Democratic Sentinel, Volume 20, Number 6, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 February 1896 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 5 [ADVERTISEMENT]

/ r ° ra !kl the Lyon I icine For Sale by all Driwsists.

emphiyes of the mcnonoliAtic establishments would be injured by a glut in tlm market of the products of their labor the maim foctories are closed down and the workingmen reduced to idleness. The government would be injured to the extent of tha decrease in revenues.

Under the Wilson tariff bill m .uufftctories liiive increased, and ih« employers of labor have established their ability to compete with the world. Under the McKinley bill the people paid wool prices for shoddy goods. Under the W iison law the poop] • pay slioduy prices fur woo’en goods. Hm risen went down under the weight of high pr Section, and at the same time the camp fires of Pennsylvania militia lighted up the country surrounding the Cars negie works.—Pennsylvania mills tin, at great expense to the state, employed in piotectiug the protected etndloyer against the des mand cf the employes for living wa^es!

In its devotion to Hanison the Republican this week s)ubbe*s like a horse on c’over. It asks “Why Not Senator Hanison?" If Ben. ny will, he can y.rge the same renson t’.at caused him so promptly to decline the presidential nomination, ioswit: TIL administration had iooPd the treasure, the Mcs Kuiley law h d destroyed the rev. anue, the government in a bankrupt condition, the people had had enough of him, and he could not be elected even though he secured tne n mination.

One can hardly comprehend it, but it is a fact that in President Cleveland’s term of office, not yet three-fourths ended, the Governrnent has or will run in debt #202,000,000, one-ten h of the entire debt contracted in four years of our bio :dy civil -var. —Rensselaer Republican. But one can reedily comprehend that sucli would be the natural result of meeting expenditures made necessary by by legislation of republican billion dollar congresses, with revenues heavily i ecraasing under operation of the republican McKinley bill. Had Harrison succeeded himself, the public debt would have een increased hv the many millions of sugar bounty knocked out bv the Wilson b 11, and the revenues would have continued to decrease unuer the operations of the McKinley bill The