Democratic Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 10, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 30 March 1888 — Bouquets. [ARTICLE]

Bouquets.

What a pleasure to gather the beautiful flowers, and fashion them into bouquets, to ornament our rooms, decorate the graves of our dear ones, or gladden the heart of the invalid! They are fit messengers of love and ; sympathy to our sick and suffering I mends, telling their own story of heavenly care and protection.

In t Nutshell- -The new tariff bill needs only to be plaimy understood to meet with universal acceptance by those whom revenue measures should affect —namely, the poor. It is the citizen whose one hard-earned dollar means fire, light, tread, that legislation must primarily protect The man with a million dollars can protect himself. First, we need in order that ”ages should be higher and goods cheaj er, cheaper wool, chemicals, fibres like jute, hemp, flax and lumber. We want cheap food and clothing, homes at f tir rent and especially cheapness in iron, clay and glass. The proposed tariff bill contemI lates this; not as thor mgh.y as could wish, but still with measurable improvement upon any tarifl bill we have known. Moreover, in abolishing war taxation we lose the war.—New York Herald.