Democratic Sentinel, Volume 14, Number 3, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 February 1890 — NEW RACES FOB FAIR OF 1890. [ARTICLE]
NEW RACES FOB FAIR OF 1890.
Piesident Harrison has finally recognized the Republic of Brazil. The rnnual convention of the Indiana Tariff Reform League will be held at Indianapolis, March 4th, 1890. Heretofore binding twine manufacturers have made their con- . tracts with merchants in January, but so far, this year, no contracts have been mad- 3 . Prices on all twine have advanced, pure manilla being quoted at 18£ cents a pound wholesale. FromJ this outlook, the farmers will have to dance to the music of the twine trust again next harvest. In order they might be unham. pered in their design to secure a partisan quorum by turning out legally elected Democrats and admitting Republicans to their places, the Republican majority re - fused to agree upon rules, and one man rule, backed by caucus, was substituted. Heretofore, Democratic majorities respected the rights of minorities, adopted rules for the trans, action of business, and dealt in a spirit of fairness toward contestants. Hereafter—well, Reed and his piratical crew have set the prece-dent-fight the devil with fire.— They have a holy horror of being compelled to take their own medicine. Retaliation will bring them to their senses, 4 and the fear of it will inspire them with a sensa of right in the future. It is svident the Republicans are going to fall back on the negro for capital to be employed in future campaigns. In 1860 Helper’s Impending Crisis, recommended by sixty-five republican members of congress, including Colfax, who then misrepresented this district, co tained, among other passages equally attrocious, the following incitement to rapine and murder in the South: ‘‘Would you be instrumental in bringing upon yourselves, your wives and your children, a fate too horrible to contemplate shall history cease to cite as an instance of unexampled cruelty, the massacr.• of St. Bartholomew, because ths South shall have furnished a more direful scene of atrocity and carnage.” Outrage mills have been instituted in the South by the Republican managers, and on receipt of a grist the other day, home-guard Ingalls intimates the following remedy to the negroes of the South:
Sooner or later there woul i be armed collision between the races. The South is standing upon a volcano. The South is sitting on the safty valve. They are breeding innumerable John Browns and Nat .Turners. Already mutterings of discontent, of hostile tions, are heard. The use of the torcli and the dagger are advised. I deplore it; but as God is my judge, 1 say that no other people on the face of the earth have ever submitted to the wrongs and in* jtstice which have been for 25 years put uyon the colored men of the South without revolution and blood.” i If an •ro u pnsi ng and a fear- * fu: race war results from the tench ' inVs « 1 'L. 0' ’ j-i ; as Ing luey t mould be heid. o -
The following stake races are opened, oy the Remington Fair Association, to be trotted during the Annual Fair to be held'by them on thier grounds, beginning August 26ih 1890. Breeders will please note the conditions and send in their entries accordingly. While it is not expected that the racing will be of a high order, it is re alized that all successful in the end, must have a beginning, and it is hoped that this beginning will develop an interest that will grow from year to year until both the breeders and the pub lie will regard it as the most interesting and profitable part of the speed contest. Two-Year-Old Trot and Pace. The Association to add SSO- - $7.50, to be paid as follows: $2.50 April first. $2.50 June 15th when colt must be named and description and pedigree given; and the final payment,s2.so, by starters on ly, and previous to the race. 50 per cent, of stakes and add ed money to go to winner; 25 per cent, t 3 second;ls percent, to third; and 10 per cent, to fourth. To be elligible to entry colt must have been foaled in the district composed of the counties of Jasper, Newten, Benton, White or Pulaski or be the get of horses owned and kept in said district. In case of a walkover, or dia tancing the field, the winner will only receive one-half of the stakes, and added money; and any part of the money not earned will revert to the Asso ciation. Three-Year-Old and Under Trot and Pace. Same purse and same condi tions. O. M. Vickery, Sec’y.
Lyman Trumbull, ex-Gover-nor, ex-Secretary of State, exSt preme Judge, ex-member of Congress and ex-United States Senator, is still practicing law in Chicago at tha age of seventy seven. He is in good health, and his legal ability is as great as ever. Koumiss: Fill a quart bottle with fresh milk up to the neck, add two tablespoonfulls of sugar after dissolving in hot water, let cool, and add a teaspoonful of hop yeast; set in a warm place, stir often, and when it begins to sparkle cork tight. Keep cold for six hours, when it is ready for use. The virtue of koumiss for the sick is that it refreshes and stimulates with no after reaction.
An amusing incident occur ed in one of our down east churches a few months ago. The clergyman gave out the hymn: I love to stedl awhile away From every cumbering care, And spend the hour of Betting day In munble, grateinl prayer. I he regular chorister being absent, the duty devolved upon Deacon M., who com menced: “I love .to steal ” and then broke down. Raising his voice a little higher, he then sung, “I love to steal.” As be - fore, he concluded he had got the wrong pitch; and deplor ing that he had not his “pitch tuner,” he determined to succeed next time. All the old ladies were tittering behind their fans, whik the faces of the “young ones” were in broad grins. At length, after a desperate cough, he made a final demonstration, and roared out, “I love to ateal.” The effort was too much. Every one but the clergyman was laughing. He arose and said: ■feeing our brother’s propensities, let us pray.” It is nefedto . ay that eu- of the c MgFvVaU -.-Hi heard Lie oraver— E
