Democratic Sentinel, Volume 12, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 May 1888 — Page 4
ffltmccrafic Sentinel FRIDAY. MAY 4. I8«s >i Urei at tb« poMefti-e at Reni»»elaer, Ind. m seeond.< *«a matter.)
Democratic Central Committee.
Hanging Grove.. David Culp, W. W. Kenton, Wm. Mount. Gillam—Joe G. Hunt, Adam Hees, John Tillett. )Valker-J. G. Andrews, F. L. Hershman, Joel F. Spriggs. Barkley—Wm. A. Snececker. Geo. Adair Jas. Lougstreth, S-rith Newell. George H. Brown, Jr. Marion. .David B. Nowels, J. Stanley, F. M. Parker. Henry Eisher, Chas D, Nowels, R. Fendi", Wm. M. Hoover, Sylves’er Healey. Jorian—Frank Welsh, 8. K. Crosby, Wm. W T ashburn, Jay Lamson, John Ulm, Jonn Zim m, r, Conrad Kauffold. Newton - Lucien Strong, A-J. Freeland, Chas. Paxton, Jas. Lane Wheatfield- John M. Welsh, Lewis Rich, John Heil, Nelson Adams. Keener—Titos. J. Erwin, George Bennett, E. Whitson. Kankakee.. John Maguire, P E- Davis, J. Vandecar. Carpenter..R. R. Pettit, C.G. Austin, E. L. Culp. W. L. Rich, John Stoudt, M. J. Castello, Jas. Clowrey, Jas. Pefley, Wm. Wells, Ira W. Y ooman. Milroy-W. C. MeCord, William H. Beaver. Wm. R. Siltton Union—D. W. Mellon, Geo. W. Casey Austin Lakin, J. K. Garriott. LEE E. GLAZEBKOOK, Chairman. Victor E. Lough ridg , Secretary C. I). Nowels, Treasurer.
DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
For Governor—C. C. Matson. Lieut. Gox. —Wm. R. Myers. Supreme Judges- W. P. Niblack, G. V. Howk and Allen Zollars, present incumbents. Sec’y of State—R. W. Miers. Auditor of Sta^e—Charles A. Munson. Treasu er of State —Thomas B. Byrnes. Supreme Court Reporter—John W. Kern. Attorney General- J no. R. Wilson. Sup’t Public Instruction—E. E Griffith. e i o . —.... The Jasper County Democratic Convention will be held in the Cour* House, Rensselaer, on the first Saturday m June next.
Township Democratic Conventions to select delegates to the County Convention will be held in the several townships o# the last Saturday in May. The Democratic Congressional Convention, for this District, will meet at Hammond, Wednesday, May 16, when a candidate will be placed in nomination who will do Billy Owen up Brown. Our old friend, ex-Sheriff Joe W. Ste wart, of White county, now represents this Congressional Dis" trietjon the Democratic Stat a Central Committee. No better selection could have been made.
Cl Delegates to the Democratic Congressional Convention for Jasper county, are Jas. W. McEwen, M. J. Castello, D. W. Shields, D. W. Mellon, George H. Brown, jr. } Jay Lamson, A. J. Freeland and Joel F. Spriggs. The Convention is called to meet at Hammend one week from next Wednesday, May 16th. See to it that Jasper county is fully represented.
Ingalls delegates to the Republican National convention were defeated in hfs own district, Kansas. The man who during the war remained in the rear and went sneaking around and jerking up Kansas soldiers for any and every petty little misdemeanor, subjecting them to punishment, deprivation of pay »nd rations, thus earning his commissions, deserves to be repudiated.
Prof. 3. B. s ßrown, President of the Normal School at Valparaiso, we understand will be before th* Democratic Convention to be held at Hammond, May 16, 1888, for nomination for Congress in this District.
Pref Brown has few equals as a public speaker, a gentleman of ability and untiring energy; and if selected as the Democratic standard bearer, will relegate Billy Owens back into the private walks of life. i
Indianapolis News (rep.): That Voorhees was a Knight of the Golden Circle was never believed and probably his story about the documents being concealed in his office is true. Let us suppose it is. D:es not Mr. Voorhees see what a terrific arraignment this i. of himself? Suppose those documents had been concealed in Oliver P. Morton’s office, or Ben Harrison’s? It is a historical fact that the radical drag-net succeeded in capturing *~ut four or -five who laid claim to membership with the Democratic partv. They were tried, convicted and sentenced to be hung, by an unconstitutional commission organized to convict. The action ot the commission exceeded the wishes of Morton, and was calculated to interfere with his object. His object was to attach odium to the Democratic par ty, and he hoped conviction and imprisonment would accomplish that. Furthermore he believed a reaction would take plac » and it would be safer to have those men where they could be produced, if called for. Consequently he was required to hustle to secure a commutation of the sentence to imprisonment. Had the sentence of the commission been executed the people would never have discovered the imposition attempted.— Bowles and Horsey were admitted into the radical cemmunion! Milligan was placed in nomination for Senator by the republicans of his district in opposition to a Democratic soldier; and Dodd, who was permitted to escape, soon after turned up as chairman of the Republican State Central Committee of Wisconsin. The result proved that there were no Democrats in the K. G. C. Had the convicte i men been hung the republican party would have been deprived of th»-ee votes. The last proposition contai ed in the extract from the News goes for nothing. The extremes to which the radical leaders of those days, in falsehood and infamous schemes, in order to manufacture capital and create sentiment in their favor, is well remembered.— Radical methods came to be well understood. The documents to which the News alludes as having bee found in Mr. Voorhees’ office, were first in possession of the radical managers, conveyed by them to the plaee where Carrington, the military satrap, proceeded to find them. The exposition by Mr. Voorhees of the effort to create suspicion of his loyalty, estrange from him the confidence an .1 support of his friends, and deal a blow at the Democratic party, was so clear, explicit and satisfactory, that the scheme failed, and Carrington was removed. Of course had the documents been found “c neealed in Oliver P. Morton’s office, or Ben Harison’s,” suspicion would not have attached to them, for the simple reason that they would have been recognized as necessary adjuncts of their trade.
The excoriation of Ingalls by Senator Voorhees, for his infamous assault upon the memorjes of McClellan and Hancock, brought the late skulking, sneaking judg? advocate to his feet the other day in an attempt to reply. He revamped the old and oft-exploded campaign lies manufactured and set affoat in the war times by Morton and other leaders of the Republican party. It will long be remembered by men who passed /hrough those trying| times, that partisan malice had no restriction in the work of defamation and ruin of such as opposed the selfish schemes of certain self-proclaimed “unconditional patriots.” Their claim of membership with the dominant party was made a cover for the villainous outrages visited upon those who incurred their
personal enmity, or stood in the way of their advancement a d aggrandizement. Mr. Voorhees very promptly and properly denounced Ingalls as “a liar, a dirty dog and a scoundrel!”
The Lincoln dubs of the State
aid to U e composed of the “kids’’ of the Republican party, pursuant to call met at Ind ianaapolis on V'edn.sday last. Judge Hammand, Senator Thompson, M. F. Chilcote, I. B. Washburn and W. W. Watson, represented Jasper county, and are a sample lot of the “kids ’ composing that assemblage. M. F. Chilcote was the “kid” selected as manager of club for this district. The convention is said to have been a slim affair.
The only objection urged against Gray, Matson and Myers, by the republican organs, is that the were, at one time or another, members of the republican party, and are therefore “renegades” from that organization. From the way th-y howl, he is a might mean man who has ever been a republican. Do these organs ever reflect upon the fact that their organization is wholly made up of “renegades’’ from the various old parties of the country.- Black spirits and white, of all creed-, like the various birds of prey, united only in greed foj- plunder.
Ihe morning train due here at 4:39, on last Friday morning killed an old man named Cary Taylor, a short distance north of Guernsey. The engineer and fireman state that the track was apparently clear, and the first intimation they had of an accident was a glimpse of a man’s hat flying past the cab window. It is supposed he had been walking by the side of the track and had f erhaps stumbled as the engine appr ached or had miscalculated the distance required for safety and had been struck by the steam chest. He was about s xty—eight ; ears of age. Funeral services were held at Moron Saturday under t)he auspices of the G. A. R. Post of Monon.
Mbs Ida Wittenberg, w r ho was shot by Ed. Chamberlain at Reynolds, died at her heme in that town on Friday last. It is a sad affair,and ajerushing blow to Chamberlain’s mother. She does not sleep, eats but little, and her condition excites grave apprehension.
JOE JOHNSTON A G. A. R. MAN.
E. D. Baker Post, of Philadelphia, Elects Him an Honorary Member. Philadelphia, April 2*—The announcement is made here this morning that General Joseph E. Johnston, the highest in rank of living officers of the Confederate Army, was, on Thursday night last, unanimously elected an honorary member of E. D. Baker Post, No. 8, G. A. 8., of this city. The election was brought about upon the receipt of a letter• reading: “For the purpose of permitting me to participate in the noble work of charity performed by the t omrades of the Grand Army of the Republic, I hereby make appffication for contributing membership in your post. Inclosed please find $lO for one year’s dues.’ Tlie petition was unaccompanied by any other communication and when presented to the members of the post, if went through with a rush, amid the cheers of the 200 veterans present. General Johnston is the only exConfederate soldier who has ever been received into the ranks of a Grand Army Post. Breathe the news gently to In galls and his backers. E. D. Ba_ ker Post will go down to zero in the estimation of the excessively loyal “bloody-shirt” crowd.
Rev. John S. Howk, eldest son of Judge Howk, of the Supreme Court of Indiana, graduates in a a few days from Princeton Theological Seminary. He has accepted a call from Pitts Creek Church Maryland, one of the most important churches of that Presbytery. , ,
Braee Up. You are feeling depressed, your appeti e is poor,you are bothered with Headacthe, you are fidgettv, neryous.and gen erally out of sorts, and want to brace up. Brace up.but not with stimulants, sprint; medicines, or bitters, which have for their basis very cheap, bad* whisky, and which stimulate you for an hour, and then leave you in worse condition than before. What you want is an alterative that will purify your blood, star! healthy action of Liver and Kidneys, re. store your vitality, and give renewed health and strength. Such a medicine you will find in Electric Bitters, and only 50 cents a bottle at F. B. Meyer’s Drug Store. 3
Give Them A Chance!
That is to say your lungs. Also al ▼our breathing machinery. Very wonderful machinery it is. Not only the larger air-p<*3sagcs. but the thousands of little tubes and cavities leading from them. When these are clogged an 1 choked with matter which ought not to be there, your lungs cannot half do their work. And what they do, they cannot do w"H. Call it cold, cough, croup, pneumonia, catarrh, consumption or any of 'he family of throat and nose and head and lung obstructions, all are bad. All ough' to be got rid oi. T k erc is just one sure way to get rid of them. That is to take Boschee’e German Syrup which any druggist will sell you at 75 cents a bottle. Even if everything alee has tailed you you may depend upon this for certain
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John Make ever Jay Williams, Pres.dent. Cashie FARM KBS' BANK, Mt Public Square_®J RENSSELAER, - - - INDIANA Ruce.ve Deposits Buy and Soil Exchang Collections made and promptly remitted. Money Loaned. Do a general Banking Brsiness. A igust 17,1883. IRA W. YEOMAN, Attorney at Law, KOTARY PUBLIC, Real Estate and Collecting Agent. REMINGTON!, INDIANA. Yill practice in all the Courts of Newton’ Benton and Jasper counties. THE MEW RENSSELAER, IND, JU*>, OPENED. New and finely furnished. — Cool and pleasant rooms. Table furnished with the best the market affords. Good Sample Rooms on first floor. Free Bus to and from Depot. PHILIP BLUE, Proprietor. Rensselaer. Nayil, 1883 ts. 1 ■ P E. QUIVEY, TDHUXTTIST, Special attention given to the preservation of the natural teeln. Art .ticiai teeth Insetted from one to an entire set. a.ll work wabrantkd. _ WVfll> ever M amers’ Hardwire Store. ... ■ .»
JW. HORTON. . DENTIST. All diseases of teeth aad gums carefully treated. FiiHn" and Crowns a snecialty. Over Ladue’s Grocer" Store. vl2-nl Rensselaer, Ind. j " ' .UTT I—AI THE Eldredge [eadst heworlQ ELDREDGE SEWING MNOHINE UML WITH Is hltmlit, /fig K ' N*. «. At ELDREDGE “B ” is sold with the) guarantee of being the BEST that ean be MADE. AGENTS WANTED. . Eldredge manufacturing co. BELVIDEH.K, ILLS. S. J. McEWEN, Agent, Rensselaer, Ind.
CHIS AGO COTTAGE,! ORGAN . Has attained a standard of excellence whisk admits of no superior. It contains every improvement that, in vwrrflw» genius, skill and money can produce. l»1 bvebt OBGAM WASRAUTm POB a' FIVE \ YEAB* I These Organs are celebrated for quality of tone, quick response, artistic design, beauty in finish, perfect construction, makfiif them the most desirable organs for homes, schools, churches, lodges, societies, etc. ESTABLISHED BEPETATIOV. UNEQUALEp FACILITIES, SKILLED WORKMEN, BEST MATERIAL, COMBINED, MAKB THIS THZ POPULAR OBGAH Instruction Books and Piano Stools. ' * Catalogues and Price Lists, on application, nu, iC3TTASE OMAN CT. (J f!3i rtl . tt f dienre -Vj’PA b- i<_. S!L!1! . . . . ,J.. I!» LEAR HOUSE ? J. H. LEAR, Proprietor, Opposite. Court House, Monticello, Ind Has recently been new furnished throngti out. The rooms arelarge and airy.tho lec - tion central, making it the most eonvauien and desirable hopse intown. Trv it riOIVJSJEB (meat Xlarketß Rensselaer, . j nd J. J. Eiglesbach, Beep Port v ea . age, Bologna, etc., eold in q Ua ties to suit purchasers at the prices. None but the best stock ered. Everyday is invited Jht. TE<Hr ß i« Paiols
