Democratic Sentinel, Volume 19, Number 33, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 August 1895 — Page 8 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

*'* » i jllgi B 3 2 i ffS J| ft pniu ■ 'HHH l liSi I 1 | II gpis il 11 S 1 B HX - ALWAYS GivEsp^ggpgi :ts patrons £j I><! Full Worth of I >* "heir Money by f rjr'°*t Jring -boro l__ — i Saualyandaulckly U, •-*>>*£„l _ between ><— —" Chicago *? • Lafayette .todianapolisp \*J£3szz2fß Cincinnati * f ,»Louisvisisl PtfLLJWAN SLEEPING CARS CLEG ANT PARLOR CARS ILL TRAINS RUS3 THROUGH SOLID tickets So/d and Baggago Checked to Destination. oTOet Maps and Time Tables if you want to be Bore fully infbrm id—all Ticket Agenta at Coupon e.tinw bave them—or addraaa

NOTICE T o Contractors. Notice is hereby given that the Presbyterian Churrh of Renseelaer, Indiana, will receive Sealed Bids for the erection and completion ot their new brick church, to be erected according to plans and specifications now|fon file with George K. Hollingsworth at the office of Austin, Hollingsworth & Co., until 6 o’clock P. m. on Monday, September 2, 1895, at which time said bids will be opened. All bids must be accompanied by a good and sufficient bond in the sum of at least SIOOO. The church reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Address all communications to George K. Hollingsworth, Rensselaer Indiana. FRANK J. SEARS, Pres’t. George K. Hollingsworth, Sec’y. SslesmenWanted Poshing, trustworthy men to represent ns in the sale of oar Choioe Nursery Stock. Specialties controlled by ns. Highest Salary or Commissic n paid weekly. Steady employment the ye arround. Oi tfit free; exclnsive territory; experience not necessary; big pay assured workers, special inducements to beginners. Write at onoe for particulars to ALLEN NURSERY GO. Rochester, N Y.

Maps of tbe Town of Ronsselaer and of Jasper coudty, for sale at Long's Drug Store in many parts of the state ints erest is centered upon the big state fair to be held at It dianapolis beginning September 16 and continuing during the week. T he railroads wilt give a very low rate and many people will take advantage or this opportuni'y to visit the capital city. The most serious thing that con-, fronts the Democratic naity today is embodied in the statement that the calm, sober, conservative membirs of the party have lost faith in the ability of the.r leaders to guide and direct the affairs of this gov > eminent. There is a whole lot of sense, judgment and patriotism in the Democratic party. There is a whole lot of intelligence and wealth Nine Democrats out of ten want to prosper themselves and want the nation to prosper.—Delphi Journal.

The closing sentence of the above is the m~st sensible thing that has appeared in the Journal for many a day. Every Democrat worthy of being c lied such wants the nation to prosper. It is not true, however, that “the calm, sober, conservative members of the party have lost faith in the ability of their leaders to guide and direct the affairs of this government.” It is the restive and impatient element in the par/ y whose faith has been ims paired. Many Democrats have manifested impatience because the work of overthrowing unwise Re--publican laws was not accomplished in a fo.tnight. I‘ trok longer than they anticipated to overthrow the McKinley tariff law—that master piece of injustice and the silver purchasing law— the cowardly makeshiittbat br >ught on the panic. Bat those laws are no longer oa tbe statute books of the nation. The peop’« oiiail parties were well nigh united in demanding the repeal of the Sherman silver purchasing law. The author of the l«Md the president who approve