Democratic Sentinel, Volume 18, Number 45, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 November 1894 — Warm, Indeed. [ARTICLE]

Warm, Indeed.

“I was very much touched by t, j warmth < fmy father-in-law’s a (lectio; i ’ said the young man who talks ab bis private affairs. 'indeed. How was it expressed?’ “By the present of a ton of coal."

i hen per aim better clothing foi the people under free wool. ibe Republicans are indebted to a considerab e extent to Gorman tnd Brioe, aim that ilk, for the recent ‘landsl.de’ in their fu_ vor. Morton will give his time as governor of New York fre*.— Salary for two years— $20,000. Itemized statement ot his campaign expenses—§2o,ooo. A cup of muddy coffee is not wliulesome, neitner is a b ttle of muddy medicine. One way to know a reliable and skillfully prepaid blood-purifier is bv its freedom from sediment. Ayer’s Sar* saparilla is always bright and sparkling, because it is an extract and not a decoctiou. One of the fundamental principles of political economy, confirm - | ed by all experience, is that trade, 1 in its last analysis, is mere barter j —an exchange of goods for goods: ! and hence it follows that if impor 1 tati e are largely increased, the exportation of goods to pay for those imported will also be largely i increased, and that this increased production of American goods lo 1 pay for the increased importation of foreign goods will enlarge cor respondmgly the employment ot America labor, and the addition al demand for such iabor will in crease rather than diminish pva gas; Increase importations and you increase exportations; check importations and you check ex j) rta ion The McKinlev tariff cut off importation and exporta tion and governmental revenue, lestroyed American labor and brought the country to the verge of bankruptcy in 1893.

| Scrofula is one of the most fatal j among tfce scourges vhieh afflict mankind. Chr .nic sores, cancer- | ous humors, emaciation and con- ! sumption, are the result of scro.fi ula. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla eradi- ' -fates this Doison, nnd restores, to tin blood, the elements of life and healtb. The fnlse claims of the proteci tionists has done more to create . discontent amoDg the laboring classes than any other cause. The claim is made that high tariff taxes are levied to, enable protected mana.acturers to pay high wages People are led to believe that a high tariff should make lug: wa ges- But it dots liut. "lie lowest ; paid wage earners in this country are employed by protected manu facturers. If any or e doubts 11 is let him take a trip through lln protected disuicts of nia and Massachusetts. For cdi tiries to c wne, w ,ges will be higher i,i this country than in Europe Tire higher wage scale is attribu table to three enu-es, viz: First the United States is in the pro cess of development. It will re quire centuries tj d.-velope this coun.ry’s resou ces as s he resoui ces o the Old World" are oevel ; oped. Second, the population of the United Stales is but little more than fifteen persons to the | square mile, while the population of the leading nations of the Old j World reaches from 200 to 450 people to the mile. The United States, because of its great natural resources, can support a larger population than any Euiopean nation. Third, the American workingman can accomplish more woi k in the same length of tune than the Earop an. He is mors I rouressive and enterprising. B suits these things, the Americans .re supplied with the most imt ro ed machinery in the world. 1 be i os‘ of production has been e! eapened by modern methods and in this pa.’ticu’ar America beats the wi rid, and a though anew and partiady developed country, it is destined to become, within a short time, the. leading producing natio i o* the world. A high tariff simply serves to restrict production nnd for this re - sou it is a positive detriment so the labor ngjppople. » v