People's Pilot, Volume 6, Number 4, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 July 1896 — PATRIOTS DESERTINC [ARTICLE]

PATRIOTS DESERTINC

THE REPUBLICAN W; PARTY BY THE SCORES THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY. ..

GOLD STANDARD UNPOPULAR —. Populigt News—Convention Notes—National Reform Press Meeting— AAmission Tickets.

There has been m uch said lately about a union of reform forces on honest lines, the consummation of which is earnestly desired by all good citizens. One of the first steps leading to such a union would be the restoration of perfect harmony in the Peoples party ranks. The tendency in that direction at the present time is very encouraging. Extreme partisanship should give way to patriotism. Peace should take the place of prejudice and universal love supplant passion in the hearts of men. Then we shall have better goverment, if not the 'millienium. James G. Clark the celebrated Peoples party poet, is the author of anew song entitled “The Peoples Battle Hymn.” published in sheet form by the Oliver Ditson Company. Gen. Weaver says: “It is the song we have been waiting for. It is an Iliad of itself. ” Reports from Illinois indicate an increasing free silver sentiment among the farmers and a material increase of the Peoples party vote at the corning election.

All advices from Oregon agree that the silver republicans are flocking to the Peoples party standard. The sentiment for Senator Teller appears to be quite strong in that case. Parties des iring accomodations during the Convention can make arrangements by addressing T. S. Pugh,» Room 356, Lindell Hotel, St. Louis, Mo. This service costs you nothing except if you wish a reply in communicating, enclose stamp. He has made arrangments with a number of hotels and private houses whereby a lower rate has been secured than others could get and those who desire to cake advantage of this service should address at once with full particulars as to when they expect to arrive, etc. The Peoples Party State Com mitte of North Carolina, met July 3rd, at Raleigh, and author ized a call for the state nominating convention to be held at that place on August 13. The majority of the North Carolina delegates are said to favor Teller for the presidency. The silver republicans of Minnesota have issued a manifesto stating that they can no longer stand by the party on account of its single gold standard platform. Among the signers are Congressman C. A. Towne, of Duluth, ex-Con-gressmanjohn Lind of NewUlm, County Attorny Frank M. Nye and John Dainsmith of Minneapolis, and John B. Sanborn of St. Paul. All these have been very prominent in politics. The Republican Bimetallic League, of Omaha has repudiated the Republican National plat form and endorsed the stand taken by Senator Teller in bolting the party. Capt C. A. Powers of Indiana, desires to give notice that he will be at the Lindell hotel a few days in advance of the National Convention with a supply of literature and campaign badges, and asks our people to patronize him rather than the street fakirs as he proposes to donate a liberal percentage of his profits to the national committee. Mr. Wm. P. St. John, president of the Mercantile National Bank of New York, was recently requested by the directors to resign, because of his outspoken advocacy of the free coinage of silver and government paper money, which he promptly did. Republicans in Kansas and other western states are bolting so rapidly that populist newspapers cannot find space to publish their names. Jas. Edward Leslie, a Pennsylvania committeeman, wires beadquarters that the populists of Pennsylvania are a unit for Sibley, and asks: “Why confine e endorsement to Teller alone?” The Sacramento Bee, a leading Republican paper of the Pacific coast for forty years, has renounced allegiance to McKinleyism and the gold standard and comes out on the side of the people. Dr. Wm. Bently, of Bismarck, North Dakota, president of the United States Board of Pension Surgeors, has withdrawn from the republican party ahd joined the populists. He is being

strongly urged to become a candidate for governor in his state.

F. M. Pullman has been endorsed by the populists of Logan county, Oklahoma, as a candidate for congress. The resolutions passed by the county convention were adopted upon motion of Leo Vincent, who had himself formerly been considered a prominent candidate. Beside Pullman, Ed M. Clark, of Perry, and W. A. Ruggles of Tecumseh, J. S. Allen of Cleveland county, and Dr. J. R. Furlong of Oklahoma City, have been added to the list of congressional aspirants. The populists of the twelfth Texas congressional district have nominated Taylor Mcßae for congress. The resolutions of their convention, beside endorsing the initiative and referendum and the Oklahoma platform, declare for a reduction of officials’ salaries, a restriction of convict labor, for protection by tariff of raw material as long as the same is given the manufactured article, and in favor of taking active steps to bring the Cuban war to a close. Judge W. R. Biddle, of Fort Scott, who has been prominent in Kansas politics for fifteen years, refuses to swallow the gold platform adopted at St. Louis.

Judge Scott, of Omaha, at the last election received the largest vote cast for any candidate on the successful republican ticket. This year he says: ‘ Human liberty will soon be supplanted by the human tyranny of the money power if the people surrender to that power their constitutional right to the free use of the constitutional coin—double standard, gold and silver.” He bolts the national ticket. J. R. Thomas, of Mt. Leonard. has been nominated for congress by the populists of the Seventh Missouri congressional district. Judge Weeks, of Jasper county, Mo., who for some months has been spoken of as the probable nominee for state auditor on the republican ticket, has bolted the national ticket of his old party. A. L. Maxwell, state chairmen of the people’s party in Illinois, has issued an address commenting the patriotism of Sena tor Teller in bolting the republican party and advising the populists of the state to support the Coloradoan for nomination in the national convention. Judge J. V. Beekman, who for many j ears has been one of the most prominent republicans of the third and seventh congressional districts in Kansas, has left the party. Beside presiding on the bench in Kansas, Judge Beekman has been a prominent candidate for congressional honors at the hands of the republican party. Charles E. Hunter, founder of the first republican paper in Garfield county, Oklahoma, has resigned his position as a member of the republican county central committee and has cut adrift from the party for all time. Populists of Tipton and Kokomo, Indiana, will come to the national convention in a special train.

L. C Bateman, populist nominee for in Maine, writes that the ol<£ greenbackers in his state are returning to the people’s party in companies, regiments and batallkms. And the greenbackers carried Maine in 1876. % • Sidney M. Owen, of Minneapolis, has* been nominated for congress by the populists of the Fifth Minnesota District. All railroads in South Dakota have granted a rate of one fare for the round trip upon occasion of the people’s party state convention to be held at Huron. The Canton, S. D. Leader is authority for the report that Lieutenant Governor Day, republican. of Minnesota, has bolted his party. J. B. dook, republican treasurer o{ Stafford county, Kansas, who says that he has voted every republican presidential ticket sibce Lincoln was first a candidate, refuses to support McKinley. Ex-Governor Lie welling, of

Kansas, learning of a report that he intended to attack the personal character of Col W. A. Harris, his opponent for the nomination 6f governor, has issued a card of denial. He declares Col. Harris «his personal friend and says: “Should Col. Harris be nominated for governor or any other office, he will have my cordial and hearty support. ” . D. H. Fernandes, of Anderson, will stump his state, Indiana, under the auspices of the state committee. Populists of Hancock, Indiana, have endorsed the candidacy of Dr. C. A. Robinson, of Fountrintown, for congress in the Sixth district. Dr. J. H. Randall, for a number of years editor of the Chicago Express, is stumping Illinois. The Rev. Dr, Terryl, populist candidate for congress in the Eleventh Missouri district, has been, endorsed by the prohibition convention.

The Colorado Populist state convention, held July 4, was a bit stormy. The delegates from Arapahoe county, led by exGovernor Waite, were refused seats in the convention by a large majority upon a test vote and the governor and his supporters withdrew and elected a contesting delegation to come to the national convention. The resolutions re &ffiriQ “the timehonored principles of the party as heretofore declared,” highly laud Senator Teller and declare for a direct legislation plank; also, “favor such action by our national convention as will unify the support of all parties upon a candidate for the presidency who is unqualifiedly in favor of the free coinage of sliver.” It was also resolved that “the mission of the People’s party has just begun, and the organization should be perpetuated, strengthened and kept intact.” Among the delegates at-la-ge are Editor T. M. Paterson and the Rev. Myron W. Reed. Women delegates were granted recognition in the congressiona) conventions held after the state convention. Our national convention prornises to be the grandest, most enthusiastic assemblage ever held in America, and every preparation is being made for the comfort and entertainment of the tremendous crowd of delegates and visitors who will attend. Our prospects grow brighter every day and populists have every reason to be proud of their grand organization and the glorious principles for which they are fighting. James H? Eagle, a prominent lawyer of Houston, Texas, is the latest notable convert to populism. A. R.