Democratic Sentinel, Volume 11, Number 8, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 March 1887 — The Public Interested. [ARTICLE]
The Public Interested.
When manufacturers of an article are asking the public to consume their wares, it is indeed reireshing to know that they are reliably indorsed, as illustrated by the united indorsement of Dr. Harter’s Iron Tonic and Liver Pills by the druggists of 8t Paul “Bough on Pain” Plaster, porosed, 10c. Best. “Bough on Pain,” liquid, quick cure, 20c. “Bough on "Catarrh.” Cures all, worst oases. 50c. “Bough on Piles. ” Sure cure. 50c. Druggists. “Rough on Dirt” for the toilet, bath or ■bampoo. Perfectly harmless. Nice for washing infants, children, or adults. For miners, machinists, and others whose employment begrimes the clothing and hands. Invaluable in hospitals, asylums, and prisons as a disinfectant and purifier. “Bough on Bile Pills.” Little, but good. 10c, 250. “Bough on Itch" cures humors, eruptions, tetter. “Bough on Worms.” Sure cure. 25c. “Bough on Pain” Plaster, porosed, 10c. Best. Send sixteen cents in stamps to Paul Morton, G. P. & T. A., C., B. & Q. It. R, Chicago, 111, and get a copy of the Pronouncing Dictionary published by the Burlington route. It contains 320 pages, 32,000 words, and 670 engravings, and is the cheapest book issued. No Opium in Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Cures where other remedies fail 25c.
“Rat, why is everything Either at sixes or at sevAs?* Probably, my dear nervous sister, because you are suffering from some of the diseases peculiar to your sex You have a “draggmguawn” feeling, the back-ache, you are debilitated, you have pains of various kinds. Take Dr. R V. Pierce’s “Favorite Prescription” and l>e cured. Prioe reduced to one dollar. By druggists. “Died for want of one foot of r'pe,” is the suggestive verdict of a lynching party out West. —Boston Star. Pierce's ‘Pleasant Purgative Pellets” aro perfect preventivee of constipation. Inclosed in glass bottles, always fresh. By all druggists. imagines the Pension Bureau mast be a massive piece of furniture —there are so many drawers.
Ei tried »n: e po«toffice at a- sccolid-clasimutter.)
. Senator L. E. Sellers, of Monticello, upon the recommendation of Ended States Sen;itor Turpie, has boen appointed United States District Attorney ior Indiana. Judge Turpie is intimately acquainted withjjSenator Sellers, and cognizant of liis thorough qualifi ations f ‘or the position. We congratulate our old friend on bis promotion so well deserved. ‘ A few of the many things” for which the Democracy wall receive the cordial indorsement and increased support of the people at the nest general election will bu
idle dire very and expose, ly the Democratic Senate (‘ unmittee, of the mismauaxynieiitof tiie State Prison South, niter years of ‘whitewashing’ by Republican Committees ; The management of the Insan Hospital m the iiiterest ofreform, honesty and humanity; ‘“'the i;i q ing < ut of cilice of a’ pretended Lieutenant-governor; Tho throwing out of a Senator repo.ted by the Committee as notoriously guilty of bribery and corruption; The seating of his legally electe contestant; The election a gentleman of superior qualifications, purer patriotism, greater bread di of statesmanship to represent Indiana in the United States Senate, where she lias so long been misrepresented by a political fraud whose only claim to distinction is that he is the “grandson ot his grandfather;” The building up of valuable and rrmJi needed State properties: The payment by the r tiring Democratic State Treasurer, to his republican succrssor, of every dollar charged against him;
“For the beautiful and artistic manner” i which the false and hypocritical report of radical investigators on the hunt for partizan capital in the management of the Insane asylum has been demolished; their “wliite-washimr” of the state prison south brought to an end, and the persistent and repeated efforts of the republican thugs to build up their waning strength by deception and corruption fru tratecl by the prompt and honest action of the Democratic Senate m the interest of true reform; For the prompt and eii 'rgetic action of Democratic Governor Gray to have such measures adopted by officers of law as will in the end be the means of converting “the great £ str«w” bond of the late lamented Andrew Jackson Howard,’’accepted and continously held by Republican directors, into a good bond; For the prompt action of the A>emociatic Senate which resulted in putting a stop to “the brutal treatment and wholesale robbery by the subordinate officers of tiie Jeffersonville orison;’'* For at once commencing proceedings in the cou ts agains these recipients of republican favors for tnese many years past; For the severe but well-deserved denunciation, by the Democratic Senate, of “the nice and gentlemanly board of directors who have kave kept such a set of officers and have been unable or unwilling to dismiss them.” Resdeetfully ded-1 ic< • ■ <• the Rensselaer Republican. i
