Pike County Democrat, Volume 27, Number 12, Petersburg, Pike County, 31 July 1896 — Page 4
9f all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report ss© ABSOLUTELY PURE
f to Spike County gemot eat =t Hr m. Met'. STOOPS. rri ‘Tk* PIU* (eiil; Ptmornl has the larKrt elrealatioi) ot a i»j H**M»er vaklliM in ka t'haatf! ‘Miertlnri aril) make a tklafbft! note «f :.:rrr'..~^rd=' P»e Year, to advance Blx Mouths,in advance. 116 Entered at the poetottkv In Petersburg for transmission through the mails as sreuud? Class tuiitjerFRIDAY, Jl'LY 31, ISM. Hoxest money 16 to 1! Again have the^ voters of the country ypnkcn for 16 to 1. The gold bugs are badly paralyzed, and knoweth not what thev dp. ..; ■ l"j 1111 , . ' - i Tits county l»arn yard heeds i around it and signs placed up* to *‘k the grass/’ REPbBUCiX papers in Indiana are falling jnto Utie. The latest being the Anderson Times, daily and weekly. Tue populist party in convention at St. Icons last wivOii uuniit. d Bryan by a vote pf 1,100 out oKt. KH). Nearly unanimous. Thi Garrett Herald, a republican paprtr, in its la^t issue ulmndcHuxl that jmrty and Dow supports Bryan. Setrall and free silver. Hanna, the boas of the gold bug party and Mi KmkVs chief manipulator, i« Ion the run, and would like to know “where he’s at.” *
Joe ChrajDlk, who waJ- elected to congress as a twoUku for several terms from the FnuiEflrt district, is standing on the silver platform. Who Will get the nominations for sheriff and coroner on the republican ticket? That's the question now before the republicans of this eonntv. The farmers of the West and the gold bugs of the East have nominated their presidential tickets, and so far the farmers have 16 to | the he«t of it. I I ' The democratic cam(>aicn in Indikna will open August 15th. This will he •the opening dar in ever) county in the st^te, when the stiver question will l»e fully discussed. John Clark Hiueath, one of the greatest historians of the day and a resident Indiana, has come out squarely on the side of coinage^at the ratio of 16 to 1 and cause of the people. Teller and hi^ crowd have declared Bryan. The latter has our sympath Petersburg Press. of the for arg F And this is not all. Every state in northwe>t will do the same thing at November election. the the A vote for James A.Coates for repn-tent-ative means to send a i-orjio ration lawyer, a millionWirc ami a pod bug to the Unlited fe'ates senate. A vute for Captain Sasser Sullivan liieaus to send a silver advojeate to the senate from Indiana. The nekt thing in onler is for ttje rejM*lican- to hold atiother convention and make the nomination of Bryan lor president unanimous. The West is now solid for* the Stiver candidates and but a few eastern states are now left to tell the take of republicanism. Tax a any will support the democratic nominees as will the laboring tuen and farming districts of New York. The gold bug dera*j»cra?s talk of a third ticket. Well, let 'em go. The common every day ;>eopl« will carry New York without the assistant* of the gold bugs.
HaTisii behind us the commercial inter**t# and the laboring interests and all the toiling Diiiw?. we shall aiiswer theirl demands for a gold standard by saying to them, you shall not press upon the brow of labor thi-* crown of thorns. You shall not crucify mankind up«>n .1 cross of gold. —WiUiajn Jennings Brvan. Tukee r* hot a day passe* but what susne prominent republican in the West deserts the gold bug party which is being mampttlated by Wall street ami the British. T-y are for America first, hast an 1 ail the time, and decline that the United States i* able to make and sustain her own financial p licy without the assistance of anv foreign nation. | ^ ^ T The free silver party in convention, at St. Louis last week endorsed the democratic nominee* for president and vice-president. The free stiver party adopted but one plank Vt their platform and that was 16 to 1. The members of this party are all republi* yams who believe that the hope of thia fount ry is that silver be restored. Exgovernor St. John of Kansas was chairman of the eon cent toti.
Sixteen to one. That and nothing more is what the people want . Make it unanimous and have it all over with. Silver is bouud to win the day. Man is of but fev days aud full of t troubles. That's abojit the condition of j the Eastern gold bugs at the present time. It is now a 16 to 1 bet thht the West wins by a 16 to 1 majority in the electoral college, and with a popular majority of more thau a million. The democratic congressional convention of the First district will be held at Evans- ! ville, Thursday, August 2?th, for the purpose of nominating a candidate for congress. The republican party in Pike county is in a bad row of stumps. The party has made a heavy debt on the tax-pavers, has Hosted county orders and otherwise misi managed affairs. The democrats of Maine will pull off : their gold bug candidate for governor, and | get in line with the national party. Maybe there isn't going to be a fight iu New Kng- ; land and maybe there is. Bryan, the democratic nominee for pres- ! ident hits been thrice nominated. Sixteen to oue is growing. There is now but one convention to be held and that by the prohibitionists, unless the republicans should decide to hold another convention. _ According to figures submitted by leadi ing silver* democrats there is no possibility i of Bryan’s election.—Petersburg Press. From the latest figures submitted McKinley and the gold bpgs and the foreign powers will not carry ten states in the Union. ,
Two vacancies have been caused l>y death ^>n the republican county ticket. John DeMott, the candidate for sheriff, and B. | F. Laswell, the candidate for coroner having died last week. They were both exceptionally good citizens of the county and \ t ry well known. The nomination of William Jennings j Bryan by the populist t national convention is heartily approved by* the party leaders in it his county, who have been favorable to \ Bryan since his nomination at Chicago. | Bryan is the choice of all parties, except ; the gold bugites. The all-abeorbing question in next Novell i 1st * ill be: "Who struck Billy Bryan?’" [ —I'etc i> burg Press. All accounts up to the hour of going to ' press would indicate that a cyclone has 'truck the gold begs and the XlcKinley millionaires and trust combinations. Chink, cliink. chink. No crown of thorus forlabor’s brow; Chink, chink, chink. No cross of gold for mankind now. Chink, chink, chink, NVc’il not lo single standard boar; Chink cl)ink, chink, We Vote for freedom*]'«!(!■. Ik free coinage would enable the savings banks to payoff their $1,350,000,000': of | dcjK-sits in 53-cent dollars and thereby make a profit of $o84,500,000, why is it that the heads of those banks, who^are m business t<» make m >ney, are so -wterly oppostxl to free coinage? Don't they want to make all that profit?. Tuk&k is now hustling among the men who were candidates before the republican county primary elect ion for places on the ticket caused by the deaths of the candidates for sheriff and coroner. Some want another primary tailed, while those who were second in the primary say that they are entitled to the places, GpLD ami silver is the money of the constitution, The constitutional standard of value is established and cannot tie overturned. To overturn it would shake the whole system. Gold and silver at rates fixed by congress constitutes the legal standard of value in this country, and neither congress nor any state has authority to establish any other standard or dispose of this.—Daniel Webster, 94th Congress, December 31, 1836.
Thk voters of Pike county will be called upon at the November election to elect a representative who will help elect a United States senator to succeed Senator Voorhecs. If the voters desire a gold bug se nator vote the .republican ticket, if a silver senator vote for thq* democratic candidates. As there is but one leading sentiment pervading Pike county at the present time, it is a 16 to 1 conclusion that a 16 to 1 man will represent the county in the next session of the Indiana legislature. The silver craze has reached its height in* this county and even now before the campaign has begun the boys are finding out where they are ••at” aud are cotufng back. Defection in democratic ranks is becoming too plain to hide and the leaders ate realizing that some one has made a mistake.— Petersburg Frees. Keep a stiff upper lip, bui for chee^his takes the bakery. Really, it w^nld t«e a microscope to find more than a dozen gold bugsontsidc of a few place hunters and candidates for post offices and deputy ship*.
It is readily admitted by every intelligent person that there is something radically wrong in this country and that it has been growing for the past twenty years, but what the cause is seems to puzzle the people. The producer knows* that the prices of his products has been growing less with each year, the laborer knows that his wages has been gradually growing less since 1878. The doctors are unable to diagnose the case to the satisfaction of the people. But as one prominent man has said: “You can hear of numerous young men sitting around who can explain the case at onc^ and yet they have uever handled,more than $500 per year in their lives.” The people i have begun to think for themselves and have come to the conclusion that this country has been on a single gold standard for twenty-three years and reason that a change to a double standard of gold and silver cannot reduce prices any lower, and will vote to make a change. This is a question for the people to decide and not the money brokers of the East and of foreign nations. The financial men of the country arc unable to give any satisfactory solution of the affairs of this country for the past quarter of a century. The patient is sick, but they know not the remedy. But it is dollars to doughnuts that a change in the financial polit y of this government is. demanded by the people of this nation without waiting for foreign countries to dictate what it shall be. The question of the currency is a great oue, and should be carefully considered by I the people. It should be studied and the party that will give the relief that is needed should receive your suffrage at the \ oils in November. Past party affiliations should not hold you to voting against your better judgment and your own interests. Vote for principal first and party afterward. If you think that the Eastern policy is what you need, vote it. If you think that the Western policy and America for America is what you need, vote it. But before you make your decision carefully weigh the matter and make your decision as your better judgment would have you to do.
Hkkr Most, the leader of anarchy in this country, has declared tor the gold standard. The republican campaign managers should at once put him on the campaign list for a few campaign speeches.—Democrat. Herr Most is top loyal a friend to Altgeld, the man who managed the democratic convention at Chicago, to do anything contrary to that gentleman’s wishes. He says A tgdd is the greatest man in the country, is as much an anarchist as himself and is the friend of all anarchists.—Petersburg Press. The following special was sent from New York to the St. Louis Republic a day or two after the democratic convention. The anarchist will now become a great leader with the gold bug republicans. Rea l what he says: “Here I am represented by the Sun as a follower and supporter of Altgeld, Tillman and all the other silver cranks, when I atn, a' all anarchists know, a better gold standard advocate than even the most rabid Wall street- banker. 1 am, moreover, in favor of a scarcer material .than gold as the unit of value. 1 would have the carat of diamonds, if diamonds could bo utilized, as the medium of exchange. As for silver money, why silver is so cheap and plentiful that shoe nails might as well la* put in circulation as currency. Gold is the only correct standard of.value.”
Janes G. Blaise, “the Plumed Knight." once the idol of the republican party, said in 1373: I believe the struggle now going on in this country ami in other countries for a single gold standard would, if successful, produce widespread disaster in and throughout the commercial world. The destruction-of silver and establishing gold as a sole unit of value must have a ruinous effect upon all forms of property except those improvements which yield a fixed return in money. It is impossible to strike silver out of ex is twice as money without results which will prove distressing to millions, and disastrous to tens of thousands. I lielieve gold and silver eoiu te le the money of the constitution: indeed, the money of the American people anterior to the constitution, which the gieat organic iaw recognized as quite independent of its own existence. No [tower was conferred on congress to ^declare cither tnetal should not la? money. Congress has in my judgement no power to demonetize silver any more than to demonetize gold. The following states will hold elections before the presidential elections, which occurs November 3: Alabama has an election in August. Vermont elects a state ticket in September. Arkansas votes in the same month. On September 13 Maine voters will cast their ballots. Florida and Georgia vote in October. Governors will be elected in Colorado, Connecticut. Delaware, Idaho, Illinois, ludiana. Kansas. Massachusetts, Mit-higan, Minnesota, Montana, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia. Washington, West Virginia and Wisconsin. In all of the 35 states presidential electors will be chosen. The Tammany tiger is going to take a fall out of the bulb and bears of Wall street that have lined up under the banner of Hanna and McKinley. The old tiger has sms enough to answer for, but in this instance he is on the right side. The voters! of Pike county without regard to politics are in favor of silver, and do uot endorse Wall street and the British running this government. The Petersburg Press to the contrary notwithstanding.
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Democratic Ticket For President, WILLIAM J. BRYAN. For Vice-President, ARTHUR SEW ALL. Governor, j BENJ. F. SHIVELY, St. Joseph County. Lieutenant Governor, [JOHN C. LAWLER, Washington County. Secretary of State, j SAMUEL M. RALSTON. Boone County. Auditor of State, [ JOSEPH T. FANNING. Marion County. Treasurer of State, j MORGAN CHANDLER, Hancock County. Attorney General, J.G- McNUTT, Vigo County, r Reporter of the supreme Court, < HENRY WARBl’M, Marion County, superintendent of Public Instruction, W. B. ST. CLAIR. Pulaski County. State Statistician, O. H. DOWNEY, Noble County. Appellate Judges ;Five Dishicts) EDWIN TAYLOR, FRANK E. GAVIN, THEODORE P. DAVIS. ORLANDO LONTZ. GEORGE E. ROSS. For Judge of the 57th Judicial Circuit, EUGENE A. ELY, Pike County. For Prosecuting Attorney 37tli Circuit, WILLI AM E; CON. Dubois County. For Representative, SASSER SULLIVAN, Marion Twp. ! For Treasurer, I ON IAS O. SMITH. Washington Twp. For Recorder, NATHANIEL CORN, Lockhart Twp. For Sheri if, WILLIAM M. RIDGEWAY, PatokaTwp. j For Coroner. JOHN T. KIME, Washington Twp. For Surveyor, A. G. CATO, Monroe Twp. For County Assessor, JOHN It. MeKINNEY, Monroe Twp. For Commissioner, First District, JOSKi'H L. ROBINSON, Washington Twp. For Commissioner, Second District JAMES P. RUMBLE. Madison Twp.
Senator Teller for Bryan. f “Denver. Col., July 16, 1896.—Hon. j \V. J. Brvan, Lincoln, Neb.: Dear Sir—I ■ congratulate you on your nomination at; Chicago. I think the country is to be con-; grata iated also. I need not assure you that i your nomination was more than satisfactory i to me. I think we shall be able to consol- ' j idate all the friends of free silver iu your | support, and if we do this, I believe you I will be elected; although I do not overlook ! the tremendous power that will be' put I against us in this campaign. “All the power of money and organized j wealth, corporations and monopolies of all t kinds will lie against us. Justice is on our I side, ami this is the cause.of the jieople; It ' is a contest for industrial independence and for freedom from the domination of foreign powers and foreign caj italists, and it does not seem possible that, iu such a contest before the American people, justice should fail and wrong prevail. 1 do hot believe we shall fail. “I think J can-'promise you the cordial support of the western .silver men, who have heretofore acted with she republican party, and if von get that I think all of the western and inter-mountain states will be 1 with you. I will not offer any suggestions to you, save to advise you that, as you were nominated without pledges of favor or privilege to anyone, you maintain that position, and make no pledges or promises, so that you may go into the great office of the president of the United States without j the promises, even if they are such ns may be properly carried out. “It will afford me pleasure to place myself at the disposal of the national committees to make speeches in your behalf, as my ' health will permit, where ami when they may think I will do good. 1 am, very respectfully, 11. M. Teller.” j
-——— —r—. " The Issue Joined. [From the Republican Money Plank.j We are unalterably opposed to every measure calculated to debase our currency or impair the credit of our country. We. ; are. therefore, opposed to the free courage ! ! of silver except by international agreement with the leading commercial nations of the world, and until such agreement can be | obtained we believe the existiuggold standard must be preserved. [From the Democratic Money Plank.] We are unalterably opposed to the single gold standard, Which has locked fast the! prosperity of an industrial people if: the paralysis of hard times. Gold monometallism is a British policy and its adoption has brought other nations into financial servitude to London. It is not only un-Ameri-can, but anti-American, and it can be fastened on the United States only by the! stifling of that indomitable spirit and love of liberty which proclaimed our political J independence in 1776 aud won in the war of! the revolution. We demand the free and j unlimited coinage of both gold and silver; at the present legal ratio of 16 to 1, without waiting for the aid or consent of any other nation. We demand that the standard silI ver dollar shall be a full legal tender,equally | i with gold, for all debts, public and private, aud we favor such legislation as will pre- j vent for the future the demonetization of! any kind of legal tender money by private contract.
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Notice of Commissioner's Sale of Heal Estate. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned C'utimisv.niMT appointed by tin- Pike Circuit Court at it' Pel ruary tern:, 1SUH, In a partition st'it wherein W tit* ii.omase; al. were plaintids. and Perry Griffiths et al wfre detenduuts, will ><lt at public auction at the door 01 the court house in Petersburg, Pike Comity', Indiana, at two o'clock p. iu. on SATUilDAV, AUGUST 1898. j The following described real estate in Pike County, Indi um.hr-wit: The noi thwesl quarter of ihe'Vm; .-st quarter, and the east halt of the west hail of toe southwest quarter ot the northwest quarter, all in section one, town otitfsoulb. range eight west,containing in alt fifty Hert s, more <>r les>. Said sal** wii; he made uponthe following terms, to-wit: Said lands to be .sold to the highest bidder, but for .not less than twothirds of the appraised value thereof: onethird of the purchase price to be paid in cash on date of sale, and the ba’anre in equal installments at six and twelve ' montns from date 01 sale; the purchaser to execute his notes for the deferred payments, due in six and twelve months from date of sale, respectively, bearing six percent intercet p-r annum from date, and providing for at tort leys fe>s. waiving relief from vulnaiion 'or apprrisement laws, with good and so the lent personal security thereon totbe approval of the undersigned Commissioner. ' #-a S..G. Iuvexport, Commissioner.
Notice of Administration. No: tee is hereby given that the undersigned hM been appointed by the t'leik of t he I ireuit Court ol Pike County, State of Indiana, administrator Of the estate of Jonas Robirskm. late of Pike County, deceased. Said estate U supposed to be solvent. \VI hLi A V K. HRot'K, July i.*. ISOti. Administrator. Notice of Administration. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appoiu ed by the clerk ol the circuit court of Pike county. State of Indiana, administrator with the will annexed of tbe estate of Sarah J. Aah, late of Pike coumy, de0 waned Said estate is supposed to be solvent. Edward P. Richardson. July 18th. isiki. Administrator.
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OF Notice is hereby given that I will sell at public auction to the highest bidder at my 3 residence in Madison township, nine miles west of Petersburg, on Saturday, August i, 1896,The following personal property: Six head of Horses, ten head of Cattle, sixty bead of Hogs, Hay, Binder, Corn Planter. Cultivators, Breaking Ploifrs. Harrows, and other Farming implements too numerous to mention; also Harness, all kinds of Tools, etc. TERMS OF SALE-—All sums under $5.0^. cash on day of sale. On all sums of $5.00 and over a credit of six months without interest will be given, the purchaser gtv * ing note with approved security. J.S. Nkwxirk, Auctioneer. J. O- BRA^Vt
