Democratic Sentinel, Volume 9, Number 34, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 September 1885 — INTERESTING to BOTH SEXES. [ARTICLE]
INTERESTING to BOTH SEXES.
Our old friend TV. J. Huff, p. m. at Monticello, lias been suspended and O. S. Dale has been appointed to the vacancy. The Cincinnati Telegram a Republican paper, says the Young Democracy of Indiana want “Dan Voorhees, Tom Hendricks and Joe McDonald to skip the gutter.”— No doubt, with these republican papers the “wish is father to the thought.” No aged stinction exists in the democratic ranks. All are Democrats, and regard with pride—Yoorhees, Hendricks and McDonald. ■■— ♦ »
Our neighbor pui lishes Ada’s Sweet Letter of Resignation to the President, in which she thanks, him for his courtesy, etc. It slio’d be remembered that our Grover is a bachelor and Ada is a maid.— However while the missive was on its way Ada is reoresented as not being in the amiable mood it wo’d indicate. It is said she boxed the ears of an office boy, and nudged her elbow through a window.
The New York Sun comes to the defense of Vice-President Hendricks’ speech in advocacy of homerule for Ireland, ag-inst the attacks of the Republican press in the following vigorous style: “The assumption moreover that it is unseemly or unfriendly for Americans to applaud the aspirations of Irishmen for home rule is a piece of insufferable impertinence. It is tantamount to saying that we ought to be as. amed of our methods of State government, and slio’d hang our heads, instead of exultantly acclaiming the adoption of our system in Canada and in Australia, and the prospect for its early reproduction in Ireland. To pretend that when Americans hail the promise of a State Legislature at»Dublin they wish for the destruction of the British Empire is to beg the very point in controve-. Ay- ; ’
In his Hamilton speech Governor Hoadley, the Democratic candidate for Governor of Ohio, in striking contrast to the bloody-shirt howl of Senator Sherman at Mount Gilead, stated a cardinal point of the Democratic doctrine of peac. and prosperity, as follows: “To the policy of alienation we oppose Union; for hate we substitute love; we welcome the new South and the old South, old men and boys, fathers and sons, not as allies mei ely in a crusade against the forces of nature, but as brothers in affection in blood. We bid them all, white and black, join us in the great march of Union and liberty, io the peaceful conquest of the future.— ‘Let us have peace,’ said General Grant many years ago. His eyes at last saw itjj ‘I have witnessed,’ * id his dying voice, ‘since my sickness, just what I have wished to see ever since the war—harmony and good feeling between the sections.’ And a gain, rejoicing in the present, he prophesied the future in words of glowing hope. ‘We may now well look forward to a perpetual peace at home, and a national strength that will screen us against any foreign complica tions.’ ”
J. W. Douthit, Esq., is attending to legal business in Reming to-day. Mrs. W. J. Imes arrived Wed_ nesday evening from Nebraska. The infant son of Mr. and Mrs T. J. Saylor, Newton township,died las t Sunday morning. Lung fever L. C. Grant now occupies the blacksmith of the Roberts Bros - w here he will be p’eased to hav3 his patrons call.
The M. E. Church Ladies’ Industrial Society will meet at the residence of Mrs. James T. Randle, nextTYednesday afternon.
Miss Clara Dexter started on the early train yesterday'morning f r Cheyenne, Wyoming Territory, at which place, to-morrow evening, she will be married to Mr. Geo. C. Starr, a merchant in that city.
Any man or woman making less than S4O weekly should try our easy money making business. We want agents for our celebrated Madame Dean Spinal Supporting Corsets ; also our Spinal Supporter, Shoulder Brace, and Abdominal Protector Combined (for Men and Boys). No experience required. Four orders per day give the Agent $l5O monthly. Our Agents report four to twenty sales daily. $3 outfit free. Send at once for full particulars. State sex. Lewis Schiele & Co., 390 Broadway, New York.
The Albany (New York) Journal lets the black cat out of the bag why the Republicans are stirred to the depths by the removal of so many fourth-class postmasters since Mr. Stevenson of Illinois, has taken the First Assistant’s desk. The Journal, in speaking of the New York canvass, says: “The bulk of the Republican vote is cast in rural counties, where voters are somewhat cattered. We have already dwelt upon the special obstacles in the way of Republican organization this year, owing to the changes in so many of the fourth-class postoffi es, and other causes incident to a Democratic National administrat’on.”— An exchange gives the key: “The fourth-class postoffices of the coun-try-under Republican rule constituted a powerful political machinery. They gratuitouslr advertised and in every conceivable way aided the circulation of Republican newspapers and campaign documents. and discriminated in every conceivable way against Democratic newspapers and campaign documents. It was a very common practice m many country postoffices to enclose Republican documents in the folds of Democratic papers. Every postmaster who engages in this and kindred business—whether a Democrat or a Republican—should be bounced, and President Cleveland will do it. . “Public office is a public trust.”
Exposition Rates.— -The sta tion agent at thi t "lace will sell round trip tickets to Chicago and return, for $2.95, on Tuesdays and p hu sdays of eve*y week until Oct. 14th. Good 13 return on any regular train until th 5 * Monday following s he day when sold. If you want a variety of fruit you know something about, go to the Rensselaer Nur ery.
