Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 33, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 September 1884 — Page 8

A.t a monster meeting of Jrisli*Americans in New York 'City, recently, the following resolution, among others, was unanimously adopted: James G. Blaine during twenty years -of official life never interested himself in the welfare of American citizens who, while abroad were deprived of their liberties and rights without authority of law, and while Secretary of State not only failed, but refused to interfere and exert the influence of the United States government in behalf of such citizens. Believing in the extension and protection of citizenhood, and in the principles set forth in these resolutions, and holding them to be of high importance to the American people, we earnestly recommend our fellow-citizens to support, as fitting representatives of that party which has already asserted and maintained those principles and made American citizenship respected at home and abroad, the nominees of the National Democratic Convention at Chicago, Grover Cleveland for President and Thomas A. Hendricks for Vice-President.’ The Irish-Americans of New York City, as well as the Irish-American party. In his “Twenty Years in Congress,” James G. Blaine, the Republican candidate for President, pays the following high compliment to Thomas A. Hendricks, the Democratic candidate for Vice-President: “He (Hendricks) was but 31 years of age when first chosen, and his record in the i House had not prepared the public to expect the strength and ability which he display ed as Senator. He was in the full maturity of his powers when he took his seat, and he proved able, watchful and acute n the discharges of his pubic duties. He was always at lis post, was well prepared bn ill questions, debated with ibility, and rapidly gained respect and consideration in the Senate.” Hendricks is the dol of the Democracy of Indiana, and why not? He is the peer of any man in the land.”

In Maroa township, Decatur county, IIL, thirty-four Republicans recently publicly relounced.their adhesion to the lepubJicon party and joined he Democratic party, promilent among whom was Hon. iohn S. Sargent, a leading >anker. Over 100,000 spindles and 0,000 looms are reported idle a Fall River, Mass., and housands of men and women ut of employment “Hard ime come again no more.” low will you vote? Senator Edmonds, of Verlont peremptorily refuses to ike the stump for Blaine, le can’t endorse the Warren ’is her letter, and why houldn’t he? The coal miners’ riots in ’ennsylvania and Ohio mean hat labor will not starve in his land of plenty. Why hould it? The Nation Republican ommittee tried to buy off St. ohn the other day. He spurni the bribe.

Senator Frye, of Maine, is •anking Bairs Buffalo nastiess through the mails.

Wit of the Past and of the Present.

Among the multitudinous complaints l the present, nothing is more freaently heard than regret over the ck of social brilliancy. The good lings that have been said by wits, iners-ont and bon vivants are periodically dragged to the front and made ) contrast with the vapid gayety and earisome conventionality of the presat. The brilliant man or woman of ■rrnor generations had an immense Ivantage in that their sayings were inght upon the diamond pen of some i-ofessional man of letters, reburnished ad handed down to us in the form of • smanent literature. Now the best iisds do not work for the special . enefit of my Lord or my Lady, or,*inaed, for any private eoterie. They ■ek » larger audience. No brighter iintillations ever flashed forth within ie besHurnislied banquet ball of the : vst than may be heard at many a pub['3 or semi-public gatherings to-day. , ut the exigences of to-day press upon ,-ie anofch.r, The chronicling of all ' e good things is left to the newspaper i mporter, an cl however nimble his pen nndmrfa fcious his brain, the result 1, Tain i« sn to the exigencies of the * ewspa h* . i'-e, or to the press of insures ij the city editor. — Boston 1 sanaa i,K

Does Protection Protect.

The Chicago Herald, In speaking of the coal*miners’ strike in Pennsylvania and Ohio, in consequence of a reduo* tion of wages by those protected industries, says: ‘.lt will.surprise many people to knew that in this year of pleuty there are thousands of people iu Pennsylvania and Ohio Buffeting lor the necessaries of life. f ‘The dispatches making note of Me arrest of forty or fifty coal miners near California, Pa-, state that when the men were being loaded into wagons to be oonveyed to jail the *ives of fifteen or twenty of them with babes in their arms begged the officers to take them to prison also for they bad nothing to eat. ‘it will eurprise many other people to know that in this free country, when thousands oi men quit work because wages have been reduced below the living point and their employers then import pauper labor, the workingmen have no right to assemble and discuss their wrongs in public, ‘The dispatch from the Pennsylvania and Ohio mining regions daily contain allusions to the wholesale arrest of men whose only fault appears to be that they are poor and are seeking in the only way known to better their condition. ‘lt will surprise some other reople to know that many of these mining districts resemble military camps in which imported laborers without families are marched around under warlike guards, while the displaced workingmen, with helpless women and children, gauntfaced and hollow-eyed, clinging to them. Btaud by sullenly. ‘ let the dispatches from the various mining towns ot Ohio daily contain some such sentence as this: ‘A military guard knocked one aged striker down and broke hig right arm.” ‘lt will touch some hearts in this great West where the barns are burstirg and the golden theaves are piled high in every field to know that the free distribution of coffee and dry bread to a camp of four or four five hundred idle miners in Pool No. ♦, Pennsylvania, called out delirious expressions of joy from the half-famished men.

‘A telegram from Pittsburg says that when this poor least was in progress one old man, bent almost double with age aud toil, laid his miserable morsel on the ground while he sang with streaming eves and a trembling voice: ‘Hard Times Come again No Mare.” ‘These are protected industries. These men are the ones whom eur pollticaus tell us they ennoble by tariff legislation. These hunger-stricken and palefaced women and children begging for imprisonment if so be it bring bread are the families of the protected workingmen »f whom we hear to much. Tbne thousands of idle men standing arou d watching imported laborers who work under the protection of gleaming rifles are the workiug men whom the tariff is levied to enrich. These sleek employers who fill the places of strikers so easily with wholesale importations arc tire men who contribute to maintain campaign organs which preach lies and circulate falsehoods aud which claim to be laboring only for the workingman's good‘Out here in the Wes' these thousands of prosperous jj an-‘ comfortable farmers whom one sees • . every hand are not protected. No <> • passes law to dignify and ennoble i on. These carpenters aud masons au<> railroad laborers are not protected, hut they have j enough to eat and to wear. Hunger, want, and idlene.-s come to none ol these- They are in enjoyment of the comforts of life iu spite of a ‘protection’ which taxes them forty per cent, on most of the things which they are compelled to buy. * ‘A lari ff reformer need uot be afraid to invite a comparison between the protectionist east and the free trade west. The record is open ' Yes.‘the record is open,’ and James G. Blaine is the cnampien of the protectionists.

A Remakable Escape. Mrs. Mary A. Daily, ofTuukliaunock, f’a.„ was afflicted for six years with As. thuia and Bronchitis, during which Jime the best physicialis could give no relief. Her life was despaired of, until iu last October slie procured a Bottle of Dr. King’s New Discovery, when immediate relief was felt, and by continuing its use for a short time she was completely cured, gaining in flesh 50 lbs- in a few'iiQonths Free Trial bottle of this certain cure ot all Throat and Lung Diseases at F. B. Meyer’s Drug Store. Large Bottles SI.OO [4.]

Will Mr. Blaine Explain ?

Bab Harbor, > ug. *4, ISB4, C olonel W- R. Holloway: I have this moment received the at. rocious libel of the ludianapolis dentine'. It is utterly and abominably false In every statement and every implica j tiou. Political slanders I do not stop t'> notice, but this editor assails the honor of my wife and my. children, i desire you, without un hour’s delay, to employ a proper attorney and have the respond bie publisher of tne Sentinel sued for libel in the United Stales District Court of Indiana. It is my ouly remedy. I am sure that honorable Democrats, alike with honorable Republicans, will justify me in defending the Honor of my family if need be with my life. (Signed) James O- Blaijse. ‘lt was not supposed that Mr« Blaine would leave Maine during the canvass, but a journey through the country iu del'enseol'my wife and children will not be a trip for which Mr. Blaine need ask tlie permission either of propriety of custom. The sympathy ot the country will go with him.’—Lewiston Journal. ‘lt was while Blaine was a professor at Bine Lick Springs that he met Miss Harriet Stan-wood, of Augusta. Me She was living with her Sister, and was a teacher'at Miss Thornton’s Female Seminary. Miss Stanwood was a descendant from the old Puritan stock in a direct line from the Stanwood family of Ipswich, Mass., and in March, 1851, became his wife at Pittsburg, Pa.’ Life and Services of James G. Blaine, by Russell H, Coiiwell; With an introduction by His excellency Frederics Robie, Governor of Maine, I u Wished by E 0. Allen & 00., Augusta, Me-, Page eightThe publishers of the workiu sending it foith to the public say of it. that it has the impress of the broadest infor mat. on and the most careful attention on every page. That it is the biography that secured the inestimable benefit of the advice, co operation and assistance of Mr. Blaine, his relatives and friends This is the volume that is recommended

by the family and private secretary of the distinguished candidate. The New fork Trib.ne of Saturday, Aug 23, 1884, says: *& the cemetaiy at Augusta has stood ! for-u:arly thi ty years a little white i stone erected to the memory of Mr. B 1 line’s sob, Stab wood Blaine. * * *, That grave has been secretly vi-ited/the last figure in the record ot the child’s birth has been cbisselled away and defaced aud the date June 18, 1851, has been made to read June 18, 185—.’ Mere is a record of facts from the highest Republican authority, tor str I* ing which the Sentinel has been sued, and £50,0(0 demanded. The exhibit has been denounced by Mr. Blaine as utterly and abominably false in every statement and in every implication, and here now we have the statement of the same facts in Oonwell’s •Campaign Life ol Mr Blaine,’ published under his very eye at his home in Augusta, and as the publisher states, was surprised by Mr. Blaine himself, and in a leading editorial of the New Vork Tribuue, Mr D laine’s metropolitan campaign organ. Pat the statements of these two prominent near friends of Mr. Blaine together and the tiuthfulnoss of the Sentinel is completely vindicated—marriage in March, 1851, and cirth. of sou June 18, 1851. What will be the outcome Kentuck part of the affair can readily be anticipated after reading a letter from that end of the line in another column. We respectfully commend this record to the prayerful attention of the few reverends and all others who have eom>mended Mr. Blaine to the public as a pure man, the champion of chastity, the defender of the virtue of homes.

These are Solid Facts. The best blood purifier and system regulator ever placed within the reach of suffering humanity, truly is Electric Bitters. Inactivity of the Liver,Biliousness. Jaundice, Oonstipation, Weak Kidneys, or any disease of the urinary organs. or whoever requires an apetizer, tonic or mild su*mular.t, will always find Electric Bitters the best and only certain cure known. They act surely, and quickly, every bottle guaranteed to give entire satisfaction or money refunded. Sold at Fifty cents a bottle by F. B. Meyer. [4.]

To Farmers. (From the Albauy Argus.) For many years your voles have kept the Republican party in power. The policy of that party has enriched and protected the monopolies of the country but has it improved your condition ?

While the Goulds, Blaines, Dorseys, Elkins, Millers, Bradys, Cornells and other monopolies have become millionaires by tbe use they have of your votes, have you, too, been growing rich? While your votes have brought princely incomes df hundreds and thousands of dollars a day to them, how has your daily income increased? Fou r years ago you were appealed to. by these monopolies who iiave captured the Republican party, on the tariff scare, aud you were told that ruin and devastation would follow Deinociatic success, aud that prosperity and plenty would n-uk from Republican victory. You voted for tbo policy of the sharks who run the Republican party and how have you been benefited? Gould and Blaine and Elkins aud Warner Miller and the monopolists in your own vicinity have grown rich, but how is it with you? Is your farm worth more to.day than it was then? Is it easier to meet your payments and vour interest to-day than it was then ? Do you get more for your butter, cheese, grain, pork and other produce than then ? Do you your clothing, groceries, tools and what you have to buy cheaper than then? Have vour taxes bceu reduced and expenses lightened? Does your daily toil do much more than barely support you and your fam - ily? Are the times good with you? If not, is it not time for you to think of your own interests and vote for your own benefit than that of Mr. Gould aud Mr Elkins and Mr. Millionaire Blaine?

Your own experience ought to prove to you that something is wrong at Washington. The policy of the past is at fault Ext'avagance and profligacy and careless methods have too long prevailed. The rich thrive and the poor barely live. A halt is necessary. The farmers of New York know Grover Cleveland and they know he is the man to bring back the government at Wash" ington to simpler methods. A poor man himself, his sympathies and his belief lead him to enforce strict economy in public administration. With him every dollar is weighed as so much trom the proceeds of the toil of the people. The farmers of New York know that when its third city was suffering from the results of extravagence in its affairs, Grover Cleveland was called by his fellow-citizens, irrespective of party, to correct the abuse. They know that so marked was his fidaltty to that charge that the people of rbe State at the next electiou made him its executive by 194,000 majority and the Republican paper at liis home said ‘Buffalo loses the best mavor it ever had.’ They know that with general accord before he was nom* inated for president people of this State,and the newspapers of all parties said ‘Cleveland is a good governor.’ They know that his appointments and his Vetoes have received the praise of all men. They know that he. has had tLe courage of liis convictions and liis convictions have b -en r glit.. They know ti at 1 \< ry 11,. asni'e promising aid to the tanners has received his cordial support. They know that lie approved the bill to prevent the rale of bogus butter. and be is forcing elomargarioe oct of competition with dairy interests. Tney know that, in every position, he has been honest, and true to the people, and that, under his guidance the mahagemeut of affairs of the citv of Buffalo was transformed from corruption and extravagance to honesty and economy, and his administration of tingreat state of New York lias won tin praise of all the people. f: Oh, ma! There’s a dude ou wings.” “No, child, that’s only a mosquito.”

PORTRAITS OF CANDIDATES FREE. THE INDIAN STATE Mil FI Every subscriber to the Campaign Weekly Sentinel, at 40 cents, wilt receive present, a fine 23x3i» inch steel engraving of our candidates. CLEVELAND and HENDRICKS This elegant Picture is prepared especially for the SentineL, and should be in every Democratic home and ciubr,room in the State. The picture alone wiil be sect for 25 cents, or 5 for SI,OO. Also CLEVELAND and HENDRICKS Songster, containing over 60 pages, will be sent, postage paid, for 12 cents. Any erson sending 2 subscr bers for the Campaign Weekly Sentinel with 75 cents, will receive the Songster as a present. Address, Indianapolis Sentinel Co

A Walking Skeleton. Mr. E. Springer, of Mechamesburg, Pa., writes: ‘I was afflicted with lung and abscess on lungs, and reduced to a walking Skeleton. Got a free trial bottle of Dr. King’s New Discovery for Honsumptiou, which did so much good that I bought a dollar bottle. After using three bottles, found myself once more a man, completely restored to health with a$ hearty appetite, and a gain in flesh of 48 lbs.’ Cali at p. B. Meyer’s Drug Store and get a free trial bottle of this certain cure for ail Lung Diseases. Large bottles. SI.OO. 33-3 mm rt I I"1 fI" I ■ &in Agents wanted for CLEVELAND:;!;"": with his co operation and assistance, by the renowned Goodrich. Largest, cheapest, handsomest. best. Elegantly illustrated. Coats more per copy to manufacture than the other lives that are sold for twice its price. Outsells all others ten to one. One of our agents made a profit ot over SSO the first day. A harvest of gold will be realized by every w >rker All new be glnr ers succeed graudly. Terms free, and the most liberal ever offered. Save valuable time by sending 25 cents for postage, ete„ on free outfit, which includes large p ospectus bock. Act quickly; a day at the start is worth a week at the finish. H. HALLETT & CO., July 18,1884 —3m. Portland, Maine.

Wbicht s Indian Vegetable Pills FOR THE LIVER And all Bilious Complaints “ e fsrssstf snp -

R. P. BENJAMIN, Having purchased the £tand of F. L. Cotton, will keep constantly on hand a full and complety supply of Lumber, Lath, Shingles; Windows. Doors, S sit Etc., HARD A SOFT COAL. My stock has been bought for cash, and I can offer superor inducements to cash buyers. Please call before going elsewhere. Rensselaer Ind., Dec. 7,1883.

We would most respectfully announce that we now have a omplete line in new styles of TAUTER Parlor and Chamber sets Cottage sets, Walnut and common beds, Mattresses and Springs, Book Cases, Ward robes, Bureaues, Marble and wood top stands and Tables, Easy Chairs Cane-seat and wood chairs, Kitchen furniture, Safes, &c.— PlcTUreTframlS, Carpets, Floor and Table cloths. Rugs, Ottomans, Foot-restsi Window-shades, Queens ware, Table and Pocket cutlery Plated Spoons, and many Novelties on our 5 CENT COUNTER. Undertaking department Our Undertaking Department is complete. We carry the best stock to be found in the county, MetaliCj Draped Walnut and White Caskets, all sizes and prices. Nice stock of Burial Robes. ;No charge for Hearse. C. O. SEARS, Opposite Court House.

IfiRON ftTONie FACTS RECARDINC Dr. Barter's Iron Tonic. Tt v.-U1 parity and enrich the BLOOD, regulate UVSR and KIDNEYS, »«d Rkstohk th* HEALTH and VIGOR of YOUTH! In all those disease- reniiirinjc a certain and efficient TONIC, especially Dyspepsia.Wantof Appetite.lodigesl ‘»». Lack of strength, etc., its use is marked with Immediate and wonderful results. Hones, fallacies and nerves receive new force. Enlivens the mind and supplies lirail) Power. B /l niCC suffering from alt complaints **» mJ I EnO peculiar to their sex will find In liR. HARTER’S IRON TONIC a safe aud speedy cure. It gives a clear and healthy complexion. Tl.e strongest testimony to the value of Dr. 1 AUTtJtt’S I row Tonic :s that frequent attempts st COunterfeltlngliave only added to the popularity of the original. If you earnestly desise health do not experiment—getthc Original and Best, CSend your address to The Dr. Harter Med. Co. V St. Louis, Mo., for onr “DREAM BOOK.” B Fullof strange and useful informatioa, free. W Dr. Harter’s Iron Tonic is for Balc by all Druggists and Dealers Everywhere.

CWAYNES Krown to Men of Fame and Science for Removing ALL IMPURITIES OF THE BLOOD. Ackaswlolgod a Grand, Pleasant, tad Efficient Cure for CONSTIPATION, breath ’ IWQPFPQIA known by irregular appeUlOrC.roiH, tlte( gour belching, weight and tenderness at pit of stomach, despondency. LIVER Coraplaiuk Biliousness. Malaria, Chills aud also bottom of ribs; weariness, irritability, tongue coated, skin yellow, hot and cold sensations,eyes dull,dry cough,stifled and obstructed feeling, Irregular pulse, bad colored stools APfIPI FYY Epllep*y,Paraly»i»,dini soundinears,giddiness, confusion in head, nervousness, flashes of light before eyes, loss of memory. Diseases of Bladder and IfinNPVQ urine dark or light,red deposit; mutiLij, burning, stinging, bearing down sensations, frequent desire to urinate, uneasiness, inflamed eves, dark circles, thirst. Diseases of HP APT severe pains, fluttering or weight near * I heart, more SO on moving quickly and when lying on left side; out of breath on exertion. HPAnAPHP dull or sharp pains in temples, llLnUnutiL,eyes or head; faintness, nausea. Dropsy is caused by watery fluid. Rheumatism, Ac., by -ric acid in blood. Bowel Disorders by corrupt matter. Worms by the posts within. Colds by choking of the secretions. SWATHE’S PiI.ES, by gentle action, removes the cause, making a permanent oure. Sent by mail toe 25 cents box of 30 Pills; 6 boxes, SI.OO. (In postagestamps ) Address, DR. SWAYNE dc SON, Philadelphia, Pa, Sold by Druggists.

An Alcoholic Trance. A remarkable case—that of a physM cian of some prominence in this city—l will furnish a clearer conception of] what is meant by alcoholic trance than.] could be done by pages of abstract de-j scriptlon. This gentleman inherited from his father a tendency to periodical] indulgence in alcoholic stimulants,] which never attacks him unless he has] performed an important operation, lost] a patient by death, or encountered some] crisis in his affairs. The first symptom] is a sense of nervous prostration, fol-| lowed by an inexorable craving fori brandy, which, if resolutely denied an th# moment, waxes more and more im-| perious, until denial is out of the quea-l tion. Tired out with the struggle, hel yields at last and takes a mere thim-| bleful of cognac—the beverage es-| pecially craved at such times. The drop of cognac is the signal fori the mental transformation that follows. I Sometimes he shuts himself up in hisl room with a bottle of brandy at his| elbow, denies himself alike to visitors] and to patients, and indulges in a pro-1 tracted find solitary symposium— if that| term may be applied to a bout in wliichj no second person is included. Gen-J erally, when he emerges from his room and his trance he has no knowledge of what has taken place. He remembers that he did not feel exactly well and took a nip of brandy; but from the moment of that event until he awoke as from a troubled dream, memory is a perfect blank. At other times, instead of shutting himself up in solitude with his bottle, he attends to business as usual, collecting and paving bills, giving and taking receipts, banking, visiting patients and prescribing for them as lucidly and correctly as though i t- his normal condition—and all this without exciting a suspicion that he is not in his proper mind, his conversation being as consecutive and coherent as ever, and his manner the same as ordinary. He continues in this condition sometimes for a whole day, retires to bed, and wakes up the next morning without the least! recollection of the events of the day! before; not even ttyo vug o -ivm unseen-' ces of a troubled drew i -remaining to mark the period of oa c through' which he lias so recently pa.-.- ed.— New York Times. — —..

HOUSEKEEPERS’ HELPS. 1 Broiled Quail. —After dressing, split I down the back, sprinkle with salt and! pepper, and lay them on a gridiron, the I inside down. Broil slowly at first, 1 Serve with cream gravy. 9 Sponge Cake. —Three eggs, one cup I Sugar, one cup flour, three table-spoon-1 fuls sweet milk, two table-spoonfuls I melted butter, two heaping teaspoonfula I baking powder, one-half teaspoonful ex-1 tract of lemon. Baked in layers, this ] makes a very nice jelly cake. 9 Cheap Fruit Cake. —Soak one large 9 cupful of dried apples over night in a 9 little water; take out, chop as fine as 9 raisins, add one cup raisins, cook them 9 in one cup molasses until weU pro- 9 served, drain off molasses and add to it I four eggs, one cup sugar, one cup butter, I one cup sour milk, two teaspoonfuls I soda, one-half nutmeg, one teaspoonful I cinnamon, one-half teaspoonful cloves, I flour to make a stiff batter, add fruit I and bake in a slow oven. ] Metropolitan Cake.— Light part: I Two cups sugar, three-fourths cup I butter, one cup sweet milk, two and I one-half, cups flour, whites of five I eggs, three teaspoonfuls baking powder. I Bake in two cakes. Dark papt: One- I half cup molasses, one-half cup flour, | one cup raisins, one teaspoonful ctnna- I mon, one-half teaspoonful cloves, two ] large spoonfuls of the light part. Bake | in one cake and place between the two | light cakes with jelly or frosting. i Chicken Croquettes. —One cold ] boiled chicken chopped fine; then take ] a pint of sweet milk, and when the milk ] is boiled stir into it two large table- I spoonfuls of flour made thin in a little ; cold mill:; after the flour is well cooked j with the milk, put in a piece of butter the size of an egg, add salt and cayenne pepper; stir all Well into the chicken; roll up with your hand, and dip firstinto an egg beaten up, then into cracker rolled fine, and fry in hot tallow (fresh tallow, half and half lard, is very nice). Almond Pudding.— Turn boiling water on to three-fourths of a pound of sweet almonds; let it remain until the skin comes off eas ly; rub with a dry cloth; whop drv, pound fine with one large spoonful of to-e water; beat six - eggs to a stiff froth wth three spoon-' fuls of fine white sugar; mix with one 1 quart of mi k three spoonfuls of powdered crackers, four ounces of melted butter and the same of citron cut into bits; add almonds, stir all together and bake in a small pudding dish with a lining of pastry. This pudding is best when cold. It will J bake iu half an hour in a quick oven.

Cor.Ned Eke?.—A good piece of beef well corned arid veil cooked is a favorite disk with nearly all persons. Put it into the pot with enough cold water to just cover it. When it comes to a boil set it on t lie back of the range so that it will boil moderately. Too fast boilfhg renders the meat tough, yet the water should never be allowed to cease boiling until the meat is done; skim often. Let it boil four or five hours, according to the size. It must be thoroughly dcfne. In England, where this dish is an especial favorite, carrots arc always boiled and served with the beef. The carrot flavor improves the meat, and the meat improves the carrot. Do not put the carrots into the pt, however, until there is only time for them to be well cooked before serving (about threequarters of an hour). Serve the carrots round the beef. In America cabbage is oftener boiled with corned beef. When about to serve press out all water from the cabbage, adding little pieces of butter. Serve the meat placed in the center of the cabbage. Little, pickles are a nice garnish for corned beef, with or without the vegetables. Horse-radish is a never-failing relish with corned beef. mm* Tain many endorses Cleveland and Hombiciis. ,