Democratic Sentinel, Volume 18, Number 19, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 May 1894 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Miss Fra n c McEwen has purchased a Caligraph and js prepared to copy legal and other instruments in type .writing, carefully, promptly, and on reasonable terms Orders can be left at tbe Sentinel office, the Surveyor’s office, or residence During the first nine months the Cleveland administration cut down government expenditures nearly $13,000,000. Not a bad record, that It is a fortunate day for a man when he first discovers the value of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla as a bloodpurifier. With this medicine, he knows he has found a remedy upon which he mav rely, and that his life-long malady is at last conquered. Has cured others, will cure you.
It requires but a small amount of space to tell a great deal of truth aboul the republican party. For instance, the Muncie Herald says thirty years of republican legislation brought the country twice on the verge of ruin, deplet ed a plethoric treasury, robbed the laboring man, skinned the farmer, put a million tram) s to begging at the back door, taxed the masses for the exclusive benefit of the few, created trusts :nd combines to further impoverish the country and at the last brought Coxeyism into prominence. The people during the past ten mouths have been reaping the mildewed harvest of thirty years’ sowing under the ‘iostering’ care of republican legislation.
Ayer’s Pi’ls are invaluable for the cure of Headache, Constipation, Stomach and Liver troubles, and all derangements of the digestive and assimilative organs.These Pills are sugar coated, safe and pleasant to take, always reliable, and retain their virtues m any climate. Parson Owen, in his speech at this place, expressed the hope that the republican majority of 1888— over 600—would be repeated in jasper county next November. The parson’s solicitude for such a result is be attributed to the fact that he is ths republican nominee for secretary of state. If a repetition of the result in 1890, when Dr. Patton snowed the parson under, does not occur, he may have some cause for satisfaction. If afflicted with scalp diseases, hair falling out, and premature baldness, du not use grease or alcoholic prep n ations, but apply Hall’s Hair Ren-wer. Hon. V. Zimmerman, in the Rochester Daily Republican thus summarily deals with the Republican cry of “Deincci atic hard times.” Ho concisely and in an indisputable manner shows the hard times is due to legislation enacted by the g. o. p. and then adds: “But why speak of the panics of ’37, ’45 and ’57 and silently pass over and suppress the truths of uhat panic of panics of 1873—the most disastrous financial crisis the world ever beheld ? This was a genuine Republican high protection panic, for, from 1873 the Republican party held uninterrupted sway of the government in all its branches and departments. That terrible crisis is ye* iresh in the memory of hundreds of thousands of its unfortunate victims whom it reduced to poverty and beggar* ism. In its fury and terror it cut a swath as broad astht land itself strewing wreckage and misery on every side. Here in Rochester seven of the leading dry goods •doros were sold out by the sheriff, Hardware stores, shoe stores, grocery stores and flouring mills wei.t into bankruptcy tosiv nothing of the half hundred smaller dea eis, shop keepers and proprietors of 'workshops who became hopelessly insolvent. For five long years the I threatful sound of the sheriff s l hammer was heard on Maio street jby day and night. Nor did this cyclone spare our farmers Column after column of the loc 1 press were taken up with sheriff’s sake, aid scores of proud owners of country homes «swere reduced to I tenants. Labor went begging piteous!'.. There were ten tramps then to one now. Fifty and tev-enty-five cents were the rulirg wages paid for common laoor a d all under Republican rule and high protection—this false system of political economy, which, for a seci ond time, has plunged the country i into financial convulsions and ruin.”
