The Enid Weekly Wave. (Enid, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 24, 1895 Page: 6 of 8
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ENID WEEKLY WAVE.
EnM War* F'rtaftn* Co . law. Pnb-a.
J. L. 1HSMBKHQ, UmnmsT.
ENID. - • • OKLAHOMA.
A herd of about 7,000 hoi ses was
taught on a Washington ranch recent-
ly by the Portland Horse Meat Canning
company at $3 a head.
In his latssi poem Edwin Arnold
lays: "Hut at Kanl-no-hanl-no-hashl
tonight thero is ending of pain." Per-
haps he misunderstood the brakeman.
The New Jersey fish commission has
started a movement for the purpose of
exterminating carp in the streams that
wero liberally stocked with that species
of fish a few years ago. It has been dis-
covered that carp live on fish spawn,
and that they multiply very rapidly.
Kinco their introduction in local waters
other food fish have gradually dimin-
ished and it is feared they will soon bo
in full possession. Fish Commissioner
Wm. G. Wise of Burlington, N. J., has
granted a special permission to a num-
ber of local fishermen to fish for carp,
other fish taken at the same time to bo
turned over to him for stocking pur-
poses. July 24 400 pounds of carp were
taken, and another haul was made of
1,400 founds the next day.
United States Consul Henry P. Mor-
ris, located at Ghent, Belgium, makes a
report on the income tax of Prussia.
In 1894-5 the incomo from this source
was $29,04.'!,084.07. It was assessed
upon 2,520,930 taxpayers, of whom 1,922
"wero societies or corporations. These
latter paid $1,845,272.62, while the
2,619,008 individuals contributed $27,-
196,811.45. According to the rolls, pre-
HORR ANI)
[CONTINUE ) FHOM I.AST WliKK
Chicago, July 30.—The Horr-Harvey
debate was brought to a close to-day.
Tho question of the wisdom of the
United States returning to free coin-
age was the main subject discussed.
The condensed report follows:
The Question at lasue.
Mr. Horr—• • * We are discuss-
ing a great question, and now to-day
we come down to the gist of this whole
business. The question Is, can this
nation alone establish the old ratio of
IS to 1 and maintain it among the na-
tions of tho world?
Mr. Harvey—* * * In beginning
the debate to-day, T hand to the stenog-
rapher a table, from pages 184 to 18G
of the mint report for 1893, of the gold
and silver coined In this country from
1792 to 1873, and make it a part of the
debate. I do this to remove the repre-
sentation that has gone all over the
country that for the first half of the
century we were on a silver basis and
from 1850 to 1873 we were on a gold
basis. The best answer to that argu-
ment is the production of the table of
coins themselves. The statement that
gold did not seek the mints for the first
fifty years and that silver did not seek
the mints for the la3t thirty years
prior to 1873 Is not true.
Tnge 130 of the United States Coin-
age Laws, Appendix and Statistics,
1894—I now hand the book to Mr. Horr
—gives the approximate stock of money
In the world. The stock of gold there
given is $3,901,900,000; the stock of sil-
ver there given is $3,931,300,000. This
estimate includes gold and silver coins
and gold and silver bullion available
for coinage Into money. I have given
It to you as expressed in dollars. As
pared in view of tho tax, the number ot
individuals was 30,387,331. Of this ."Pressed In space or bulk there is, if
total 21,233,024 were exempt becauso
their Incomes wero less than 900 marks
($214), or because of their foreign na-
each were melted Into a solid mass, the
cube of 22 feet of gold and the cube of
66 feet of silver. In chapter V of
tlonallty. The population affected by "Coin's Financial School" you are told
the tax was 9,117,426 represented by how t0 make tills calculation. But it
2,619,008 taxpayers! The amount of tax j 18 sufficient in this debate that we deal
foreach taxpayer averaged 2.15 per cent wllh these two metals as expressed In
in the cities, 1.61 per cent in the I dollars.
country, and 1.98 per cent of general ! The quantity of these two metals
Incomes declared. The tax per person available for coinage into money Is
amounts to 1.65 In the cities, 2.32 in the what Is left after the demand for them
TT t D Y'FY ' one nat'on can do it—at least he does
* not propose to keep that ratio. He
says In his book "they Bay it Is not bi-
metallism unless the two metals stay
at exactly the parity of 16 to 1. These
men do not know what bimetallism is.
It may be desirable to let one metal go,
as it would be now with both as pri-
mary money. We may have bimetal-
lism and bimetallic prices whether one
metal has a tendency to leave us more
than the other or not, and if desirable
to stop this leaving a change in the
ratio will do it, and if necessary we can
do it so as to set the other metal going
so that we can feed Europe either
metal wo choose." So he is not a stick-
ler for 16 to 1 at all. Now 1 start out
with this proposition: Nations by
their laws do not fix the value of things.
They can not do it if tliey try. The
actual value of the two metals at the
present time is wide apart. The ratio
of 16 to 1 is today a thing of the past;
the value of the two metals in the mar-
kets of the world has changed all this
discussion that we have had. How it
happened to have been done, what
brought it about, does not bear upon
this question today. The figures 16 to
1 do not represent tho commercial value
of the two today, nobody claims they
do. * * • It is useless to talk
about fixing a comparative ratio be-
tween any two substances by legisla-
tion. Is there a man living who thinks
all the nations in the world combined
could fix a ratio of value between a
bushel of wheat and a bushel of oats?
Try it on. You will see where you will
land. If you have a small crop of
wheat up will go your ratio, and law
has no more effect on it than it has to
make water run up hill instead of down.
Does any one think that by passing an
act you could stay the floods of Niagara
and make them run up stream? Why
not? Well, there is a little difficulty
in the way. The law of gravitation
stands between you and the accomplish-
ment of such an act. Consequently
tho same thing occurs when you come
to the ratio between any two articles.
They are determined by the different
conditions over which legislators have
no control.
city districts, and 38 cents In the
country. The general average was 89Vi
tents per person. There were only 321,-
196 actual taxpayers that had an ln-
>wmo of more than 3,000 marks ($714).
of the arts and manufactures are sup-
plied. As civilization has grown the
use in arts and manufactures of these
metals has grown out of proportion to
the increase in population.
Ki-port of tho Director of tlio Ml it.
From Their Organization, by Calendar
Years.
Silver Coinage.
Years.
1793-5 ..
1796 ..
1797 ..
1798 ..
1799 ..
1800 ..
1801 ..
1802 ..
1S03 ..
1804 ..
1805 ..
1806 ..
1807 ..
1808 ..
1809 ..
1810 ..
1811 ..
1812 ..
1813 ..
1814 ..
1816 ..
1817 ..
1818 ..
Dollars.
. 204,791
72,920
7,776
.. 327,536
.. 423,515
.. 220,920
54,454
41,650
66,064
19,570
321
The death of Hjalmar HJorth Boya-
en in the prime of his powers must
•waken regret among all who are truly I
Interested In the development of Amor- : Calendar
lean literature. A native of Norway,
Prof. Boyesen had done the greater
part of his work Bud won his fame in
Ihls country, and his successes ale a
matter of pride to both countries alike.
A man of broad sympathies and keen
Insight, he united in an unusual degree
the faculties of critic and creator, es-
sayist and romancer. It was a sign of
*>]e symmetry of his development tha:
ho Wits a student of books .as well aa of
men, and that in both occupations he
found occasion to furnish the world
•with thoughtful and suggestive matter.
His loss will bo felt abroad no less than
tit home, for there he had countless
friends and a remarkably wide acquain-
tance with the great group of modern
wrltors, one of tho foremost among
whom is that other great Norwegian,
Bjorastjerno DJornson. It was partly
from associations, perhaps, that he im-
bibed the taste which marks his val-
uable and Interesting work, lie will be
regretted and remembered as one of the
few strong forces working in a distinct- jgog
ly commercial age toward the culture j
of his fellow men. - I js22
— j 1823
During last year 1,823 rail ray em- 1824
ployes were killed and 23,42j were in- 1S25
jured, as compared with 2,727 killed 1S26
and 31,729 injured in 18S3. This mar'ied 1827
decrease in casualty is In part due to jg2S
the decrease in the number ot men em- ig29
ployed, and tho dccreaso In the volume 1830
of business handled. The increased use jg31
of automatic appliances on railway 1
equipment also may have rendered rail- ' is33
way employment less dangerous and it isS4
may bo that the grade of eldclency of 1835
employes has been raised. The number 1836 1,000
of passengers killed was 324, an In- 1837
crease of 25, and the number Injured irm
was 3,304, a decreaso of 195. Of the 1839 300
total number of fatal casualties to rail- i84o 61,005
way employes, 251 were duo to coupling is41 173.000
and uncoupling cars, 439 to falling from i842 184,618
trains and engines, 50 to overhead ob- 1843 165,100
structions, 145 to collisions, 108 to de- j 1844 20,000
railments, and the balance to various i845 24.500
other causes not easily classified. To i84s 169,600
show the ratio of casualty, it may be ^47 140,750
stated that 1 employe was killed out of i848 15,000
every 428 In service, and 1 injured out jg<9 62,600
of overy 33 employed. Tho trainmen i850 47 500
perform the most dangerous service, 1 18B1 U00
out of every 156 employed having been j ^53 1 iW0
killed, and 1 out of every 12 having lg53 46 U0
been .njured. The ratio of casualty to ,SM 3;U40
passengers is in striking contrast to „55 26,000
that of railway employes, 1 passenger 1856 t;;i,500
having been killed out of each 1,912,618 94.000
carried, or for each 44.103,228 miles lg6g
traveled, and 1 Injured out of each 204,- lg59
«48 carried, or for each 4,709,771 miles 1860
traveled. A distribution of accidents ,861
to tho territorial groups exhibits tho 186,
diversity in the relative safety of rail- m3
way employment and of railway travel 1864
Half
Dollars.
$ 161,572
1,659
636,500
733,930
78.500
12,090
27,660
. BJ . . lOOn •1.170
In tho different sections of the country lg65 47,000
1866
1867
a wave of excitement seems to bo
sweeping over tho entire west. Wichita "5'
u wrestling with a mysterious ■. islta- *!
tlon several feet Jeep, of beetles; a
man in Illinois woke up the other morn-
ing and found his pumpkin vino had
twenty-seven specimens of the ple-
frult 011 It, while South Dakota has the
promise of tho Yzuaga divorce next
month.
In Monterey county, California, there
aro Beveral estates of 30,000 and 40,000 0ij rat(o of 1# <0 j j g(ate now that I
acreB, twenty-one persons owning more do not Relieve Mr. Harvey thinks any
than 9,"00 acres of land each.
49,625
60,325
382,700
424,300
1870 445,463
1871 1,117.130
1872 1.118.600
Dimes, half-dimes and 3-cent pieces
are omitted from report.
Odd Nation Can Not.
Mr. Horr—I had Just started to show
that no nation alone can establish the
15,144
11,945
15,851
78,259
105,861
419,788
525,788
684,300
702,903
638,138
601,822
814,023
620,951
519,537
23,575
607,783
9S0.161
1,104,000
375,561
652,898
779,786
817,100
1,752,447
1,471,583
2,002,090
2,746,700
1,537,600
1,856,078
2,382,400
2,936,830
2,398,500
2,603,000
3.206.002
2.676.003
3,273,100
1,814,910
1,773,000
1,748,768
1,145,054
355,500
1.484,882
3,056,000
1,885.500
1.341,500
2,257,000
1,870,000
1,880,000
1,781,000
1,341.500
301.375
110,565
2,430,354
4,111,000
2.288,725
1,903,500
1,482,000
5,998,000
2,074,000
1,032,850
2.078.950
802,175
709,830
518.785
593,450
899,812
810,162
769,100
725,950
829,758
1,741,655
866,772
Now, Mr. Harvey and I both agree
that the free coinage of silver will de-
crease the measure of value used here
in this country. He doesn't deny that.
The burden of his whole talk in this de-
bate is that we ought to have a cheaper
measure; that the unit is worth too
much. So now we agree that it will
change the measure. Mr. Harvey says
then, that is what ought to be done, be-
cause, he says, the whole world is in
debt and our country is on the brink of
ruin, because tho present dollar is too
valuable. That is his position. That
in a position from which I differ.
He proposes to relieve tho distress of
the people by letting them pay what
they owe in cheaper money. I know I
do not represent you in that respect.
Mr. Harvey. I answer him, "No, the
debts of the day, the bulk of them, have
all been contracted with the gold dollar
as the measure and to relieve the pay-
ment of them in any way by a trick of
this kind of repudiation."
Mr. Harvey—When I reach Mr. Horr's
argument as to legislation not con-
trolling the value of gold and silver,
my answer I think will be satisfactory.
I now continue reading from Professor
Suess. * * Hero in the United States we
produce a little more gold than we use
in the arts, but the portion left for use
as money is pvowing less. On page 102
of the book on coinage laws, etc., here-
tofore referred to, you get the annual
gold product ot the United States. On
page 455 of the same book, you get the
gold furnished by tho mints to be used
in tho art3 and manufactures for the
years 1880 to 1892 inclusive. I put
these two together and here is the re-
sult. I hand this table to the stenog-
rapher to insert in the report:
Gold Production Slnco 1880.
Production of gold In the United
States and amount used in the arts for
the years 1880-1892:
Years. Production. Use in Arts.
188 0 $36,000,000 $10,962,600
188 1 34,700,000 11,770,700
188 2 32,500,000 10,868,000
188 3 30,000,000 14,458,800
1884 30,800,000 14,500,000
18S5 31,800,000 11,824,742
188 6 35,000,000 13,069,529
188 7 33,000,000 14,810,346
188 8 33,175,000 16,514,842
188 9 32,800,000 16,697,056
189 0 32,845,000 17,655,960
189 1 33,175,000 19,686,916
189 2 33,000,000 19,329,074
We thus see that while we produced
of gold $36,000,000 in 1880, we produced
only $33,000,000 in 1892, with popula-
tion larger and necessity for gold great-
er at the latter period. But the
comparison Is more serious when you
notice what is left for use as money at
the latter period as compared with the
former. In 1880 there was left for coin-
ago after deducting what was used in
tho arts $25,000,000, while in 1892 less
than $14,000,000 was left. This es-
timate does not include the $3,500,000
before estimated as melted up in the
coins by manufacturers, and does not
include gold lost by boarding, accident,
fire or abrasion.
Silver of the World.
Wc have seen that the supply of sil-
ver in 1894 available for use ^s money
was $3,931,100,000 (seo page 130,Coinage
Laws and Statistics, for the figures I
am about to read); $950,000,000 of this
silver Is In use as money In India, $725,
000,000 in China, $88,000,000 in Mexico,
Central and South America, $81,300,000
In Japan, $110,000,000 in the Straits.
The remainder, or about $1,900,000,000,
In use a3 token money or occupying
the quasi position of limping bimetal-
lism In tho other nations of the world.
Tho larger part of this Is divided as fol
lows; United States 624,000,000,
United Kingdom $112,000,000, France
$500,000,000. Germany $215,000,000,
Spain $155,000,000, and the remainder
among the smaller nations of the earth.
The foregoing figures are all coinage
valj© jxi our dollars.
A natural inquiry is, what becomes
of the Bllvtr wo are producing? I
quote from an interview with G. H.
Gibson, a prominent New York stock-
broker who has Just returned from Lon-
don, in the Chicago Post, a gold stand-
ard paper, of the 8th inst.:
"I talked with Sir Hector M. Hay, a
member of tho firm doin- the largest
bullion business in the world. In reply
to a direct inquiry as to how much sil-
ver bullion he regarded as existing in
the market in Europe, he stated his
belief that the visible supply in Europe
did not exceed 3,000,000 pounds sterling.
"Sir Charles Freemantle, the master
of the British mint on Tower Hill, told
me five years ago that there was no
stock of silver bullion to speak of in
Europe. It came by every steamer
and went away by every steamer. On
inquiry of one of tho highest statistical
authorities in London the fact was con-
firmed that despite the demonetization
of silver by all of the great nations, in-
cluding India, the use of silver in the
arts has grown so wonderfully that
there is a ridiculously small supply in
the market at any one time."
Last Year's Silver Production.
The production of silver in the United
States last year was hullion value $40,-
000,000, and we exported bullion value
$37,164,713. Thus there was a demand
in the balance of the world for substan-
tially all of our silver. These are the
facts, and this is the situation before
us as we begin the argument for in-
dependent action of the United States.
Let us first sound a few principles:
The more costly either of these metals
become, the greater the demand for it
among tho rich for use as ornaments.
Where tho dearer is used exclusively
for primary money, it is the one that
is hoarded. When gold and silver
wero both used as money in their rights
silver was hoarded by the plain people
and was brought forth to serve them
in time of need. Gold is principally
hoarded by the rich to serve a purpose
in bulling the money market. Hoard-
ing of silver by the people was bene-
ficial; hoarding of gold is an Injury.
The cause of hoarding in the two in-
stances is different. In the first in-
stance it Is to serve a natural law pro-
viding for the future; in the second in-
stance It is a commercial motive affect-
ing injuriously the community.
This is one of the reasons why silver
has always proven the more stable
money.
The production of the two metals
combined is moro regular than either
separately, and is safer to rely on for
a stable money measurement of values
than either could be separately.
Where two metals are relied on for
money, with the right of the debtor
to pay in either, if the demand for
money is sufficient, this demand regu-
lates the commercial value of the two
metals at the ratio fixed by law. Sup-
ply and demand affect the value of
these metals the same as all other
property.
When the law bestows the full func-
tion of money upon these metals, it
creates a use for them that they did not
before have. (Applause.) A new use
to an article adds to its value. The
new use of corn for making glucose,
candy and molasses has increased its
value. The extent to which corn can
be supplied Is virtually unlimited, and
with other farm productions unprofita-
ble, the corn crop will increase and
the price will drop.
In the case of the two metals we are
considering, they differ from corn in
this: The use of these metals for
money, when given full money func-
tions, is comparatively unlimited. The
supply, unlike corn, is limited. Their
geological formation, and the experi-
ence of mankind in their search for
and development prove this. The ab-
normal demand for money In all ages,
now at a tension; the fact that tens of
thousands of men are continually
searching for the metal from which it
is made, and the further fact that all
that is now in existence outside of use-
ful articles and ornaments can. if
meltei down, be put into three rooms
of this building, prove conclusively
that the supply is limited.
Wc can, therefore, better understand
the effect to be produced by the United
States throwing open its mints to silver
and conferring upon that metal the full
functions of money when I shall reach
it directly.
Mr.
Don't "Want Chesp Money.
Horr—* * * Now, I ask the
army of professionals, do you think it
would benefit you to vote down the
price of the dollar in which you are
paid? They are all paid in money for
their work. Will you be better off by
getting just the same number of dollars
but having them worth just half as
much? Well, they say, we don't want
you to submit that proposition to us.
We fellows that have studied so that wo
have got a little bit of gray matter so
that it is somewhat active in our brains
—you don't want to ask us whether we
will be benefited by making us think we
are getting the old pay, when we are
only getting half as much. Would they
vote no? No doubt about it. They say
we want the best money, tho money
that will buy the most of the comforts
and the necessities of life. Aren't
they right about that? • * • I next
call up thoge engaged in trades and
transportation. That includes all the
railroad hands, all tho steamboat
hands. That Includes all the people
who work in different trades. Type-
writers, men and women, they have
cultivated themselves bo they can do
good work and the world pays them for
It. The brakemen -It includes people
who take risks.
Mr. Harvey -I wish I had time In this
debate to characterise tho last speech
of Mr. Horr as It deserves, but I can
only stop now to say that when I said
all the gold and silver In the world
available for money coi'.ld bcjiut Into
three rooms In this building I knew
It would make Mr. Horr wince. The
statement that all the gold in
the world available for money
can be put in the space of
twenty-four feet is one of the argu-
ments that worries him the most. It
It an object lesson, and if Mr. Horr
were on our side of this case, with his
inimitable wit and sarcasm, he would
go around with a picture, a twenty-two
foot block of canvass, and he would
have it on every stage where he spoke,
and he would ridicule the gold gam-
blers of the world until he would satisfy
his audience that the man who would
advocate that that twentytwo foot block
should supply the people of the world
with primary money had a soul in him
no larger than a mustard seed. (Ap-
plause.) • • • There is great con-
cern among some of our citizens that
if free coinage of silver is adopted those
holding gold obligations will bo paid
In silver, also that gold will leave us,
and a debtor who owes gold will not
be able to get it without paying a high
premium in order to discharge his debt.
Both of these questions can be answered
together.
Mr. IIorr Clone*.
Mr. Horr—This debate is drawing to
a close. I desire to state to this audi-
ence that silver has had its day as a
money of final redemption. It will al-
ways be used as money for the pur-
poses for which nature adopted it.
Gold has come to stay because gold is
better adapted than silver for the great
transactions of American life. It has
come to stay because the people of the
whole civilized world like it, believe in
it, prefer' it. (Applause.) * « * «
Listen, Brother Harvey. The sun is
the center of our system. The world
revolves around the sun and the moon
revolves around the world, the lesser
always around the greater. So in the
use of metals as money, you should
plan the more valuable where civiliza-
tion demands it and make that the cen-
ter, silver to revolve around it, and
copper around that, but the yellow
metal should always be the center as
is the yellow orb of the universe. (Ap-
plause.) Don't forget it. The people
of this country, Mr. Harvey, are
going to decide this question. I do not
say that they will decide it as I think
they ought to, but I will say this, if
they decide it as you think they will,
I will base my reputation as a prophet
and as a man of sense on the result, and
if I live—I may not— if I do not I will
look down from my seat in the heavens,
(laughter) and I will see this nation, of
ours suffering as I have told you today.
No people can violate the great laws
of the universe and go unhurt.
A single standard, the best metal in
the world, should be used as the basis
of money and tho center of the mone-
tary system. If I am right time will
demonstrate it.
I discussed this question rrom prin-
ciple. If I know my own heart I want
to do what is best for the people of this
nation. I believe that bimetallism un-
dertaken on the plan of Mr. Harvey,
by passing a law and placing this na- j
tion on a silver basis, on the plan that ;
is today in use in Mexico, China and a
few of the lower grade nations of the
world, would bring disaster to the busi- I
ness interests and to the working peo- j
pie of this entire country. (Applause.) |
It is against that that I am arguing, j
and if I am wrong I am not to biamo |
l>Ir. Ilarvoy Closes.
If we have free coinage of silver the
use of money in tho United States will
establish a parity between the two, and :
then gold will be held. A man set- I
tllng a balance with us in Europe, if
he cannot get silver to send he must
send his gold. The argument I have
made in this debate today will convince
you that upon the United States adopt-
ing the free coinage of silver Its ex-
tensive use as money will take tho
metal out of the markets of the world
and force a parity as it was forecd
prior to 1873. With Independent action
of the United States other nations will
follow our example. We have allowed
England to set the example for the
world. The United States when she
exerts her power is greater than Eng-
land. (Applause.) And when she ex-
erts It tho other nations of the earth
will take hope. France will follow.
She said at the conference of Brussels,
"We are here to hear your proposition
and are ready to accede to it. Name it,
what Is it?" Mexico and South Ameri-
ca will be with us; China and Japan
and all the weaker nations of the world,
and with France by our side we will
have more strength, more influence up-
on the metals of the world than the
Latin Union and the United States had
in 1873, when they were at a parity.
(Applause.) All wo have to do is to
Nerves
and
Blood
Are inseparably connected. The for-
mer depend simply, solely, solidly
upon the latter. If it is pure they are
properly fed aud there is no " nervous-
ness." If it is impure they aro fed on
refuso and the horrors of nervous
prostration result. Feed the nerves
on pure blood. Make pure blood and
keep it pure by taking
Sarsaparilla
The One True Blood Purifier.
tli*! after-dinner pill aad
f V cathartic.
rnauLH uuuiitf BALSAM
is excellent for all throat inflammations and for
asthma. Consump-
tives will invariably
derive benefit from
its iiBe, as it quickly
abates tho cough,
renders expectora-
tion ea*y, assisting
naturo in restoring
wanted tissues.
There is a large per-
centage of those who
suppose their cases
to be consumption
who are only suffer-
ing from a chronic
cold or deep seated cough, often aggravated by
catarrb For catarrh use Ely's Cream Halm. Both
remedies are pleasant to use. Cream Balm, 60c. per
bottle; Pineola l!alsam,25c. at Druggists. In quan-
tities of $'2.f 0 will deliver on receipt of amount.
ELY BROTHERS, GO Warren St., New York.
i nuiiu n I uii iiuiiii.^i n it ni\u. ■
I IMPERIAL^
II <5 RANUM \
| Is unquestionably a mostj
|valuable FOOD /hne sick|
koom,where either little^
|one or adult needs deli-?
|cate, nourishing: diet!!;
I Sold by DRUGGISTS l;VERYWHERE ! J
? John Carle <Si Sons, New York. J
tub Best
Waterproof
The FISH BRAND SLICKER Is warranted water
proof, anil will keep you dry In tho hardest storm. Tho
new POMMEL SLICKER la a perfect riding coat, and
covers the entire saddle. Roware of Imitations. Don't
buy a coat If the "Fish Brand" is not on it. Illustra-
Cataloptie lr- o. A. .J TOWF.it, Boston, Mass.
ondaryorTor-
Itlary liLOOD'i'OISON pormanoutly
loured in 16 to 35 days. You can be treated at
■home for pa mo prioo under same guarau-
Ity. If you prefer to come hore we willcon*
tract to pay railroad fareand hotel bllls.and
nocharge.lf we fail to cure. If you have taken mer-
curjt
pains. Mat m . HP
Pimples, Copper Color« il Spots, Uleers on
pains, Muooub Patches in mouth. Sore Throat,
we puaranteo to cure. We solicit tho moat obsti-
nate cases and challenge the world for
case we cannot cure. This disease hns always
battled the skill of the most eminent physi-
cians. #500,000 capital behind our uncondi-
tional smarauiy. Absolute proofs «* nt sealed on
implication. Address COOK KEMEOY CO.,
307 Masonic Temple, CHICAGO, ILL*
Cut out and send this advortlsiimeiit.
Monthly for a poon roiiector ano
Salesman in <-very tow u and county
in United State*. Man or woman,
permanent |>ositlon for suitable
•erson. Write fop Hie position at on«-e.
N. A. BRUCE & CO., 200 O'way.New , ork.
P
|Lf
#33
F>AIO)| /T% ii JOIf N W. ill O It 111 s,
Wunliliitfton, D.O.
3yraiu lutot war, lOadjudicatinBclaitus, atty fainc®.
Berlin's oldest inhabitant is a shoe-
maker named Prenzel, who is now 101
Till four years ago he worked at his
trade. Ho smokes and drinks coffee.
VV ATCTKD —Anv lady wlFhlnq; to make som
/ money quii'klv and m edio* steady employ-
mmit should work for mo selling medicated wafers.
Address A. M. LiK, M. D., 213 Columbus ave*
• i was ar «ea.
Bound for Boston the other evening
by steamer my attention \vas called—
by myBClf—to a young couple who oc-
cupied the after part of the boat—the
narrow deserted place abaft the saloon
shut out from other passengers by
little glass doors. Both of them wer
alone, except that they were with each
other, nor did they have knowledge that
I was near at hand, concealed in a
shadow of my own casting.
"You are cold," I heard him whisper;
have the heart to go ahead and do the | "Cold and weary. Sit up closer to me.
right. (Applause.) The "way to re- j Lean on me. And then it seemed as
sume" was to resume, and the way to
remonetize is to remonetize. (Ap-
plause.) Creditors the world over
when they can control the legislation
of tho country, can dictate what money
shall be named in the bond, and lCng-
land is doing that; the necessities of the
people make them sign tho bonds to get
the money. To relieve the necessities
of today they will chance the future
and sign tho bonds. But tho day of
reckoning is coming, and Kngllsh war
ships are in all the harbors of the
smaller countries; the Monroe doctrine
has been violated in the western hem-
isphere by reason of the gold standard.
What we want to do is to say to tho
creditor, "You cannot name in your
bond gold alone."
The debate then closed and many
resolutions of thanks to Illinois club,
Judges, clerks, assistants, etc., were
unanimously adopted. Both speakers
cpoke kludly of the manner in which
the Inter Ocean and llecord reported
the debate.
(THE END.)
w .ii vi
A man In Horton, Kau., who s^lla
patent risht«, is appropriately uauioJ
Weary.
though he saw for the first time an op
portunity to steal home, and with a
little convulsive gurgle h« added; "Lean
on me always—lean on me through
life!"
I waited with bated breath—I had
baited it myself—for the answer. The
steamer had Just entered the swell of
the harbor bar and the motion was de-
pressing. I heard her swallow a few
times and then say faintly:
"If you will—oh, if you will pardon
me, let me first, for a brief season, lean
upon this rail!"—New York Recorder.
A Member of th« Force.
"A good mauy amusing Incidents
came out In our first examination of
the police," Bays Col. John W. Ela, the
apostle of local civil service reform. "I«
recall one incident which struck me
as being particularly funny. We were
putting ore of the patrolmen through,
and the big fellow fumed and fretted
and perspired as If he wore actually
tn tho sweat box. At last I asked him
j this question: "What is a felony?'
j "Tho poor fellow lookod stunned for
n moment or two, but finally there
came an expression of returning reason
Into hlB eyes, and In a triumphant tons
be anBwered: "A t'lng on tho t'umbl'"
1 —Chicago Record
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Isenberg, J. L. & Isenberg, Edna A. The Enid Weekly Wave. (Enid, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 24, 1895, newspaper, October 24, 1895; Enid, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc111614/m1/6/?rotate=90: accessed April 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.