Crawfordville advocate. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 189?-1???, April 19, 1895, Image 1
THE CRAWFOEDVILLE CRAWFORDVILLE Consolidated with l DEMOCRAT, Oct. 6,1893. \ Keep hammering. , Banks are only pawnshops. Now Is the time to educate. Prosperity! Where art thou? The way to win is to keep a-movin’. i The old parties can’t dodge any longer. The gold maniacs must be sup¬ pressed. A money despotism is worse than an absolute monarchy. No more gold monomaniacs should be sent to congress forever. You can’t make things better by vot¬ ing for the fellows that made them worse. Time is not to be considered, but the truth, which is eternal, must triumph in the end. The republican party will split on fthe same rock that shattered the demo¬ cratic party. Straddling will no longer fool the people. Radical reform alone will pre¬ vent revolution. The gold lunacy can be cured only by free exercise of the people’s right to govern themselves. The republicans laughed at the dem¬ ocrats, but they seem to be afraid to tackle the job themselves. Under the present system the United States assumes the responsibility of furnishing the world with gold. The trouble with the democratic party is it has the dry rot. The re¬ publican party has a bad case of the itch. New York has reached the hanging garden period in the repetition of Babylonian history, Its fall is ap proaching. There is no longer any doubt that the leaders of the two old parties are the same—and that both get their in etructions from London. The year 1896 will be the most crit¬ ical period in the life of the American republic. The people must be pre pared for the crisis Fo>?**.te them. With the increase of population the day is not far distant when the people will discover that they have put off the land question too long for :'neir own good. Secretary i. Morton says: has outlived its usefn.'rnesS^’ In that U d> w from Mr. M/orton, who cannot T _ ....id to Have ever reached a period of usefulness. The Illinois Supreme court has de¬ clared the eight-hour law unconstitu¬ tional. The next thing we look for is a decision that it is unconstitutional to eat more than twice a day. I The postage stamp represents labor —service is not based on gold or silver, and the government will not redeem them in either, yet postage stamps are always worth their face value. l Until dollar of foreign capi¬ every tal is withdrawn and not a single acre of American land is owned by aliens mere will be neither freedom^ nor pros¬ perity of the whole people in America. One of the silliest objections to gov¬ ernment loans is that it is not safe to loan a farmer money on land at the rate of 2 per cent, but a bank or loan company will do it and charge him 10 per cent. Bonds issued by the democrats through republican law are just as fraudulent as if they were issued by republicans through democratic law. Both parties are guilty. The two old parties are the machines through which the corporations, trusts, and banks rule this country. The Peo¬ ple’s party is the only party in the field that is being fought by the cor¬ porations, trusts, and banks. It is the constitutional duty of con¬ gress “to coin (create) money and leg ulate its value.” It is not doing it when it delegates to the banks the power to issue their own notes to be used as money. A bond is a debt; a greenback or treasury note is a debt. The bond draws interest and absorbs the profits of productive labor. The greenback draws no interest, gives labor employ¬ ment, develops the resources of the country, and brings prosperity. Bonds bled the country; the greenback saved it. The bond is a robber; the green¬ back is a patriot and a blessing. The two old parties represent bonds; the young and growing People’s party rep resents greenbacks. We saw a cartoon recently represent ing a congressman returning home to his constituents after the adjournment of congress which was significant. A crowd was awaiting Mr. Congressman just around a corner, armed with clubs and baskets filled with eggs, anxiously anticipating a “reception’ of the tleman who had just alighted from a palace car with grip in hand. There’s more in a cartoon of that kind than the mere poking fun at the average gressman. It is significant of a possibly when some of these fellows will he received with a rope, me w THE TRAITORS OF THIS COUNTRY. THE OLD PARTIES. * §)©^P i ? feg w? I ?! G it. E* i WJ f/ Mf -a If I M \ Ml ft A ft Zs m m£Wy -y : m At i Mils m a - f S— — !sa ■S4 5 w r m r lG\i |WIERII-« ■-•i m u n i 2^=2 SWALLOW ANYTHM6.QH!LORD! WE.KNOW THE. RESULT. HO WORK!MOBT<&A6MDHQNE3tt FREE SOUP!!! BUT VOTE HER STRAIGHT. i PONT TURN POPOUST. YOU MIGHT LEARN m <> SOMETH am. SF" - rnoM ''Our populist." a a 3 d % & |§§ FBOM MU, HACKNEY. HE WRITES A LETTER AND IT IS A HOT ONE. He Scores the Republican Killtors and vtllates the Coming Monetary Con¬ ference t*S a Fraud—Typing to Dodge tin# Fopnligt Landslide of '96. Torieka, Kan.—(Special,)—Ho?- Bill l, amey. a prominent Republican , and formerly a *rconfident, of Wi' A, this state/ is now at ricvclaninaoi He writers a letter to Capt. Pat Coney, of (city, -“‘fcich ke says; world A mere is anything in the disgusting than another, it i3 to be compelled to listen to the everlasting twaddle of a cringing, cowardly whelp who happens to be a Republican editor, and who is afraid to say his life is his own for fear it will reflect on England. I wonder when these Re¬ publican ignoramuses will cease to fatigue us with their everlasting crude financialisms. The average Republic¬ an editor hasn't as much backbone and brains as a last year’s bird's nest, and they never pen a line that they do not discover to a gaping world what in fernal fools they are. “I just received by today’s mail a clipping of Joe Ady’s speech at the Baker banquet. I wonder why in the name of sense he did not make the same speech for the past two years; if he had talked all these years as he talked at that banquet he would have been elected United States senator and not Baker. “I am in the midst of a shoddy aris¬ tocracy and purse-proud mediocrity, and my mentality is offended and tramped on every day by their igno rant assumption on this money ques tion, but I suppose I will have to grin and to bear it until common sense and reason regain their sway. Surely that influence must be overthrown in the Republican party, or else you and I have no further business in it. We can not shut our eye3 to the fact that the present condition is made possible by Republican legislation, conceived in the womb of iniquity and born through legislative rascality, and the masses blinded to such venality and mendacity until they are in as de plorable a condition as the paupers of Europe. tariff “The question of a tariff or no had nothing to do with the cause that made such results possible; it was the appreciation of dollars, or what is the same thing, the depreciation of every thing else, by means -whereof enter prise has been stopped, trade and com _____strangled merce and labor pauperized. The mistakes of the past are irremedi able, and the voters of America are in no way responsible therefor, because the crime which made our degradation possible had its inception in foreign villainy and American cupidity. “Tom Reed and John Sherman, Grov er Cleveland and John G. Carlisle arc all of a kind and they lead the hosts of f Democracy ^ and Republicanism today, f ey are Republicans and their con duct means Republican principles, then neither you nor I, nor men who think as we do, have any business in (be Repub ij can party; and where in the lbunder are we t0 go? We believe in tection and Democracy and Popu jjsm dQ ^ not and the gold ies bllgs of Ix)li . ; dQD a d their em i ssar there, through {he control of parties by such leader ghip prevent tbe amalgamation thus £af tbe O pp onen t.s of gold mono meta ]] igm and as they, each in turn, ^ jftUe harder under the gold Republicans howl for a higher protection and their opponents for a lower, and thus the friends of hi-met : allism are kept apart, to the everlast- CRAWFORDVILLE, GA.I, FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1895. ing shame, disgrace and dishonor of their country. “It would be amusing, if it. was not so everlastingly disgusting, to see Re¬ publican newspapers and politicians jumping up and down and shouting themselves hoarse over the recent ac¬ tion of the British house of commons and a German chancellor in reference to silver—a proposition, by the way, that don’t mean anything, because there is no such thing as international money. Verily, the cringing, coward¬ ly, tuiiljinui u.iiioeu u.> the conduct of modern Americanism, and the avidity with which they poll parrot like watch for and enunciate foreign ideas, as a guide for our con¬ duct, is enough to make Washington and Jefferson and Jackson and Lincoln rise from their graves as a protest. What has become of that Americanism that threw off the English yoke in ’76, asserted nationalism in T2, and saved us a nation in ’61? Verily, the leaders of American politics today can be lik¬ ened only to hyenas, who tore the flesh, and the thieves who robbed the dead on our battle fields. Enervated by lux¬ ury, debauched 15V greed, and dominat¬ ed by English monarchia) and finan¬ cial influence, they are the fit repre¬ sentatives of a venal age, that follow the heroism and sacrifice, that tramped the continent end watered one-half of our union with their blood in the late war for self-preservation. It is enough to make an old soldier who survived that horrible ordeal, go out behind a barn and coax a mule to kick him to death for being such a fool as to make such sacrifices for so contemptible a people.” NOTES AND COMMENTS, The plute press gave one feeble little squeak about the anarchism in the Indiana legislature at its closing hours and then shut up like a jack knife, if Populists had been in the disgraceful row the snake press would have hissed for months over the affair. * * » Mrs. George Gould and Miss Anna Gould's wedding cake cut into 100 heart shaped pieces, and each piece packed in a solid silver box lined with pure gold. Ah, ye weary toilers who make the millions this worthless family have robbed from you, and are still robbing you, how do you fancy this profligate waste of your money? They’ll con tinue the waste as long as laboring men continue to vote with such cattle, * * » In Nebraska alone it is officially stated that there are 100,000 persons who have to be supported by public charity until another crop is raised, and also provided with grain for secd ing purposes. The good people of Ne braska can’t stand everything; they might weather along with droughts and chinch bugs, but gold bugs—the great est enemy of all downs ’em. * * * Taylor, the defaulting South Da kota state treasurer, it seems, was not caught in Mexico after all and the ring in that state which shared in his pecu lations is breathing easier. It is said the Pinkertons caught Taylor, and if they did, he had only to pay them lib erally to iet him go again. His co partners in crime—the Republican politicians in South Dakota—are not anxious to have Taylor returned—in fact, they will see that he is kept out. * * * God is making use of human instru mentalities to declare His purposes, and in His own good time wili He demon strate the fact that “the earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof,” and He wiil give it to ail his people, There is war to the knife among the Republican “redeemers” in Kansas, _ The once “happy family” in the Sun- flower state is divife;>Rn4-broken up in factions. The leaders aroi indulging in a Kilkenny matinee resflt gives prom¬ ise of annihilation >. to be de¬ voutly hoped for. Kansas Populists are gleefully rubbingl palms r over the "rumpus” in the ReTnijlit " an camp. * * ?(*• Two new political pu' ties have been organized recently, an mother one is on the tapis—the / rlcan party, under the auspices A. P. A. Do •Ml the "YttfTtfte unrest and c t . * people. All do noi see alike, b j' 1 ' as I are think ing, and many are sim ;Ply traveling on parallel lines, which wilt finally con verge and reach the sif me en< L * i ’ * It is better—a thou j 3a ® ( l times bet¬ ter—to make a failure li* e in honest effort, in a faithful a< fheronce jns to duty in answer to convictln of conscience than to succeed in tii attainment of honors and riches at j the expense of honor and the sacrifice . of principles. • * * The logic of events < loes not seem to sustain the promises I uade by the Re¬ publican "redeemers” in Kansas, Ne braska and Colorado is ltf t fall when tho hungry hordes were ii iromising every thing to regain power, In one portion of Colorado 3,000 famines are in desti¬ tution. The “wither ing blight” of Populism in these stat es seems to con tinue despite the pro nlses of instant relief if Republicanisn i was successful. The “withering blight!’ in these states, as well as all over tht ! country, Is due to the infamous finan rdal policy inau gurated by the Republicans a third of a century ago, and which has boon sanctioned and is being by carried the Democratic >ut to the party, letter ' by the present admir istration. * Figure it as you mi iy, the People's party holds that eve ry dollar taken from labor without t he return of an equivalent is simply th}' ‘robbery. Census statistics show that average wealth produced annually by each manual la bor worker is $2,000, l md that of this amount $346 showing is paid $1,6 ajs 34 wages appropriated to each worker, by the never-sweats. No sort of Jug gling or dissembling can get around this uneven and un; list distribution of the fruits of toil. i r The past winter was a hard one on Duke Pullman, He never before dis¬ tributed so many sle ?ping car passes among members of tlx legislatures and congressmen as during the last winter when legislatures we,i in session, and that fact that so little -was done to curb the avarice and greed of the palace tar prince prove that these favors were not wasted, * * Oh, how very, very tiresome theso people are who declare “We could not have developed this country without j | capital the aid has of foreign been and capital." is today Foreign an ac tuai curse to the people of cur coun try. During President Pierce’s adrninis (.ration the cost of national govern ment was less than 40,000,000 bushels of wheat per annum. For the fiscal year 1865, the heaviest expenditure of any year of the war. the cost was less than 700,000,000 bushels of wheat. In 1894 the cost was ov<-r 800,000,000 bush • els, and this year it will probably ex teed 900,000,000 bushels. Here is food j for calm, reflective, rm st thought. I * ‘ * In the city of New York in three j wards less than one miiv civilization in 100 own (?) j a home. Think a i that produces such udi'ions! What | will the harvest t time? Big nnit Little Thieve*. The conviction of ex-Treasurer Woodruff, of Arkansas, and his sen¬ tence for one year to the penitentiary for stealing over $100,000, is another brilliant example of the method of dol¬ ing out justice in this country. It is useless to attempt to disguise the fact that if this had been some poor labor¬ ing man, whose family was really in need of something to eat, who had stolen a hog, or anything to else to the value of $15 or $20, he would have been sentenced to not less than two years. The case of Woodruff is not an isolated case. Nolan, of Missouri, who stole over $40,000 of the state’s money, re¬ ceived but two years’ sentence. Hem mingway, of Mississippi, stole $210,000 and got live years in the pen; if it had been some poor, friendless devil, he would have got the full limit of the law. Now why should Woodruff, Nolan and Hemmingway be entitled to great¬ er leniency than a poor man who is struggling with poverty and hunger? The court records are full of cases where men have been convicted and sentenced to from five to twenty years imprisonment for stealing less than $100 in value. Such methods of dis¬ crimination in tho administration of justice are breeding more anarchy in this country than all the Herr Mosts could do if they tried. It is a travesty of justice to send a poor man up for five years for stealing $50 and a wealthy or influential (?) man up one year for stealing $100,000. Tho official who steals the public funds commits a double crime. He is guilty of a breach of trust and theft. In no instance can he plead the palliating circumstances that exist in the o.afee of the man who is poor, and whose opportunities for making a living are limited, as is the case with thousands at. present. It. is this discrimination in favor of the rich and influential that is undermining our free institutions. Government is only useful so long ns it is adminis¬ tered “for tho greatest good for the greatest number.” The stability of the government rests upon (he respect which the people have for the law and the proper administration of Justice. When the courts become engines of oppression for the poor, and citadels of refuge for tho rich and powerful, as was the case in the Drod Beott de¬ cision, beforo the war, and in recent railroad strikes since, the peoplo lose respect for tho law and for government. It is now generally conceded that John Brown was right, although ho was a law breaker, and as such was pun¬ ished. John Brown and his followers had no respect for the Bred Scott de¬ cision. The majority of the people W”tW»t Mason a line were cisions in the world can not make a wrong right. Chattel slavery was wrong, and, although It was recognized by the constitution, sustained by the courts, and protected 1>y (lie laws, the' people rose up and shot it to death. Bo it will be with debt slavery. No chains can bind an intelligent people to slavery, whether they be of Iron or gold. Such cases as are cited above are not tho greatest that are filling up the cup of inbiulty, that eventually must be overturned either with the ballot or the bullet. Just in proportion as the people lose their respect for the lav/ and its administrators, they are approaching tho vortex of revolution. When a government falls in its func¬ tions it is no good on earth, and if the spirit of the Declaration of American Independence still lives in the hearts of the people, they will “alter or abol¬ ish if, and Institute a new government, laying its foundations on such princi¬ ples, and organizing its powers in such forms', as to them shall seem most like¬ ly to effect their safety and happiness.” A Tl|> for Silver Mon. We want to give the sllverltes a tip right here and now that is worth their while to consider. If they will unfurl the banner of "Demonetization of Gold” and fight for it tooth and toe nail, in less than eighteen monthx --very gold bug in Christendom will oe l ight down on his knees begging for the restoration of silver. Why? Because he will real¬ ize the danger in which 1.’•» fetich oi metal money is placed and he will be ready to join forces with the sllverltes in order to save fits own idol from de¬ struction. It is the most vulnerable point in the gold-bug fort today. If the silverites had any sense or courage they would bring the "honest money” ihriekers to terms in short order. A Skirt Ilftnrer'M down. A costume for a skirt dancer costs tom $250 to $400' it. has to l»e renewed Irequently, for yards of thin lace arid lengths of gauzy silk are not caten¬ ated to withstand constant and vigor ills use. Slippers wear out rapidly, as ;heir soles must he of paper and the treasure on them severe. But to offset these extravagances She salary of such a nightly perform mce is very line. Women like Amelia (Hover and Loie Fuller reap a perfect jar vest of shekels by appearing thirty ninutes during the evening, and even in artistic young beginner, like Miss Tel, commands a salary a woman ivho haa served years in another pro ‘eseion would be glad to earn. There is not a new idea in the whole of the Omaha platform. The principles embodied therein have been discussed for ages and are now being successfully carried out in other countries. The man who thinks they are new and un tr j B d ought to ride in an ox cart until he ab i B to keep abreast with the times, The millions of Populist publication;! circulated every week are doing their work silently, powerfully, and per petualiy. Every word of the truth published affects somebody for good. No effort Is lost. That Republican “Wave.” Tho wave of republican prosperity that struck this country last fall, as a result of the election, is still rolling. Only a few weeks ago ai number of men unable to obtain employment were ar ristfd, serleno'd as vagrants, chained together at the .Hides and forced to work on the streets in Des Moines, in republican Iowa, when the thermome¬ ter was 10 degrees below zero, and the wind blowing a hurricane. On die day the above incident occurred other men, who were fortunate enough in finding employment were shoveling sand from the Dps Moines river bottom at 50 cents a day. Still other men were working upon the streets of Washington, the capital city of the nation, at 50 cents a day. Investigation shows that the average wages of the coal miners in (ho Hock¬ ing Valley, Ohio, district is 27 cents a day! Farm hands all over tin country are working for $8 and $10 a month and some as low as $6 and $7. Cotton goes from the producer at less than 4 cents a pound In many in¬ stances, while wheal^has simply struck bed rock. Only a few weeks ago over 135,000 families applied for help in the city of New York in a period of eight, days. With an average of four persons to each family there were more than a half million people in that, great city in a destitute condition! Every city, town and hamlet in the country has a proportional number of those who re¬ quire charitable aid, and yet in the light of these astounding facts—with distress and destitution on every hand people suffering witli hunger and cold, with millions half fed and half clothed, those who proclaim this anom¬ alous condition of the country are de¬ nounced by the heartless classes who have produced these conditions, and their thoughtless and stupid followers, as calamity howlers, and creating dis¬ content among the people. In looking around for tho promised wave of prosperity that was to follow the “republican victory” of last fall, even the optimist falls to And it. Tho truth is it was only tho superficial and very foolish people who expected any improvement to follow as a result of the election. There must be a change of conditions, and this can only he brought about by a chango of policy, radically different from the present financial policy of the government foslerod and sustained by both of tho old parties. To keep on voting for either one of D>e old parties at this time, coasider J ItOP ’’ ° i « ft*!' I lift’?, PREFERRED TO DIE. 8ad Story of One Olrl vtAditv than Wed a Brutal Cripple. A little girl in India went to the mis¬ sionary school. She was a pretty, clever little thing, and so attracted thi teacher that she ventured to visit hei in her home. She found the child overshadowed by the horror of her ap¬ proaching marriage. As a baby she had been betrothed, but, according to custom, she lived in her father’s house till sho was 12; then she was taken from her own people and given over to her lilisband, a hideous little man, de¬ formed, his face scarred with dis¬ ease, of bad character, and notoriously given to drink. The child was terri¬ fied of him and ho derived a ghoul like pleasure from her terror—used to Jump at her in tho durk, muke faces at her, and told her that once really married to him and in liis home he and his old mother would make short work of her beauty with a red-hot fork, so that It would soon he difficult to choose between their two faces. At last the fatal day arrived. The missionary’s heart ached for the little friend she was unable to help, and as she went about her work she prayed, says a writer in Temple Bar, that God might save Ills hapless creature. At noon the child's mother burst into tho house. “Nahoml is dead!” she cried. The two women hurried to her home. She had washed her little person and her hair, had braided It imatiy, had put on her bridal gown, had decorated heiself with flowers and Jewelry, and then had gone quietly into the yard behind the hotfse, where a datura tree hung its great white trumpets against the blue sky, dug up and ate a little of its poi¬ sonous root, and then crept back into her home, where she now lay, cold, stark - free. Give I * Government Bank**. The issue is squarely drawn between the people and the banks. As to money, shall it he based upon hank credit, or upon the credit of the nation—the peo¬ ple's wealth? As to the deposit and security and loan distribution of the people’s several surplus savings, or token credit, money, shall its safe keep¬ ing and judicious, careful loan distri¬ bution be undertaken and guaranteed by irresponsible banking corporations, or by the people themselves, in their sovereign capacity, as a co-operative hanking corporation, through govern¬ mental agencies? Give us government banks. Talmage, Ram Jones, and no other freacher of any note has uttered a word of condemnation of the Sunday session the day before the final ad¬ journment of the Fifty-third congress. Congress was not only in session all day, but a number of member took the occasion to “wind up” by getting uproariously drunk, several members being so far gone that they had to be removed from the floor of tne house. This ending was characteristic of that congress that will go clown in history as the most infamous in the history oi the country up to this time. VOL. II. NO. 21. GOLD VERSUS PAPER UNION SOLDIER AND GREEN¬ BACK CURRENCY. Fought Side by Side—National Supremacy Sustained by Their United Efforts— Gold Is a Coward and Retreats in Time of War. In 1862, when liberty was assailed by grim-visaged war, gold, as ever a coward, retreated to vaults and to Europe. Then as Minerva sprung full armed and ready for victorious combat from the brain of her parent, so sprang from the brains of wise statesmen the millions of greenbacks ready to save the menaced nationality. They shel¬ tered, fed, clothed and armed tiie sol¬ diers; built ironclads and manned them not alone for the union, but for the con¬ federacy as well. With the aid of tho hoys fn blue they conquered. Peace once here, the coward, gold, whose em isaries had traitorously crippled the nation by crippling the greenback, re- - turned, and lias been for thirty years waging subtle and insidious war upon the national life by seeking to destroy the savior of ’65—the greenback. Now the warfare is open and avowed. Tho battle is on, it is Gold vs. Greenback. Will tho American patriots stand firm? Will the G. A. It. see its comrade de- - feated? Will the son of the veteran see tho power that saved, through his father, liberty for him, destroyed? Traitors they who cry out against the greenback! It is as much a sign of nationality and sovereignly as is the flag. “Shoot him on the spot who hauls down one” is tho cry. Of the two the greenback has most power, and ho who decrys that should lie exported with gold to some country where liber¬ ty is not. Beware of any cry that does not Include all the Omaha platform. Let not our ranks he divided by the silver issue. The whole includes air its parts. The Peoplo’s party includes free silver and more. Encourage the free silver discussion in the o id par ties, but shoul¬ der to shoulder forward under the banner on which is money, land and transportation, To that banner all shall yet rally, and the first battle¬ ground—the silver dollar—only pre¬ pares the way for the victory for the legal tender paper, Let dissention rage and disrupt tho old. AH frag¬ ments thrown off by schism will unite with this large young party that has no leveller and acknowledges no au¬ thority but truth and justice As well curtail the declaration of 1776/ as that at Omaha, Rejoice in ihm new parties >'m, ou the platform now i unto which they shall step. After taking the first sliver stop the Other two will be easy. dawn¬ ‘iWn^grnUon ing light of victory is in these SIRKSjif t n the old. - That taffiRKi wisdom"^;’!? n * aUar Btono of time, Eternal 'ways To build a temple mor’e t ta°w n —Chicago Expi^kl’ Oh, for Men With llackbones. The railway managers are hastening government ownership of railways as rapidly as almost any other influence by their cruel and heartless blacklist¬ ing system, and their arbitrary methods of dealing with the public. Aaasamplo of methods it is stated that the Great Northern railway requires applicants for positions on that line to fill out a History of their past lives, stating when and where they have worked for several years previous, why they left their positions, and giving their height, weight, age, color of hair, eyes and eyebrows, distinctive marks, etc. In addition to this other roads require proof that the applicant is not a mem¬ ber of any labor union. You would not have thought a'system of this kind possible a quarter of a century ago, and it was not thus, hut it has gradu¬ ally developed crawled steadily upon the people as Ihe snake crawls upon its victim, until to-day labor seems powerless to shake it off. Why are yon, railroad employe and other labor¬ ing men, in such toils, arid why do you submit to such tyranny? Are you powerless? Certainly, unless you con¬ clude to be men and not cringing ser vlles. You have permitted yourselves to he voted inlo present conditions and aided it by your votes, and now if you will not rise to the dignity of in dependent manhood, to the position of freemen, and undo the wrongs you are suffering by an intelligent use of tho ballot you deserve to suffer, and you will suffer more than you are now undergoing, Oh, that men would think as they never have before. As you care for your wives and your ehii dren, in God’s name, and in the name of humanity, rise to the dignity of true manhood and assert your rights and cease to he slaves. Relief from galling oppression is at hand if men will only be men. Have we become a nation of men without backbones? It would seem so. Q |l'leiity of Time. We would suggest to ail Populists to refrain from making presidential nom¬ inations in 1896. This is premature. Ixits of things will happen before it is time to make nominations, and the ad¬ vocacy of Individuals will prove a dis- * turbing issue. The right men will be found at the right time. Wait for events. There is another congress to come yet. and a long one at that. It is sure to do many fool things that will feed the reform flame. The thing to do during the next twelve months is to educate, especially to circulate our papers and literature. Get the readers for Populist papers and they wili do the rest.—Non Conformist. While the papers are howling about the “$9,000,000 dollars lost” in the last bond deal—why not state the whole :ruth? The whole amount of the bonds is a dead loss, that must be paid in the abor and produce of the American peo¬ ple.