure for ail f.tinwl Di-eases. Large ottles SIOO. I Bro k'yn Eagle: The conviction! strengthens that it would be a crime tel keep the Republican Party, with its ret cord of corruption, m power for a-otheil four years, w hen theie s a chance tel turn it out. The books must be open for inspection, the accounts must be ini vestigated and the foul places inadl clean. To accomplish this there is hul one way, and that is to elect Grovel Cleveland. | Chicago Telegram: Keep it before th! people that the Democratic House al its last se sion passed bills, to fori feit some 00,000.0 0 acres of iiuearo«l ed railroad laud grants and iese.iv J them for the use of actuil settlers, bull the hills were choked off by the Bepub-I lican Senate. |
Thousands Say So. I Mr. T. VV. Atkins, Girard, Ktnsasl writes ; ‘i never hesitate to recommentl your Electric Bitters to my customers! they give entire .satisfaction and are rap! id sellers? Electric Bliters are the purl est and best medicine known and will positively cure Kidney aid Liver com-! plaints. Purify the blood aid regulate! the bowels. No family can afford t> b| without them. Tney will save bund! >eds ot'dollars in doctor's bills evertl year. So'd at fifty cents a bottle by f| B. Meyer. I
S. S. Cox’s Letter Showing the Abl surdity of Blaine’s Claim to I Irish Support. Fron the Newark, Ohio, Advocate, I New York City, 13 E. 12th St-, ) I August 9, 1884. j I OearMr Taylor: —On arriving home! yours of the 4th inst. awaited m«- if have not time now to go full into th<| the utter falsity of th<] statements as to Mr. Blaine’s care fol the Irish, in or out of British bastiles. 1 hflve oeen knowi tor ten or fifteen vearl as an active and leading member, wh<| Ims br tight the case of the ’suspects] and others beiore the Department ol Mate m.d Congress. I have never beerl conscious of M-. Blaine’s sympathy ol Leen conscious of anything irom him al aid. Korbas any other R publican ol any prominence helped in th-s- matters-] except Mr Orth, ol Indiana, now dead] ami Judge Stanley Ma hews. Wheii Senator, the latter aided Judge 1 hurl man lo pa.-s mv House resolutions, oj the la v t day of the 47th Congress, fora the release of O’Gonnor. 1 had, before th-n, even made a trip to London to help those in prison. The memoria contest of 1882, in Congress, was broughi up by my resolution. As modified, it finally passed. I referred to the O’Connor and other cases. Be was a Baltimore man and an American citizen. ’ It was a case of the arbitrary arrest of a 'suspect. ’ The man was held without due warrant, and denied any trial. Mr. Blaine was Secretary of State. Did be aid in the enlargement, or forward or demand the trial of O’Connor? No. He wrote 'o the brother in Buff* alo ‘that it was an elementary principle of public law—that in such a case, the Government ol Great Britain, in the exercise of its various functions—judicial and executive—administer and interprets the law in question? This was said in reference to a law of Parliament, called ‘the coercion act-’ It suspends tlie habeas corpus. It enabled an iiresponsible officer to pick up outcitizens. jail tfiem and trv them just when and how they please, however rey mote the time oi distant theplace, or not try them at all, at their royal pleasure. It was simply infamous. It was a black blot on civi ization, an insult to the English ns well as to our constituents We Democrats of the Marcy school de nied this ‘absolute and sovereign rlgiit'as Mr. Blaine called it, whether applied ‘to a citizen or a resioen’ alien'—we denied it. and Mr Fieling'.uysen, when he succeeded Mr. Blaine in the Foreign and Home Affairs Depar; meat reiterated our denial. Let this be said to ins credit. But th-: story <4 Irish wrong and Res. publican indifference is a long one. It requires much research to bring it out. Before long ii will b- done.
The temporary ardor of a few pervert’* fed Irishmen in behalf of Mr- Blaine, because lie will bring a slap-dash ratGe-te-bang insane vigor into out policy, it is not b line out hi good sei se and internationality comity, or by a just love of either ‘old sod’ or the new soil. After all, the calm firm and intelligent defiance of .oreign dictaaon which Marcy and CaSs and the Democracy have illvsu'ah-d in <mr plas diplomatic and political history, gives the best assurance that the liag will rover the cit.zeu whoever be navels, and that win ther an adopted or native born citizens, the right of trial —speedy and fair cannot by abridged by »•< etcion or other i tyrannous acts of i arliament. The at- ; eruo n of tue ninenc-tb century, mi- , de'D ir-cr. l ! rul.ill ii.: derog <tf from he sp ci uid thou-, ‘i and her > c atdtu e ■ f 1775 and its great delaration. I write .these views hurriedly. They may b- to crude for publication, but to my old Irish f iends ir G'ejtial Ohio, and whose ch il Iren are now ready tn vote, I commend them as true views of duty based on honest experience. Respectfully, S- «. COXWaldo Taylor, Mayor of Newark, Ohio —< 6 St. Louts proposes to have a World’i Fair in 1893, the sOlth anniversary of the discovery of America by tolumtius .... _ The Ge irgia boy v?ho wrote to-8 -rfa Clah-.o for n pony ad<h>d : ‘Po crip— }• he ■.t ft tu’-tlo please ty his behine Itgs.’
