People's Pilot, Volume 4, Number 11, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 August 1894 — Page 4
The People’ Pilot. PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY THE PILOT PUBLIBW COMPANY (Limited)., OF Norh Western Indiana., Luther L. Ponsler. .President. J. A. McFarland. .. Vice Pres. Lee E. Glazebrook .. Secretary Marion I. Adams... Treasurer. L. E. CLAZEBROOK, I Associate J. A. MCFARLAND, ( Editors. Cq lj ado n■ n t Local Editor and . a. nAnnULU, [ Business Manager. Tm People's Pilot :s the official organ of the Jasper and Newton County Alliances,and la published every Friday at ONE DOLLAR PER ANNUM If pai>' in advance. If not paid in advance. 81.25 per year will be c> ?>»’«red to all subscribers. BATES OF ADVERTISING. Displayed Advertisements 10c inch Local Notices 5c line. Entered as second class ma.ter at the post office in Ken»eu-" Ind Rcnimelaer, Friday, .uy HI. 1594
People’s Party Ticket.
State Ticket Secretary of State, C. A. ROBINSON. Shelby County. Auditor of State, E. A. PERKINS, Marion County. State Treasurer, A. B. KEEPORT, Cass County. At =• rm-y Genpral, CY HOLCOMB, Gibson County. Cler.. .? . .... Court, J. H. MONTGOMERY, * Lawrence County. Sup’t Public Instruction, J. H. ALLEN, Vigo County. State Statistician. W. P. SMITH, Marion County. Geologist, EDWARD KINDLE. Johnson County. Judge Supreme Court 4th Dist., D. H CHAMBERS, Henry County. I»Mrict Ticket. Representative in Congress, S. M. HATHORN, Carrol I County. For Senator, PERRY WASHBURN, of Benton county. For Joint Representative. DAVID B. NOWELS, of Jasper county. For Pr«‘--.-. irin~ Attorney, J. D. RICH, of Newton county. C'ot«>trv Ticket. For County Clerk, John a. McFarland, of Jordan Township. For County Auditor, THOMAS H. ROBINSON. of Gillam Thownship. For County Treasurer, JOHN L. NICHOLS, of Barkley Township. For County Sheriff, ELLIS JONES, of Carpenter Township For County Surveyor. WALTER HARRINGTON, • of Union Township. For County Coroner, M. Y. SLAUGHTER, of Marion Township. For Commissioner. Ist District JOELF. SPRIGGS, of Walker Township. F r Commissioner. 2nd District, JOSEPH A. ROBINSON, of Marion Township. For Commissioner, 3rd District. GEORGE G. THOMPSON, of Carpenter Township. The Pilot from now until Ifecevber Ist, for 20 cents.
Shifted.
Every Republican cur of high or low degree, be he pencil pusher or campaign yawper, is now striving to make the people believe the panic was caused by threatened tariff reduction. What short sighted liars they are. Do they imagine that we have forgotten that less than a year ago, John Sherman, New York Tribune, Chicago Tribune, Inter-Ocean, Dunn and Bradstreet, with all the small fry of the press and rostrum charged the panic to the silver purchasing clause of the Sherman law. Have they forgotten that they roasted the Senate for its dilatory tactics, how they charged it with keeping off the business boom that was ready and waiting to come as soon as the threat ened “slump to silver” was out of the way; how they promised that the outflow of gold would cease; how six hundred millions of gold in hiding was waiting for the repeal measure; how it would “come out of hiding, rush into the channels of trade;’’ how prices would rise, how the wheels of industry would start, every idle spindle would whirl, and ail would be employed ai good wages. The tariff as a cause was not mentioned. The
whole cause as then charged by Republicans was the “threatened slum*) to the silver standard.” The purchasing clause of the Sherman law was repealed, gold didn’t come out of its hiding, gold still went abroad, the wheels of industry remained deadlocked, the spindles didn’t turn, labor was not employed, trade didn’t revive, bankruptcies continued, the tramp continued to tramp, and every prediction failed just as the Populists said they wourd fail. ' The campaign of 1894 is now on and the Democrats must bear the blame for all the ills the country is suffering, so these monstrous liars of high and low degree forgetting all they said a year ago about the cause of the panic, now charge it to the scare about tariff reduction. If the panic was caused by the “threatened slump to silver” in 1893. it couldn’t be caused by a tariff scare in 1894. When did you lie about the cause of the panic, last year or this? It was not caused by the Sherman law last .year, nor by the tariff this year, but was a world-wide conspiiacy of the money power of the world, and made possible by the rascally legislation of the Republican party for the past thirty years. All the loss, bankruptcies, misery and crime caused by the panic in 1893 and 1894, are primarily chargeable to the Republican party and policy. When the people entrusted the Democrats with power and they failed in applying corrective measures, then the responsibility became theirs, and to-day both parties stand condemned aud wholly unw’orthy of the confidence of the American people. We have no faith or sympathy for Democratic leaders, nor are we an apologist for Democratic treachery and hypocracy, but we do insist that when a man or a party makes a record, that man and that party should be made to stand by that record. The Republicans made a specific charge last year that all know now is false, and we submit that they have no right now to claim a different cause and ask people to believe it merely because they say so.
Two years ago the people turned down and out the w’hole Republican outfit, because they would not respond to the wishes of the voters. The Democratic party was given .control only to prove as miserable failures as the Republicans) Take the Democratic house with its one hundred majority, fresh from the people, pledged to certain policies, see the miserable, cringing, cowardly scoundrels, bull-dozed, brow-beaten and
bribed with patronage till all their principles vanished, kicked and cuffed by the senate as so many puppies till they make a complete surrender. After all wax lost and the opportunity to retrieve was forever lost, the house was seized by a virtuous spasm or remorse or the dread thought of facing a betrayed and angry constituency; whereupon it made haste to pass such bills as it ought to have passed when it first assembled, and after passing them should have stood by them and thrown the whole responsibility of legislative failure on the president and senate. They know the passage of those bills now will amount to nothing. Yet, they pass them with the sole purpose of deceiving the people. W r hy, when they return home they will say, “Why, yes, of course we passed bills for free coal, iron ore, lumber, sugar and free coinage, but those rascally senators killed our bills. Do these betrayers of the people, these sell-outs, and enemies of right think they can deceive the people and get back to Washington to inflict further injury upon an almost ruined people? We trust the people are too wise for that.
Mr. Egan’s Testimony.
iChicago Record. Mr. Egan may have been entirely serious, but there was a vein of grim humor in his testimony before the labor commission yesterday. He told the commission that he was the general agent of the General Manager’s association in its contest with the American Railway union. In that capacity lie was authorized to call for police, deputy marshals, federal or slate troops in any number he thought necessary, but he did not have authority to talk in peaceful conference with Mr. Debs or Mr. Howard without the special sanction of the General Managers' association. Unlimited power for repres sion, not a jot for peace, would define the extent and scope of Mr. Egan’s job. Incidentally, it would define the whole unfortunate policy of the railroads in the recent difficulty. Carried to its legitimate conclusion such a policy means extinction for one of the contestants and incalculable injury to the interests that are drawn into such conflicts innocently. It is not likely that the neutral public will continue long in its submission to the inconvenience and damage ’that comes from acquiscence in such a policy as Mr. Egan so ingenuously described. The people who paid for soldiers and deputy marshals to do Mr. Egan’s bidding have a right to demand that conciliation be substituted for extinction in the general mangers’ strike vocabulary.
Specimen Cases.
S. H. Clifford, New Cassel, Wis.,-was troubled with Neuralgia and ' Rheumatism, his Stomach was disordered, his Liver, was affected to an alarming degree, appetite fell away, and he was terribly reduced in flesh and strength. Three bottles of Electric Bitters cured him. Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg, HL, had a running sore on his leg of eight years’ standing. Used three bottles of Electric Bitters and seven boxes of Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, and his leg is sound and well. John Speaker. Catawba, 0., had five large Fever sores on his leg, doctors said he -was incurable. One bottle Electric Bitters and one box Bucklen’s Arnica Salve cured him entirely. Sold at F. B. Meyer’s Drug Store.
. “There is a Salve for every wound.” We refer to De Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve, cures burns, bruises, cuts, indolent sores, as a local application in the nostrils it cures catarrh, and always cures piles. A. F, Long & Co.
AT COST I Will Sell My Entire Stock of Goods AT COST for —>Twenty Days,drconsisting of Dress Goods, Ginghams, Calicos, Muslins, Table Linen, Crash, Ready Made Clothing, Carpets, Boots and Shoes. O. M. Florence.
BOY S OF ’6l.
(Continued From Page 5.)
N. S. Bales, I, 124 Ind., Rensselaer. Cane Galbreath, G, 9th Ind.. Blackford. R. Sieverson, G, 9th Ind., Parr. David Biocus, G, 128, Fair Oaks. Martin McNutt, E, 13 111, Remington J W. Nf -on. E, 39 HL, Rensselaer. B. H. Dillon, K, 20 Ind., Renso la er. ■i- b Mimiion, A, 33, Ind.. Dunuville. Jon n Vanniee, D, 150. Ind., Munon. Hen-y Grow, E, 29 Ind., Rens Sina.e;’. W n ?•.< why, 2nd Mo. Cav.. I ndiain. polls. Jos. Gr ■•. A, 118 Ind., Fletch er.
O. P. Robinson, H, 155 Ind. Rensselaer. W. H. Wood, E, 135 Ind., Renssela« i. John C. Kresler, F, 129 Ind., Rensseiaer. H A Renner, M, Ist Mich Cav., Mt. Ayr. S Gerard, C, 100. Cav., Rensselaer. W B Chilcote. G, 11 Mich, Cav., Rensselaer. A Warren, K, 74 Ind., DeMotte. J M Wasson, G, 40, O. V. 1., Rensselaer. R. W. Marshall. C, 100, 111. Inf., Rensselaer, Geo. P. Daugherty, A, 11th Ind. Cav., Rensselaer. Wm F Powers, H, 15 Ind., RensS6I3iGF Thos Walters, D, 67 Ind., Pleasant Grove. John W Porter, G, 9 Ind., Rensselaer. John Sulson, H, 15th Ind., Rensselaer. E V Vondersmith, H, 88 HL, Remington. Jas. Thompson, B, 123 Ind., David Hilton, H, 53 HL, Pleas- • ant Ridge. Nathan Dunn, C, 100, Rensselaer. John G Reynolds. K, 20 Ind., Rensselaer. W Scott, K, 125 Ind, Rensselaer. W Stockwell, D, 82 0., J C Watson, C, 139 Ind. Rensselaer. Allen Catt, E, 99 Ind. Rensselaer. J. W. S. Ulrey, R, 120 Ind. Fores-
man. H. D. Wilson, C, 120 Ind. Francesville. J. S. Murphy, H, 140 Ind. Kewanna. H. W. Wood, K, 93, 0. V. I. Rensselaer. H. Warren, H, 151 Ind, Rensselaer. H. C. Pierson, H, 151 Ind. Renssel Jos. Mitchell, C, 62 111. Rensselaer. E, W. Morris, H, 69 0. V. I. Rensselaer. Jacob Hurley, D, 9th Ind. Blackford. Jas. A. Blake, K, 113 O. FairOaks. A. M. Mundun, A, 53 Ind. FairOaks. E. Hammerton. D. 99 111. Rensselaer. John Humes, E, 29 Ind. Rensselaer. H 0 McDonald, E, 135 Ind. Zard. Jos. H. Burns, E, 135 Ind. Remington. W. H. Rhoades, G, 9th Ind. Reesselaer. R 0 Dowler, E, 86 Ind. Rensselaer. t Ed M Green, E, 21st Heavy Art. Remington.
List of Patents.
Granted to Indiana irventors this week. Reported by C. A. Snow & Co., Solicitors of American and Foreign Patents, Opp. U. S. Patent Office, Washington, D C. O. W. Bowen. Albion, carnage jack: G. J. Cline, Goshen, roller and ball bearing; W. M. Duane & E A Peck, Indianapolis, nut lock: C. Klenk, Connersville, liquid wood-filler; J. L. Potter, Indianapolis, trench machine; N. H. Roberts, Indianapolis, draft equalizer; R. M. Roberts, Anderson. ’ i *ss carrying truck; F. W. Rooinson. Richmond, thrashing machine
West Lebanon.
BY SOUTH-WEST.
We had the pleasure of attending one of the Hamilton Ideal Theater Co.’s entertainments at at this place on the 25th. With the troupe appeared an impressive and able actor in the per son of Gus Phillips, a well known Rensselaer boy, and he rendered his part in a capable and forcible manner.
The Coxey meeting at Veedersburg has awakened the people to the necessity of immediate action. The voters are on the inquiry. You may look out for a good report from this section at the November election.
GILLAM.
BY SHORTY.
A number attended the Remington fair this week. The teachers of Gillam have all returned to their respective homes. McKendree Faris has returned to Melvin, HL, to resume teaching. A number of Gillam’s young people will leave id a few days to attend school elsewhere. Emma Robinson is spending the week visiting friends in Remington and Goodland.
A Household Treasure.
D. W. Fuller, of Canajoharie, N. Y., says that he always keeps Dr. King’s New Discovery in the house and his family has always found the very best results follow its use; that he would not be without it, if procurable. G. A. Dykeman Druggist, Catskill, N. Y., says that Dr. King’s New Discovery is undoubtedly the best Cough remedy; that he has used in his family for eight years, and it has never failed to do all that is claimed for it. Why not try a remedy so long tried and tested. Trial bottles free at F. B. Meyer’s Drug Store. Regular size 50 cts. and SI.OO.
No Griping, no Nausea, no Pain, when De Witt’s Little Early Risers are taken. Small Pill. Safe Pill. Best Pill. A. F. Long & Co. ■ Hallie Flynn is clerking for John Eger.
A6ENTS WANTS*. A Vital Questions of AL a Po’itiea) Revolutn 6 DdVa tloil of CrlMsof J ■ - S( antl Battle.-, for Bread. COVEJ’ISM. Strikes, the Uneniployed. GREAT LABOR ISSUES of the present and the fnturv. Tariff Legislation. The Silver Question Wba’ PROTECTION does for the American Workman. What FREE TRADE does forhtr.i. A book for the hour. Everybody wauts it. Price only JUKI. Sells at Sight. Most liberal terms to agents. Send for circulars or send 20 cents for agent’s outfit at once. P. W ZIEGLER A CO., 720 Chestnue St. Philadeldhia. Pa.
If you have not yet procured one of those pretty watch case openers, get one from your jeweler, or send to Philiadelphia. They are furnished free by the Keystone Watch Case Company. Besides making a handsome charm for your chain, they save your finger-nails and knifeblades. The Keystone Company is the largest of its kink in the world, and makes ail kinds of cases, from the low-priced nickel to the most expensive solid gold. Its great specialty is the Jas. Boss filled case. Jas. Boss invented and made the first tilled case in 1859, and many of the cases then made and worn since are still intact. Later the Boss patents passed into the hands of the Keystone Wai eh Case Company. which has the sole right to make these cases. Boss cases are known to all jewelers ss the standard, after which all other filled cases are patterned. All Keystone cases. Boss cases included, have the far-famed Non-pull-out bow or ring. It is the only bow that is securely fastened to the case, and can only be had on cases made by this Company. It prevents loss of the watch by theft or injury by dropping. These cases are handled by all jewelers, as the Company itself does not retail,
One word describes it—“perfection.” We refer to DeWitt’s Witch Salve, cures obstinate sores, burns, skin diseases and is a well known cure for piles. A. F. Long & Co. We have received some new printing material, and are better prepared than ever to do your job printing. Come in and see us. The Nonconformist and the People’s Pilot from now until after the election, both for 35 cents. Can you beat that. What is the use of baking when you can buy fresh bread at your door every day of Lakey & Saylers’ bread wagon. Wm. Eger has commenced the the work of placing another story on his store room. Long cut, late style, black frock English worsted suits. Chicago Bargain Store. You can have the Pilot sent to any address from now until Dec. 1, for only 20 cents Our merchants are receiving large invoices of goods for their fall and winter trade.
Mrs. C. E. Hershman is again able to be out by the aid of a pair of . Say, have you tried one of' those stylish rigs at W. E. Overtons’ livery barn? The tank at the court house well received a good cleaning out this week. New stock of fine clothing just received. Chicago Bargain Store. The band did some excellent playing this week for the old soldiers. B. F. Ferguson is moving into his new residence on Cullen street. Porter & Yeoman can and will sell goods cheaper for cash than on time. Lew Day is now occupying his new home on North Cullen street. The only real bargain house in Western Indiana. Chicago Bargain Store. New and nobby rigs at reasonable rates at W. E. Overton’s. See my line of 10 cent toilet soaps. B. F. Fendig,
