People's Pilot, Volume 6, Number 6, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 30 July 1896 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

i'aper money bottom'*, d oh taxes is tlie safest and most convenient money for the people. The trouble with the democrats is that they are better reformers out ol office thap in office. The democratic party ha 3 attracted attention to itself chiefly by the blunts rs it has committed. A.jout the only enthusiasm in the old parties now is from the fellows who draw the salaries—or expect to. According to old party logic God 'r- J de the earth and the good thinsa idareof for a few human hogs to enjoy The constitution denies to the stateright to issue money. Then wh-‘■'’'-nld the privilege be granted to th banks? Have you the names of the populist who tried to steer the democratic co vention at Chicago? Put them dow for future reference. !_ The record of the derra-ratic p*- 1 H against free silver, and •hffir pr :i i es have been violated so often rlr v • y amount to nothing. V party that has thro vr. tp its o r'. amiscs eleven times c:n hardly is .rett Ihe populists toswallor- ;he p:or isf-3, party and all, at one gulp. The political pot boiled over a *:**.: at St. Louis— and it is ge'tir.g b - . f ’ r hp time, '"here’s s- --•- • - old party potatoes get bur-ej his % The gold power is n pulous, and wi!l hes!ts>- -- no b ■ continue its clutch upon the threat r labor. When you vote with eitl.-r party you vote with it. There is no longer anv doubt as - th° he’nr in f->vor of a ? ’ s*sndard. There is no Lincoln re” iilifanism in this. Now let the + rv<> re publicans come otv of that party. According to rep-V'ea- ’ • r""‘ , egf!y proper to print pn p « r to men to shoot other men, bit* i would be all wrong to p-‘nt it. to r>' for constgucting public highway. Nice logic, that! * Where is the democrat who said feu years ago that if his party got a chanto relieve the people and did not do i* he would never vote the ticket again? Most of them are ea’ing their word? and chewing a tree silver cud. The success of the anti-gold standard men would of course result in a panic, as Jackson’s veto of the United States bank bill did —tout that would only prove the power and unscrupplousness of the banks and the necessity ol their abolition. VWhen you hear a democrat trying to lay the blame on Cleveland for his party not passing a free silver measure Just remind him that a democratic congress never gave Cleveland a free colnage’blll to sign. That knocks the wind out of them. Besides that, the democratic party gave us Cleveland