Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 39, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 October 1884 — Page 1
VOLUME vui.
THE DEMOCRATIC SENTINEL. A DEMOCRATIC NEWSPAPER. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY, BY Jas. W. McEwen. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. One year SI A l ' Six months . 75 hree months -.50 A.d.'wertiaing Rates. One coiumn. one year. SBO 00 Half column,* “ 40 tn Quarter - - 30 00 Eighth - - io oO Tenpcrceot. added to foregoing price if jdvertisements arc set to occupy more than Jingle column width. Fractional parts of a year at equitable rates Business cards not exceeding 1 inch space, t 5 a year; S 3 for six months; $2 for three All legalnotiees and advertisements at established statute price. Reading notices, first publication 10 cents j line; each publication thereafter s cents a line. Yearly advertisements may be changed quarterly (once in three months) at the option of the advertiser, free of extia chargeAdvertisements for persons not residents of Jasper county, must be paid for in advance of first pnblic vtion, when less than one-quarter column in size; aud quarterly n advance when larger.
MORDECAI F. CHILCOTE. Attorney-at-Lav Rensselaer, - - . - Indiana Practices fin the Courts of Jasper and adoinlng counties. Makes collections a specialty. Office on north side of Washington street, opposite Court House- vinl B, 8. DWIOOINS ZIMBI DWIOOINR. ». & Z. DWIGGINS, Attornoyg-at-Law, Renssklaeb 3 Indiana Practice in the Courts of Jasper and ad joining counties, makecollcetions.etc. tc Office west coruer Newels’ Block. v_nl SIMON P. THOMPSON, DAVID J. THOM PBON Attorney-at-Law. Notary Public. THOMPSON & BROTHER. Rensselaer, - - . Indiana Practice in all the Courts. W ARION L. SPITLER. Collector nnd Abstractor. We pay , irticukir attention to paying tax- , selling and leasing lands. v 2 mH FRANK W. 15 LOCK. Attorney at Zaaim And Real Estate Broker. Practices in all Courts of Jasper, Newtor tnd Bentdp counties. Lands examined Abstracts of Title prepared: Taxes paid. Collectloxiß a, Spoclaltsr.
JAMES W. DOUTHIT, ATTORNEYsAT- law and notary public. . Office upstairs, in Maieever’s new building, Kent seiner. Ind.
H. W. SNYDER, Attorney at Law Remington, Indiana. ' JOLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY.
W W. HARTSELL, M D , HOMEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. RENSSELAER, - - INDIANA. ESFChronic Diseases 1 Specialty, jgj OFFICE, in Makeever’p New Block. Residence at Makeover House. July 11, 1884. Dd. dale, • ATTORNEY-AT LAW - MONTICELLO, - INDIANA. Bank building, up stairs.
J. H. LOUGHBIDGE. F. P, BITTERS LOUGHRIDGE & BITTERS. Physicians and. Snrgeons. Washington sfteet, below Austin's hotel. Ten per cent, interest will be added to all accounts running unsettled longer than three months. vlnl DR. I. B. WASHBURN, , Physician & Surgeon, Rensselaer Infl. Calls promptly attended. Will give special attei tion to the treatment of Chronic Diseases.
R. S. Dwiggins, Zimri Dwiggins, President. Cain ter. Citizens’ Bank, RENSSELAER. IND., Does a general Banking business; gives specialattenilon to collections; rnnittances made on day of payment nt current rateotexchange;inter, ,t p, hl.-p hnlHiieHH certificates bearing int, rest issued; exchange bought and sold. This Bank owns the Bu-glar Safe, which took the premium at tjie Chicago Exposition in 1878. This Rafe Is protected by one o£ ' Sargent's Time Locks. The bunk vanltimed is as good as can be built. It will be seen from thn foregoing that this Bank furnishes as good sacurlti to depositors as can bt. ALFBED M COT. THOMAS THOMPSON. Banking House nr a. mccoy at.Thompson, successors U to * A - Thompson. Bankers. Rensselaer. Ind. Does general Banking business Buy and sell exchaoge. Collections made sn all available points. Monev loans’ Interest paid on specified time deposits & Office same place as dd firm of A. McCo y hompson. „ apru.'si
The Democratic Sentinel.
MM® & Our stock ot Dress Goods is now complete, consisting ut A Splendid Line of Dry Goods, Dress Ginghams and Shirtings, Corsets, Hoop Skirts aad Bustles, A Full Line of Satchels and Vallses. Saxony, Germantown and Stocking Yarns, Flanm ls and Jbar>s from the best Factories, Ladies’ and Gent’s Underwear at prices tl.at cannot fail to pieuse you. We are offering our ent’re stock of L'idiea’. Misses’, aud Children’s Cloaks at prices that DEFY COMPETITION. We invite you to call and nee our New Goods, Ellis & Murray. Renssla.-r, Ind.
THOMAS J. Boots, Caps,
v>shoe:? fc. TFeVERY BUR WRAHfO THOMAS J. FARDEN, L •' 3ors East of P. O. Rensselaer, Ind. A com ' : ' eln .p ot light and heavy si s for - ieii and boys, women ; an ■ • s, always in stock ai H.’ttoi;! prices. Increase ot i ; . de more an object than large profits. See our goods before buying.
Gents’ Furnishir Goods!
N WARNF SONS. DE' L N Harks ! ? -A : '•* te- . Side Washington Street. RE£gSS££>AER, - - INDIAN/,
IRA W. YEOMAN, attorney at Law, KOTA RY PUBLIC, Real Estate aiiß Collecting Agent. .Vill practice in all the Courts of Newton Benton and Jasper counties. Office: —Up-stairs, ovet Murray’s Cit; Irug Store, Goodland, Indiana. ' THE NEW RENSSELAER, IND. JU° . OPENED. New nd finely furnished.— Cool and pleasant ro< ns. Table furnished with the beat the market s fords. Good Sample Rooms on flr-t floor. Iree Bns to and from Depot. PHILIP BLUE, Proprietor. Rensselaer. May 11.1888/ ts. LEAR HOUSE, J. H. LEAR,Proprietor, J Opposite Court Hoise. Monticello, Ind Has recently been n w furnished through Out. The rooms are lege and airy.tho loen tion central, making i the most eonve Jen and desirable hopse I town. Try it
RENSSELAER JASPER COUNTY, INDIANA. FRIDAY OCTOBER 24. 1884.
Mr Calkins has not replied to the Widow’s last led tor - ITMr. Calkins, your attention a mo went. Has “Will” settled your school fund indebtedness yet? An Answer Wanted. Can any on:- bring us a case of Kidney or Liver Complaint that Electric Bitters will not speedily cure? We say they can not, as thousands of cases already permanently cured and who are daily recommending Electric Bitters, will pmve Bright’s disease, Diabetes, Weak Back, or any urinary complaint quickly cured- They purify the blood, regulate the oowels, and act directly on the diseased parts, Every bottle guaranteed For «do a* .’Oc. a t«»ril»» by F. B. Meyer- I—3o An Entrprising, Rliable Hons. F- B. Meyer can always be relied upon, not only to carry in stocK the best of everything, but to secure the Agency for such articles as have well-known merit, and are popular with the people, thereby ustainingthe reputation of being always enterprising, and over reliable. Having secive;! the Agenc.y for the celebrated King’s New' Discoyeiy for Consumption. will sell it on a nosifive guarantee. It wll' surely cure anj and every affection of 'ihnat, Lungs, and Chest, and to show '-er confidence, we invite you to ctll and get a i rial Bottle Free I—3C
RHODY SHIEL
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR STATE TREASURER, In a Pickle—The Workingmen Promise to See Him Later. Roger R. Shiel, Republican candrdate for Treasurer of State, having been charged with offences and actions of the blackest on record against the laboring element, for whichja vigorous boycott has been waged against aim. Upon his own appeal to the Central Trades and labor Assembly, fee was allowed an investigation with the following result:
Indianapolis, Ind.,) October 12 1864. J To the Officers and Members of the Central Trades and Labor Assembly: Gentlemen —Your Committee appointed to take evi dence and report upon certain charges pref erred against Roger R. Shiel, Republican candidate for Treasurer of State, beg leave to say: That, as requested by Mr Koger R. Shiel, we received and carefully read and considered the various statements which appeared in the daily Journal, Times and News of October 6, 1884, which statements he caused to be made public before your Committee had finisl ed its labors in said investigation. The charges, in substance, are that Mr. Roger R. Shiel opposed, by every means in his power, the Telegraph Operators in their strike with the Western Union Telegraph Company in July and August, 1883.
Mr. Roger K. Shiel was invited by your ommittee to produce before it any evidence in his possession |hat he might obtain to refute said charges. It was the endeavor of your Committee to a fiord Mr. Shiel any opportunity to meet said charges; to explain them or disprove them, and your Committee postponed its meeting for a period of four days (allowing him twelve days from the date of filing his petition) to accomodate Mr. Shiel and to give him ample time to bring before your Committee such matters as he desired. Your Committee also extended to the ’• elegraph Operators an opportunity to furnish evidence sustaining the charges made against Mr. Shiel. After a very carful and full consideration of all the evidence produced we find.
First—That Roger R. Shiel did oppose, by word and action, the ’ elegraph Operators in their strike against the Western Union Telegraph Company in 1883. Second —That Roger R. Shiel used every means in his power to defeat the 1 elegraph Operator* in their efforts to obtain justice from the Western Union Telegraph Company. bird —That, whether known to the officers of said company or not, he brought and was instrumental in bringing operators from abroad to take the place of strikers.
Fomth— hat said Shiel personally interfered with the strikers at Indianapolis—in this, that he persuaded operator who had been brought from abroad to remain with said company and fill the places of the strikers. Fifth— hat he. not only by word and action, induced operators, who had been brought from abroad, to remain with the company, filling the places of the striked but threatened personal violence against the strikers who were seeking to induce said operators to leave the company. Sixth—That in public utter* anceshe seemed to be favorable to the strikers, yet, by unrea onable and cunning amendments, defeated every
motion nr measure that tended to the solution of said Roubles, and in private talk, and upon the streets, abused, maligned and vilified the strikers, and upon one occasion said: “That the Governor ought to order out the militia and drive them from the strocts Seventh— w e find that all of the charges made against Boger K. Shiel are true. Respectfully submitted, L. H. Me' lellan, Henry C. Deck, , William B. Lewis, # S. Schmalholz, Committee.
THE MOLDERS SAY GUILTY.
At a regular meeting of the lion Molders’ Union, No. 56, held Wednesday evening, October 8, the following report was handed in by the investigating committee appointed by that body.-and was unanimously adopted. Indianapolis, 0ct.8,1884. We, the members of the iron Molders’ Union, No. 56, after carefully ihvestigating the report of the committee from the Knights of Labor, in regard to their action toward Rhody Shiel, find that he did all he could to injure the cause of labor during the late telegraphers’ strike, and pledge ourselves to use all honorable means to accomplish his defeat on the 4th or November B. Sheridan, Gus Lipp John Gird, Committee.
By Request.
Mr. M. E. Shiel, editor of the Monitor-Journal, the temperance organ, requests us to correct our assertion to the effect that Roger R. Shiel attempted to bribe that Journal with and states that the ain’t was $3,000. The following asplains itself: Indianaplis, Ind., ) Oct. 151884. j For some two or three weeks previous to the Prohibition State Convention of July 24, 1884, Roger R. Shiel, Republican nominee for Treasurer.of State of ludtana. * * * * tried to hire me, and finally offered me three thousand dollars ($3,000) to oppose the prohibition ticket, if nominated, and favor a constitutional convention. Michael E. Shhl. State of Indiana, Marion County, ss: On this 15th day of October, 1884, said Michael E. Shiel, per onally appeared before me and subscribed and made oath to the truth of the fore going statement in due form of law. Witness my hand and notarial seal. Robert Denny, Notary Public, in and for Marion county, Indiana.
The Labor Signal is Non,Partisan. The Indianapolis Times has spoken of the Labor Signal as an “inferior sheet.” The La bor Signal makes no pretense of being a great newspaper.— t is not published by the organized labor assemblies of this city for the purpose of making money out of the enterprise. but to voice the sentiments and wishes of labor.— It is published by an editor selected by the Trades Assemb ly. The Trades Assembly is composed of sixty delegates, selected by thirteen organized labor bodies in this city, including the Knights of Labor, ypographical, Carpenters’, * igarmakers’, Molders’, Upholsterers’, and Varnishers’. Unions ond various other crafts. This paper is non-partisan, but will strike down the hand of any man raised against the rights of working men, as that of Roger R. Sniel against the telegrayh operators, be that man Reyublican or Democrat ’he dead and wounded in Cincinnati as the result of the Ohio election numbered twen-ty-f our.
NUMBER 39.
These are Solid Facts.
The best blood purifier and system regulator ever placed within the reach of suttering humanity, truly ie Electric Bitters. Inactivity of the Liver. Biliousness. Jaundice, Constipation. Weak Kidneys, or 4iny disease cf the urinary organs. or whoever requires an apetizer, tonic nr mild stimulant, 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. Bold at Fifty cents a bottle by F. B Meyer.
It is estimated at " ashington that the republican campaign thus far has cost $2,200000, Where did this enormous amount of money come from? "as it subscribed by men anxious for good and economical government, by men who are alarmed at the charge that Grover Cleveland is a monopolist? Not much. It was subscribed by the class of men for whom Blaine has always been a tool—the jobbers, speculators, railroadwreckers, subsidy grabbers, who expect to profit by his election. A large share of it came from the profits Which the high tariff has enabled the protection barons to wring from helpless consumers, sub. scribed with the belief that the election of Blaine will thwart all efforts at tariff reform, and further perpetuate the. infamous system under which they are plundering the public every year of hundreds of millions of dollars. The Cleveland party has no such sum of money. Their“mohopoly” candidate is not assisted in his campaign by subscriptions from every wealthy monopolist, corporation speculators and railroad jobbers in the country, for there is noth ing in lis charecter to command the supportrtf such men.
OHIO.
[From the N. Y. Herald.] In a total poll of 750,000 the Republicans secured, in a State which has gone Repub. liuan every Presidential, year since 1852, a plurality of less than ten thousand. • hat is to say, a change of five thousand votes would have lost them the State In 1880£they carried it by nineteen thousand. But it is not at all certain that the Blaine people can hold these five thousand votes in November. At least seven or eight thousand prohibitionists voted for the State ticket because a leading candidate was a prohibitionist. They may prefer to vote for Mr. St. John, their own candidate in November. Several thousand antiBlaine Republicans voted for the State ticket, but will vote against Mr. Blaine and for Governor Cleveland in Nov ember. It will be difficult for the Blaine men to repeat the scandalous deputy marshal business in Cincinnati, and it is not probable that thej can afford to swamp the State with money again, because they have too many dt ier doubtful States to deal with. On the whole, Ohio must be regarded as a doubtful State, Ohio d mocrats should not be discouraged.
DEMOCRATIC MEETING. Democratic candidate for Attorney Gennral, will address the people of Jasper county, Ind., at RENSSELAER, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28.
