The Chandler Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, January 11, 1895 Page: 4 of 4
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PSM'IHWD' | ■-
there
was a woman in
the case.
This woman,
in this present
instance, was
passably plain,
but she had
knowledge and
magnetism.
Tom lien ton
first met her
when ho was a
bachelor. She was sweeping the
pavement in front of a tidy, unpreten-
tious frame dwelling, at Atlantic
City, anil not seeing him had thrown
much dust into his eyes. Apologies
followed; her dictation and modula-
tion of voice contrasted strangely
with her pingiiam and her menial
position, and as Kenton passed on lie
fell to wondering. And that night,
by luck, her gown caught in a nail in
the board walk just as he happened
along in time to extricate her. And
then she threw more dust in his eyes.
Her name was Cora bentley. Or-
dinarily close-mouthed, to llenton
she told much. She lived with her
grandmother she said. tJrandma was
a Russian, wealthy, peculiar, and had
rented a little cottage in an out of the
way street at Atlantic City. Grand-
ma never went out and Cora did all
the housework. Only three men ever
called at the house—the butcher, the
baker, the milkman.
Tor a month Kenton and Miss Lent-
ley were boon companions. Their
tastes were identical, their logic ran
to the same syllogism—love, lifg and
death were all material bits that
were immaterial.
One day she passed him with a tall,
sinister-looking man in tow. The
roan said: "It must be done quickly,"
and the girl answered: "I'll catch the
steamer to-morrow." Kenton only
gave *the conversation a jSissing
thought then. Later ho thought it
over.
That evening he heard that a Cap-
tain Nkolski, a well-known Russian,
who stood high in the Russian police,
w as making a 6hort stay at one of the
well-known hotels.
For threg days he saw nothing of
the Lentley weffnan. Then his morn-
ing paper enlightened him. The ar-
ticle was headed: "The Police Puz-
aled," and ran as follows:
"Mrs. Ivan Palitski, a Russian, was
found dead in her bed this morning at
4956 A t Ian' ic avenue. The deceased
had lived in the house for the past
three months, her only compan-
ion beir.g a domestic, who, no
doubt, finding her mistress Jead.
fled for fear of being arrested.
Thero were no marks of violence on
the body, and death was no doubt due
to natural causes. Mrs. Palitski was
arrested ten years o^jo in Moscow
charged with being u Nihilist; bui
owing to great political influence, she
was released and came to this coun-
try. No papers were found in the
house when the police searched this
morning, but her money anil jewels
were found intact, showing that if
foul play was meditated, robbery was
not the motive. The servant had evi-
dently loft the house last Monday for
Mrs. Palitsky had been ^ead for sev-
eral days.
Tommy Kenton's marriage in the
/all was a brilliant one. Everybody
She pursed her lips up and an id. with
some show of coquetry, "Me?"
"Yea," he said. "You. I am gohig
to ask my wife to jret a divorce. If
she does not accept — well — your
grandmother died suddenly, didn't
she? And there weren't any marks
of violence on her body."
"There usually isn't any mark of
violence on the body of one who hae
died a natural death,* said the girl.
"Possibly not," he answered, "and j
I want my wife to either got a divorce
or die a natural death,"and he looked !
at the girl fixedly.
The jfirl «as silent for a little space. j
Then she said: "Why should I help
you. Tom, to get an inoffensive wo>
man out of the way?"
"Because," he answered slowly, "I
want another inoffensive woman to
take her place."
Their eyes met.
Her fingers were working nervously
and the toe of her boot was describ-
ing ungeometrical circles in the
gravel as she answered: "I will help
you."
He was trying to be calm, but hill
lips shook as ho asked: "Can I meet
you hero Wednesday afternoon?"
"Yes," she answered, "and I will
bring the drops with me." Then the
woman in the case dropped the seri-
ous and began to be as other women,
with the smile on her face, and after
rf space, hiding her thoughts. Kenton
took the '.10 train for®Philadelphia.
That night he and his wife were
placing euchre. Kenton was dealing.
"Nan " he began, "I'm tired of mar-
ried life. I want to be free. Will
you get a divorce from me?"
There was a scared little look in her
face as slio glanced up at him.
"I'm perfectly sane, Nan, and ter-
ribly in earnest I never will a thing
unless I do it. You know me enough
to understand that. I'll give yon
grounds for divorce and then you sue.
Clubs are trumps."
"It would kill mo to sue for a di-
vorce, Toip. *
"You'd better do it. Nan, for I moan
to be free. You rinigod there.
played u club and you put a heart on
it. Your mind's not 011 the game."
She played the hand on without
speaking. Then, when he had
handed her the cards, she said trem-
ulously; \N hen do yQB want my de-
HFR UFA D WAS PILLOWED OX HIS BKKAST.
who was anybody was there. Of
course the bride was the prettiest
bride that anyone ever saw. Like-
wise the presents were as handsome
as anybody remembered to have
seen, and half of the invited folks
thought she was far superior to him.
Then six years sped around and
Cupid grew tired of following Mr. and
Mrs. Kenton and went off to attend
to other young folks. Kenton was a
bit more attentive than most married
men,(and knew no clubhouse or had
no business that kept him late at
night. tor six years lie had never
spent a night away from his wife.
And one morning he woke up and
rame to the conclusion that he was
horribly bored, that he wanted to be
free and that his love for his wife was
s bit of (Juixotic imagination.
The whole morning he thought the
matter over and then partly to get
away from his environment and part- 1 #1' u ™ ™ .
ly for a change he took the train for ' l)rouffht ***0 general
New York He walked around the '
city aimlessly until about 3 o'clock South African 1 In tor* Stone,
and then ho walked to Central park. An account of a strange lapidarian
A woman paused him and half turned. ' freak comes all the way from Kimber-
There wa, something familiar in her ' ley. South Africa TVorkmen in the
diamond mines at that place discov-
ered a stone, dark brown in color and
cision?
"To-night is Monday," he said.
"Say Wednesday morniiig before I
go to business."
"All right, Tom."
They playod cards for a time, and
then sho took'a book and lie his
paper.
She cried behind her book, but he
read the stock reports carefully. Then
they went to bed.
"I'm sleepy, too," he said, "and a
good night's sleep won't hurt me."
.lust as iey wore about to retire
sho asked as a favor that the window
be closed. "It's a triflo chilly for
May," sho explained, and I've got a
bad cold as it is."
He was just about dozing off when
he heard her getting up. "What is
it. Nan? '
"My throat is parched. Tom, and I
want some w ater. " * • *
"Let me jret it," he said, starting
up.
"No never mind,eicar, I'm now up.
The water is on the bureau here, and
I'll light the gas a second."
'lit the gas, drank a tumblerful
of water, and then put her hand over
her heart as if nerving herself for an
ordeal. Then she turned the light
out and crept into bed again.
She put her arms around her hus-
band and said: "Tom, dear, mav I
put my head on your chest tonight,
and sleep as we used to when w«
were first married?"
"Certainly, ddtr." he said, "only
don't forget that you give mo your
aa*wer Wednesday morning."
"I won't forget, Tom," she said.
And putting her head on his chesl
she fell asleep praying.
The next morn in . t lie cook sinelled
gas. For over an hour sho sinelled
it and then went upstairs to investi-
^. ate# W hen she came near the sleep-
in- ;i4>artment of her mistress the
cook's mental observation was that
either Mr. or Mrs. Kjoton must have,
inadverianth* left the gas on all
night.
And so the coroner's jury decided
It was a very <deplorable accident,
said everybody, for the couple loveu
each other so. And the policeman
who opened tlit door* when inn
moned by the cook testified beforo
the coroner that Mr. and Mrs. Benton
looked like lovers, for he was smiling
and her head was pillowed on his
breast.
IVHI I'm th« Motrl«- System.
^ I ho cla.sf. of ' 7 of the Jefferson *
medical college. Philadelphia, has de-
cided to use the metric system in writ-
ing their prescriptions \ghen they are
graduated. This action will no doubt
l e handed down from class to class, as
it is the first step made in this country
by a medical college. It is contended
that at the present time all kinds of
weights and measures are used by the
druggists and pharmacist!, thus'lead-
ing to confusion betw<
and the druggist The
Pharmacopoeia of 1890 pronounced in
fa\or of the metric system, jet it is
only by concerted uetion on the part
of the doctors and the pharmacists
REPUBLICAN
DEMOCRAT
S.125.OOO
4. 950.000.
%
,Wp.:ivJ- ■■ ...
MORE BONDS.
Mora Hod(Ii! More ltnnda! More bonds!
More lionds! More Bonds! More Itonds!
More Honds! More llouds! Morellouds!
j More Honds I
What a commonplace statement—
and yet, how awful its import.
'MORE BONDS TTIEPRY.' holds that t>ebs' action was contempt
I A * of court—considering, we presume^
that the railroads are a part of thi
MORE BONDS! MORE BONDS! government
The court also holds that Debs and
' other officials had absolute control of
the strike, guiding as they close the
movements of the men. This
is well known to bo false,
whereas the strike was instituted
first by vote of the members of
the A. It I*, and no more was takcri
without a vote of all concerned.
Issuing more bonds has"Come to be ! Kven 'he smallest subordinate lodgi
a serial story, continued in our next. lhttt st°PPed work did so wliolly upod
People have got tired of reading it "s °"'n0 decision by vote of its owii
because eVery new chapter is just like '"embers only.
the others. The defendants took the sentence
It is a tragedy on such high st Its i ,ike meD Uebs bowed h} tall, gaunt
that the average reader don't see the form aml whispered a few words to
application. who near, and they
More bonds-more debt. J both laughed heartily. Howard and
More bonds, more taxes. Mogan exchanged smiling glances and
More bonis, more contraction of Keliher grasped his attorney's hand
currency by piling it up in Wall street ",,d "PPcared to offer congratulations,
to buy more bonds. It was evident? that all had expected
More bonds are issued to provido rafcch more severe sentences, and alf
employment for idle capital. U OIC H look of ,elief ,,ebs drew hi®
More bonds afe never issued to pro- reople together and instructed thenl
vide employment for idle labor—and n°thing for publication, set
should not be. Labor is willing to tin* them an example by refusing id
accept greenbacks. discuts the case at alL After the
More bonds are issued * to sustain | >«rmur of excitement over the fccii-
government credit—when it is already j lence 'ia(* subsided, the court An-
so good that every capit let in the "°unced that the punishment was
world is willing to pay a high premium i no^ effect fOr ton days, in'
for its bonds. which the defendants' attorneys wilt
More bonds, for the present genera- prepare an appeal.
tion to pay interest on, and to bind Denounced as an Out race.
your children in a debt they never The Federation of Labor being id
contracted. session at Denver, Colo., the follow-
riOURF.S NEVER I,IF..
The people's Tarty More Than Doubted Its Vole Over ISO!?,
Itepiihllraiis l.ost Heavily.
WAlln Holh Democrats and the
IS MODERN* PAGANISM. M"!n,t Vermm- H fact
weiirh nobody disputed and all re-
j spected.
GOLD WORSHIP AS PRACTICED
IN AMERICA.
It Is Dur OihI iiml We I'ay Revert
Homage o lis Wonderful Powe
Has the Clod of Creation lleeu F
gotten Forever?
The savage African, in the wilds of
his native home, takes a few sticks aud
some cloth, and out of these rude ma-
terials makes an idol which he calls
Mumbo .himbo, and before whicjt he
falls prostrate, in devout worship.
Whereat wt civikized fools all laugh
at said African, and call him a barba-
rian. as, indeed fie is.
Nevertheless, it is quite apparent
tfcat while wo mako no gpds out of
sticks and calico, w£ worship Mumbo
Jumbos, of our own make, just the
same. *
• Take for instance the "Gold Re-
serve."' Nature did not produce it: it
has no life, no motion, other\hsn that
which we lunatics give it. . *
One day it occurred to old John
Sherman thft it would be a good
scheme to stack up, in the treasury, a
cool one hundred million dollars in
gold, and keep it there, idle.
feting upon this idea, he straight
way created tho fund known as the
gold reserve.
*Any law for this?
Congressmen referred to it as they
would to Arlington or Hunker Hill.
It was, in their eyes^ consecrated.
Statutes referred to it, iu passing, as
they would to West l'oint or Yellow-
stone park, something that was per-
inancnt, national, and inseparable
! from the life of the republic.
I There never was a law #ur the gold
reserve, there never was a#necessity
for it, there never was any antecedent
discussion in regard to it, and there
never was a particle of financial sense
in it.
Hecause and Hecause.
Attention, first class in finance
Why was one-tenth of all the inonej
in circulation in the United Statei
offered in exchange for bonds bear
ing interest at ,1 per cent or less.—
Kansas City Mail,
4 hat's dead easy. Hecause it wat
tho best investment in the world. He-
cause Undo Sam's bonds are bettei
than gold. . •
t Because more than 4 'one tenth of all
the money in circulation" was hoarded
for that very purpose to force Uncle
Sam to issue interest bearing bonds
Hecause the bankers want to brinp
More bonds, issued at the rate of a
$100,000,000 a year means that in five
years the government will have bor-
rowed all the gold in.the United
States—and the treasury reserve will
still be below the sacred hundred
million mark.
More bonds, when the government
j already owes more money than all the
money in circulation, means that the
whole country is beiDg mortgaged
and every citi/.en sold into slavery to
1 Shylock. •
More bonds, meaas destroy the
money of the people, and throw them
deeper in debt.with nothing but their
lives and homes to pay with.
More bonds to redeem money that
is its own redeemer and better than*
gold. * •
More bonds 4o encourage "foreign
investors" who would destroy our
government if they could, and make
a monarchy of it.
More bonds, to get gold to pay in-
terest to rebels who refuse govern-
ment money, on a contract that calls
for lawful money of the Uttited
States.
More bonds to get gold to play in a
confidence games.
Mqre bonds to get the country down
to a gold basis. After the debt grows
equal to the value of SU1 tho land and
property of tho nation, government
ing expressions were gathered by Cor-
respondents of the AssoCiate press
from prominent labor leaders:
President GomperS said regarding
the decision of Judge Woods in the
Debs c^se:
"I think it contemptible fot any
judge to take from a citizen of the
United States the right of trial by
jury. If Mr. Debs is guilty of any
criminal act, a jury of his peers
should be allowed to say so. I de-
nounce the action of any judge who
shows himself so eager to do the bid-
ding Of the corporations."'
Patrick McBride, secrstary of tile
United Mine Workers, said:
"I think the decision is an Outrage.
I do not believe the intention Of the
law under which the injunction was
issued was tp include labor organiza-
tions. There has been no decision by*
the Supreme court on tho mAtter. It
seems to me that the court should have
remitted the ^penalty. Instead • of
that, fie has strained the law tc reach
the decision and inflicts a soverc pun-
ishment upon the first juan tried for
its violation."
John K.JO'Sullivan of Boston: "1
have examined this decision and it
now only remains for us to see that
the ease goes to the highest tribunal."
Mctirath of tho Typographical
Union: "I think the methods of the
people in power are tending toward
Uncle Sam's crcdit down to a parity
; O.N'wIxidjr ever presented greenbacks .with theirs.
for redemption until Mr. Carlisle made Hecause the bankers want to con
his famous ruling, under which gold is I tract tho currency and get I ncle Sair
paid out for paper money, and bonds ! rattled so ho will consent to let then
issued to got tho gold back affain. expand the currency for their oivi
The gold reserve was absolutely use- j benefit.
less until ft became, under Carlisle's Because the bankers want to#get■ ui
ruling, a bait to set the® bond trap an "emergency," so that Uncle San
with. will give them 75 per cent0 of theii
To show that it has no influence PH'^ #UP capital to "relieve" the
upon the value of the greenbacks, we eountry with?
need only to point to the fact that al- Because bonds will sustair
though the size of the «j• ld reserve has 11,0. Pr®«ent banking Systen
constantly fluctuated for about a year, unt'i bankers succeec
the value of the greenback has not in establ'sh'ug a more profitable "one
varied at all. "divorcing" the government from is
# If the greenbacks depend on the gold sumff anything but bonds. *
| reserve, their valine would giae and fall Because they want I nele Sam t<
with the gold reserve. Hold the gold to redeem the green
The greenbacks no liot. and never that they arc preparing to hav<
did, depend on the gold reserve. They destroyed, so that when Uncle Sara
depend on the governtnent, and the
j known fact that the credit of the
I government is based on 970,000,0 K),t0fl.
j Their legal tender quality, their re-
anted a 1 ceivabilit3r taxes and public dues.
fiat will be worthless, iiryl Uncle Sam
will bo forced to pay all obligations revolution.
in gcf d—and Shylock will have the ,!on- Holmes of London de-
gold. Then Shylock will demand the clineti toexpresfan opinion.
flesh of your children. Thomas J. Morgan said in regard to
More bonds, to force producers to l,,c *I)L'bs sentence: "The decision,
support idlers.
More bonds for the brokers to gam-
ble in.
More bonds, without any reasonable
excuse whatever.
More bonds should be repudiated.
What do you think of it, ye horny-
handed toilers of this country, who
must bear the burden and whose chil-
dren after you Hi ust bear it with an
increased burden of interest.
More bonds, more interst, more
Ide from its immediate effects on
Debs, is a good thing for the labor
movement, fct shows what may be
expected from legislatures and courts
that are controlled by the capital*
lsts."
William B. Preset)tt, preside!^ of
the Tynographical union, said: "I
am opposed to the punishmeril of one
man for the acts of another. I be-
lieve that the injunction Debs vio-
lated was against his real Ugftl
taxes, more bondage, moreslavery for rights "
the worker—more wealth, more glory Texas After the oil Trust.
more fatness, more debauchery for the The #Kofkfcller gang of robbegs
money sharks. are having a rocky time in Texas.
How lonj* will you remain indif Dr. ti B. Harris of the Texas Reform
ferent? Press association has been largely in-
Do you want a kingdom, a despot- strumental in securing an indictment
ism, a military hell in America
Any necessity for it?
No.
Any popular demand for it?
No.
His excuse was that he 1
gold reserve out of which lie could pay l'iem good iu the eyes of the
off the $345,000,000 in greenbacks when l,coPle' irrespective of any gold re-
presented for redemption. • servo whatsoever.
Was anybody clamoring for the re- i 1'°'111 Sherman had 110 more right to
demp^ion of greenbacks'.' i m"liu " K'old reserve than he had to
jj„ j make a silver reserve. .
has bought up the greenbacks and
destroyed thein, lie will have to issu<
some more bonds at higher interest tc
buy tome more gold to pay the inter
est on the bonds he has already out
standing.
Because they would rather loan
I nele Sam 6onie of his own moncv '
• than to have him create more.
Because they want to get Unek
Sam in a good humor so they can rol
Will you submit'.'
In self-defense for God, humanity
and America, organi/.e yourselves into
tho party of the common reople and
drive the demon plutocracy from its
bacchanalian revel. •
COllEMPT OF COURT.
The Declftlon of an Knglisli Court Ouoted
as Authority In the I nlted Slates.
Tfte sentence of Eugen« V. Debs to
six months* in jail for alleged con-
tempt of court, will doubtless create
more contempt of court than it cures.
He and other leaders of the A. IL U.
were denied the right of trial by jury laV7R- anti Texas officials are be-
and seietenced to jail by a plutocratic to realize that they must do
Ifiid prosecution of the Standard Oil
company, doing business *in Texas
thrombi its agents. •
The sheriff of Galveston county re-
fused to arfest the agent of the trusf.
after indictment had been found, and
he was fined for contempt of court.
The next day .the oil conjpany senfi
the sheriff a check reimbursing him
for the tine ho had paid for refusing
to do hia duty.
Texas juries and* county attorneys
arc not all'afraid of New York mill-
ionaires. ,
The oil trust openly violates the
there any law under which any- j ureen hacks were no more redeemable hl®-
the doctor ,Mxl.v 1,11,1 right to go to the treasury i in pold ,hllu the-v weTO in silver. Hecause the bankers want to save
t nit,Hi States and demand gold for greenabeks'.' Hut why argue the ease • The ver credil of the governtnent uotil
",ot m already made up in the minds of thcy t a better flold
tir .. ..I the jury
Wat there any custom or policy 1
1 Mumbo Jumbo wins.
face and 8gure an I he walked afte
her.
••Core," he called, and 6he turned
to him smilingly.
She put out her hand and said: ' 1
tried to avoid you. Tommy Benton,
for both our gool, but." and she gave
a little sigh, "you have made that im-
possible now. I am not a fatali-t, but
this meeting isn't go ng to be pro.
about tho si m- of a pigeon's egg, which,
view, d in a dark place with a candle
or other light In-hind it, exhibits a
perfect profile picture of a man from
the waist up. I'urniAg the pebble par
tiall.v around, the image of the man
vanishes and the features of °a wo-
man's face, clearly-cut and partly con- o before it The people—the great inert I reVerent hands?
ire o good and i hesmiled again j coaled by heavy treses, comes into mass within whom is irresistible might '
view. I he Britiah museum offers £ot| if they but had courage and co-opera
for t he curiosity.—St. Louis Kcpnblic. tion—patiently padded their knees,
and likewiae knelt in mute submission
which authorized this sotting a^art of
gold to redeem greenbacks?
No. •
But Sherman did it, just tho same,
and it soon appeared that he had made
us a Mumbo Jutnbo which we all wor-
shiped, and before whoae mysterious^
power we fell prostrato.
As long as Sherman was secretary
of the treasury the gold reserve was
sacred. Congress looked upon it with-
awe. The President did it reverence.
The newspapers bent to it in speech-
less adoration. The politicians rubbed
the skin off their stomachs groveling
before it
Sherman's god rules us. •
Wc quake and tremblo every time
they tell us anything bad has hap-
pened to the gold reserve. We roll
and toss in our sleep, mutteriTig dis-
tressfully, when the news comes that
the gold reserve "is dwindling."
We shiver and we groan when we
read that "tho treasury has lost 94,000,*
000 of the gold reserve to-day."
After such news how can wc sleep?
How can wo frisk and gambol and dis-
port ourselves in thoughtless levity
when our god, our fetich, our Mumbo
Jumbo, is being picked to pieces by ir-
Because the bankers know thathav-
j ing their money in their pockets und
1 drawing interest on it at tho same
time is easier lhan loaning it t) in
dividuals and hustling to collect it
back.
Because the bankers know that if
they waut to they can have *o pei
cent of their money back in bank
notea to loan to the peonle to pay
their debts, so that the money *-an
come back to the bank and be loaned
again. •
Because paying a dollar for a bond
and getting 90 cents to boot and
drawing 3 per cent on the firat dollai
is getting 30«per cent on the invest-
their duty, and those who refuse will
bo classed with the sheriff who ac-
cepted money from the trust.
The attorney general of the state
has been forced to proceed or lose
his oflicial head.
The
people of that state are aroused
fn that enigmatical way of hers.
"Let s ait down, said Benton, and
they found a bench.
Well, he said after a lonp pause.
I am disillus oui/.cd. 1 woke up this
morning and found that I was not in
love with my wife. Possibly that was
not the underlying thought, for the
real fact of the case i* that I want my j flood !o' suppah?"
freedom Nature never out me out to Aunt Dinah
be a domestic man. I haven't as much ! miracle.
\n Act
Uncle Pete,
thing iind'T hi
ntering with some
oat What wud vou
to the yellow god which John Sherman th# nakm, Afri(.an?
had condescended to make for them.
the
None.
ay, A nt Dinah of d-good Lawd wui When Shermau went out and other Bnt then you
eh send us >ome'n mighty pow'ful secretaries came in, the spell was a I- doesn't know it
' "" . . t . . , . ready upon the public, and Mumbo Thafs the reason he i. a fool. What
I ehud say dat wu/. a j Jumbo reigned by the omnipotent title jjood ,ioet,
, ment direct—not to speak of interest
How can we see out idol carted off on the bank notes.
by piecemeal and not suffer in our ; Because there are ao many uews-
*"inds? j pnper wits laughing at their own
What good does Mumbo Jumbo do j°kos and hoodooing the people that
most of them don't know any mere
about the banking business than the
African Jokers want them to know.
judge. Thcy had violated no luw
and had been exonerated from all
blame by tho United States' strike
commission appointed by President
Cleveland. • *
Tho Injunction which Debs and his
associates iguored.#was clearly tp all
sense of right and justice, an interfer- Btul earnestly demanding that officials
once with the strikers' legal rights. (,° duty.
The real nuisance in the case was Nearly every state iu the T'nian hap
the Pullman Car company, and the lftW6 against trusts, combines and
mobs employed by the railroad com- monopolies and the United States laws
panies to arouse public sentiment forbid them and yet in the face of the
against thsjust cause of the strikers law right on in open violation
As for interstate commerce, Pull °'A Texas court has indicted
man sleepers are in no way engaged Bockfeller and his associates of the
in commerce, nor even in carrying the Standard Oil trust for violating the
mails. The railroad compsnies violated laws of Texas, and their paid attor-
their contract with the government ney isughed at this puny state and
in order to help (ieo. M. Pullman
'crush his workmen and violated the
interstate commerce law rather than
concede the richts of workmen to
quit work when they pleased, pro-
sentiment possibly as the majority of I nele Pete producing a pair of
men but I will say that since I hart chickens Dat e right, a'nt. dat' iu V
been a married mm I have always what it vu/ a mira-Me Sothin'
acted as such. I want my freedom short ob a miracle wud have made de
.now;. And you, Cora, must tell me kow I colonel (o -it t«h lock •«* h**uati
<ret |U I doV—«Nsw York Herald
of universal consent.
The gold reserve was a national in-
! stitution—like Washington monument.
It waa not to be desecrated. It was
i to be recognised, supported, defended
i our Mumbo Jufabo, the gold
reserve, do us?
None.
But then, you see, we do not know
1 Rt'it it is that the President's recom
mendations were not worthy of con
sidoration by a sensible man—but cou
gress will consider them.
it
Havf. we a financial system? Or is
it just plain systematic robbery?
w.«s«2:
' **** 5 the reason we are bigger fools
predicted that Gov. Flower of Ne
York would not surrender these men
as fugitives from Texas justice who
had never been in Texas, and when
tJie requisition papers*were presented
|« . ... - • ■ to the governor he did refuse, sure
viding such conditions as they saw fit enough, to surrender them. Thus in
for returning to their work. this boasted countiy of liberty, mill- ■
l he strikers did no violence und ionaires can defy the lawsafcd openly
did not interfere with men employed violate them; but the nigger who
tq take their places, further than to boota ci:apa, or the hungry msn who
appeal to 'heir sense of right and steals H ,oaf of bread goes to prison,
manhood. UQd the fellow who dares to steal
The judpe quoted the Engllah hl?h *1° F°"/ 'ilble Ket hi« neclc
cr.flrt of ehaneerv to prove that the , ' "''T "l0 d >' wil1 com"
federal courts have jurisdiction with "i "'"!'1 'T ' TI ' / ttc,;or ,cd to
. , «-uon with ,11 special privileged thieves will
ti" ,V, ° conKrC!,s' ,hus holding be back number*.—Central 'l'eian.
that the dectsiou of an English court
it authority in Ihe I nlted M te Zlr: 1 m a w"d cllt 'rom Baltimore!
The railroad, have been clothed 1 ain 1 of anytliing that wear,
with the power of culsint domain fur— or diamonds.
for the uqairtoaat und (or lh<lij, ,;eI up ,.lub, 4 lirtllfriml for your
purposes, and theralor, th. Judge home paper, and help spread th« light,
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French, W. H. The Chandler Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, January 11, 1895, newspaper, January 11, 1895; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc147167/m1/4/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.