Democratic Sentinel, Volume 18, Number 23, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 June 1894 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]

fl, rCO~ 1 CO’S BANK) Is pre; red to make five year loans on farms at itec positively as low, ana on as favorable inns aa can be obtained m town, giving the privileg. of partial payments at any time, and stopping tbe interest on the amount pud We are also prepare < to make loans ->n poreonal security on shorter time easonable rates. If yuu are in need o‘ . loan, give a eall. 13—4 t.

SEND twelve cents in postage stamps to 39 Corcoran Building, Washington, D. C., and you will receive four copies of Kate Field’s Washington,containing matter of special interest. Give name and address, and say where you s»w this advertisement. *’l never txchauged a word with Mr. Cleveland or in his company in my life, and I never have seen the man,” whs the response of Havemeyer, the Sugar King, when asked by Seualor Gray, chairman of the senate investigating committee, whether he had held aco - versation on Mr. Benedict’s yacht in the summer of 1892, with President Cleveland, as alleged by one of the newspaper co respondents who have been indicted bj the Gram.l Jury. WANTED- Au ageAt to gell good and reliable Nursery stock at Kt nsselaer and vicinit’. Address F. A. WOODIN, Foresmnn, Newton Co , Ind. THE PROFIT FROM A TARIFF TAX. There is big money in matches with or without far 1 rT. but the tariff profit is soni thing Ming in its way as a premium fax and builds up the dividends., Heie is the Diamond Match company of Chicago, ne manipulators of nn infant industry bearing a 20 per cent, protective duty to keep it from failure, payiag quarterly dividends amounti ig to 8862,500, and a special dividend of 8750,090, making the total dividei ds $1,612,400. This all happen* ed during the year 1893, when business depression laid Its mark everywhere and the calamity howler claimed the counter. Yet this is the same Diamond company whose recent appeal for a 35 per cent, duty on matches was made furious with charges that unless the duty was increased they would be compelled to reduce wages and close thei r factories. It is this kind of clatter that makes the country tired when the truth turns on the fair light of fact. Truth runs to figures as the brooks run 10 music. Tne 15 per cent, increase of duty demanded woul(l have increased the special dividend of $750,000 to one of $1,350,000, and th? total investment return of $1,012,500, all clear profit and all I ighly protect ed would have aggregated about 82,800,000. Under this enormous subsidy the Diamond company is really enabled to pay girls in its factories $3 to 85 a week for a day of 12 hours, and men can make from $1.60 to $2 a day. Reed’s compensatory wages balance has a hard road to travel. The dividends do not.—Philadelphi 1 Times When the blood is loaded with impurities, the whole system becomes disordered. This condition of things cannot last lon without serious results. In such cases, a powerful alterative is needed, such aF Aytr’s Sarsaparilla. It nc-ver fails, and has no equal.

A we 11 informed authority in the coal business estimates that the coal strike in the Pittsburg, Pa., district has cost tbs minersm wages's 1,800,000, taking it J for granted that the normal output of the region had been maintained. In prooortidu to the general out«» put the dist ict mined about onesixth of the <o I dug in the area affected by the strik . With reasonable proportion between the prices paid in that and oth»r distiicts, the loss in wages alone, the same authority says, would be over ten million dr liars. Estimating the gain of the miners by the settlement of the strike to be ten cents a ton over former prices, it will take them about one and a half years to make up by increase of earnings for the time they have lost. Of course the miners are “out” t the extent stated above, and the operators are “in pocket” to that