Newspaper Page Text
RICH ANARCHISTS.
THERE IS AN UNWRITTEN “AW
THAT EXEMPTS THEM.
They t »n Do hn Tli**y I’Icbnii nn<l No¬
body to I’mierulo Thom tor
Violation of tlie I.aiv They Own the
Court*.
From Chicago Sentinel; Some two
or three years ago it was dis
covered that a comparatively poor man
had tapped a city water pipe in such
manner that he obtained ail the water
he wanted without paying. Of course,
he was duly prosecuted according to
law, just as he ought to have been.
Now the startling discovery has just
been made that the great packing
houses of Chicago have for years been
getting water In the same way a six
inch pipe, tapping the water main and
conducting water around the meter, in
the case of the Nelson Morris company.
The Armour company has been pro
vided in the same manner, so it is said,
and several other prominent packing
houses in the stock yards district still
to be hoard from, with the good work
of investigation still going on.
It. Is estimated that more than a mil
lion dollars In revenue has been lost
to the city in this manner.
The Civic Federation has stirred up
this hornet’s nest, and tlie authorities
arc compelled to take some action. So
far, they are simply trying to stop the
leak nothing Is said about prosecuting
Phil Armour, or Nelson Morris, or any
other of those highly respectable gen
tlemen of the stock yards district, who
are making so much money every year
and devoting a little of It to the cause
of education and religion.
It goes without saying that no crim¬
inal proceedings will be instituted.
And why? Simply because the of
fenders are so wealthy and influential
as not to be amenable to the laws which
apply to poor people, fn England there
Is a written law which exempts mem
bees of the royal family from prosecu
noil for crimes other than murder, and
there seems to be an unwritten law
in this country exempting our pluto
cratie rulers from prosecution for of
fenses of any kiiul.
Prosecute Phil Armour? The great
pig-potentate, who refused to appear
before a United States senatorial inves
tigatiug committee, and nothing was
done about It! The idea Is prepos
te roils.
The man who makes United States
senators would not obey the bidding
of United States senators, much loss
would lie heed t he summons of a
whom he or his confreres have placed
on the bench.
Phil Armour, Nelson Morris, and
other Chicago millionaire packers, may
have stolen millions from the city of
Chicago in evading water taxes, but
they will never lie called to account for
the offense. If the city can "stop the
leak” it will he more than satisfied,
There don’t seem to be any law In
this country which rich men are bound
to respect.
But there is a growing public senti
ment in this country that men
wealthy enough to defy ttie law and
live unmindful of law are no less an¬
archists than those who advocate the
abolition of all law- for tlie poor ns
well as for the rich, for tlie pauper as
well as for the plutocrat.
Anarchism is a dangerous doctrine
and its advocates, especially its practi¬
cal advocates, should be properly pun¬
ished.
The anarchist who practically advo
cates tin* abolition of law so far as it ap¬
plies to the wealthy classes is more
dangerous to society than ho who car¬
ries a red flag.
The great anarchist breeder of this
country is the unwritten law that the
wealthy culprit shall go scot free for
an offense that sends a poor man to the
workhouse or penitentiary.
Now let Chicago inflict the same pun¬
ishment upon Phil Armour, Nelson
Morris, and the rest of tlie stock yards,
water-stealing millionaires who have
stolen a million, that it did upon the
poor man who stole $28 from the city
treasury in the same manner piping
around the water meter.
if Chicago does this we will take
back all we nave said about millionaire
an arehist
Thai (’ liUago wilt do this, there is
jusi as much prospect as that John
Sherman will join the populists, and
no more.
Henry Vincent is making Coxev’s
“Sound Money" hum. it is among the
best reform papers of the day—if, in¬
deed, it does not lead them all. Bro.
Vincent is a broad visaged journalist
and is thoroughly schooled in the
various branches of tlie reform move¬
ment. In him Bro. Coxey has an ex¬
cellent coadjutor, the people an editor
who is forever wedded to the cause of
right. “Sound Money" is doing grand
vork all over the country as well as in
Ohio. It may not succeed in electing
Coxey governor of the state, but it will
succeed in making the people's party a
fixture in Ohio. Next year we will reap
the results of this year’s campaign.
The San Fraheisco Call, the great
Pacific coast daily paper, owned by
Claus Spreckles, the sugar king of the
Hawaiian islands, proposes to erect the
grandest marble and stone building in
America for use as an office. It should
be cemented with 1 * 1 men's bones
mixed w the tes s of women and
children whom tic great sugar king
has robbed, murdered and starved in
b process of accumulating bis blood
tv med mil! ions And then it should
anted forever by the cries and
gre of his victims.
L
account it is cal u **e»
A DEMOCRATIC PAPER’SOPINION
Of Hie Gubernatorial Candidate* in
li «*»t iirky.
Tbe following editorial appeared in
the Daily Evening Post, of Louisville,
Ky.,’(a strong Democratic paper) a few
(lays ago.
"Air. Hardin ^Democrat) is trying to
: teal the thunder of Mr. Thomas S. Pet
tit, Populist
“Mr. Pettit lias a higher claim to the
support of so-called free silver demo
crats than has Mr. Hardin.
“Mr. Pettit is a better democrat than
Mr. Hardin. He is loyal to the princi
pie of representation in the conduct of [
party affairs. lie left the democratic I
party by the front door, because he be- j
Ifeved the party wrong. He had the <
courage to surrender the hope of polit- j
ical advancement rather than surrender j
his convictions. |
“He preferred to leave the party to
having the party leave him. We may
differ with Mr. Pettit, but we must re¬
spect his firmness, his loyalty to prin¬
ciple and respect for fair play. i
.
“Mr. Pettit, moreover, is a better !
speaker than Mr. Hardin, and a far bet¬
ter debater.
“if the committee desired to have Mr.
Flradley’s (republican) arguments in be- ;
half of a sound currency answered, they i
should have named not Mr. Hardin,
who knows nothing on either side of j
the question, but Mr. Pettit, who has ;
the arguments of the populists at his I
tongue’s end. make j
“Still further, Mr. Pettit would
a better governor than Mr. Hardin, j
His judgment is sounder; his views are j
clearer; his reasoning powers stronger,
and he knows how to express himself |
so his auditors can understand him.
“Give Mr. Pettit a chance, He has
had great experience in legislation and
knows enough to know that many of
Gen. Hardin’s vagaries are utterly ab¬
surd.
"It is true that Mr. Pettit is the can¬
didate of the populists, but he is not,
tbeir victim; no one has hypnotized
him, and he would lead his folowers
and not surrender to them.
“Mr. Pettit is a man of many Ideas;
Mr. Hardin Is a man of one. Mr. Pet¬
tit stands by his platform; Mr. Hardin
repudiates his. Mr. Pettit was the
choice of the party; Mr. Hardin was
forced on the party against, its wish,
Mr. Pettit bows to the will of the ma¬
jority; Mr. Hardin’s own will is a law to
him. Mr. Pettit at Frankfort would he
prudent, cautious, painstaking, indus¬
trious; Mr. Hardin would be obstinate,
indolent and dangerous to all interests,
“Altogether, it would, In our judg
mont, lie Tar better for the state and
for the democratic party to elect et-
1 ian 0,11 a,< ln ’
NOT WAITE'S FAULT.
('o)orailo'H F*-Governor (il'IH linrk at
tlie “liprioemerrt' I** Great Style.
Chicago Sentinel.
When Davis li. Waite was governor
of Colorado, his activity in stirring up
things got him into a number of contro¬
versies, from which he usually emerged
triumphant. At times he beat the ene
my witli argument, and when they
“tried to be funny" the shafts of wit
he hurled at them showed them they
had “caught a Tartar.” In the campaign
which resulted in his defeat the one
(
cry was, “Waite must he beaten and
the state redeemed from populist mis
rule!" The banks that had failed during
Ilia term of office were dwelt upon, and
tlie promise given that no more banks
would fail and prosperity would return
if (ho populists were whipped.
Waite was said to be ruled by his
wife, and it was said she was the real
chief executive. In his paper, Our
Nation’s Crisis, he comments on a re¬
cent bank failure in Denver and exon¬
erates himself and wife from blame in
Hit' following happy manner;
“in the matter of the failure of the
Union National bank.
“Plea in abatement.
“And now comes Davis H. Waite, a
citizen of Denver, and over the age of
31 years, and affirms in his own behalf
that he ought not to be held responsible
for the failure of said bank for the reas¬
ons following that is to say;
“First- UUant denies that he broke
tlie said bank, either on purpose and
with malice prepense, or accidentally,
and he alleges that he never learned of
the failure of said bank until Monday
of the present week and was consider
ably astonished thereat, because affiant
had been informed on several occasions
within the past six months that ‘the
state of Colorado had been redeemed;’
that immediately on hearing of said
failure tills affiant hurried home to as
certain if he Ir.iii in his possession any
bills of the said bank and found after
minute examination that he was pos
sc'sed of no bank bills on the said bro
ken bank, or any other bank.
“Second- To the current report that
the failure of said bank was caused by
the withdrawal from the said bank of
a generous confidence.’ this affiant
solemnly avers that he withdrew nary
confldence from the said bank.
“Third And this affiant further al
leges that since the 7th day of January
last past, neither himself nor his wife
lias been governor of the state of Colo
riuio.
"Witness my hand this 30th day of
July A. D. 1895.
“DAVIS H. WAITE,
State of Colorado. County of Arapa
hoe, ss.:
Subscribed before me this 30th day of
July. 1 S’J5.
fSeal) “SAMUEL J. SHIRLEY.
Notary Public.”
“My commission expires April 11,
189(5."
The democratic papers of the South
strive to keep each other in
a,ice bv repeating with variations the
•une “Populists are Bring ” But non
of them ever venture an argument
against the principles of populism. T
t) . 0 ne^er
old parties to right trouble
., ,- nr moment
England is now buying silver from
5th Ai -t Mexie but th
Don't accept uanoaai bank uo;es.
OOT E *«
--- e£ T AC *1H.
r \o romax !■
n
X: J ts- X
tfrr '.r-r- VC s-t'r'- _T -■ s#m§t -V
”
__ ■r
kr sf \<2
'I SBff OpuL Wk- a * 1 4 1 Kf vk %
;
y, ; m ■j-- my m Hi p|i 3 rJ? 'MU'
HtCH ^ AlP» "III 11W.
Si® 3 ' I w l^"«kAfr /
Z=%- ir r ' ■ - ■ fit
5=—____...____ /; Hu, r* .. __=.^ E~fr ‘“•wy- 3 ■ HfJlW
jy* wr— as*.
i
s'
WILL WE SUCCEED?
APPEALS TO REASON.
THE SILVER CAUSE THE CAUES
OF HUMANITY.
Hill Arp, Goldbug Writer, Gets Con¬
verted by “Coin Up to Date” and
Tells His Friends that They Cannot
Meet It with Argument.
I have just finished reading Coin’s
last book “Up to Date.” If somebody
doesn’t answer it and prove it a lie it
will shake this country from center to
circumference. The bankers amUspec
ulators and money kings will be over
thrown and the danger is that the
masse8 wlll g0 t00 far in revenging
thejr wr(mgs and Uke Santstm , pull
down the temple and crush all alike.
When he shows up the inequalities of
taxation and how the rich escape, it
makes the blood boil with indignation.
Aside from the silver question, he gives
a certificate of David Gore, the auditor
of public accounts for the state of 1111 -
nois, which shows that all that the
bankers and brokers of Chicago were
assessed for taxation was only $ 44,000
of money, while farmers of that county
were assessed $84,000 for agricultural
tools and implements. Think of it! The
farmers; aH ml,( j h tool^ro. as a ' ! the assessed money a^i' credits twice and
"ecurities of all the banks, bankers and
brokers of that great city. And all the
<l> a >™nds and jewelry in Chicago were
at ^, .0, when it is known
that single families live there who
own diamonds and jewelry ten times
that sum in value. The money of these
hanks amounts to hundreds of millions,
but through the manipulation of muni¬
cipal politics the rich control the as¬
sessors and escape taxation. Can this
be true? If it is false, why doesn’t Eli
Perkins say so. I see that he has taken
tHo field against Coin, but I can’t tell ex¬
actly from his last piece whether he is
lying or joking. He closes it by saying
that after he had shown Coin his errors
and fallacies Coin gave it up and tears
rolled down his cheeks and he dis¬
missed his school and declared he
wasn't gwine to teach any more. I like
Eli. I like any lie that is funny and
harmless. I used to like to read Baron
Munchausen, and I like to read Eli now.
I confess that it strains my credulity
j 0 believe what Coin writes about the
Chicago banker’s tax, but there is the
certificate of the state auditor. Surely
there is some explanation of ail this.
We know what Solomon, and Paul and
the Savior said about rich men, but I
never believed that our rich men were
that bad. We poor folks whose income
was under the mark, believed that to
tax large incomes was the right thing
to do, but it seems that we can’t do it.
we are taxed all the time on the outgo
through the operation of the tariff—a
tariff for revenue only, with incidental
protection, It is the incidental that
gets us. An American sewing machine
or a mower or reaper can be bought in
London or Brazil 30 per cent cheaper
than we can buy one here. There comes
in the incidental. It is protected here
from foreign competition and the profit
is so great that Mr. Singer or Mr. Mc
Cormick can pay the freight across the
ocean and then sell it for less than he
will sell to us. Isn’t that funny? Har
per’s Magazine sells all over this coun
try for thirty-five cents, but sells all
over England for twenty-five cents. An
American Cedar pencil of the best quai
ity sells here for a nickel, but you can
huv the very same in London for a
copper. And just so it is with hun
dreds of other things that are made
ln " a * s country. This incidental is not
accidental, but was done on purpose
Washington and our law makers say we
must stand it.
Boys, let’s fight. No, I don’t mean
that exactly, but let’s meet and pass
some resolutions— let's do something,
Now > the Chicago goid-bugs have
“ ,,wl a mmin ^ t0 if the v ^an't
-
s * op a11 ,his rumpus about silver, but
they a « well try to stop a
do - I w«n’t taking much stock in
financial affairs, for I had read so
much on both sides that it made mV
head swisu - «d so when a friend sent
me Coin's first book I took it up with
prejudice against it. for I supposed that
Mr. Harvey was a Chicago Yankee and
was {laid by the Inter-Oceaa to write
m that side, and so I fortified ravself
against being seduced by hss
read it rather hurriedly, watching for
traps and triggers, but I didn’t find
them, and I found so much information
that was news to me that I read it more
carefully the second time, and I came
to the conclusion that Coin was a very
smart man, or I was a very great fool—
one or the other. His last book is bet¬
ter than the first, and if these two lit¬
tle books are made up of fallacies the
gold-bugs had better get somebody else
beside Eli to expose them—Eli’s forte
is fun, not finance—though I’ll bet a
dollar he was opposed to the income tax.
—Bill Arp in Atlanta Constitution.
FARMERS AND BICYCLES.
Ways in Which Profits of Agriculture
Have Diminished.
The extension of the trolley and cable
systems of traction for street car lines
has greatly reduced the demand for
horses, and as electricity and steam
power has been substituted for horse
power, the market for the cheaper grade
horses has grown worse. Recently
the farmers who deal in horses have
met with still another disaster which
lia s diminished the demand further
the bicycle craze. This strikes at the
horses of the better quality, ordinary
carriage horses, and not those devoted
to the humble and laborious task of
drawing street cars for their board and
lodging. Livery stables throughout the
country, and more especially in the
smaller towns, are now feeling the siri r
ister effect of the bicycle craze. In coun¬
try hotels or boarding houses where in
previous summers it was the custom of
the guests to go driving, this year there
has been very little demand for car¬
riages, as bicycles have furnished an
adequate substitute. Not only have the
livery stables suffered in respect of
transient patrons desiring “to go for a
drive” over green hills and through
winding valleys in the country, but the
regular customers as well have gone
over to the bicycle contingent very
largely. Country doctors, as a rule, have
been among the best customers of livery
stables, but they r are so no more, for
many country physicians now use bi¬
cycles for their professional visits, and
this is true of many other former pa¬
trons of livery stables. The big bicycle
factories are turning out hundreds of
machines every day, and up to a few
weeks ago could not supply the demand.
As the number of machines increases
the demand for horses falls off, and one
of the results of this lias been the
cheapening of good carriage horses and
the reduction of the number of such
carriage horses raised by farmers. In
still another way the farmers of many
states have suffered from the effects of
the bicycle craze, the wheels need no
fodder. The fewer horses, the less de¬
mand for hay and oats; and it is be¬
lieved in many quarters that a shortage
in the New York hay crop this year is
all that prevents a big fall in the price
consequent upon the decrease of the de¬
mand.
CORPORATION ROBBERY.
The Corporations Unite Ajjalnat the
Private Citizen.
A well-to-do farmer residing near
Denton took several baskets of peaches
to the boat iast week to send to friends
Baltimore as a present. When he
offered to pay the freight he was
charged 15 cents a basket. The farmer
was thunderstruck for the regular rates
are but S cents. When he asked for an
explanation he was told that he was
not shipping to a commission merchant
but to private parties; and that rates
to consumers direct without passing
through the hands of commission mer
chants were higher. Talk about the
despotism of the czar of Russia! The
despotism of this steamboat line in
compelling the farmer to deal with the
commission merchant is as tyrannous
as any despotism in the world. Where
is your democratic or republican form
of government when you are such
slaves to monopoly. It is time to limit
the power of this trust. If you agree
with us why not be men and vote with
us?-Peninsula Farmer (Federalsburg,
lid.),
God grant that the two old gold-bug
parties may unite on Grover Cleveland
as a candidate .or president. Then ne
^an ki.i two snakes with one club.
The gold men bolt their party all
r:r hf but the silver men appear to be
tco t ifounled '-if. cowards to declare
themselves .n pendent men.
SENATOR PEFFER ON BONDS.
Will Introduce a Resolution Advising Re¬
pudiation.
Topeka, Kan., Sept. 13.—“If another
issue of bonds is made without the au¬
thority of congress I shall advise their
repudiation.”
These are the words of Unites States
Senator Peffer, used to-day in speaking
about the probability of another bond
issue* i Senator Peffer has kept his eye
on figures which tell of the condi
tion the gold reserve. None have
watched it sliding down below the
$ 100 , 000,000 mark more anxiously than
he. It was he who objected very em¬
phatically in the United States senate
when the first and subsequent bond is¬
sues were made.
“I consider the bond issue fraudulent,
and I have not changed my position
since then. I still think the govern¬
ment has no authority to issue bonds
without the concurrence of congress,”
said he. “I am satisfied that there will
be another bond issue before Oct. 1, be¬
cause the syndicate has been given the
privilege of taking all the bonds issued
before then. There is only one thing
which may prevent a bond issue, and
that is the fear that it will weaken the
democratic strength. They are mak¬
ing heroic efforts to strangle the free
silver sentiment in all the states, and
have to a considerable extent suc¬
ceeded. Look how they squelched it in
Kentucky, Arkansas and Iowa, and
nearly all the other states where a test
has been made. They are compelling
the silver men to go outside the demo¬
cratic party if they desire to adhere to
that principle. The leaders thing that
the voters can be whipped into line, and
if they find out that they can, then look
out for another bond issue before Oct.
1. The people will be given all they
will stand, and no questions are sup¬
posed to be asked.
“At the last session of congress I
was called impertinent because I asked
to have the names of the bond purchas¬
ers made public. If there be another
bond isue without authority of con¬
gress I intend to introduce a i esolution
advising the repudiation of the bonds.
They were issued without authority,
and are fraudulent, and the people
should not be compelled to pay them.
This may not sound well, but there us
no use of allowing the people to be im¬
posed upon any longer. When the first
bond issue was proposed Secretary Car¬
lisle came to both houses of congress
and asked legislative authority for the
issue. He went so far as to prepare a
bill for that purpose and presented it to
the committees of both the senate and
the house. Congress refusing to act,
the secretary gave notice that If he
were not authorized by special act he
would issue bonds without such au¬
thority, and he did so. I called atten¬
tion to these facts at the time; charged
that the bonds were issued illegally,
and also introduced a resolution in¬
structing the judiciary committee of the
senate to examine and report whether
the secretary had such authority under
existing law, and the committee dared
not report because they knew there is
no such law.”
SNAP SHOTS.
Don’t you hear "dem good times com
in?”
National bank notes are not legal
tender.
_
“Sound money” makes labor and pro
duce cheap.
-
Corn at 12 cents a bushel—gold stan
dard prices.
Direct legislation wil restore the gov¬
ernment to the people.
The initiative and referendum an¬
swers all questions of reform—by direct
vote of the people.
The workingmen of America will
never be free from oppression until
they free themselves.
The United States subtreasury will
not redeem national bank notes. Try
it and see for yourself.
If every debt in the world were sim¬
ply canceled there would not be a single
dollar less of wealth left.
_
41 ; money used by an honest govern
meat will be sound. Let us have an
honest government of the people.
fOUNG MEN OUR HOPE.
THEY HAVE COURAGE AND AM¬
BITION AND WILL WIN OUT.
They Possess as a Birthright That
Healthy Independence Which Despises
Traditions and Questions the Highest
Accepted Authority.
Young men are the hope of new ideas.
They are sincere, earnest, unpreju¬
diced seekers of the truth.
They have the energy, the courage,
the ambition and determination to do
something in the world.
They pine over no regrets and fear
not the untried future.
Their lives are before them. They
long to conquer the world.
Their ancestors have been swallowed
up in the whirlpool of competition, and
many fathers have become reconciled to
the lash and the blind of party and giv¬
en up the struggle. But these young
men will not give up without a fight.
These young men may not now be
statesmen—heaven knows there are too
many of what the world calls “states¬
men” already— but they have human
hearts and manly aspirations and op¬
portunities to pursue the right.
They may be hooted at by their el¬
ders, but they were born in a fortunate
age, and will live to manage the affairs
of the nation long after their elders,
with all their egotism and prejudice,
are under the sod.
The old men who have had their po¬
litical eyes opened just at the physical
age when nature stands waiting to
close them again forever, have learned
by a life’s experience, and we should »
respect them as teachers—but upon the
young men of to-day will fall the work
of practical reform.
The principles of right have always
existed—but to this generation is the
revelation of the progress of all the
past ages—and this or a future genera¬
tion are the only hope of utilizing the
wisdom of the ages.
It is but natural that the great West
should lead the reaction against the
encroaching restraint of liberty which
drove humanity westward.
Here the eye and the mind have
looked upon an unbounded prospect.
Imitation of the East grows fainter as
people scatter westward and away from
the centers of custom and tradition;
bold strokes of nature assert themselves
as man is thrown upon his own resour¬
ces, and isolation shows him the mean¬
ing of liberty and independence.
He forgets the fashions and methods
laid down in the books , and conditions
force practical ideas into his head.
He learns simplicity and directness.
He sees that the complications of “fi¬
nancial legislation” are composed prin¬
cipally of formulas to enable “finan¬
ciers” to squeeze a living out of labor¬
ers without toiling’themselves. f
The young man growing up in the
West learns Nature’s laws first—they
are a part of his being—and no peda¬
gogue in the world can persuade him
to exchange real ideas for artificial
ones.
The young man of the West possesses
as a birthright that healthy indiffer¬
ence which tries things on their merits,
and accepts nothing until he sees what
kind of stuff there is in it.
Call him a savage if you will, but he
sees through your flimsy ceremonies,
and scorns them.
He is tied to no formality.
Give him only facts—fairy stories
don’t go.
The young men of the East are sur¬
rounded by environments the justice of
which they will not question as long as
they are well-fed, well-clothed and edu¬
cated in aristocratic schools—but the
poor among them are born with their
eyes open to the glaring injustice of the
situation—and as they hear the hope¬
ful voice of the great West and South
proclaim the coming day of “equal
rights to all and special privileges to
none” the courage of youth and hope
responds: “Hurrah! boys, we are com¬
ing.”
THE DOG YELPED.
Coxejr’g Rock Hit Him Amidships an<
Shattered His Frontispiece.
A correspondent from Glouster, O.
sends us a cliping from the Athens
County Gazette, in which he seeks to
blackguard Mr. Coxev. He has not the
ability to attempt to reply to his argu¬
ments. He contents himself with call¬
ing names. Sound Money is engaged
in a labor of reform. It is seeking to
tear the mask from the rottenness and
corruption of the old parties and ex¬
pose the villiany that permeates and
controls their leaders.
Our correspondent says of the pin¬
head editor of the Athens County Ga¬
zette, that he graduated as the landlord
a little country tavern and immedi¬
ately assumed the editorship of a news
paper that, through more or less
changes of name, has at last assumed
the name that it now bears. What the
next change will be is a problem. He
knows nothing about the questions of
the hour, and there is not a miner in
the Sandy Creek valley that is not cap¬
able of teaching him the a. b. c. of eco
nomics.
We expect to arouse the antipathy of
such people and only hope that Mr.
Coxey hit him so hard that it will
bring him to a realization of his igno¬
rance. Such people usually are put to
&reat straignt to pay for their patent
insides, and, if the truth were known,
possibly this man Allen is in the same
fix. The greater the outcry from such
fellows the better impression Mr.
Coxey generally makes, Let them
blow.—Sound Money.
If the fiat cf» bankers is good a 3
money why not the fiat of the govern¬
ment.
Y.'hy not hire England by the year ta
manage our finances?