Democratic Sentinel, Volume 18, Number 40, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 October 1894 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Treesd Trees!! Trees!!! If you are going to set trees this fall give me a call. We sell the best stock at very low prices.— Five thousand two>vear-old grape vines, 5 cents each. Ready for delivery after October 10th. Nur* sery one and one*haif miles north* east of Foresman, Indiana. F. A. WOODIN. Circuit court has adjourned over to one week from next Monday. Luke Turner and his former wife have been remarried. We have the most complete stock of Millinery ever brought to town. Call and see us. M. & A. Miyeb. E. Mauck, now of Ar* cadia, Ind., and Miss Elpha L., daughter of David H. Yeoman, of Union township, were married last Saturday evening at the residence of the bride’s’parents, by Bev. B. F. Ferguson. Miss Mary Meyer, has returned from Chicago, after studying the styles and preparing herself to suit the people, Would like to have you call. Mrs. J. H. Wood, at one time a resident of Bensselaer, died at her home in Winamac Friday night of last wetk. C. W. Coen killed a, rattlesnake the other day at the door of his grain office. Mrs. C- D. Martin and Mrs. E. D. Rhoades attended the state con* ventions of tne Y. P. 8. 0. E. and Sunday School, at Indianap* olis. Hal Stackhouse, of Indianapois, a former Bensselaer boy, is visiting old friends in this locality. A fine head of hair is an indis* pensable element of beauty. Ayer’s Hsir Vigor maintains youthful rreshness ani luxuriance, restores to faded a d gray hair its original color, prevents baldness, removes dandruff, ui I cures scalp diseases. It gives jrerfect satisfaction.
Stamp within the square surrounding the rooster. The republicans in this locality find it necessary to resort to all sorts of methods to get up an at* tendance at their meetings. Tues* cl y the balloon ascension was made to do service, and to-morrow the populist and milk-church gather* ing is expected to furnish the crowd. Tom Nelson thinks the reduction of the tariff duty on silks, plushes, etc., is in the interest of the rich. He forgets that the “plain people,” as Mr. Lincoln termed them, will invest to a certain extent in these article since the Democratic eon** gnss has reduced the tax and placed them within their reach. Pills and squills, i i the Republican says: “The Republican sugar bounty cost the people about 812,000,000 last year. The Democratic sugar tariff wilj cost them about 860,* 000,000 next year. Under the McKinley bill* a bounty of about 817,000,000 per annum was paid to southern sugar planters from taxes paid by the people; no revenue was paid into the treasury, and republicans boasted that 20 pounds of sugar could be procured for SI. Under the Wilson bill the bounty is saved to the treasury, a large revenue is derived by the government, per* mitting a large reduction of tax on other articles of necessity, and you can get 21 pounds of sugar for a dollar. The Republican quotes: “Abraham Lincoln said that he thought that he knew enough to know that “when an American paid twenty dollars for steel io an English manufacturer America had the steel and England had the twenty dollars, but when he paid twenty dollars for steel to an American man*ufactur, America had both the steel and the twenty dollars.’* Abraham might have be< n naoro 'explicit and added:. ‘'But, if an American paid twenty dollars for steel to Carnegie, under the pro*tective system, Carnegie would i have the twenty dollars, and the purchaser would have ten dollars, worth of steel.”
