People's Pilot, Volume 4, Number 51, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 June 1895 — Page 7
This book is creating a sensation throughout the United States. It is revelation on the money question, and is changing the views of millions of patriotic citizens on the great issues now before the American people DO YOU WANT MORE BONDS? OUR Anglo-Wall Street Administration Is now endeavoring to precipitate upon the nation A Gold Debt of Five Hundred Million Dollars, Which will entail 50 years of added labor, self-denial and privation. Had Coin’s Financial School been studied more generally some years ago the wise men of finance could not to.day hope to carry their audacious and infamous measure. Coin’s Financial School Waking Up the People. READ IT! STUDY IT! RECOMMEND IT! This book, which is sold everywhere for 25c., and is being printed from four rapid presses at the rate of 10,000 a day, than which no other book has been so warmly defended by the masses of the people or so bitterly opposed by the banks and wealthy classes through the single-gold-standard press; this book, which is more extensively read and commented upon than any other book of recent years, can be had free by the payment of $1.00 on subscription to The People’s Pilot, either for what is now due or for a year in advance. EVERY TRAVELING MAN SHOULD HAVE ONE. INTERCHANGEABLE =WS = Each and »»m E 1000-MILE * TICKET. ™ = E MONON ROUTE. “E? = r a **• They are good Baltimore &,Ohio South-western r*y-all divisions 4 ♦ 4 • ♦ **“* for one vear c,NC,NNAT| . Hamilton & Dayton r. r.-*ll divisions. ♦ 4 4 4 4 4 , j x j. Cincinnati, janckson a Macinawßy. 44444444 4 !*** from date of Cincinnati & Louisville Mail Line steamers. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 »»•« sale, and good Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago A. st. Louis R’y.—all divisions. 4 4 * uu CLEVELAND A CANTON R. R. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4“1 4 4 ZZ for passage on Cleveland. Akron a Columbus r. y 4444444444 the following Columbus, hocking Valleys Toledo Ry. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 0 Columbus, Sandusky a Hocking R’y. 4 4 4 4 4 4 A.-. 4. < 4 Hoes: INDIANAPOLIS, DECATOR A WESTERN R’Y. 4 44444444 •**! **** Indiana. I lunois a lowa R. R. 4444444444444 Louisville, New Albany a Chicago R’y. 4444444444 v Louisville a Nashville R. R.(Brrw«NLouiAwiLi« ano Cincinnati only.) 4 4 4 LmJ . Louisville. Evansville a St. Louis Consolidated R. R. 444444 EBES Ohio Central Lines. 44444444444444<f ~.r Reoria, Decatur A Evansville R’y. 44444444444 TT „•», ' Pittsburg, Akron a Western R. R. 44444444444 Toledo, St. Louis a Kansas City R. R. 444 4 444444 **"" Wheeling a Lake Erie. 444444 4 444444 4 4 **** The above lines afford the commercial traveler access to the principal cities and towns in Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky, with through lines to St. Louis. Note this: The coupons from this book will also be accepted in payment for **•* , r7r excess baggage and for seats in parlor cars on the Louisville, New Albany & Chi- **** cago Railway, also between Chicago and Cincinnati, via L. N. A. & C. and C. H **** mrw &D. Railroads. 77Z *»»• The train service of line includes all the conveniences devised to make travel- -■»« ing a pleasure. Vestibuled trains, with parlor and dining cars on all day trains; •** Pullman buffet and compartment sleeping Cars on all night trains. Special featores: Steam heat. Pintsch li<rht. !Z7 SIDNEY B. JONES, city PA S ac t I D BALDWIN, d.s pas ag t. E. H BACON, dis.pas. a C t **** 232 Clark St.. Chicago 2W. Washington St. , Indianapolis. 4tm and Market Sts., louisville. Vice Rtes, and General Manager. General Offices! • ■ FRANK J. REED, General Passenger agent. ibb Custom house place. Chicago.
THE PEOPLE’S PILOT, RENSSELAER, IND., THURSDAY. JUNE 13. 1895
Cbtn’« Financuil School (price £Sc) is given free to every new trial subscriber of The People's Pilot. Twenty-five cents for three months.
THE WEEK AT HOME.
SAILOR HATS 10 CENTS A special sale, beginning Saturday. May 25, at Meyer sisters, worth 25c. C. W. Coen has Tile for sale. A full line of cakes always on hand at Lakey's. Nice line of 5 and 10 cent goods at Mrs. Lecklider’s. Buy a McCormick harvesting machine of C. A. Roberts ard save money. Beautiful line of millinery going heavily discounted from now on at Mrs. Lecklider’s. Half price. The Aeromotor Wind mill is sold by Judson H. Perkins, who will put them up at very low prices. In order to order a machine uhat is always in order, it is always in order to order a McCormick, sold by C. A. Roberts Rev. Byle, of Chicago, deliv ers his last sermon next Sunday previous to taking a three months vacation. Childrens’ Day in the evening at the regular hour of service. Everyone invited. Over Twelve Hundred sets of window shades in colors, qualities and prices never before equalled. You can’t help buying after seeing them. At Frank B. Meyer’s “Old Reliable” drug store.
A Surprise.
The members of the Christian church were very agreeably surprised Sunday morning. The presentation of a beautiful silver communion set by the Junior Endeavor Society from the proceeds of their festival was the cause. M. L. Strong on Main street is enlarging his house and addinira large veranda which when completed will make a beautiful home. J. P. Overton, who left for a sight seeing trip on the 30th, writes from Roanoke, Va., that ne is enjoying his trip and that crops are looking fine... He mentions having attended the German Baptist meeting at that place when there were 10,000 in attendance, and 1973 vehicles, besides uncounted saddle hoi ses.
Thfe people must govern thernfelvi* Prosperity will please hollow if th Is lost. The gold reserve Is still going t< Europe. The banker’s prosperity is the people’s poverty. The money power has openly as smned the position of Concentrate your fire on the bankers for a few weeks, and they will be routed. The reform papers tumbled at once to the pretended fight between Carlisle and the bankers. They unaalmouEly proclaimed it a farce. There are sen tinels on the watch towers of liberty. Any representative who works for the retirement of the greenbacks is a traitor to his country and his district. Hit him a jolt with your ballot when you get another chance at him. In view of ttelr prevlouT argument that there was plenty of money in the country it is hard to understand what ' excuse the administration finds for it> proposed Inflation scheme. History will record the proceedings of the last congress by a marginal reference stating that “while Dictator Cleveland was perpetrating these outrages, congress was in session, but its proceedings l>eing unimportant, have no relation to this history.” - Ovelgnd and .Carlisle. either sold, themselves in that last bond deal or put 18,000,000 into the pockets of the syndicate. Silver and greenbacks are a legal tender for everybody in this country but the rich bondholder. The three-ball men are in clover. The whole country is to be “put in soak” to Rothschilds. It still grows more difficult to explain who or what or where is the democratic party. »- - - Grover will henceforth deal directly with Europe, so as to gst all the commission himself.
Short Crops land Lower Prices.
I With a crop of 600,000,000 bushels of wheat in 1891, under McKinley protec- . tion, the average price was 83 cents per bushel. With a crop of only 400,i 000,000 bushel*: in 1893, under Dexnoc- | racy, it averages only 52 cents. Put this ;in your pipe, farmers. and think it over.
Women’s and children’s black hose, only 5 cts. a pair. Chicago Bargain Store. The largest and finest line of wall papers ever in Northern Indiana, and at the lowest prices At Frank B. Meyer’s “old reliable’’ drug store. Chipman & White are handling the Star wind mill, the best in the world, and will put up a 40 foot mill complete for SSO, and do it in proper shape. Every job guaranteed. There will be a practice shoot at Marlboro next Saturday, the Bth, which will be attended by most of the members of the Iriquois Gun Club. Blue rock targets. will be used. Whitewash lime, always on hand at Meyer’s “Old Reliable” drug store. Also whitewash and paint brushes. Dr. Kuderling, the dentist whose artificial teeth harmonize with the patients features in general, will be at the McKeever house again on Tuesday and Wednesday, June 11th and 12th. Do not fail to give him a call.
NOTES AND COMMENT.
Congressman Bland, in his lecture on silver, says: "The battle to be fought, and the all important point to gain is to secure a president who will sign a free coinage bill if sent to him, and will not use the power and patronage of his office to prevent such a bill coming to him.” Accordingly to this kind of logic Mr. Bland is a self-convicted demagogue. He has been all the time working hard to have a free silver bill passed, and at the same time has given in each campaign his best talent and efforts to secure the election of a man who has done all he can to defeat free silver. And right here we make the prediction that Richard P. Bland will vote for the next Presidential nominee of the Democratic party If he is a gold bug. * • * The Bankers’ Magazine, a gold standard organ, has Issued a circular stating that it has prepared an answer to '‘Coin's Financial School,” but expresses the fear that it will not reach and be read by the masseA While there are some things tn “Coin's School” we don’t indorse, we take great pleasure in the knowledge that It Is stirring up the gold bugs as nothing else has ever done. Any attempt to answer the argument from a gold standard standpoint must surely end in miserable failure. ‘‘Coin" stands juftt where the whole bimetallic world stood prior to the time the Rothschilds conceived the Idea of doubling their wealth by striking down silver. The very objections which are urged by the gold bugs can be used to support the arguments In favor of a bimetallic currency. These attempts, however, on the part of the banks go to substantiate what we have frequently said, that this Is a fight between the bankers and the people, the dollar and the citizen. We now believe that silver is to take the place of the tariff as a bone of contention to keep the people divided and to sustain the two old parties. It will be a sham fight throughout. For this reason the free silver issue Is being made as complicated.as possible. We now have the following varieties of free silver advocates; J. Thosejor free, unlimited, and. ludepeidenl coinage? “ 2. Those who only want free, unlimited and independent coinage of th'.* product of the United States. 8. Those who want the ratio changed. 4. Those who want to wait until some International arrangement can be bad We find these factions in both the old parties. There is only one pure, unadulterated free coinage party— the People’s party. Its members are united for free, unlimited and independent coinage of trtlver regardless of ,|<!iirope, Shy Jock or the devil. W r.. . ♦ • ♦ A dispa(<l> from Washington dated May 17, stated that Mr. Carlisle’s Memphis speech "had been written, read to the Presiilent, revised, and a thousand copies printed for distribution.” if any one has any doubt that every effort is being put forward by the gold bug administration and the bankers to commit this country indefinitely to a single gold standard, it must be because they are crttninally blind to passing events. There is not a member of the administration that favors placing. silver-.where it was prior, to 1873. Every national banker? every bondholder, every money leech that has Med this government since the war is in favor of the gold standard. If there was nothing else to condemn the gold standard theory, the crowd that advocates it ought o be enough to sink it into hades wibb honest, Intelligent people. • • • The bonds which Mr. Carlisle and President Cleveland sold to the Bel-mont-Morgan syndicate for 104% are now quoted in the market at 122%. This Is perhaps one of the peculiar ways which the administration has of restoring confidence. That one deal will lay in the shade the winnings of Monto Carlo for many months. When Mr. Cleveland writes his book on economic questions he will no doubt explain the necessity of paying a foreign ayndicate nine million dollars to protect the public treasury when he has a congress of bis own party behind him. Until that is done the people will look upon tuat bond deal with a great deal of suspicion.
List of Patents.
The foltowloz are the patents granted to Indiana inventors thta week. Reported by C. A. Snow A Co., solicitors of American and patents, opposite U. S Patent office, Was>hlnzton. D. C. P. M. Howell. Rolling Prairie, Bicycle. L. b. Boyd. Marlon. Guitar. J. I. Conklin, South Bend. Broiler. . i u a lb «y, Indianapolis, Combined troliey-iiead ana Wheel. W. Heyna. Evansville, Bedstead. W Hqrdley. Terra Haute, Vehicle-wheel. •1. J. Mine. Kendallville, Nut-lock. A. Krieger. Indianapolis. Saw. L. Lambeth. Carlisle. Transplanter. G. W. Roth. Richards, Gas or gasoline engine J. B. Wells. Indianapolis. Lock-strike.
When you can buy a good top buggy for $40 it is false economy to have an old one repaired. Warner & Son handle just such a buggy, as well as a full line of better carriages of all kinds, and at correspondingly lowprices. Cash paid in advance to a manufacturer who needed money to keep from shutting down, secured an unequaled bargain which is more than divided with customers. Porter & Yeoman have just received a new invoice of carpets, consisting of all wool ingrains from the Lafayette Carpet Company. Heavy weight, and superior to anything offered by competitors.
Real Estate Transfers.
Geo. H. Brown, jr., to Edward J. Randle, May 31, 1895, nw ne 20-29-5-40, $1,000. Geo. W. McConnell, by heirs Henry Linaler, April 19, 1895, sj nw 21-28-5, 80 acres. Geo. W. McConnell, by heirs, Henry Lindler, April 19, 1895, □i ne 81-81. 580, SSOO, I. C. D. Eleanor M. Search to Benj J. Gifford, June 3, 1895, swse 80Bl 5. Eleanor M. Search to Benj. J. Giffoid, June 8, 1895. se sw 30-31-5. Eleanor M. Search to Benj. J. Gifford, June 8, 1895, sine sw 80-81-5-90. 11,000. Rhoda Irwin to Mary A. Newman. March 14. 1895, e side sw Rhoda Erwin to George Newman. March 14. 1895, w side sw 22 31-7-60, $2,100. m. Dye by heirs io Ira F. Brainard. May 7, 1895, n end w 4 sw 28-38-6-24 $l2O. James F. RandleJ.lo Robert Randle. May 16, 1895, undivided 4 nw ne 9-2 James F. Randle po Robert Randle, May 16, 1895, undivided 4 ne nw 9 29-5, S6OO. ■AUifd C. Robinson toVinlon W. Schuck. May 25, 1895, se 84-81-7-160. $4,800. Allied B, Lindley to Benj. G. Giffoid. .lure 8. 1895, few nw 3681 6-40 SBSO. Maiy Aj. Vinson to Jacob D. Rich. April 19, 1895, w$ nw 8-28-7 kaiy M. Vinson to Jacob D. Rich. April 19, 1895, se corner SV sw 5-28-7-88, 75 acres, $8,520. Euwaio Sanlord to Chas W. Lowe. Mai ch 1, 1895. e j sw|, 295. Ecward Sanloid Jo Chas. W. Ltve, March 1,1895, ei swi 9-r. H.Ht.ir. Lillian E. Troxell to Edwin G. Warren. June 8, 1895, lot 14 DeMoite Ej iner’s addiiic n, SBFO. Jaccb Haan to John Haan, June 18. 1895 d| es wi nw 56,827 -lu. Jac c b Hi an to John Haan, Jineh. 1815. se sw 14-12-7-40. ,'tc< I Eflfeii to John Hfign. June 8, IHS, sw h e 18 U-? <(', t2.8(0. M. h. (hardier to Ellen E. Graham Juie 4, 1895, n$ nw 12-81-7, 1600. llhr h. CraHw io 11cnr.es 1 hempen. June 1/ IPS, rJ nw R -: i /. Hio. Mi Ti cn J. Gibrcn to Ruth J. Fushr. Nrich 9, 1895, pt. 6, Rcn-ip ti. buatici/s adaiticn. 1500.
i'EM I R cALLIANt E. No, «. JAMFR y << 1 1 ty. n«-«u n llliiHj <v ry *<<.«>( and JoihHi ►au.Hi.y lipins hi i<mo I<l m i idon t<>« in hip, cGm out. Secretary. i ii.jiu uhihiMF ]N J. icaiiiU has ilun it hi stt 1t d i.i d iol'l4 4J. lit I<Hl j til li 11, (1 lit. tut-Al--11: I■ t r M I 1) >et 4,1 It V I . it 1| > pm 11,10 II ail til 11 fa< iii i,< t< i ni. ha,) i ate hi 1.11, ie » ii,in j tit.Hi m m i)e o f Mt) Jill, bill. H V 1.) 4 I CMH jM it 1 ( , l) rfce il i>. •11 in i e n.h) hi) t< its iMtl iiau. We i e rit .nit, il i.i il.t it h n.t it) hi hand io 1 1 i > • •«i oi t. <• ntn 11is v] o tiply for it 1., n tun titt«>>t ,it|j j. Hili- will be . li, t.’iii li.sims m»i1O( imi(ny night, 1 -11. If K j rtVtt n.i il of har- '*' •* • 111 e*. fl t n 111 > 111 tint h.r rein* >. i ii. ti 1 i Lei. <4 at iLt 11 it up t,)ar meet- • » f»rtr»« 11, ).t t n yfj t- j o COMING! THE LU BA Nilß. IHEIEIBAMTB TEE JEBBANDTS. EWS OPERA HOB® 3.,25T1Q1ZT5..3 Thue lb) Inc t n’j -(11 rei dng Thuitdry June 13, 14 and 15. Opening with "he great Comedy Success Is Marriage a Failure. E: t HANGt 01 PLAYS EACH NIGHT. VOICE GE THE PRESS, I: i“ v it) nut doubt 4re of the cleverest ».i i t; names wt havt set r this season.—CM-<-i ;t,t no < aior. g.;> c t —t | 1 An ' .xieilMH tt nj ary beaded by those a,,< Le Brandt and little Irene.—Chicago News. ‘ i ')'■ "-‘ u a: "Is Marriage a l al.uic is ii jo-fhltajcl n es.
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