. VOL. -II WADESBORO. N. C., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1895. NO. 10. u t M 4 1-1' . I. t-1 i A FOUL CONSPIRACY PLAN OF BANKERS TO DESTROY ! 'greenbacks. Bank Notes That Draw a Double Bate of Interest Is the Kind of Souncl Money Sbylock Wants -Iioycott Thelf :- Notes. The New York Voice, Aug. 15 Little by little it becomes apparen that the associated bankers of . this country are gathering their forces foe a mighty, struggle during the next ses sion of congress. No public proclamation has been is- sued and no brass bands are being em ployed; but unless all indications arej misleading there is on foot a definite concerted movement that is likely tq change the whole line of battle on the; currency question. The purpose of. the bankers is this To strike with all their power for law that shall put out of existence oncdj for all the entire issue of United States? notes known as greenbacks. f . The plea which they will make wil be the highly patriotic plea that thisj action is necessary to rescue the treas ury from its perilous position and es tablish the nation's finances on a firm basis. ' The plea will be a false one, the pat? riotic professions will be delusive, an the result of the action' proposed will be a far-reaching disaster whose ulttj mate consequences are incalculable. j Here ; are . the . facts. There are iH circulation to-day about $340,000,000 o greenbacks. Those greenbacks repref sent a policy in direct antagonism t( the policy underlying the national bank system, and they have from the beginning been regarded by the bankl era with hostile eyes. They insisted od .their Retirement as part of the plan ol resumption twenty years ago,' and thii retirement was actually begun. So im mediate and stern was the popular prol test, however, that that provision of th law was repealed and the greenback! preserved as a part of the national curl rency.- From that day to this the bank ers have sulkily watched for their opt portuftity,and they think they have it now.- Whether they have it or not thei uauiuuai uuK.eiii convention neiu a lew weeks ago took steps to urge upon con gress ine retirement 01 tne greenbacks The journals that best represent th thought of the organization have bee iur six montns witn innnite tact anq skill, testing the public temper: on the subject. The public has not taken alarm. The time seems auspicious' The plans have been consummated! TUa Kill m nli.ni... v.: .i .! effecting the desired end. What isthe motive behind all. this The- ostensible motive is this: The greenbacks are exchangeableon demandj at the United States treasury for gold They are the vehicle by means of which; the gold reserve has been taken out oi the treasury. On the face4 of affairs they are to blame for the treasury's, re cent troubles. What more plausible therefore, than to say, as the bankers do, that the real remedy is' to retin these greenbacks as fast as redeemed destroying them at once instead of re4 issuing them. and thus putting a sto to the "endless chain of buckets" tha is carrying away our gold? This is the argument.: It is plausible Is it . sound or sincere? No. On the contrary it is impossible when one is acquainted with the facts either to believe that the proposed ac tion will remedy matters or to believ that the bankers believe it will. In the first place the greenbacks hay not caused the treasury's troubles, fo they have circulated for twenty years! without trouble of any.kind, and condi-jj tivxioy ou xcu 0.0 tiirj CVA XJ VUliWCi Ut;u, Ul the same now as heretofore. The gold! drawn from the treasury has been drawn for export. Destroying the green-J backs would not destroy the demand for gold for export nor render it any more difficult to obtain it. The situation! wmilil Ho 99 IWatthow f arcVinll 4-Vio financial writer of the Sun, says it? would: "If the legal tenders were retired all debts including bank deposits would become really payable in gold, though nominally In silver alsoj The exnorter of gold would demand it from tfie banks and the! banks ,would have either to pay It or to refuse to pay it. If theyf paid it the country would lose the gold just the same as it is losing it now, and If they refused to pay it we should come to the suspension of gold payments, to avoid which we have for the last two years made such strenuous efforts.; The treasurer now re-issues the greenbacks in payment of govern mental expenses. If he is, instead of that, to destroy them, He must pay those expenses in some other way. If he must receive greenbacks but can not any longer pay out greenbacks, it is as evident as- that two and two make four, that the treasury instead of being relieved will be still . more greatly embarrassed, and more in need of help than ever. No; the associated bankers are not praoslng this action for the relief of tu treasury or the relief of the coun try. Their ostensible motive is not i'ieir reai zuoiive. it is impossible to, believe tnat it U. What then is their real motive? Listen. With the greenbacks out of the way, there will be! no longer .any reason for the treasury s keeping! a gold reserve. It will,' as a matter of ourse, gradually disappear as the' greenbacks! are re tired. When that ejent occurs, the banks will be the onljj place to which, any one can go to get Wold. The entire j circulation of the country Will be based upon golip, but the banks will have a complete monopoly in the matter of supplying gold, barring alone the slow production of the mines. The government Itself will! have to look to the banks when it : wants gold with; which to pay- the interest on its bonds. This Is partjof the reason for the pro ject of the bankers, j j Another and similar reason is that the greenbacks are a constant object lesson to th people tnat the govern ment itself can supply! a safe, sound; end convenient currendy as well as the banks. The greenback is a constant threat to the ank-nate. And now, when the bonds on w!hlch thq bank note issue isj based are! near maturity, the whole bank-note system is near an end, unless Ah8 $340,0&0,000 of green backs can be forced opt of existence, leaving a vacuum thaf must be filled by something else. This is why the banks cannot wait anjy longer. This is why they have seiied the present pretext so promptly. This is why, as we more than j suspect, they propose to keeps on the ragged edge of another financial pan c until congress is fright ened into the For it -must the Belmont- retirement of greenbacks. ;not be overlooked that if Morgan-Rbthschilds syn dicate has been able, as so eulogistic ally described by the feditor of Brad street's in thie current issue of the Re view of ReViejws, "to suspend the opera tion , of the laws of trdde," to compel "financial interests ok other govern ments" "to await on the requirements ot the treasury of the United States," to force the (ordinary broker into re- fusing to export gold transaction Offers him when ! such a a profit," if it has . been able to do that in one case it can do it in another, land if this year it brings thej tide of gcjld one way be cause paid tpjdo so, the iriext year it can turn the tide the other way if it wants to force action by corieress that will DanKS. m 1 -km x ne nnanciai crisis hat will sopn the entire con- confront us is whether trp.l of the currency system oi the fia uon snail be: handed over to a small and select class. The crisis is ureent. the importance of the volved, tremendous. iples princ in- CURRENCY. QUESTION DEAD. 4-; Ohio Leaders of the "tiro OI4 Parties , ,Will Make Office th Only Issue. It is thought that the j contest be tween these jold leaders in Ohio will overshadow the currency question anJ other issues jThere is the repub so little differ icah and demo- ence between cratic platforms on silvter that! the cur rency question is now believed '. to bo disposed of in Ohio, bujt the tariff will be kept prominent, as jthe parties dif fer widely on that issu, and Governor Campbell is expected jto . arraign the republican state administration of the past four years-as severjely as he did in the previous campaigns. Press Dis patch. I ! 1 It's nothing but a question of which of the Ohio f'Jeaders" jshall have the offices. Their jplatformjs are the same. Neither of them has any principles ex cept what John Shermn: can indorse. Had to make the platforms the same, so that they cquld swapj easierl It is Brice's turn to bte elected to the senate, and the republicans will sup port him to j get the support of. his party lor a republican g over nor. Even swap-Ljand nobddy cheated but the people who don't kiow tlie differ ence between party and principle. But the currency question is not set tled in. Ohio. Coxey is going to have a hand in that scuffle and don't you for get it. 1- The only thing a sensible and patri otic silver democrat or republican of that state can do to help the cause he advocates is tolvote the populist ticket, and help defeat both ol parties. Let Them Dare. Let the Cleveland gang more bonds ajnd there will lution sure enough. The dare" issue be a revo-' patient ass at length bends with his burden, the final feather breaks the camel's back, and the hunted hind goes to- the water once too often. The people of this country are lqng suffering and wonder fully complaceht under inisgovernment that would cause war 'anywhere else but there surely is a point where they will rebel. Certainly they the line somewhere and th will draw e resale or this already disgraced country to the greedy Jew syndicate jwilj certainly prove the jumping-off place. If not, if our people pre so debauched, so lost to all sense of shame, io say nothing of open robbery of their resources, then indeed have they sunk to the level of Asiatic serfs jand become fit food for tyrants to feed! on.r-Noncoriformist. The" bankers in this country stead $25, OOO.QOO a year unlawfully; ye't tney have the gall to raise he cry that their notes are honest' WHAT KEEPING OUR CREDIT. FARMED OUT TO A SYNDICATE '. OF BANKERS. Case of the Wolves Guarding, the Lambs And They Talk of Cleveland for a Third Term rrom a Gold Pa per. Fellow countrymen, read the follow ing. It comes from the editorial cpl umns of the San Francisco Chronicle: Wall street, the money power las an organized influence, if not. indeed, an organic body, is aimine at nothing! short ot the absolute domination and control I lbfreticfwhJtiviH ment. If anvthine were needed to con vince the country of this fact the stu-i v - . died efforts that are now being made to defend and justify' the infamous con tract with the Rothschilds-Morgan syn iicate and to laud the money kings who 3ofnpose the syndicate as national ben 9factors, the fulsome articles and state ments that are now appearing simultan eously in the magazines and papers of the country ought to satisfy, any intel ligent American that the Shylocks who hold the governments of Europe in their hands are seeking to get a firm grasp upon the United States. There is certainly something signifi cant in the sudden activity of the pen servants of the syndicate. In the Re view of Reviews for July there is an ar ticle by the editor of Bradstreet's writ ten for the confessed purpose of show ing that if it had not been for the gold purchase contract the credit of the gov ernment would have been wrecked, and that the American people are, therefore, beholden' to the syndicate for having "protected the treasury." Protected the treasury from what, from whom? Why, it iwas these same money sharks and their associates who were draining the treasury of gold for j;he very purpose of forcing another issue of bonds. The portraits of thej American mem bers of the syndicate jare given in the article and they are spoken of, as al ready said, as national benefactors. There is also the picture of Lawyer Stetson of New York the former law partner of the president, "wTho drew up the contract." But thke is no mention in the article of the! onerous and in famous terms and conditions of the deal which petted the syndicate some $10, 000,000. Protectors of the treasury! Benefactors of the nation! Why, the members of this syndicate are the mon umental Shylocks of the age. It will only be a few months when congress will meet and when the out rageous affair will be or should be in vestigated to the bottom. It is more than likely that the articles that are now appearing, of which the one just mentioned is only an example, are put forth for the purpose of forestalling the action of congress. A. B. Hepburn, a New York banker who served in some capacity, under the first Cleveland administration and who is always at the front in defense of the gold ring, has an article in the Forum for August entitled "The Bond Syndi cate: Its Excellent Work." He also goes to the fullest extent in sustaining the expediency and honesty of the con tract. Then again here is the latest weekly "special'' circular from the banking house of Henry Clews & Co. Mr. Clews is a very inconsistent finan cier, and there are strong indications in his circular that he has not been forgot ten by the syndicate. He, too, speaks of the incalculably valuable services rendered by the syndicate in "protect ing"the treasury. He even suggests that "the members of the syndicate will yet find the .means of guarding the treas ury by some permanent form of protection."'.' THE NON-INTEREST BOND WILL It is difficult to find words to express the sense of shame that should fill the minds of patriotic Americans who read such language. Not only that, but thoughtful men ought to feel anxiety for the future when such assertions are made and are not reproved on all sides. Has it come to pass that the credit of the United States is dependent upon a particular ring of money lenders, mon ey sharks,? The "editor of Bradstreet's" is fol lowing up his service to the syndicate by his weekly articles. A week ago he asserted in a long editorial that there is no doubt that the syndicate will maintain" the treasury gold -reserve, Vnd in the issue of last Saturday, as telegraphed to the financial columns of paper asserted with much vehemence that nothing had oc- curred, particularly in the recent ship ments of gold, to "shake confidence in the ability of the Belmont-Morgan syn dicate to protect the treasury." It is high time that the American peo ple should wake up to the danger and tne disgrace of the state of affairs indi cated by the line of defense marked out by the syndicate in anticipation of the meeting of congress. ANARCHY .AND SOCIALISM Are Jfot the Same, bnt Exact Opposites of Each Other. The populists are indiscriminately called "socialists" and "anarchists," as if those terms meant the same and were both terms of reproach. We give the definitions in parallel; WEBSTER'S DICTIONARY, 1893. SOCIALISM A ANARCHY Ab theory or system of sence of govern focial reform which ment; the state of f ontempl ates a society where there complete recon- is no law or su Itruction of society, preme power; a fvith a more just state of lawless and equitable dis- ness; political con tribution of prop-fusion, erty and labor. Populists are all directly opposed to anarchy. And as to socialism, in its ideal condi tion, it would be a realization of the millennium. We are not opposed to socialism yet as a practical solution of present day problems, concerning a people who av erage considerably lower than the an gels, we are-somewhat inclined to pro nounce socialism too far in the future. There are many bold practical prob lems that will have to be settled under our present system for the benefit of the people now on earth. The reforms of this age may help the next generation to attempt greater ones. But something has got to be done right now. . As our illustrious (or notorious) pres ident has said, "It is a condition and not a theory." confronting the American people. We must deal with actual people and practical questions until the ideal peo ple are created and the theories of so cialism become practical. The Declaration of Independence and the Omaha platform contain probably as; much socialism as will be realized within the next hundred years However, if the whole world should be I converted to practical Christianity sooner than that, thus rendering so cialism possible, so much the better. i Eternal Punishment. Justice is not mathematical. A tramp in Alameda county who stole twenty five cents worth of property was sent to jail for fifteen years In that county there is an office-holder who is $11,000 shtirt, and this leads a man to figure out that the said office-holder should serve 22,000 years in jail. RecoTd. Why not say for eternity and call the jail by its proper name? DO. PENNSYLVANIA REPUBLICANS. Declare- Themselves Opposed to Free Coinage of Silver. In the Pennsylvania! republican con vention Congressman palzell, discuss ing the money plank in the platform, said: "There is not an industry that does not demand the maintenance of sound money, and by sound money I mean money good at par in any market in the' civilized world. ! An impression has gone abroad that there is a free silver party in Pennsylvania, and; that that party is republican. Hence, in my judgment, there Is sity for the republican a crying neces party in Penn- sjlvania in this convention assembled to declare itself unequivocally against the a free and unlimited coinage of sil vetf at any other ratio than that, fined by j international agreement. There are thousands of republicans west of thelMississippi who claim that the re publican platform as adopted at Min neapolis means the free and unlimited coinage of silver. I want to get rid of that impression. In order that there may be no straddling, and in order that no man can stand UP and say Pennsyl vania republicans are seeking to catoh votes by straddling the tree silver ques tion, add to' your platform that the re publican party of Pennsylvania de clares it is opposed to the free and un limited coinage of silver in any other ratio than that fixed by internatonal agreement." The convention complied with Dal zell's command by adding to it meaning less jumble of tangled relative and parenthetical phrases khe declaration of its "opposition to the debasement of the national currency by the admis sion of silver to free; and unlimited coinage at the arbitrary ratio of lfi to i: , j The first part' of the money plank adopted is the same old double-back-action flip-flap Groveri Cleveland hay been performing: "We accept unre servedly the determination enunciated by the republican national convention of 1892 that we demand the use of both gold and silver money with such re strictions and under. such provisions t be determined, by legislation as will se cure the maintenance of the parity of values of the two metals so that ih purchasing and debt-paying power of the dollar whether of! silver, gold or paper shall at all times be equally faithful to the republican party." They want money that is "faithful id the republican party." i jiuucj 10 r n a i. luuLiuus me iepuuiic-; an party and It wouldn't be good pol itics to have money in this country that was faithful to all, the people. Sounds funny, don't it? The Globe-Democrat, leading west ern republican paper, says: "The; money plank shows that the Pennsyl vania republicans are in line with their party all over the country on that is sue." , j They are in line with the party, in line with Cleveland and Sherman, in line with England and Wall street. Of course money will the republican party." be "faithful to ; If you had a mule and it was balky and would not serve you, what would you do with it? Would you keep it? Of course you wouldn't.) You would get rid of it as soon as possible. If you had a neighbor that had lied to you about the same things for twenty years, would you believe. him ny longer? Of course you wouldn't. Well, why don't you exercise the same amount of sense in voting? Say, are you a political chump? r ) ' If you are not pleased with the situa tion suppose you change your vote. . - - i More money is good if or the individ ual why not the nation? "CIECLE OF TJttJTH." POVERTY CAUSES INTEMPER ANCE" SAYS MISS WILLARD. Opinion of the Great Temperance Ad- i ocate Miss Willard Recognizing the Itoot or the Great Krll of Drunken ness at last. Milwaukee Advince:; At the great St. Louis conference of labor and re form organizations! where the organlza- tion was affected that resulted in the Omaha convention Miss Frances WIN lard was an honored . guest and by i courtesy was made a member of the committee on resolutions This corn- mittee was very large;, having raoro than 100 members, and a very strong Miss Willard and fight was made by other prohibitionists tn favor of plac- ing a prohibition p ank in the platform. The fight lasted fiom 11 o'clock p. rn. until about 3 o'clock in the morning, and the principal contestants were Miss Willard on one sidje and Robert SchllN lng on the other. The latter held that prohibition was not only a violation ot personal liberty bit Impracticable and j that it could not be enforced as long as poverty drove people to drink. His argument was that people well fed and well educated needed no prohibition and that -drunkenness was lne result of misery and destitution. Miss Willard seems to have adopted this view now. wie find the following sentence quoted in the Representative, 'gnatius Ponnelly's paper: We used to say intemperance was the :ause of poverty, pleted the circle Now we have com- Of truth by saying poverty causes intemperance, and the inder-paid, under-sheltered, wage earning teetotaler deserves a thousand imes more credit than the teeetotaler . vho is well paid well fed and well sheltered. In the slums they drink to. target. We should make life some hing they would gladly remember; so vould you. Our objects are the same. "t us clasp handsjin the unity of spirit nd the bond of peace. All honor to Miss Willard. If. every ne of our prohibition friends would ake the same position, a union of re- 'orm forces plished. would be easily accom- CLEVELAND AND HIS CUCKOOS. Are Managing Democratic Convention Democratic I This Year. i In an interview Gen. Thurman- ot Ohio says: "During Cleveland's first administra tion an order was issued forbidding fed eral office-holders! from taking part in the convention, yjjt this, year in Ken tucky every revenue ; collector,, every postmaster and every whisky gauger was turned loose jon the state to help Carlisle." Only last year Cleveland worked tooth andjtoe nail against Gor nian and Brice, yet now he turns about and drums every jfederal office-holder into the Brice ranks. The democratic party .gave these men their offices." And so it has been at all the demo cratic conventions throughout the coun try. The president orders hla ple-at-ers to go and work for an English finan cial system under threat of being "sum marily dealt with" unless they . obey. The democrats wt.o have threatened to leave the party fall In line from habit and everything's ilovely. 'THE PARAMOUNT ISSUE." Both OW1 Parties Endorse the' Sam Policy. : ' Mr. Brice said Ohio convention: in his speech at th "The great paramount Issue upon which the battles of both this year and next will be fought will be the tecord of the democratic party under President Cleveland; the j question will b whether it is to be endorsed and Its pol icy continued, or Whether it shall le re pudiated and its policy ended." The republican party endorses that record and Uie only issue with both old, parties will be j to down the "silver craze" and populist lunacy. Grover's record, will be endorsed, but the democratic party will be ended end over end ihtp the republican goldr , bug camp, where the same policy has been, pursued forjten years longer than Rip Van Winkle slept-and still the "daddy-was-a-democrat" fellows are asleep. . i . . . A Goldbu Blunder. ; The goldbug papers.ln their suddenly developed derision for the Horr-Har-vey debate, are charging that it was a mere' money-making scheme to sell books for Mr. Harvey. Since they challenged Harvey themselves and went to New York after Horr and brought him to j Mr. Harvey's home Chicago, it seems a little strange that they should go so far out of their waj and do so much jto further the sale of Mr. Harvey's books. And now, to cap the climax, comes a publication of an assignment by Mr. Harvey of all prof its from the sale pf the book containing the debate to the silver committee, to be used in promoting" the cause. Thess goldbugs had a well come down of! their perch and confess that they have blundered and made a bad bargain. The National Banks won't take your note. Don't take thelr's. J- II -V. 61 1 j 1-