Democratic Sentinel, Volume 18, Number 5, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 February 1894 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Bro. Marshall desiris to know how A. P A. No. 2 will "‘suit Brother Me hwen'.” One thing at a time, dear boy. Stick to your A. P. A. No. 1, under the leadership of Rudolph and Halstead. — When No. 2 r :omes to the front it will he brushed aside with ease by the p ople. The Repub-Peo o editor of the Pilot views resumption by the Elwood Tin Plate company in the same light as does his neighbor of the Republican. George insists that the “Tin plate company resumes operations with the full understanding that if the Wilson bill becomes a law the wages of its operatives will have to be cut at least 50 per cent.” The| tin-plate company resumes with no such understanding. Free raw ma’erial will give such manuiactories an advantage they never mjoyed under re* publican laws, and there will be no cut in wages. Le the S' nate make haste in the passage of the Wilson bill. Its perations in the interests of the people will expose Ihe liars and ignoramuses in the republican party.

The suspension of tin plate and other manufacturing establish* men,s under the McKinley bill, their resumptio with the Wilson bill in prospective, has set our neighbors of the Republican and lilot to howling. George cannot dispute the resumption business, and tbereiore gives vent to his gall thusly: “In chronicling the resumption of operations by tne American Tin Plate Company the Democratic papers admit that that there are such things- in this country as tin plate factories, andtha iu making th. ir statements to the contrary, during the c .rnpaigr of 1892, they were willful.y lying, and deceiving the people.” The above extiactf served as a pointer to the Republican attache of the P'lot editorial corps, and he echoes it. What the Democratic papers said in 1892 w»s, that the raw raate/ial u c ed iu these manufactories, ev °u to th? emp oyes, was all irn ported, and tha the output was not sufficiently extensive to ive them the importance demanded by the Uepublicau papers which ‘were willfully lyi”g and deceiving tl e people,’ in their efforts to show the industries established and built up by the McKinley bill.

Boles Coming Down! Halfi'Soling was 75, now 60c. Ladies sol'v.g was 60, now 45c. Nail.ng was ‘Jo, now 15c. Ai d other repairin - in propo-tion. Also Lad.es’ an i Gents’ov rgaiters for sale. S Healy. A. P. A. SLANDERS. “Prof.” Buns has broken f rth in Indiana, and his speech at Rockville as rep orted is one of the most scurrilous sketches of falsehoods that has ever publicly promulgated b any member of this association of haters of for igners in this state. Take tor example tL is:

“He suiit that daring the civil Wit th pope, through bis b shops, promised absolution to all catholics in the confederate army and withheld it from those i thenortn**ri >;rmv. Vhat as a conseqn -nee f (it-- 72 ! : cen' of the fe.leral C tli lie Bolil'-ers th serted ;uid w.Mit ; - s uit n .side; nd ; i aii catholic oldieps «iio em uii'd did because t-hey could better serve the southern cause thereby. \lso that during the Mexican ‘ r an entire regim ut. of Irish deserted in a body and went. • ver 4 o the enemy rather than ficht catholic Mexico.”

This would put Ananias to the blush, but it was improved on by | one of the most prominent local leaflets of the A. I*. A in Indianapolis, who made the statement in j conversation that “every democrat j in the anion army was a rebel at! heart.” We should like to hear i this Canadian pau er liar dressed down by some good union catholic, like Father Cooney, for instance, who went to the front and disked i ■ life so his country wh Ip Sims was probably fufn'shing assistance to confederate emissaries in Canada. There can be but one l