People's Pilot, Volume 3, Number 4, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 July 1893 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
What are those people that don't work here for anyway? The Democratic party as a trust smasher is not a success. Silver is low and as a conse- < uence so is wheat and cotton. Nothing short of actual ownership can ever control the railroads. We wonder if it is not the tarlif that is causing so many bank lailures. The memory of promises is a Thorn iii the side of the Demo- : cratic party. Just what use the silver men have for the Democratic party is hard to tell. Now is the time to get up picnics and do some effective j work for the People’s party. if Grover Cleveland is a Demo-1 unit a great injustice has been done to Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson. The changes of posloftices throughout the country has not contributed much to the prosperity of the people. Any difference between Cleveland and Harrison? Yes, of course. they differ as to who I should hold the offices. The credit of the government is good with the people, butthat i - more than can be . aid of some of the government officials. i*ai State bank currency s.ii.une is a fraud of the first v. ver, and the man who advocates it is worse than a fraud. Hogs are high because of a s - jrcily of hogs. It is a good tc’iig for fellows that have hogs. Money is dear because of* a s. amity of money. IF is a good thing for tiie fellows that have money. See?
The government boarded the Duke of Veragua at a Chicago hotel one week. The bill was i ’oo, and was promptly paid by the government which means that much sweat for the producers of wealth. We demand either a legal union or a separation of the two o d parties. This illegal occupancy of the same political bed is a disgrace to the respectable members of the two families and an outrage on decency. The cry from certain quarters is “the silver kings of the west have had a good thing long enough; they must be choked of: " What about their brothers, the gold kings; have they been suffering much? How would it do to stand them both off awaiie and give the paper kings a little pull? John Sherman says there has never been a day since its passage but what he would have voted agamst the Sherman 1-aw. voted for this bill, he says, to prevent the passage of a free coinage bill. In other words he had his bill passed to prevent two-thirds of the people from having what they wanted. r l he money lender or the highsalaried office holder that is complaining of “Democratic hard limes” is simply trying to make believe a lie, for inwardly he is rejoicing that money is so scarce -thefewej - the dollars in cir- ■ gula’.im the higher his intei est, <
