Democratic Sentinel, Volume 16, Number 48, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 December 1892 — All Is Lovery [?] [ARTICLE]
All Is Lovery [?]
Now that the election is over and the calamity howlers shut down, New England cotton manufacturers have increased the wages of their operatives. the Carnegie Steel Company starts the last of its idle mills and announces its purpose to increase its plants. The “paralysis and ruin" that were to follow at the chariot wheels of Democracy triumphant are limited to a decline in trust stocks and the seizure of “Prince Rus’" Montana newspaper by the Sheriff.— Louisville Times. Mr. Bayard says there is no precedent for an extra session to revise the tariff. Neither is there any precedent for the tremendous expression of public opinion against the tarifl that recently occurred. It is time tc make new^precedents throughout.— St. Louis Courier. A female temperance lecturer visitec Valdosta, Ga., the other day, She published a pamphlet setting forth the horrible effects of intemperance, and exemplified them in person by getting on t rousing drunk. Some of the cottonwood telcgrapt poles used in Nevada chanced to lx sunk in marshy places with the bark on They have taken root, and display attractive foliage.
