The Chandler Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, September 6, 1895 Page: 2 of 4
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Chandler Publicist.
W. LI. FRENCH, Editor and Manager.
MRS. C. C. Fir UNCI I. Aaaoclat« Editor
CHANDLER,
Ten-Inch strawberries are one reason
for keeping away from Washington and
Idaho. Little ones are nicer.
A treaty with such a nation as China
Is a U8eles3 piece of furniture unless
there Is a gatllng gun behind It.
A hirudin the hand is w«rth two in
the bush, esj>#cially when that bird is
one of Uncle Sam's golden eagles.
The man who is continually allowing
ogo story to remind him of another is
one of the great. American bores of
long standing. •
Instead of Campos in Culm sticking
like a hot r'aster on the flanks of the
Insurgents. It's they who are making
the Spanish fly.
How would It do to drop the raurdei
cases and prosecute Holmes on the
charge of having conducted a World's
Fair restaurant?
Mrs. ynrnum gave her new ^raeco-
Turkish husband her heart and hand
but not her fortunr. Ho can only count
on regular mvfls, therefore, during
good behavior.
■m&smm
up) eg i -
(
Suppose New Yorkers should leave
tbe question to New York wives
whether they should have Sunday
closing and sober husbands, who
doubts the detfelon?
"When it comes to the missionary
business." remarked Asbury Peppera,
"I dSn't see that it maki .n much differ
ence whether a fellow runs agalnst^thf
Vegetarians or cannibals."
To think thft a woman who once bor
the name of Barnum should bo going
to keep house In that very Greek Isle
where Sappho loved and sung! Queer
world, and full of curiosities.
The slimmer girl who carries her vial
of "rose water and carboflc acid" in
her pocket doesn't propose to end tlfo
season with an assortment of "mi
drebee." Is the "carbonised kiss" com-
Ing?
A represents ground rent.
B railroad franchises.
C street car franchises.
D telegraph franchises.
THE WORM OF THE MODERN MONOPOLY MISERY DISTILLERY.
F rtiterest on private and public bonds.K pensloys.
ti extravagant appropriations by con-L parasites
gress. # M superstition.
H unnecessary strfte, county and cityN aln
gas, electric light and telephone fran- expendltun
chlses.
Thrifty
^5 AVE AND
MONEY.
And 111* l'rodiKitl
J protected manufacturers.
the secretary of the treasury and be
gives them the notes."
"Oh, they trade off 1 lie bonda for
notes and the government gets out of
paying out any more interest on tho
bonds It takes in."
"Not so fast; you young financier.
Tho government only holds the bonds
to make sure that the bttls will be paid.
It keeps on paying interest on them
just the same as If the bankers held
O capital's profit after the clippings.
P wages.
PHILADEL- PARIS, July 27.
phia, July 27. —All Paris Is talk-
The trouble amonf Ing of the prodigal
the employees of extravagance of
ex-Postm aster- Rodman Wana-
Oeneral Viana- mak<t, the young
maker over the son of ex-P03tmas- ! them.'
low wages and pel- tor general John "Well, I suppose that is fair. The
t| tyranny of the Wanamakers < i banker getft interest on the loysrnnieni
floor l (#se.s is seri- Philadelphia, who bonds but he has to pay interest to the
oils. • Since the apent $20,000 this people who take these notes ot his for
publication of the week on a single what they have to sell."
employees' griev- dinner to twenty- j "Wrong again; you seem bound to
ancea and their two guests. Even j get the cart before the horse. The
steps to organize tills city • of people who get these notes from the
for self-protection, sumptuous dining banker pay him intorest«for the use of
There must be some mistake in the
story of a pretty postmistress who was
arrested for opening others' love let-
ters. If she were pretty she ought to
• have been able to get all uho wanted of
her own.
The best way to buy anything on tl?o
1n£a!lment plan Is to pu^ your spare
money by In Instalments of s dollar or
so a week, until you have enough Bribed
•p to buy what you want at the lowtbt
price for cash.
•
Governor Bullock's remark t£at the
Atlanta exhibition will be an entering
wedge toward completing the bond of
detectives have it is doubtful
been employed In whether so much
W n n a m a k e r's money was ever
store to find out squandered on a
J he employees single feast.
whoa have joineif was given i^i
the union. The Pavilion d'Armo-
new labor league, nonvllle, a famous
which numbers restaurant in the
over one thousand, Hois de Houlogne.
threatens togo out Twenty-two of the
in a body if any finest equipages
<>f their number i* called at tjle same
discharged. Tho moment at tho
league, which is residences of the
known as the Re- guests and
tail Employees' brought them* to
Protective Asso- the banquet hall,
elation, claim that The decorations
they are paid but were marvelou*
$1 a week, and are Luminous foun-
subjected to petty tains pliyited up-
end unnecessary on groat blocks of
fines for trivial l(,e kept the aif
faults. The dele * cool.
gates from the dif- It was not one
them
"What! Pay him interest because
they take tho promises to pay?"
"That Is exaetfy what they do. The
promises to pay circulate as money and
use of the
unity between the north and the south j feront lodges have dinner but t
is worthy of Sir Hoylo Roche, in the
way of a figure of speech.
The " Chicago park commissioners
have decided that bloomers aro not
bathing suits. In other woyls, if
bloomers nre to bo laundered they must
be laundered In the usual style, and
hung on a lino instead of limbs.
A man out at Downer's Grove, III.,
otalms to have a bottle containing a
mysterious mixture which will locate
a gold mln% It has boon found that a
bottle-holder generally finds his way
sooner or Inter to the gol^ ••ore.
One thing the $.T..O(io ono p:ipor ti n-'
Vllf kiTe to do when it begins to cut
shines and Sow its teeth will !■ to
meet the newspapers of the United
8tates. In such a fight the paper trust
won't know whether "it is a foot or a
crltter-back." The American people
are against trusts—and the paper trust
may be just the "feather to break the
back" of all such monopolies.
'Mrs. Joseph Faulkner, of Ogdon
burg, N. Y., thoughtlessly omitted to
look under her bed before^he retire.!
Before she had closed her eyas In slum-
ber, however, she heard an unusual
noise, and quietly squinting over tbe
edge of the bed she beheld a man's foot
sticking out. She immediately ru: b l
out of the house screaming, while Mr.
Man hastened out through a side win-
dow, taking sash and all. Jlrs F. n-
Fists that she will n#\or le <> care^i
again. •
• —— .
^ At a r« ent bicycle meeting at Now
bury women appeared In bloomers for
the first time in South Carolina. The
spectacle so astonished a Tillmanite
eotio4§y maa nam*d Jacob Huey that he
wrote a scurrilous letter to the reform
paper, making very improper allusions
to the ladies being astride wheels. The
gentlemen bicyclists were very lndlg- I
nfnt and drew sti ,ih i d who should
whip Hue. The lot fell to M. If Speui
man. When Huoy <11110 to towne Mi
#pearmaa fell to hie task ami did the
mallgner up in great shape.
formed a mutual ty-two Independ-
i protection agree- pnt dinners, sep-
j ment with the arately served, one
I Knights of Labor, to ench guest,
and at a meeting Each guest Tiad
of District Union beforo him
| No. 1120, K. of L., whole leg of mut-
a reaolutftm was ton, a whole sal-
passed pledging mon, truffled
moral and finan-*fowl, a basket *of
cial support to the peaches, and a
employees In their double magnum
efforts to obtain of champagne, fe-
mora liberal wag- sides bottles of
es and conditions wine of sacred
of labor. vintage and fabu-
It Is common '°us cost. After
knowledge i n the banquet costly
Philadelphia that Jewelry was dls-
the# Wanamaker trlbuted to the
employees below a guests. among
certain grade have whom were a
fewer privileges number of young
and have to bear titled Frenchmen,
greater enactions Paris newspapers
than employees of speak of the ban-
any otnor dry *quet as magnlfl-
goods firm. cent, but in bad
tass*.
the they pay interest for the
money." •
"It seems to me that Is getting tho
cart before the horse. When you make
a note In a promise to pay money don't
you have to pay Interest on It to get
anyone to take it and let you have any-
thing for It?"
Yes, but in the case of the hanks it
is different."
"You bet! I should say it was differ-
ent. The banks draw Interest on their
notoB and you pay interest on yours."
■ fcwu are g<tting it straight now."
"Hut isn't a bank note a debt just
tbg same as your note'.' Don't It show
that the bank owes so many dollars t#
tho man who has it.
"Come right down to the point of the
matter, 1 guess that is about the size
of It."
"Then as you pay interest on what
you owe. :! more you owe the poorer
you are, but with a bank it is diffgrent.
They get interest on what they owe
and tho more they owe the more money
they make."
"I suppose that is true, too."
"Pa, when I grow up 1 ain't going to
sell groceries like you. I am going to
be a bunker."
A Primary l.enion In Finance.
A bright boy whose father is one of
ortune's favorites, fi Ads among the
••her presents in his slocking 011
•hristmas morning t $i<> national bank
iote on the Third National Hank of
Chicago, 111. At the breakfast table
he boy begins to ask questions about
ho bill #
"What is It good foe?"
"That is money, my son. It will buy
inytbing you want."
"Hut what nutkfs it any better than
in> Other piece of paper •
"Because the government says it is
food. You can seesthe signatures of
he register of the treasury and the
leasui 09 ol I heJ nited Stati a on It."
"What <ii«i ' he j sign It foi ""
"To know t^at the government stands
<ood for it and will see that the prom-
ho on its fifre 1h kept." #
"What promise?"
"The promise of the bank to pay ten
lollars."
"Is that what It is?"
Show Tlil* To Your MlniMer.
Hearing in mind that what is meant
by usury in tlie Bible is The taking of
increase for the loan of money, read the
following*text^s and ask your pastor to
preach on the Bible doctrine of usury:
if thou lemi money to any ef my peo
pie that is poSr by thee, thou shalt not
be to him a usurer, neither shalt thou
lay upon him usury. Exodus xxii:
25-26.
And if thy brother be waxen poor,
and falloti in decay with tliee, then tnou
shalt relieve him; yea, though he be a
stranger or a sojourner, that he may
with thee. Take thou no usury of
him, or increase; but fear thy God; that
thy •brother may live with thee. Thou
shalt not give him thy money upon
usury, or lend him thy Victuals for in-
crease. Levitiou8 xxv: 35-37.
Thou shalt not lend upon usury to
thy brother; usury of money, usury of
victuals, usury of anything that Is
lent upon usury.—Deuteronomy xxlil:
10.
And there was a great cry of the peo- i
pie and fti their wives against then-
brethren the Jews. For there werl that |
said: We, our sons and our daughters
are many; therefore we take
them that we may eat and 11 v
also there were that said, we have mort-
gaged our land, vineyards nnd houses,
that we might buy corn because of 11*
dearth. There were also that said, we
borrowed money for the king
Clot Together.
There Is nothing which plutocracy
so much fears as Intelligent organiza-
tion of the farmers for political ef-
fort.
The Individual is easily overwhelmed
by an organized power and It is by a
practical appliance of this fact that cor-
porations are domineering every legal
authority in the land.
It is through ignorance of this fact,
that unorganized farmers are being one
by one turned out of their homes.
Old party speakers are never found
advocating organization among the
farmers, y«t*they are never found con-
demning the organization of bankers
and speculators.
This is illustrated very forcibly by
the attitude of Secretary Morton of Ne-
braska, as presented on two different
occasions. r
From his speech in this city. Oct. 16,
1893, we clip the following advice to
the farmers: •
"Less legislation and more learn-
ing, less gr^gariousness and more indi-
viduality, less dependence upon asso-
ciation with the alliances and the gran-
gers, and more self-reliant independ-'
based upon acquired tacts. is a fair
statement of the interests of the farm-
er."
Tills same Secretary Morton In refer
ring*to the communication.of J. R.
Buchanan,^writes John DeWitt Warner j
as follows:
# "My object in sending you this letter
of Mr. Buchanan is to give you a thor !
ough business man's view of the altua- !
Hon. The letter shows how fallacies |
flourish among the farmers of the west
and soutl^ The letter also points out
to you the necessity of immediate co-
herent and organized action in behalf
of sound money." This now is his ad-
vice to the bankers. * •
Individual action for the farmer, but
"coherent organization" for the specu-
lators. • •
When Morton gives advice concern-
ing organized effort, ibis all owing to
who will be benefited .what that advice
will be.
Organization among the farmers nev-
er fails to secure the downfall of such
fellows as this Secretary Morton.
It is through the organized strength
of corporations that he holds position
and power.
Every association of the farmers has
led toward industrial liberty and this
fact should not be overlooked.
The watchword must be "organize
and educate."
Thoje Is no good reason why farmers
should permit themselves to be forever
the prey of designing politicians.
While they continue to "go it alone"
they will remain the easy victims of
organized speculators. .
This is a question of vast Import and
one that cannot long be Ignored.
The farmers must get together or be
one by one crushed down by organized
greed.
Bankers and speculators never fall to
vote together when their interests are
at stake. •
There Is but one hope and that is "get
togfther." Chicago Express.
A Word to Voter*.
Voter,Jt 1b time for you to think!
Don't be a dupe any longer!
Don't be buncoed by old party hacks!
The leaders of both of the old parties
_ are corrupt and wholly dishonest,
•i n for In God's name, don't be a dog to wag
Some | recognition to these political masters*
Get up out of your hypnotic sleep, and
get on a move.for political Independ-
ence.
If you would throw off thj* burden o^
poverty and slaver\ that the old parti-
^OLD-BIG THREATS.
WILL FORCE IMMEDIATE PAY-
MENT OF MORTGAGES.
Sheriffs Will He Perched Around on
the Worm Fences of the Country,
Like Dlackhirda \v t<-liiiig n Corn
The qi.opl. or til" UMtod Ktatcs nre
law-abiding and cannot aid Cuba In her
brave fight for Independence, but there
Is no mistaking ihe facts that the
hearts ot nine tenths of the y.oplo are jromises to pay nion.v?
with the Cubans, and they will rejoteo
In their success.
"Marching through <;.• says a
Japanese correspondent, ' is the groat
est tune of Japan. It is played upon all
occasions, especially when a victorious
regiment is received on the homewar.
march." "
well.
vineyards. Yet now our flesh is as the
flesh of our brethren, our children as
their children; and lo, v- bring Into
bondage our sons atffl our daughters to
be servants, and some of flur daughters
nre brought into bondage already,
neither is it in our power to redeem
fhem; for other men have our lands and
"Yes. It is a promise to pay money, I vineyards. And 1 was very angry when,
nd not money itself, strictly apeak 1 learfled their cry and the.-e words
ng " Then 1 consulted with myself and re
"Then the bank sends out these ' linked the rulers and the nobles nnd
said unto them, Ye exact usury, every
"That Is It exactly." one of his pother And 1 set a great
"What makes people take them?" , assembly against them. And I said
"Oh, everybody Is glad enough to get unto them, we after our ability have
hem, because they can buy anything ; redeemed our brethren «Ua lows, wnlen
trlhiw and that upon our lands and have loaded upon you. liberate your
Ideas ami give your reason rope.
You cannot afford to be" led to th
daughter like a sheep in the shambles.
hey want with them, and the govern-
ment's guarantee makos#lt sure that no
)ne will lose anything on them."
'That must be a nice thing for the
No wonder the Japs fight .bonkers. If 1 should get some prom
ses to pay money nicely prlntefl with
a ,* . , ~ ~ green and black and red Ink would
E j ia8,fi °rJ? fa array °' ve8 people take them for money?"
e B surrounding Cuba made up of six "No. Indeed. Whatever put «uch an
h , "6V? , \rpe ,hoat!, eleven idea Into your head? Banks couldn't
fun boats, and eighteen launches. How Jo (t If |t wasn't for the law." .
would It do for Uncle Sam to go down
and take poaaesslon of the Island (in
the English way) until the Mora claim
is settled?
New Yorkers at one time playfully
referred to Commissioner Roosevelt as
"Teddy, the would-be reformer." n„
0 sincere netually gave a twfit to the
0 reform screw they wall and mourn as
if they had no friends on earth.
"Well, why does the law let some
folks' promises to pay go for monoy
nd not others?"
"Because the folks who make these
promises to pay are rich and have lots
)t money of their own."
"Oh, then, it Is on the principle that
to him (,hat hath shall be j|lven.' "
"No, not that, but they use their
money to buy government bonds and
then put the bonds IntQ the bands of
wero Bold unto the heathen and will ye
sell even your brethren? or shall the>
be sold unto us? Then held they their
peace and found nothing to answer.
And I said, It Is not good that ye do;
ought ye siot to walk in the fear of our
God, because of the reproach of. the
heathen, our enemies? I likewise, and
my brethren and my servants, might
exact of their money and corn. I praj
you let us leave of this usury. Restore.
I pray you, to them, even this day. their
land, their vineyards, their olive groves
and their houses, also the
hundredth part of the money (this
looks as If the usury was only
one per cent interest) and of
the corn, the wine, and the oil, that ye
exact of them. Then they said. We will
restoro them. . . . And tho people did
according to their promise.—Nehcinluh
▼: 1-13.
The following bluster Is an extract
from one of the broadsides Jjeing sent
out by the "sound currency" commit-*
tee, to be used as supplements to cuckoo
papers: •
"Three-fourths of the people who fa-
vor free coinage' without personal In-
vestigation have a sneaking idea that
they can pay their debt easier with a
debased currency than under the pres-
ent toilsome, slow-going process. But
this is all a dream bor* of the lurid im-
igination of your typical free-silver ad-
vocate. The creditor who holds a mort-
gage on the farmer's land Is not ex-
actly an Idiot himself, and the mo-
ment it becomes clear that free coin-
age at the 16 to 1 ratio will be legalized
In this country thousands of mortgages
will be foreclosed by men who propose
to have their loans paid in good mpney.
The free sliver dupe may argue, with
tears#ln his eyes, that the price of sil-
ver will be immediately jerked up to
the desired point in the markets of the
world as soon as our mints are opened
to the metal. But the* hard-hearted
creditor.doesn't belong to that class of
reasoners, and he will turn the former
°"i. bafc and baggage, then and there,
with the money in which the creditor
has confidence. vTust before the dawn
of that happy silver day—when the sil-
1 vor lining of the clouds will be coined
into fiood government dollars -sheriffs
will be perched around on the worm
fences la*the country waiting for mort.-'
gages to mature, like blackbirds watch-
ing a corn crop."
Ye gods, what patriotism!
This is the kind of stuff with which
the organized plunderers are trying to
feighten the "Ignorant rabble." *
It's all a game of "boo!"
The entire sheet sent out by the com-
mittee is composed of just such sinister
threats and ridiculous hog-wash as
this. •
It is intended for fools but it won't
rub in. The people know that they
can more easily pay their debts when
money is plenty than when it is scarce.
Neither are the debtors all idiots.
Jho^' know 4hat ft real estate mortgage
cannot be legally foreclosed until ma-
turity, or until there is a default In the
payment of Interest.
They know, too, that*the capitalist
cannot force payment in gold, unless he
has made a special contract.
Th|y also know that oven after ma-
turity of his mortgage, the laws of
most of the states give tl^e debtor from
•one to two years to redeem his aland.
In the meantime the price of the land
will so far advance as to give the debt-
or such an equity in the land as to en-
able him to make <1 new loan at a low-
er rate of interest, which is bound to
folloft an increase of the currency.
*Of course, the hard-hearted creditor
will do all he can to crush the people
and get hold of the lands, which are ad-
vancing in price—but the people them-
selves are not feelinfc very tenderheart-
ed toward the extortionists and con-
tractlonlsts, who, by the destruction of
half the money of the country, have
forced the people Into debt.
If the credjtor has no confidence ii^
the money of this government* the
sooner he gets out of the country the
better.
If h# will n0t submit to the voice of
the majority of the American people,
he is a traitor, and should be hanged.
When "the dawn of that happy sil-
ver day" comes the hogs will find that
the banks and railroads have been
kicked out of the governing business—
and their bluff has no longer any ter-
ror. . •
The sheriffs, too, will be elected as
friends of the people, not as blood-
hounds for plutocracy.
The people seek only justice In the
restoration of American money to the
standard under which the great debts
of the nation were incurred—gind #he
fellows, who have conspired to contract
! the volume of currency, deserve tp lose
! all they have gained by such contrac-
I tion.
| The spirit of 1776 and 1861 Is being
aroused in the people, and It is foolish-
I braggadocio for* the cowardly bush-
whackers of plutocracy to attempt
scaring the American people from their
! purpose. #
| }Vhen a majority of the American
j people vote together for free coinage of
I silver, then they will also control the
munitions of war Und if tho traitor
i ous goldbugs rebel, they will be treated
I with a dose of their own medicine.
j* The people are not to be mod *d for-
j ever, and such threats as the above
I only make the people more determined
' to overthrow the tyranny that dares
thus to threaten them.
t Vengeance is mine, saith the Lord
.i*d when the apitalisis" attempt to
overthrow, the nation for revenge, they
t will find that the Lord is on the side of j
officials. So that as it now stands tho
silver men are in three camps and the
gold-bugs are practically a unit, having
control of both old parties, and being
sure of getting their own candidates
elected, if they can only manage to
keep the silver men from bolting their
parties.
A strong effort is being made to stop
tho discussion of the moqey question,
and line up the old parties on the ques-
tion of tariff—which the money power
considers a safe question to discuss, no
matter which side wins—If it will#only
keep the people blinded to the main
issue. * •
But tho money questioy will not
down. The people are aroused, and
will not be satisfied until it*is settled.
T^ie gold-bugs assume all virtue, and
their cry of "sound money" Is only a
catch phrase by which tliojj will try to
dodge the question.
There can Ifb no doubt of the honest
intentions of the silver men, and 110
doubt that they consider Independent
bimetallism the best means of securing
"sound money" in sufficient quantity to
transact the business of the courftry.®
The talk of international bimetallism
is a farce, nnd tlio question must be
decided for America by Americans only
The silver men have the best of the
argument and the majority of the peo-
ple on their side. Now if they will only
vote together the tiling is settled, and
the howl of the money brokers may £0
on forever. #
No man can prophesy the outcome
next yfar. Whatever the people decide
\hat they want and then unite to vote
for they will get. flut if they vote the
old party tickets straight, there is ab-
solutely no chance for anything but a
gold-bug victory. «
Bxp*rl nco |rn<1«
TJ c Parker'* (•! >«• Tor
tell) K" 1 for coltln. pain 1
vrry
r«to nay
it Is etpea*
To see once is better than to hear 1
hundred times.
Th line <il«tre*Hiui; Corns!
Dad a* they n
then yuu ran
. llfndn
•lie and
When .lob's wife told him to curse
God and die, it hurt him more than all
his boils.
There is sometimes as much venom
in the point of a pen as there is iq
the bite of a dog.
Every man has
kind, but only thos
art'Christians.
religion of som©
• who kmnf Christ
FREE SILVER IN MEXICO.
An Intelligent 11 utines* !>l in Disproves
the (iolil liugH* MIsMtntenientH. a
The Memphis Appeal, of recent date,
contained the following: •
Major Jules A. Randle, a resident of
Monterey, Mexico, but a citizen of the
I nited States, has written an interest-
ing and timely letter to J. W. Gaines,
Esq., of Nashville. Mr. Randle is an
old-fashioned Derl!ocrat,*a man of pro-
nounced views and marked intelligence,
and thorougfllycqulpped to give a faith-
ful, interesting, and instructive history
of the effect of free*coinage of silver in
Mexico.
The letter is as follows:
J- W. Gaines, Esq., Nashville:
You desire to know the effect ef free
coinage of 3ilver In Mexico. I have
been doing business in Mexico since
1S66, and since 1880 have lived in Mex-
ico, consequenfly, have had a good op-
portunity to know the country and its
When you go into the closet for se-
c ret prayer, be sure to kike the key of
your safe along.
T he Mo<lei 11 lienuty
Th rives 011 good lood and sunshine, with
pi cnty of exercise in the open nir. Her*
form glows with health and her face
blooms with its beauty. II her system
needs the cleaning action of a laxative
rem cdy, the*uses the gentle and pleas-
ant liquid laxative, Syrup of Figs.
. Charity begins* at home, but it
should not end there.
If salvation did not depend upon love
'it could not it- eternal.
Tickets nt Ited ueoil lUites
Will 1 - sold vtd tho Nii'kol Plate roa.l
on occasion of the meeting of the Ger-
man Catholic Societies of fchc United
States at Albany, N.°Y„ Sept. 15th. to
18th. For further information address
■L Y. Calahan, Gen'l Agent,*lll Adams
St., Chicago.
Gave Ilia Fishes to the I.ord.
A novel proceeding for the benefit
of the Methodist church took place re-
cently on the farm of W. T. Kenyon,
on the Ohio side of the river. He 13'
tho owner of a fine fish pond, which
he permitted to be drained and the fish
sold for the benefit of the church. Tho
small boy was in his glory wading in
mud and water after the fish, of which
there was about 400 pounds. The larg-
est weighed twenty pounds. They wore
mostly German carp. The church real-
ized about $50.
Tired Women
o
Nervous, weak and all worn out -«wlll
find in purified blood, made rich and healthy
by Hood's Sarsaparilla, permanent relief and
strength. *Get Hood's because
Mood's Sarsaparilla
Is-thc Only
True-Blood Purifier
conditions. I operated, bought and I
sold .property there from 18GtJ up to Prominently In the puldle eye today. It Is
date. I*have known the*eagl§ dollar of sold by alj drum:i;-t #1: ix f<>i .<> •
Mexico—I mean the present silver dol- j
lar- when it sold In New York at $1.0G
to $1.12 In American gold, when a gold '
dollar was worth $1.32 to $1 34 In green-
hacks. Then Mexico was not In a flour- j
ishing condition. A very few men con- i
trolled the finances and the country ;
was in constant revolution. The p(for (
and middle classes had but f£w rights
or privileges, and hence, naturally arose j
dessentions. Today we have*a liberal. J
progressive government, paying its 1
debts, and Its affairs managed for the j
benefit of Mexico and her people. I11 |
the past fifteen years we have built 1
thousands of miles of railroads, and |
with but few exceptions, none of them
have been In the hands of the receiver,
and no reason on God's earth for one of
these, save from a sharp financiering
standpoint often adopted by American
speculators. The Mexican government
has given large subsldfes, and notwlth- j
standing the Lombard and Wall street '
brokers, who seem to# run the great
American government, they have sig-
nally failed to cripple and demoralize
Mexico.
Yes, sir; we have free and unlimited
coinage of silver, am* *♦ buys every-
thing we want in Mexico, >hout in-
quiring what London and L. sister
eity, New York, are paying for silver.
Mexico is prosperous under free coin-
age. We have n«i strikes, no corner
on ryoney or any merchandise, no
trusts or syndicates controlling the
people or the government. The nanlc
of 1893 in the United States was un-
known in Mexico except through Amer-
ican visitors. Rents,m wages, products
and landed interests have In no way
been affected by American panics, or
by the low price of silver. There is not
a vacant house in my city (Monterey),
nor have we had a business failure for
years. Monterey has BO.OOO^population.
I have lived In th* city of Monterey,
state of Nueva de Leon, and since
1880 we have doubled our population
and Increased our business a thou-
sandfold. High tariff in the United
States and the speculators In silver,
hacked by the American government,
have made Monterey In particular
and Mexico, generally, the most pros-
perous scction of the North American
continent. The Windom ruling on
thf lead ores Niat were flowing into the
United Stat
McKinlo
Hood's Pills iV
" ••• -. mllTl, elf.v
GET
WET.
FISH BRAND
SLICKERS
WILL KEEP YOU DRY
Chills and Fever
And all other forms of bilious
liver and malarial disease. Col-
lins Agne ( ure has a record ot
more than forty years' unfailing
success in the cure <«/ these com-
plaints that has never been
equaled by any other remedy#
One bottle *of it is sufficient to
cure five or six of the very worst
cases of chills.
£2?"A11 druggists sell it.
[uredln days. V
•mo forsnme price under
■ I f Jon pr
pay railroad fa
Ify.
nochartro, if wo fm
oory, iinlldo pnt iHli,
!•;. I. M n«oih l'lii clu'i
I luir -
Ol SON permanently
" v l>o treated at
nogiiaraii-
* ri'T'l we #iltcoll«
ind hotel bllti.nnd
have taken mer-
PP« I < o|l
r pari of the body, Hui
i« Secondary lY!,(
i Spot*. I Ice
OUt, It ||
we tfim
lint
fulling
o i oi.ho$
oi.nti-
eiM« w"raon"rh 1111"K" th. 'V,-„rii for", — .
<1.10-.. W..OD.OOO C , ,1 I,,• h!,n| t.nr iinnmdl.
t*mil mmr.iiiiT. Absolut •• ,, 1!!„ SMM
"I'IH'.mi. i hSW. "
uple, ClilCACio', ILL.
'i tliIn ltdvertleumi nt.
■Mta* tad rlghl atterwird th. '.r i ; t
■/•bin mi Mooter* on. of I
If you have any nianhcnil about >on In ,he PeoP'e. ;ind that th. ,ial>st place the sramlest smelting towns on the *
a man! 1 for bloodsuckers is on the other side of globe. j
hisky habits un-
tie tobacco
on request.
„ _ he state of
B WILSON. Una, Texa .
You cannot fall to know something the Atlantic ocean
of the rascality that has been going 011
at political headquarters. You know
conditions are wrong.
You must be aware that the condi-
tions you struggle against are unnatu-
ral, and due to the.errors of govern-
ment. Vote for men and measures that
Will right these wrongs.
Read up and study the conditions,
and you will see a light shlniug around
and about you. and e, now song will
come to your mouths. Voters of Texas,
bo men, be freemen! Don't be dupes
and slaves! Southern Mercury.
The Main 1 unite.
Never since the war has there been
more discussion of the money question
than during the past three months.
The free coinage champions are the
most .enthusiastic, active and aggres-
sive, and representing the views of a
WELL MACHINERY
•11 warranted.
Iiavo boon tested nnd
Rowell & Chase Machinery Co,
1 11 4 Went lltli Street
KA.WIS I in, MISM„'ui.
We regret to erttlclBe tho usually
accurate Dun's Review, but from Its
summary of failures for the first hnlf
of 1895 there Is a great and unaccount-
able omission. It Is only one failure,
to be Bure. anil Dun has collected th<i
evidence of 6.657 others. Vet the lia-
bilities of the 6,657 were only 188.83!),-
944, while those of tlfe one wore $3:16.-
000,000. We refer to the Cleveland ad-
ministration. which by falsifying its
books, tmleavorlng to deceive Its credi-
tors. and. In part, temporarily suspend-
That ruling and tariff caused a large
portion of the Mexican trade to go to
Europe and added millions of money to
the people who seem to manipulate
Washington. Our country Snd Its
customs and habits seem to me to be
catering to England and adopting or I
trying to ape English manners and
customs. The . wealth of Mio United
...... States Is rapidly falling into the hands
large majority of th. people, naturally o( „ (avort„, f,„ . aml if lhis thing
their meetings are the largest, their goea on for 25 year, more lori|a an|j
dukes will be as plentiful sb they are
now In Europe.
I I am an American and have retained
my cltljenshlp agd have always felt
proud to say that I am an American.
but now I see my country drifting into
' such an aristocratic government con-
trolled by trusts, and that money con-
trolled largely by foreigners, that I FOR LADIES ONLY Th«
1:1 ' • --try inf. rii.ntt..n ■< n
, wrapper upon nvHpt of i .m
books nre most widely read, ancf suc-
cess seems already within their grasp.
But the gold standard fellows are ac-
tive too. They aro long-headed
schemers, nnd working hand in hrfhd
with the leaders of the two old political
parties, they expect to divide the silver
vote so that the minority may rule.
It seems absurd, but the handful of
gold-bugs opposed to the people have tremble for the future. The all gold
as the matter now stands a better show mon(,v proposed by Mr. Cleveland Is
PATENTS,TRADE MARKS
The Ladle# Companion,
i !<'. With lli
•Mled in plain
of winning than have the silver men
backed by the sentiment of the masses
of the American people.
That Is because sentiment won't elect
silver men. It requires silver votes, all
cast for the same set of candidates, to
elect silver men. Democratic and Rc-
Ing payments, conceded In bankruptcy Pu^^can 8i'ver °ien will throw their
on July 1. The assets aro a fishing-rod V0te8 nway to reform the two
and n largo collection of first personal K°,<l l)UK Parties. Tho Populists are
pronouns."—-N. Y. Press. solid for silver, and will not fuse with
eltiier old party to help elect gold-bug
humbuggery. If all the gold and sil-
ver of the world were put In circula-
tion you would Injure about one thou-
sand men and benefit millions. Being
a Democrat I am for the great ma-
1 Jorlty.
I am a lifelong Democrat, but In the
next election, If we can't find good
Democrats to lead us, we'll vote for tho
man who or party which has the nerve
to stand by tho dollar of o r daddies.
Very truly, Jules A. Randle.
HUPITKK* 1 HID, \.-knifeui.
t "r« •! < alnrrh treated l>v man
cnvonp'Tt l.ii[itnre cure,l ti K Market
MINERAL Rod* for locntlnir irol
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
French, W. H. The Chandler Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 2, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, September 6, 1895, newspaper, September 6, 1895; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc147201/m1/2/: accessed July 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.