.
THE
CASIAN
.AY
I
14
t
XI
)1Tirs chair,
1 HE EDITOR ON THE
Of THE DAY.
1 1..- currency and
idd htitfnJanl Mr.
i iiiWli- tin- burden of
ui' hoist any change
if t In- risculating
lf.c,ea.-'C'l
to
'",() per
McKin-
, it'
,i U-coiti'- less
1-1I1'SCII-
r ( r,t. would )'
c mi ! i 1 1 the
lit
, i- hi- h'-avi- r burden
if lux i.-; tli.- more
. , luuiit-V t ll lighter till-
, ,r V;i!cot i!f .--!il 1 the
, i f lit. f ' h W li n he
, iili hctiu- y aiul re-
!,,,! a.-i till' subject now
, If, if this .-.hill paid,
: !,.-, as it intist he, abso-
i,roii.;il and 1 -graded, I
: reason why any Senator
. - in free coinage should
another vote in favor of
in ;inv form. If ho are
i u-adily appreciating cur
i ..n.staiitly lowering price,
:. i for our farmers ami wugc
! t ln-y liave thi- ojpoitu
l,:i:ng, untraniniekd ami
, !. .1, in tin- markets of the
I ;i i he light of t he proposed
::it irs are inh'tiitous, pro-
i. predion, and free ships
This is an era of cxperi-1-
pi rini'-nt all around."
'..t ill I -1- ( lli-p.,) of Colorado,
. . nt liiiancial speech made
i, f . .1 i-vv i n lt remarkable ex-
H .1 I
"A - 1
uiks of i.-s'iu" they had been
failures :is they had shown
i ;,,m -i 1.' to he as batiks of deposit
Kii.k - of exchange. It was the
Ls of exchange.
i.ivru-,t!f of the 1' ni ted States to
h.ii- ,!- own currency, and this was
! inn- to reform its banking
in lb- would not by his vote
h'i t a,v more p iwtr into the nanus
ill
f tli-- luuk- of the country, lie
. i ii .i i
ftvo'ii. no enat litem any loiiiiei
pataU.- tin- business of the coun-
a- tli-v w '!! doing to-day. If
h;id ;i i.vv o-,-n .rtutiity to wipe
em !i- ;..;,;. wipe them out as
could. He was otmosed
. i -
tli-- .'cut system,
I lit system, lie desired to
Jk.w..v from the banks the privi-
li'-v now possessed.
Tin- -rowth of the Populist party
ii the iat month has been reniark-'i.-.
livery where we go and from
v. : y . n.ii tor that we hear not only
:i X'ltii Carolina but over the
DiiJit i v larire numbers of the sub
t , 1 1 1 1 1 .-1 3 citizens who have before
ti tli ! i t . - 1 with the old parties have
1 !iom- ;ue disappointed and dis-
jr;iti .1. 1 hey art! turning tneir eyes
'tin urreat principles of justice uu-
i'llvin-- the reform movement and
fkiiiL' to the standard of the
"ni'iUt party. Let every patriot
' hi.- I'.uty. Push on with the fight
tul victory and justice will sure be
i'1 iviiiinl and heritage of the peo-
ti- democratic papers are no
, . . i i , , t i
'li.'ir i cuouiicin'? mat 'cuinnnat-
ii- iiioti.-irositv or me aire, me ic-
pviii!' v lull, and tlemantliii'' at once
rep. ai and a radical reuuction 01
nit -ioLim r tariff." but occasionally
'inc ot i n-iii sav that "there niav te
-iii" ui hcts m the Jlclvinlev oiti
hiiit ni;'iit be corrected. oucn
" uuy has put the people to
"iui!ir. 1 here are thousands ot
;,t'i wno want "a chance to teach
'-' i'ciu M-ratic iarty what ought to
1 ''';. c with "a chance."
rttu-rn papers are now re-thi-
South as ''that land of
in Tci ies.v The South might
mlling New England the
- a! cut throats and finan
'.' s. Thev are trying to
'I'lUciiu
t--r: ;.v
1'"
tl.:
l;cii on !;- a liuauce system that
tin- South for their bene-
A,, ili-mand is justice.
:'! : ;' 'b.i-t. a.l the noted Kepub--:,y.-
tiiat he regrets to see that
" '"hi i ;i l).-iiiocvat- do not stand by
i'l-ut Ck-vland n lis financial
-- J--u aiige to iiioc
!-vem.t y.r.,ir,,a that Hol-
:U!'1 iami ihouirh in dif-
f'1Vllt ,,:Ut;, , aie l1(1lh rvinff thfi
g-.iin.u. "
'1"'"-lt the ,,,,!
ts will sweep the
St:.r.. -;. .1
i't.t eli-f-tinn is heinff
--'c'o.eu ana conceaeu.
L, n ' - p:u ty just now grow
ins lii.-it .... .:
i i-ov Mian i-vi-r lliia 1
fill .11 I'll- . .
, ' "n UK-y uii hke to fight in
Ir,J!'- til, lJU!id.
ftiiN in 1
Ur (!er,-.,.t . r ..
"'ll UHU LI Ulll Ul 1 1 I
, f ,IJ1 ll,at city every minute
y;iv.
Ti,,. . . , .
JUi ts tin able to move thfi cvp.
I'UlL u ! :. i . . J
I ' "Uii- i u i ,i
if m ' 3 '"ouuvaoiy nxeu in in
ii t-
. elastic caruiagm
Uce-
STATE EXECUTIVE COMMiTTEE. AND
THE NEXT STATE EXECUTIVE COM
M.TTEE, AND THfc NEXT CONN
TY MEETINGS
The State Executive Co mm it tee of
the Alliance WiW in session in lktl
elgh on September 21 -t ami
The Committee in addition to the
other work before it, prooit-ded to
'airy out the iiictriictiorm of the
State Alliance, tu arrange a (schedule
of consecutive dates for the various
county meetings of the Alliance in
the various districts, and to provide
a speaker for each district, tut that
eery county Alliance could U visi
ted by either a State ollicer, or the
President at the next 'p.iarterly meet
ing. 'I he committee iM-rfoimed this
duty to the best of its ability, and
lh" M-hedule of dates in the various
counties will be furnished for the
Secretaries in the next few uay. iN'e
have forty or fifty letters upon our
de.-k calling for speakers at entity
meetings; we take this means of
answering them by saying, the mat
ter has been arranged by the Execu
tive Committee. Each countv Alii
auce will be expected to bear the ex
penses of the speaker. Fur since the
action of the Legislature cutting off
our funds, theto is no revenue for this
purpose. lift eyery county Alliance
go to work to make the next month a
grand rally and a revival for reform.
In addition to the speaker asoigned
to each district, let every county get
out some of its local talent for
speeches also. There is as good
material practically in one county of
the State as in another, and all it
needs is pract'ee, and an opportuni
ty to develop. The brunt of the
reform movement in the future, as
in the past, must be made in each
county by the n.en in it; therefore
we should lose no opportunity to
develop the local talent at home.
MR. GLENN, IT IS TIME FOR YOU TO
SPEAK!
Thousands of the people will re
member that during the last cam
paign, when the editor of this paper
charged on the stump thataJr.
Cleveland was an enemy to silver,
and in full fellowship with the gold
bugs and monopoly, and further
produced evidence to that effect, that
Mr. C. I. Aycock among other
speakers, emphatically denied the
charge; he declared that the President
was a friend to silver, and a friend
to the people, and took upon himself
the responsibility of standing spon
sor for his candidate. When we met
Mr. filenn in joint debate, he was
so alarmed at our evidence, that he
even wrote to Mr. Cleveland him
self, praying that he would send
him a personal letter, declaring that
he was in favor of both gold and
silver without discriminating against
either; iu fact that he was for free
coinage of silver. Col. Glenn made
a great ado about tht3 letter, and
used it with much effect to break the
force of our argument before the
people to the contrary. It is now
evident to Mr. Glenn, as well as to
every one else, that Mr. Cleveland
made a fool of him as well as other
speakers to fool and dupe the people.
Now if Mr. Glenn is a patriot, how
can lie fail to come out and publish
that letter, and denounce the hypo
critical and traitorous course of the
President. If Mr. Glenn fails to do
so, then he becomes particep3 cri mi
nis, and is no less a traitor than the
President himself. Mr. Glenn be a
man! your duty to the people as well
as yourself respectfully demands it
at this time. If no other paper will
publish an honest confession of the
whole matter, The Caucasian will
do so.
INCREASE IN THE TOBACCO TAX.
The Richmond Despatch, says the
people of Virginia must not flatter
themselves that there is no danger
of au increase in the tobacco tax, to
be isued under the Internal Revenue
laws, the proposition to again resort
to a high tax on that commodity is
not only made seriously but is ad
vocated by men professiDg to be
Democrats. We have never favored
a repeal of the Internal Revenue
laws, so long as we needed a revenue
and had no better system of raising
it than oui Tariff system, but to see
the Democratic party favoring an
increase in the tax after they have
made war up on the system so doing
and have made it the slogan of so
many campaigns, make us feel like
welcoming consistency thou art a
Jewel: We need not be surprised at
the Eastern Wing of the Demo
cratic party, the plutocrats favoring
all increase in anything that will
throw the burden of taxation upon
the masses. They, begin to see the
hand writting on the wall: They
fear that there is a reality in the
demand for a graduated income tax
and they will attempt to checkmouth
the move by raising more tax from
the masses and then to an extent
avoid the necessity for a high in
come tax.
"John Sherman a patriot"
New York World.
GOIDSUGS
AND GRECS. '
BACKERS '
t
When ex Senator Allen G. Thur-1
man declared for the free coinage of j
silver and charged that the g'dd-j
bugs had capered the President and j
the majority of ronn the Ncj
lork papers referred siieei ingly to j
Mr. Thurm tri and said no U tter
could be exjK-cted of a man who
"took up with thegn e:iback oraz-.- in
1875." .Vow let itb rcmemUnd
that Mr. Thurman wa on tin- Pr.s
ideir.ial ticket with Cleveland in
1-SSSaa vice-President. The g Id
bugs cou trolled that convention as
they did the I Hiuoorat ic conven
tion at Chicago in ls:o2. The men
who now sneer at him
for being a
greonbackHr in 175 nominati t
advocated him in 1nk. The
and
same
men 'iOinniaten Stevenson another
I
green! lacker in IS'xi. And yet they
hate greenbackers. Why is this?
They did it simply to catch votes of
the people to support a goldbug
Pre&idcnt. Mr. Stevenson does not
dare to-day open his mouth in advo
cacy of his honest conviction.-, or he
too will be sneered at as a green
backer by the goldbugs, the men
who used him as a tool to deceive
the people. The people are catching
on to this kind of deception and
will not be fooled by it any longer.
In this connection we wish to say
that any man who will study and
comprehend cur present linancial
system will s-e how unjust and de
structive is and h-nv the present
conditions are produced by it; then
if he will go and study out what
a just and scientitic linancial system
i3 he will be a green backer at
heart. And if he is a man who has
the courage of his convictions, if he
is not under the inlluence of the
goldbug power either directly or in
directly, if he is not a candidate for
oflice hoping to get it through the
favor and help of monopolies, if he
is uot pandering for the boot-licking
social favor of a certain set, that
man will be a pronounced green
backer? A man who believes that
neither goldbtigs nor silver bugs
nor national bankers should control
the volume and distribution of mon
ey, but that ever dollar whether gok'
ilver or paper shall be issued and
controlled by the people through
and every dollar shall
stand on its own bottom and be ay
good as any other dollar. Who is
opposed to this? We challenge any
newspaper to a disproval of the fact
that this would be a just and honest
currency. V e challenge any speaker
believing differently to a public dis
cussion of the question.
Governor Tillman, of South Caro
lina, is qvtoted as follows:
"They object to greenbacks as flat
money; they object to silver as a dis
honest dollar; they demand gold to
become the standard of the country,
although it means fifty-cent wheat
and six-cent cotton, and the loss of
the titles of their homes by millions
of American farmers. I told the
ring in this State in 1S88 it was
damming up the water when the de
mand for reform was refused in the
State convention. I now make the
prediction that a similar crisis is ap
proaching in national affairs and the
floodgates of the people's wrath will
be swept from the face of the earth
in the next presidential election. The
farmers will not be pauperized to
satisfy the greed of the Wall street
shylocks, without exercising the bal
lot to redress their wrongs. Therp
is lots of driftwood in Congress, and
men who have betayed the people
iu the fight against silver will yet
learn that the people are uot such
fools as they think they are.
John Sherman is the logical nom
inee in 1896 of the new Demo-republican
Wall Street party, wnich Pres
ident Cleveland is wurkinsr so hard
to found. Sherman is the only man
who has shown the ability and ver
satility necessary tc lead both parties.
It va3 no surprise to the public for
him to lead the Republican party
when it was in power, but when
Cleveland was elected and Vorhees
made chairman of the Finance Com
mittee the people at least the hon
est Democrats among the people
supposed that the domination of the
Bank of England (through John
Sherman) of the financial policy of
the gorernment, would for a time, at
least, stop. But they were iu error;
it is now plain to all that Cleveland
draws his financial water from the
same fountaiu that supplies John
Sherman, and Voorhees seems to be
content to get his from John Sher
man second-hand. Political Econo
mist.
NOTICE
To the American People.
The Democratic party under the
leadership of Grover Cleveland has
surrendered to John Sherman and
THURMAM.
his allies. (tf .)
GOLDSBOKO, N. C, THUKSDAY, OCTOBER f,
SIIKRMAN AND VOORHEES
aui: ri.i:vi:iaM)'N Mom .! him aauon.
SHERMAN".
Cleveland to John Sherman: 4'(io
to the Senate and tell the common
people to destroy the silver which
they have so long worshipped and
adopt a single gold standard."
Sherm m to Cleveland: "Sir, I
am a republican and my voice would
not be heard, for I am slow of speech
iu the eyes of the si 1 writes. If you
will send your silver-tongued orator
Dan Voorhecs with me, to make the
chin music, I will furnish the arjni
monts." Cleveland to Vooi hoes: "John Sher
man, the high priest of republican
ism and orach- on finance has con
sented to help me destroy the silver
idol, and I would have thee go with
him and speak the words he shall
put into thy mouth."
Voorhecs to Cleveland: "But sire,
SI N.VTdi: MILLS IN 18S.
He. Has Woefully Chillis"'! Since Then.
In 1SKG when the silver question
was before congress, Senator Mills
who was then a member of the
House said:
"Would you take the country
through the valley of the shadow of
death? Would you repeat again
that experience so full of lamenta
tion and mournings and woes? If
you would listen, listen to the soft
sweet notes of the siren &s she sings
from the vaults of the national
banks about dishonest dollars. Drive
out into banishment the old sPver
dollar of our fathers; call in the sil
ver certificates; retire all the Treas
ury notes; make money So scarce that
the poor bankers in Xew York can
buy a bushel of wheat for a dime, a
pound of cotton for a penny; make
it impossible for people to pay their
debts; make labor so cheap that
working people can only earn mon
ey enough to pay interest to money
lenders and taxes to support the
government, and you will see again
the return of that night with all its
horrors intensified.
Sir, let the man who lives by the
sweat of his brow, and his repre
sentatives het v, be not deceived by
the shams and false pretenses that
are throw n around this measure that
is filled to the brim with the direst
of conseq.iesces to millions of peo
ple. Let the laborer remember, and
write it on his wristlets; carve it on
his frontlets, and wear it. as an amu
let over his heart; that scarce mon
ey is his .sleepless aud unforgiving
foe, a foe whose bosom never swells
with a sigh or sorrow, whose eye
never moistens with a tear of pity.
No one can deny that it increases
the burden of debt which labor must
pay, deny that it makes the life
struggle dark and harder."
1 he Senator has now joined the
goldbugs and is trying to help do
the very damage he plead against
in 18SG. Wonder what kind of ar
gument caused him to desert the
people?
ALLIANCE KALLY.
There will be a graud Alliance
rally at Bunus Levil on the 11th of
October inst , and the public are in
vited to participate. Bring your
baskets well tilled with something to
refresh the innernian while you hear
Col. Harry Skinner "and Pres, J. M,
Mewlorn fill your souls with enthu
siasm for the cause of the people.
D. T. Williams,
Z. J. Kivett, j- Com.
A. A. By iti), j
THE REMEDY THE. ALLIANCE DEMANDS
In Watauga county, N. C, near
Blowing Rock, ou the top of the
Blue Ridge, there is a spring, which
is che source of the Yadkin River; a
little further on is another, from
which flows New River; the one
empties into the Atlantic Ocean, the
other rolls on through ten States
and finally pours its waters into the
Gulf of Mexico. Also in Cambria
county, Pa., there are said to be two
springs only a few feet apart, one of
which find3 its wav into the Atlantic
and the other into the Gulf of Mexi
co.
VOORHEES.
those silverites will slay your ser
vant It was this hand that fash
ioned that idol; this arm that placed
it on it3 pedestal and this silver
tongue that magnified its virtues."
Cleveland to Vorhees: "Go aud
fear not Take these fedtral offices
and when my people will not aid
thee, throw them down at their feet
and give to them, if they will exe
cute my will."
Voorhees to Cleveland: "But, sire,
thy servants the republicans, are
they to sop of the flesh pots?"
Cleveland to Sherman: "Go and
do my bidding. I have given or
ders that those who fall down and
worship me shall iu no wise suffer
when the public patronage is to le
distributed."
A IJVKKTLSKM KNTS 18U5J AMI I8a.
They Advertised for au Aniiiml In 'iti and
Now Wont Know What to lo With It.
(The Farmer, Mt, Vernon. 111.)
Wanted, 1892. by the democrat
ic party "A Chance!" If the people
of the United States will furnish this
animal, we will promptly ride him
into general prosperity for every
body. We will reform the robber
tariff, aud we'll reform the civil ser
vice, because "a public office is a pub
lic trust" We'll drive away forever
the ruin that is staring the Ameri
can farmer aud laborer in the face
by eternally wining out the terrible
McKinley bill, which is the sole
cause of all this poverty aud ruin.
We'll maintain silver and gold as
the true money metals, and we'll in
crease the prices of all farm and la
bor products so that those who have
been driven into debt by the robber
tariff may pay off their mortgages
and save their homes. WTe realize
"that a condition, not a theory con
fronts us," and we'll drive away the
clouds ot ruin and let the bright
sunshine of prosperity into every
home. All this and more will we
do, and we'll do it at once. For God's
sake, give us a chance.
Demo. Politicians.
By G. C. (his x mark.)
To Dispose of, 1893. In the fall
of 1892 there broke into our ranch
a peculiar animal called a chance.
He is a many colored beast and is
peculiarly labelled. His brands are
unmistakable. On the right ear is
a promise of "Revenue Reform,"
while on the left is a promise of
"Free silver and more money." Down
his neck on one side are the words
"Better prices for labor," and on the
other side is "Lower taxes." On the
left shoulder is "Opposition to na
tional banks," aud on the right is
"Dow n with the trusts." And so on
through ou extensive list This is a
very attractive animal, but it is very
much in o lr way now, and we aie
anxious to dispose of it Wrhen we
ride down our favorite promenade,
Wall street, the big moneyed men
there laugh at us, aud we'd rather
not ride him any longer. He carried
us to success last November, when
we were riding down among the peo
ple asking for votes, but we can get
along better without him now, we
are tired of his labels. We are wil
ling to dispose of him without money
and without price; mdeed, we have
already turned him out "to grass.
Demo. Politicians.
By G. C. (his x mark.)
THE DEADLY PAKALLED.
I undertake to affirm, without fear
of contradiction, that a paper issued
by the Government with the simple
promise to receive it for all dues,
would be as uniform in its value as
the metals themselves John C. Cal
houn, Democrat.
"Our Government connot make
its fiat equivalent to intrinsic value
nor keep inferior money by its own
independent efforts, nor is it pisti
fied in permitting an exaggerated
and unreasonably reliance on our
national strength and ability to jeo
pardize the soundness of the people's
money. Grover Cleveland, pluto
crat, tf.
1893.
WHAT IT MtUl.
tlty I Km Th. II Vti t
Kverj us man tnut admit that
if the coaatry i mfferiep for the
want of money, CoDfrrr- hould Jo
iU duty, aud make a iargr up(dr
The Constitution ivt thrm the
wer to do it, and the Hier would
never have been riven if it a not
intended to be UedL
Why do the money kib ohjeet
to the wakiu of more money by
"onjrreiw? Heeaue thi large tup-
ply of eurrency would h . their
irrip on the market. They would
no longer dictate price.
Hence their oiuMtion to money
made by the government.
What do they want?
They want the govern rut nt to -low
them to make a papei money of
their own, so that they eau charge
the people what they hie for the
use of it; and can call it in again
and destroy it whenever they wish
to create another money famine.
Therefore, we have the sickening
picture of money king everywhere
claiming the right to issue their
own paper money, while denying to
the government a similar power.
The Standard Oil Company is pay
ing it laborers iu their own paper.
The factory lords, who have been
'protected' for one huudred year,
are forcing their employers to take
payment in the same way.
The New York Clearing House
and all its lesser satellites are flood
ing the market with private paper
money.
Gen. Gordon wants the bunks of
Savannah to have "for six months,"
the privilege of issuing their private
paper money.
Think of a Senator of Georgia
gravely proposing in the United
States Senate a "six months" system
of finance!
Democrats, after denouncing Na
tional Banks in tbeir Campaign
Book of 1890, now report favorably
in the Senate, a bill to add to the
power, profits and privileges of these
same banks. . The Serato bill, in
troduced by Voorhees, aud reported
favorably by the Democratic com
mittee, proposes to give the national
banks $19,000,000 of paper money,
endorsed by the governmeut.
The banks are to pay the govern
ment one dollar on the hundred for
the use of that monej'.
How much will we have to payf
Think of the monstrous injustice
of the thing!
The government, as agent for all
the people, endorses the notes of
certain bankers,and then gives those
bankers the privilege of lending
those notes, at tremendous usury, to
the very people whose endorsement
made them valuable.
In other words, a merchant, whose
credit is doubtful, comes along and
says to one whose credit is undoubt
ed: "You endorse mv notes. If vou
will do so I will give you one dollar
on the hundred for doing so."
The sound merchant endorses for
the unsound one. Then the unsound
merchant says to the sound one, "I
will lend you these notes if you will
pay me eight dollars on the hundred
for them."
And the sound merchant does it!
Every business man will say he
was a food to use his own paper upon
any such terms; and that if he keeps
on doing it he. will "bust."
The government is doing that very
thing for the bankeis and has been
doing it for twenty-fire years.
And now that the Democrats are
m power they proposes to go further
than the Republican ever dared to
go. No wonder the whole country
except the Money Kings, is about to
bust."
If the government's endorsement
on private paper money makes it
good, why should not the govern
ment make its own money? Look
on the picture?
Every Democratic and Republican
statesman in the land wants Con
gress to allow private persons and
corporations to make paper money,
yet none of them wants the govern
ment to do it! Whj-? Because if
the government issues its own mon
ey, the millionaires and the banks
of issue will no longer control!
And our politicians dare not op
pose the orders and interests of the
Money Kings. It is a shamuful
spectacle!
More money wanted everywhere
the government vested with power
to make it; and yet not daring to
make it, because the favored classes
want to keep the privilege of doing
so to themselves.
The pampered favorites of class
legislation, grow insolent upon the
huge profits of special privileges,
now deny to the government the
right to govern; deny to the sover
eign the sovereign right of making
money; and defy the people to taka
away from them a power which they
hold by an illegal grant, but which
they have held so long that the ar
rogant tresspasser wants to drive the
rightful owner off his own premises!
"Y heu you don't get your paper
send ns a postal card at once. Don't
wait two or three weeks. We wil
send you the missing copy and also
investigate the trouble. (tf.)
All churches have some members
who talk too much,
rutin i cor thi m kt ukki
There r r two certain nart j
Aleck who Kte4 tbt they never j
M-rairhed a teket. Morwrr. th v l
thought that the Ue ! twvUe and
whickey w the rhiefr! I ! tstf of
popular i-urTrajre. Ita! taj;'v they
maid; "Mvparlv i giHwl enough fr
rue.
There a!oa et rtaui Jh.-i mn
who joined the Alhance and o-d
the People J-rty ticket, and niaJe
detxand of Cor.gr , d-iririg wtiie
rrumb of faor, mrh at the Gortu
inent bad given to a f w j. t At t h
rcu-t of the !uirl Alrrk. Hut
Congress and the Pit id. nt treated
this oor man a if he w a tramp.
Ttae Alliance mn diet!, and car
ried by Lincoln and othets m!- Jef
ferwu" biotU,
The smart Aleck dud alo aini
were buried; aud in a political hades
they lifted up their eyes, and utit.
the Alliance man afar .fT iu Jeffer
son. lossom, crunl out and --aid;
Thomas! Thoma? have nu-roy mi
us, and send the Alliance man with
water to cool our throat, for th
ection whiskey we drank k tr
meriting us here."
Jefferson said unto the smait
Meek. "In ondcr wot Id thou
hadest th good thing, such as
whiskey, hoodie, all the election of
flees, and also to do the bidding of
the city dione. And likewise the-
llianee man hi evil thing?-; lut
now he is hlt ssed. and thou art t r
niented." i
rr i . . i .... ... i .
i ue smart Aleck sail, l limua:
Thomas! many wonderful wor
have we done in thy name. V
have circulated canpaign lies to the
uttermost; and have not kept more
than half of the hoodie intrusted to
our hands.
"As to the election whi.-ky, w
... .
eoniess mat we goi into a maimiin
i . -
mauitliu
condition and can't tell wheie we
were at.' The Alliance man wns
stoned, rotten-egijed and shot, and
we stood by and said, amen!"
Father Jefferson said, "I'artyism
is not patriotism, l ou have follow
ed your parties until Shylock owns
my country. Therefore depart from
me; ye workers of partyisni, into
the place prepared for the smart
lecks, for I never knew you.
"There shall be
weeping and
smashing of slates!"
A lllli II AY IN KMI1II1II II.
Notice is hereby given that the
Johnston County Alliance will meet
in Smithfield on Fridey, October
20th, 1893. Hon. J. J. Long and
Marion Butler will be present and
will deliver addresses.
The addresses will bo public,
everybody is invited to attend.
The farmers, the laborers, the
merchants, the lawyers, the doctors,
and all. You are also invited to
bring your dinner. No regular table
will be set Friends and neighbors
can club together and have their
own table if they choose.
The citizens of Smithfield are re
spectfully invited to help furnish
something to eat.
As most of the day will be occupi
ed in speaking the Sub-Secretaries
are requested to forward to me their
reports by mail. The officers are re
quested to meet early Friday morn
ing in order to get through the Al-
iance business. Speaking to begin
at 11 o'clock a. m. Reserved seats
for the ladies.
A. I. Tayi.ok, President.
K. I). SneaI), Secretary.
A ItAHKKT I' I CMC.
The noU-d Tom (Jreen of Martin
county, will speak at South West
Church iu Ix:noir countv on Oct 11,
at 11 o'clock. All friends of the
Alliance are invited to come and
nng well Gl'ed baskets. We want
everybody to hear the truth, and if
the speaker is as well jtosted on Al
liance principles as he is on the Bi
ble we w ill assure you a good sj-eech.
nro Ureen will preach at the church
at night on the 10 and 11th. Those
coming by the train will be met at
Kiuston or C res well and provided for
if they will notify.
J. J. ANSK. )
Win. B. Isler, i
C. E. Kexxkiv, J Com.
Bubin IIodi, l
JXO. A. TlLGIIMAX, J
The control of trad." through the
contraction of the currency or by
placing it iu the hands and power of
a few is the analogue of the control
of the supply of commodities through
the protective tariff. The principle
is the same. The man who under
standing favors Cleveland's finan
cial policy is a protectionist at heart.
. (tf-)
Whenever one of the partisan pa
pers is unable to answer the argu
ments of The Caucasian it squeals
"Miss Mary Ann I" We always know
we have got the hypoc rites down
when they resort to this. Some fools
are very amusing.
53fNearly every man who has
advertised in The Caucasian has
taken the trouble to assure us that he
was. highly satisfied with the results.
We suppose the tariff is not rob
bing the people much now. We nev
er hear anything about it tf.
NO. oO.
TIIAT SECRET ilitlil!.
t
'm sot tu
f II t
J
! .
'
The vrt i.rvula: !.;
ChAirman inui:- is. t?. I
pVfTti raV for it if, i
jiWt th- U -:iii ,i; f ?K :
t
it
J ' : '. i
'i i-
H t-l
! t
other ordvfn and li-ttrtut;
Coin iti i U fraud.
J r-ttmal a-,'rrtt.
Unit i.if, N. C., --m;
MIC -I tall UnT a!t- f tt
act oimvii ting letter tf
t.
Att. f i
General Ivh1oi
Th registrar mtt -p u thc.r
Uxik and ie prt j r roii.c f
doi on the 'Jl'th day of Np'emUr,
and i loe t h m at I'.' oYJovk tHti
ou Saturday, J'.'th dn i f October.
According tt a n ut dviior. tif
the Suprt iiic ( o:ut it i t!.. ' it v i f
the registrar to r--.d t ca h !- t.-r
Ik fore he r jistcf s, the tn juiiicii at
head of uu h rolunm of the registra
tion look, and he tn.iv r-vord the
wttcr's answer in the words iu whit h
he gives it or he may make the o
tcr correct hi answer, or pic his
statement more - ifn a'lv.
The act id declared n-.it. da!: in
the opinion rfrud to .llano i.
ScailH.ro 1 lo N. ( '. I.. j. t-. d
then fuie the resist;. I!..-! i- unlaw
ful if the e K- tor fail. to .-!..,- "h:.
ae, occupation, place o
plu-.e of residence of the
t . .
lull
i a
:ci
well as the
tow ll.Milp
or coiintv
I f rolll w hence the elector li:o !,linn-
f .
ed, III the eciit of a li luoxal, and
the full (christian and mi ) liaine
by which the oter i known."
In answer to the three ,u. -Isoli.-,
iz:
Place of residence, place of birth;
and place from which oJei has re
moved, in case of reinoal, the cotut
holds that it i not sul'icieiit to en
ter simply t he name of the State,
but the iiaiue of the county at ha.-t
mutt be entered. Where the neis
trar failed two jears ago to enter
the "ae, occupation, place of birth
and place of residence of an elector
a. well u the fowtisiiip or comi!)
whence the elector ha removed, and
the full name by which the voU-r i
known." Th elector still has the
privilege of lilliujr anv blank o
correctiug any mi "take
I deem it uiiiiecescai to cidl vour
attention to the iuiportaiitance of
seeing every Ih niuciat ii propetly
registered, and all registered two
years ago w ho were not proper I v reg
istered Ut have the net e.-i-.trv collection-
in such registrations made.
Voll will please notify -aeh I ';.
trar of your county prompt lv not
only of the day of -ning and hour
of dosing the registration books,
but take early occasion to see each
one persot.. illy and give hint full in
struction: as to hi.-i duty.
No moil important duty devolves
upon you in this campaign. Thin
is a coiitidetial communication and
only intended to be special in.stni'.--tious
for your guidance.
Yours truly,
(Signed ) Y. M. Simmon.--.
Chairman,
JEFFERSOM AI 0 JACK',0';
Wern 4litikril l,
State ami
Ilk of It- llotti.
NmUoiihI.
Andrew Jackson it was who naid,
"if congress has the right under the
constitution to issue paper mcniy, it
was given them to be used by them
selves, not to be deb-gated to in livi
duals or banking corporations."
Tbos. Jefferson it was who said
"Bank paper must bo suppressed,
and the eh filiating medium must be
restored lo the nation to w hom it be
longs. It is the only fund ori which
wo can rely for lo;sic, it is our only
resource w hich cau never fail us, and
it is an abundant one for every neces
sary purpose."
If you believe iu the d x-triuu of
Jefferson and Jackson aud have the
manhood to back up your belief with
your votes, what party will you b
acting with to-dav T tf.
AM.I.1NCK 11 CMC.
There w ill be a grand reunion of
Alliancemen and the friends of the
Inform movement at Pollard's Mill
near (Jreenville Pitt countv North
Carolina on Tuesday the 10th day
of October 181)3 at which time Hon.
Marion Buthr a:.d Hon. Harry
Skinner will address th jK-onle.
The public is resp.-cti fully invited.
Baskets solicited.
J. A. Thioi-ex,
Chairman Com. of Manaerp.
THE REMEDY -THE ALLIANCE DEMANDS.
The scarcity of monev brought the
People's party into existence. Xew 8
& Observer. tf.
Every man that preaches one thing
and practice another is a hypocrite.
X
i