Crawfordville advocate. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 189?-1???, April 12, 1895, Image 1
THE CRAWFOEDVILLE ADVOCATE. CRAWFORDVILLE Consolidated with I DEMOCRAT, Oct. 6,1893. i err Listen to the man. ’ Hurrah for Mayor Sutro. Democracy is still dead. | Tell nothing but the truth. i Sold a t auction—American l iberty. Don’t vote the old “scab” tickets any longer. Circulate reform books among your neighbors.___ Workingmen should vote only for workingmen. Organized labor should not “scab” at the ballot box. Mayor Sutro of San Francisco is stir¬ ring up the animals and the railroads. Stick to theOmaha platform and the middle of the road. Rapidly the old parties are fusing against the advocates of good govern¬ ment. Who wasTt said the Populist confer¬ ence would confine itself to the discus¬ sion of silver? While there is a single acre of Amer¬ ican land held by aliens the land ques¬ tion will never be settled. j The labor unions are learning that they can’t succeed by voting either of the old party “scab” tickets. The national pawnbrokers who call themselves bankers, should be forced to earn, their living or starve. 1 Mayor Sutro of San Francisco seems to he loaded with an earth¬ quake pointed at C. P. Huntington. There are enough lands unjustly held by corporations in this country to fur¬ nish homes for ten million people. The best made currency plans ot bankers and gold bugs have to be stuffed with government fiat, before they can make a shadow. I When c7p. Huntington violates the law, the officers refuse to issue a writ for his arrest—but the poor man may be arrested without a writ. l If the check of the bankers could be converted into confidence, the country would experience an over-production of this ethereal commodity. Lawyers thrive only on the strife of the people. Think of that, and then of how many lawyers we have in con¬ gress—about three hundred. i Every interest-bearing bond issued by the government is an endless chain on a force pump revolved by the wheels of oppression to pump the products of labor into the tub of monopoly. 1 The corporationfTand “trusts arc wip¬ ing out the individual business men all over the country—and yet the little fel¬ lows continue to vote for cut-throat competition and monopoly. . : Did you notice how quickly the pluto press dropped Taylor, the defaulting treasurer of South Dakota? If he had been a Populist, instead of a republi¬ can, the associated mouthpiece of An¬ anias and plutocracy would have howied fo r two years. _ The amount of land granted by the United States to railroad corporations amounts to more than the area of the original thirteen states. Don’t you think it about time to consider the land question? The idea of “redeeming” bank notes and silver certificates with gold, in a country that owes more gold than the nation possesses and pays more gold interest to Europe every year than all the gold produced. Absurd, isn’t it? ' It is not claimed that equal rigiits to all and special privileges to none will transform men into angels at once— but it would give every man an oppor¬ tunity to better himself—which many can’t do now, even if they already pos¬ sessed the disposition of angels. Senator Hill is in favor of the elec tion of senators by popular vote. The people have been in favor of that for many years. Reforms always originate down among the people, and then when some great leader finds out what the people are thinking about he is hailed as a man of original ideas. The Chicago Tribune recently devot ed a full page to describing the silks, satins and diamonds worn at a great “charity” ball in that city. It must make the poor recipients of plutocratic bounty feel happy to know that the benevolent dancers had to sacrifice The moneyed men of . the .. country , having secured during the depression a great deal of cheap property by ture and otherwise, now desire a temporary expansion of currency so ings. But They want bank notes can be contracted when they get ready to make another haul. They are op posed to government issues which would make the expansion permanent, It is generally remarked in v Kansas that the reason J. Ralph Burton was defeated for the senatorship was be cause he had not yet reopened his as signation house for the season, and the republicans had consequently coo ed in the ardor of their convivial love for him. was Breck.nr BSkTnHdge g- ef t e Ke a ntu C ;^an . a d doubtless for the reason that he was getting too good. Th itv bank notes Dro nand the government might issue enough legal tender greenbacks to in crease the present currency to $50 per capita, and ail the wealth of all the people or tho nation would be behind it. insuring security by a backing ot over three thousand per cent for each all and a vary government npta. IS ANOTHEB SELL. BLAND AND BRYAN ISSUE MANIFESTO. Stick to the Old Party and Put a Free Silver Plank in the Platform Blatherskites Endeavoring to Dupe the People. Messrs. Bland and Bryan have re¬ cently started one of the cheekiest political moves that has been fathered by any set of political nondescripts since the birth of the devil. It is for the democrats to stay in the old party and try to select delegates to the next National Democratic convention that will force the adoption of a free silver plank in the platform. Then what? They had an expression on silver in their last platform which Messrs. Bland and Bryan and nearly every other speaker in the political cam¬ paign of 1892, said meant free silver. Mr. Bland, in a speech in the house August 11, 1893 (Congressional Rec¬ ord, special session, page 252), said: “We voted the ticket in good faith; we expected that the platform would be carried out as was promised—that we would have tariff revision, and that when we came to the money question it would be regulated according to the Chicago platform, that we should have free coinage of silver, which in itself would destroy this makeshift. But lo and behold, we find that we were tricked, that we were deceived. And I use that language advisedly.” Mr. Bryan, in a speech in tho house, August 16, 1893 (Congressional Record, special session, page 410), said; “The last platform pledges us to the use of both metals as standard mbney and to the free coinage of both metals at a fixed ratio. Does any one believe that Mr. Cleveland could have been elected president upon a platform de¬ claring in favor of the unconditional repeal of the Sherman law? Can we go back to our people and tell them that, after denouncing for twenty years the crime of 1873, we have at last ac¬ cepted it as a blessing? Shall bimet¬ allism receive its death blow in the house of its friends, and in the very hall where innumerable vows have been registered in its defense? What faith can be placed in platforms if their pledges can be violated with impu¬ nity?” This is what Messrs. Bland and Bryan said with regard to the demo¬ cratic platform adopted at Chicago in 1892. They said that that platform meant free silver. They insisted that no other construction could be placed upon it. On that platform, declaring as they said, for free silver, they both went into the campaign and worked for the democratic party. They led the people “as sheep to the slaughter” and their party “through a slaughter¬ house to an open grave.” Mr. Bland, in the same speech from which we quote above, said: “My God, shall we do such a thing as that? (demonetize silver.) 'Willi you crush the people of your own land and send them abroad as tramps? Will you kill and destroy your own industries, and especially the production of your precious metals that ought to be sent abroad everywhere? Will you do this simply to satisfy the greed of Wall street—a mere agent of Lombard street? * * * Any political party that undertakes it will, in God’s name, be trampled, as it ought to be trampled, into the dust of condemnation, now and in the future. Speaking a3 a dem¬ ocrat, all of my life battling for what I conceived to be democracy and what I conceived to be right, I am yet an American above democracy. 1 do not intend, we do not intend, that any party shall survive, if we can help it, that will lay the confiscating hand up¬ on America in the interest of England or of Europe. Now, mark it, this may be strong language, but heed it. The people mean it, and, my friends of eastern democracy, we bid you farewell when you do that thing. Now, you can take your own choice of sustaining America against England, American interests and American laborers and producers, or you can go out of power. We have come to the parting of the ways. I do not pretend to speak for anybody but myself and my constit¬ uents, but I believe 1 do speak for the great masses of the great Mississippi valley when I say that we will not sub¬ mit to the domination of any political party, however much we may love it, that lays the sacrificing hand upon sil ver and will demonetize it in this coun- “Gentlemen, you cannot hold the democratic party together on that line, Yon cannot nledge vourselves to bi and ignore U in >our legislation lwslatlom We \Ve pledge pledge our our Behes in the «« ^t and the people had a^right^to^expect to expe^ of the country we were told to let ail ver alone; that we already had a law on that subject. They said to us: Do not disturb that question, but take up the tariff; we are united on the tariff; let us take up the tariff and reform and reduce it; tbe tariff is doing us great , n , ury . let us attend t o that first.’ We th0U g ht th at declaration was sincere and w@ thoU gh t the first thing to be {a){en wag the repeal of the * L m , • » i beleive it was "bat in nded by 0 ur eastern rXm Democratic considered first, but their main, if not their sole, object was to put their hands upon silver and demonetize it and let tariff reform take care of itself «a„. And b„. w« .r. 1„„ in that situation Reduce the tariff 2a per cent, yet make money in go,d 2a per cent more valuable, the tariff remains as great a burden as ever. It takes the game quantity of wheat, corn, pork and cotton to pay it as before. Now I tell yo u I ar not going to submit to it. You may asa your bill and do these CRAWFORDYILLE. OA as FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 181)5. . r i t . M r '7* KjA 'To * iY f s r. s \ i / /// A AM I / /' ■r ^ i V »/ J /* v* /« *N •T-X /■ fh •'V e. -yV 'V % k' r*v * 1 iV'v c'". © ft // ‘N w-, V I \ -zy. A It /. ) A r * • V r W' V m mb W My ty ►v.; ’D * r\ 1 i , r _ I Up [CL > h hJM LW ) J 5 • C\ Bek K, »- mA\i/ 't\ \ I &XjixL4jeJ f A VAIN EFFORT. This Country Will Never Be Prosperous Aculn Until SUver Is Restored t° Full and Unlimited U oluugo things; but if you do we are going to cut loose from you. You may go ahead, but you will never trick us again. Do not charge me with being a radical or a fanatic,or with indulging in threats. I speak the sentiment of the masses I would not say it if it were not true. You propose to remit us to the demon¬ etizing act of 1873, which in all my section of the country the democratic party on every stump has denounced as the monumental fraud of the nine¬ teenth century Here is a democratic .house proposing to go right back to that act. When you do so you will be guilty of a greater fraud than that act itself. I speak advisedly when I say that If the democratic party, after all the pledges it has made in regard to silver in its platforms, national and state, should take the country back to its condition under the act of 1873, you will have consummated the monumen¬ tal fraud of the nineteenth century, because we never expected much from Mr. Sherman or his party; they never made many promises, as we have.” Now these two men, and others of their gild, are Issuing manifestos and making speeches to prevent the peo¬ ple from doing what they threatened to do themselves and bad not the cour¬ age to do. In the language of Mr. Bryan, “What faith can be placed in platforms if their pledges can be vio¬ lated with impunity.” Why should the democratic party be trusted again? Suppose there are enough delegates in the convention to force the adoption of a free silver plank in the platform? What better guarantee have we got that they will carry out the pledges they make than we had the pledges made in 1892? Messrs. Bland and Bryan are a pair of political blatherskites, condemned by the words of their own mouths, and they should not be trusted any fur ther. They are no more honorable than the party they represent. They are demagogues of a dangerous kind their avowed object is to lead honest voters Into another trap. Bars open on Sunday. *d No matter if it was Sunday night, an the laws of the District of Colum bia forbid the sale of liquor on Sun day, the bars of the house and senate were Towing running in full blast, with the fol as a sample. About 9 o’clock that that night mg Mr. De Armond called up a “Bzhect” , said Mr. Scranton, feebly, ^ ])f Armon(J turning toward the Pennsylvanian. Then he continued: Mr. Speaker, s on < > if a member as drunk as that has any rightobject? demanded “What did you say? Mr. Scranton. "I said the gentleman was too drunk to engage In legislation,” said Mr. De Armond. “I call ze gentleman to order,” said the tipsy objector. Mr De Armond proceeded, and Mr. Stanton was shown the door. He pres ently returned and sidling down the aisle to the Missourian’s seat, began to abuse him. Members gathered around to prevent . and fi “ a ^’j y-a-; arms to p . d8 lhe unrulv ’ member ' Scran P , Mr. o dga - - ter the chamber of the house .... lobby, but.was caught in the arms of the keeper. He was finally taken to a < jri vate room and put to bed.-National Watchman. A STARTLING BOAST. BOND ISSUE CA BETTER THE SITU Government Official* lecu Like Clny In the Ilandf. tbe Morgim Rothschild Syndicate VVe Are the Slaves of This “Rush.” The following from Matthew Mar¬ shall, the Wall street financier, con¬ firms the truth that the arch-conspir¬ ators of two continents*have been at work to rob and enslave the people of the United States. ) * “Not the least gratifying circum stances attending the success of the new loan, is to me, its confirmation of my often expressed favorable estimate of J. Pierpont Morgan’s financial abil ity. In the hands of the experienced and skillful negotiator our govern ment officials seemed to have been like clay in the hands of the potter and it is a question whether it would not be worth while to employ them at any salary they asked to manage the na tional finances, instead of the politi cians now charged with the duty. Naturally the immense profits upon the loan which, at the present quota tions are assured to Messrs. Morgan, Belmont and their associates, have excited much hostile comment, both upon them and upon the government, That bonds which were purchased at 104% should within a week eagerly demand in the neighborhood ot 120, does indeed show that the terms of the transaction were highly favorable to the purchasers; but to this it may be announced, first, that as I have said, government, being in dire straits, had to take whatever price was offered it, and second, that congress, if it had so chosen, might, have authorized a 6 per cent gold bond upon which no such premium could have accrued as has accrued upon the coin fours. When, too, it Is -considered that only sixteen years ago these same 4 per cents were sold by the Y mdreds of millions of dol Iars at 99% to a favored syndicate of New York hankers, in which the secre tray of fhe treasury was accused of being interested, and that, ten years thereafter the government itself was buying them back at 130 or thereabouts the profits on this recent purchase of $62,400,000 at 104% shrink into insig nifieance. That, with shrewder men to man age the transaction on its behalf, and with legislation to support it. the government raight , under every die \t did ^j^^Tu^not blunder enm" a heavier accusation “hen awaits the ad as is P nrobablc even this shall have emonstru ea d not <> nl >' that it has made a dtsadvanta geous contract with the buyets of th - bonds, but that tlm transaction has t averting the merely postponed without catastrophe of a suspension of go, 1 payments which it war intended to pre vent. At present everybody aimost takes it for .anted that this recent quired, loan is and h^ that b ^eforth . .. , con ; tinuance of go r *rap on a Mmre< beyond question. ; JJTJKSfZt,* , . premature as was the exultation in j , M? „ v( . r tbP gun nosed final settlement j oT . , t h Kilv eontroversv ' ,' ‘„ ' b h all tional tenders're- exnetrl irurcs so that * a t I h, legal K deemed told can be held in tne . WANTS TO KNOW. RISES TO A QUESTION OF PRIVILEGE. After the FIglit Is Over—Theti What? Asks That Oreat Fopnlist Paper, the American Nonconformist—Some Timely I nterrogat ions. Suppose the money question was set¬ tled in exact accordance with the pro¬ gram laid down in the address of the bimetallic league? Does any one con¬ tend that this would end the. agitation and satisfy the demand for reform? Would that satisfactorily dispose of the trust evil? Would Havemeyer cease to buy the taxing power lo be used for his exclusive benefit? Would Hunting ton stop his Pacific railroad lobby and quit buying congressmen to do his bidding? Would the courts suddenly become honest and quit making law that is not on the statute books? Would the problem between labor and capital be solved? Would the whisky trust discharge Dan Voorhees and cease from troubling? Would the land question find itself suddenly settled? Would the oppressions growing out of our trans¬ portation system no longer vex shippers and producers? Would all the evils of the competitive system vanish immedi¬ ately and Ihe necessity for demanding municipal control of public utilities no longer press for consideration? Would “the armed camp of commerce" dis¬ solve and the thousand and one com¬ bines no longer concoct schemes to cor¬ ner tlie markets? Woul<* the Judge Woodses quit rendering decisions that put workingmen in jail for organizing for self-protection and tho railroad magnates into big offices for doing the treasury and thus effect a contraction of the currency, the same peril of « suspension of gold payments from which we have threo times in a little stile more, thtln bonds", a year wTil been ‘eventually rescued by a of recur for a fourth time and then no fourth bond sale may be possible. If, too, the agitation in this country In favor ol silver should conynue, not only will foreign investors continue to sell their other American securities, but they will return-- those same new govern¬ ment bonds which they have just pur¬ chased to so large an amount in the London market. I regret to see a dis position evinced in many quarters to treat the abandonment last week by the silver senators of Senator Jones’ free coinage bill and of Senator Wol cott’s free silver resolution as a proof of the weakness of the cause of silver in congress. On the contrary, the pre lirninary votes taken on Senator Jones’ bill very clearly showed that, a majoi • ity of the senate were favorable to it. That they refrained from forcing it through at once demonstrates no more than that they were not willing to risk the delay of the appropriation hills and a consequent extra session. After the 4th of March they will he still stronger in numbers and nobody can say with certainty that a majority of the new house of representatives will not Join with them in legislating for free silver. If so, there will stand between the conn try and a free silver coinage act, noth ing but President Cleveland s veto. --- •« 11 K»'»u.v '•’rue? “How much did Grover Cleveland make in the last bond deal? is a ques tion being openly asked all around the country, and with an emphasis that will admit of no doubt in the minds of those asking the question as to their belief that the president of the Lnited states actually shared in the profits j °f ttio syndicate who took the bonds J and in a tew days resold them again at a gain of over igMy millions o dollars. Whether (trover Cleveland had any share in this deal or not may never be known, but the circumstances attending the negotiations of the sale, the secrecy attending H the parties at the ,'iesl munld PreraNm °'^ ned, ^ f than pai bonds often command, ogeth r with their tamed late sale at a very much higher premium, can have no other effect than to leave the suspicion In the minds of many people hat even Grover Cleveland was unable to resist Tus noTenough to say that partisan l«« or political prejudice prompts this suspicion. The president of the United States should be above suspicion, but Grover Cieveland-unfortunately-ls ^ ^ characteristics of the man " ainti , him „ame Rumor has herself more about this man’s ' ' character ’ his social life his habjtfi arK) , nnPr , jfp j than any man he Mk] ,, , cbair r , an(1 a " if ” one-half ’ ae the T.c stories hLT afloat f f of tfiat raal bond °° D deal. Vrom 1493 to 1020 “ an STZZXS ounce of cold silver. From 1521 to 1544 silver held Its highest value since the discovery of ' America. Between the years Iasi named, 11.2 ounces of silver brought 1 ounce of gold. Now it requires 19.60 1 ounces of silver to buy an ounce of , go NOTES AND COMMENT, As a wedding present George Gould gave his sister Anna, who married the French count, a coronet set with dia¬ monds, that cost $40,000. On the day of Anna's brilliant wedding four deaths were reported In the city ot New York caused by starvation. Is this a Christian land? What are the preachers and Christian people think¬ ing about anyway? The school children in many of the large cities are being taught the uso of arms and the armories are being turned over to them in the afternoons for military drill. Many church organ¬ izations have companies of cadets. Why all this? Bo you see anything in the signs of the times? Will you longer vote for systems that recognize the necessity of educating boys in knickerbockers to shoot down their fellow men? Bank officials stole over $25,000,000 last year. If we. had postal savings or government hanks not a dollar, per¬ haps, would have been stolen and cer¬ tainly not a dollar lost, to the deposit¬ ors, Why have we not government hanks? Because we have too many foolish people who would rather be robbed by bankers than to give up their old parties. They have a way of disposing of Populist officials out in Oregon that is unique. King county elected a Popu¬ list county treasurer. Before the time for him to take the office the county board raised the bond to $800,000. As he was honest and would not be. used by the bankers, they would not go cn his bond, and. being unable to give the bond otherwise, his republican prede¬ cessor and the banks are holding on to the office and the funds. same? Would alien ownership of our lands by foreign lords and ladles, and the reduction of our farmers to peasant tenantry, need no further discussion? Would the corruption of our polities by partisan committees, suppression of suffrage by force and fraud, counting in of those not elected and counting out of those elected, become merely un¬ pleasant remembrances and not present freight and charge all equally for the samo kind of service? Would they quit defying the laws? Will rascally aider men in the cities abstain from selling public franchises to private corpora tions and putting the money into their pockets instead of into the treasury? Will the free pass nuisance by which congressmen and legislators are bi ought to disregard the welfare of the people and enact legislation in the. interest of corporations, no longer he n\i;yfng evil the) ni*#*s on-e“m jJuppressiing? ill* <,ontaei\ice,be-, wsttl Wall street for its having and no more attempt to rulfi Ad ministrations lo In 1st cat ions and and conaresses’' congiesses. Will win Rothschild retire from bus I nags on this continent and the hooked nose and "three balls” no longer be our national trademark ? Will Pierpont Morgan and “my law partner" make no more secret contracts with the secretary of the treasury? Will Ickelhelmer & Co. take down their sign? Wilt the Pacific railroad let go their grip on California and surrounding states? Will tho Stand¬ ard Oil company and other monied kings quit buying legislatures? Will Gorman Brice and Elkins dissolve partnership with the trusts and com¬ mence legislating for the people? Will the Nicaragua deal he dropped, con¬ gress quit voting bounties to sugar planters, and grabs be kept out of ap¬ propriation bHls? Will favoritism stop and ail accept and act on the fundamen¬ tal principle of Populism, "equal rights to all and special privileges to none?” In short, will the millennium he here and nothing remain but to put on our wings and sail off to the New Jerusa lem? As Mr. Toots would say, we »* 'or Information? Non-Con fovmist. n. nm. ™. y. “The question whether one generation ,,f men j,as a right to bind another seems never to have been started, yet jt - m a question of such consequence aB no ^ on ]y to merit decision, but pj a( . e among the fundamental prin ,.jpi e8 (J f every government. That no BUch obligation can be transmitted I (hink ( . ttpa „ k . of proof . , Be t out on this ground, that earth belongs in usu io , k( . living; that the dead have r ,thr-r powers nor rights over it. No man ( . an b y natural right oblige the jalKls t)( , occupied to the payment of contracted by him, for if he ( , oul(1 might eat up the usufruct of , j 1(; (; aHh for several generations to am ] ,b ( , n the earth would belong the , 1(sad . Thfl conclusion, then, is th!lt nelther the representatives of a nation, nor the whole nation Itself as gem bled, can validly engage debts he yon<) what ltiey may „ ay in their own llmp .. ,) e ff eraon ’s works, vol. 3. page m f|) wrI , ln(C t0 Madison, same vol , he closes a long and in t( ,, e8ting „. Uer on thU subject in the following language; in mind . “Tur» this subject your my ,iear Kir> an<1 par /' llMI ’ ,7 P We [ as 10 contracting debts. At first t blush K , u ma v be lalI * he ' 1 ttt aB thn d f? am of - * theorist, but examination will prove 11 to be soli<1 dwl salutary. It would a fine Preamble to our first ,aw for appropriating our public rev f ’ nue - and it would exclude at the threshold of our new government the ruinous and conts^ious error* of this quarter Spot's of the globe, which have armed with i .-ntu which nature does » ot sanction for binding his fellow Compare these utterances with the act of Grover Cleveland hob-nobbing .. MM ......— '» ....... nation to pay a debt thirty years hence without wariant of law, and a Demo b i;([ o» a’ipjbmoj oot ssajSuoo ojjeJ ) hand lo prevent it. Think of it, you old-time Democrats, and then exclaim from the bottom of your hear . “0, my party, how ‘hou art fallen! VOL. II. NO. 20. The Gould ladies wear veils that coat $6,000 each. You would never be fool enough to buy your wife a $5,000 veil, but, brother, haven't you been helping by your vote to pay for those $5,000 veils for the Gould family? if so, how much longer will you keep it up? ♦ * * Why are the labor strikes as a rule failures? Because capitalists well know that, behind each laborer stands a hungry man or woman ready to take the place of the striker, as has been proven by every strike in the past ten years. It, would seem that in time la boring men would learn the futility of labor strikes und try tho ballot as a remedy. j _ * * * - f Qno 6{ the mfian(wl and mo9 arM . trflry monopoMe , n thlB country and nfjpi , t wWch there Is the least said is the telegraph monopoly. What, a bless i n g it would he and how many people would 'be benefited the telegraph lines were owned by tjie government. Thousands of printers and report,era now 0,,t of ewP |o 5'meht. would soon fl , employment. Every town of 2 000 or more population could have one or mo> e (’ally papers, with the latest dis¬ patches, which would create a demar tl for more printers, reporters, and edi¬ torial writers, besides creating a de¬ mand for more paper and printing ma¬ terial. Best of all, it would destroy a m.iuopoly that does more to foster anti sustain all other monopolies than any other element in this country. We can have government ownership of tel¬ egraphs just as Hoon as the people got sense enough to vote for it. Good horse are selling in Kansas, Nebraska, and portions of Missouri for $J(), some fair animals bringing no more than 1.U. Well, unless men learn to vo*a right these conditions will con¬ tinue. Reports from San Francisco say that not only lime errors and had wo-k manship from repairs to the cruiser Boston and the gunboat Bennington been laid hare, but that rumors are nlioat to show that the warships P’m adelpbla, Yorktown, and Olympia aro can __ things be considered different in a government reeking with rottenness from center to circumference? j, M. Ashton, chief attorney for the Northern Pacific railway in the state of Washington, has been elected a brigadier general of militia, This is according to the eternal fitness of things. In filling the United States senate with railway attorneys and ^ evident that looked for and hence they mH king tin soldiers of some of t p em to serve them in that capacity, h av e wageg 0 f the coal miner f th0 Hocking Valley (Ohio) district j 8 27 cents a day! The cotton and WO olen mills at Galveston. Tex., pay from 60 to 90 cents a day and the com panies are asking that the hours of ia ^ bor.be ^ ^ J ]ow a raonth . the best h ( , H not gett ing more than $13 a ^“.ate onth .Jefferson said: “A nation can itself into prosperity or ad verslty." Legislation has brought U3 as a people where we are and legisla¬ -ion will bring us out if the great corn mon people will only vote right. ^.^.^'^ntTand <vt Williamsport Ind an election out of 292 votes polled the Populists had a majority f .| e< , le d their entire ticket. Straws of this kind show which way the po mk:al win(]s are blowing down east. According to the. inter-state com merce commission report for the year en( ij n gjune 30,1893,therailwayearn j n gs over operafing expenses for that year were *392.830,5ia, and the income from corporate investments was $149, ' ownership of rail Tays h l goverame nt this more than a half billion dol iars would have been a clear profit, but of this vast sum $431,422,156 was paid ££»£*&£* however | llx ,058,034 as a net income, , nd<ir government ownership the op Pia ting expenses would be largely cut , )own and by , h u8 saving the income VlOU |d be increased to $700,000,000 or $800,000,000. as can be easily demon striped by figures.