People's Pilot, Volume 6, Number 45, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 April 1897 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

JguRY Hlpf CURES THE RECORD OF Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.

The people have been “buncoed." Philadelphia has adopted lbe Pingree plan. Who owns Indianapolis? The people or the street car lines? “Charity begins at home." Yes. and so does most of our meanness. What do the Republicans think of the man they lead intocamp last fall? A millionaire is no better than his laborers. The law should be as stringent with one as the other. I Monopoly 7 is a danger compared with which slavery is small, indeed. —Henry Ward Beecher. The Kentucky Republican bosses have a little job on their hands. Has any one heard from Senator Hunter? Why is a gold standard workingman like a fish hook? Because when lie gets what he’s after he * ’get's bit.” The Republicans are having a hard time maintaining a “parity” between their promises last fall and the after election results. Congressman M. W. Howard, of Alabama, has issued a new book.—“ What Christ Saw”—a sequel to “If Christ came to congress.” The present administration has begun violating civil service rales by dismissing women who have neither a vote nor political pull.

Thousands of people starving in our cities, while thousands of bushels of potatoes in the Ohio river bottoms rotted, because the price wouldn’t pay for the handling. To have started out after a United States Senatorship and brought up against an indictment for having offered bribes is the sad fate of one Hunter, of Kentucky.

Humanity may be divided into two classes, those who scheme and those who sweat. The sweaters create the wealth and the schemers consume it.—Ap peal to Reason. The United States has passed the time when we should hesitate to strengthen ourselves by such outlying strategic points as Hawaii and Cuba. It now becomes almost a military necess ifcy. Mr. Bryan was received most cordially in his trip through the South. A pleasant indication for 1900. It now becomes more apparent to the over-burdened people that they partook of the wrong feast. A long denial whets the appetite, though. Editor Thomas, of the Tipton Dispatch, has been dead several days now, according to the daily papers. This was supposed to