Democratic Sentinel, Volume 15, Number 32, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 August 1891 — Page 8 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

GHICACO ALWAYS "S PATRONS fcFvJl-Worthof lU,,u «t.elVF J> I ° 1 hair Money by b ..“hoM .dy' Taking Them |— — M Barely and Quickly I w t* ■ "fl I between T^Sk>^? 0 .J r I. w shtcago ■ Lafayette ndianapolis - " kiici li n ati * *> PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS ELEGANT PARLOR CARS ILL TRAILS RUHHROUGH SOLID Tickets Sold and Baggage Checked to Destination. ISfGet Maps and Time Tables If you want to be more fully Informed—all Ticket Agents at Coupon #ta.Uona have them—or eddrcea JAS. BARKER t General Passei. ger A yen

A huge treat in store for the people of Rensselaer and vicinity. Through the enterprising efforts of 0 S. Dale, Master Irvin Jay Steininger, the Hoosier Boy Orator, will appear before a Rensselaer audience September 29tL. The bankers and railroad corporations are kicking like Sam Hill before the StateJßoard of Tax Commissioners. Let ’em kick. At the same time see to it 1 hat they rre held to their just proportionate share. “If by any chance we should fall into a condition where one dollar is not as good as another, I venture the assertion that that poorer dollar will do its first errand in paying somejpoor laborer for his work." —President Harrison at Albany, Aug. 18. Benjamin knows how the “blue-bloods” do it. By the way wasn’t it Benny who asserted thai “a dollar a day was sufficient compensation for a working-man?" —— ■ i e - mb i e a®"The Republican |is very deeplyconcerned because the “People’s Party” of Texas have determined upon sending effective speakers into Ohio |to defeat McKinley and Sherman. It is very evident these people know what party is responsible for the legislation which bar hurt them. - i »«.. ...i. ..i . Our County Auditor has received notice from the State Tax Commissioners that ten per cent, has been added to the assessed valuation of realty in this county. This is done in order to equalize the rate with that of other counties. How many of those who kick at this will be willing to sell their propexq, u. the assessed value? How many? e pause sot a reply.

“The Future of the Farmer"- “Never Was the Prospect of the American Agri culturist so Bright"—“A Home Market"— Are the head lines of an article in the Republican this week. From all overoui land eome tidings of bountiful crops, but our farmers will naturally look to the foreign demand to fix the prices for their products. “Home Market" is a delusion about which our neighbor is as well post ed as he is concerning cost of living, rate of wages, facilities of communication, transportation, etc., back in the’4o's, ’so’s and 60*s.

We extract the following from a reeent published interview wirh Mr. Voorhees: SILVEB AND JEFFSBSONTAN DeMOCRACY. lam a Jeffersonian democrat and believe that Thomas Jefferson was right and wise when in If 85, in the continental congress, be devised and secured the adoption of the silver dollar of 412 J grains as our unit of account and payment and the standard of values. I believe also in the wisdom of Washington, Hamilton and Madison and the other great fathers of the republic, who established the free and unlimited coinage of silver. For ninety years of American history the American silver dollar in every business transaction held i s head as high as gold, and some > times higher, and in spite of all the assaults made upon it in these later years SIOO fin silver, or in paper certificates based upon silver, will now purchase just the same as SIOO in gold and will purchase the gold itself. It is a waste of breath to denounce such a currency as dishonest money. In Indiana, and in fact throughout the Mississippi valley, there is really out little, if any, division of sentiment among the laboring people in regard to the coinage and use of silver money. On this issue, however, as on all others, we will de f er to the platform to be laid down in the next national convention. There ought to be no sectionalism on the silver question. The laboring masses, the wage workers, the farmers, the mechanics of Idle empire state of New York, of the great state of New Jersey,