Newspapers / The Plow Boy (Wadesboro, … / March 18, 1896, edition 1 / Page 2
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I - . -i t --'I'M !' tj it i .1 if - :4 m . rr( - M. 5:-1 m THE PLOW BOY. JrUBLIiHBD TI1KI,T BT - Editor Lol EdiUr Ono dollar a yr in adranoa. ITAPMBomo.N.O. Mch. 18, 1896 THIS GREATEST ISSUE. iAnva r.tv.htt!i!a DAW that, the IV-pnliat convent ioo which meets &ML Louis the 22nd j of July wil! I clwJide to make a square cut fight for financial reiorm, noiuingomerques tfons in abeyance for the present ; Whether or not thi will prove t lA the wiseat course,4 time alone wili tll. We have never been able to set E anything wrong with the transpor tuition plank in the Omaha platform if and we believe that the government ownership of vhe public" highway- mil eventually be tlio adopted sys- Mm in this; country, but the people ill have to be educated up to it just they were educated up to the postoffiee system. It will be only a liestion of time. There never has been nor never 11 be any part of a political plat- m that is more important than liat which relates to the financial pMstem of the government. It fact, . bllorft is no r.nlitieftl issue ot more fT'i r r portanco' than the financial ques- iln. This is true in time of peace ;cjfrnwar' in time of adversity or pros Uy : In time of peace and pros-; eVity the masses should keep Close rYUicu on ure uuuuuiai p biciu, icti It should be transformed into a sys tem for the benefit ot the few at the ibxpenso of the many, as has been b$ ea&e during the past 30 years of iu history. In times of acTVersity ;ir var the financial question is more anftortant than all others, for witl jrft irnjust and discriminating finan- arsystem there can be no ray of po lor an oppressed pooplo. We repeat hero what wo have Jrc fluently said before, that if every j&rl ot the Omaha platform were chatted into law arid the financial f-8l.em left as it is now, it would Kot? bnncc prosperity, but times toiId .continue to go from bad to r . k ' VvorMe. IVe must strike at the root' 1 , ' , fjjt tlie evil if "we would bring about. . ' . ha-figed conditions ior the better liiiaet an American sjsiembf finance t hfuet the business rcqifiremenls ol tiiisfcotntry and it will pariia'ly romfdy other evils of which we com- P Sme of the Populists arc disposed ? condemn the idea of making the, te 'iifl V rquo8tion the leading isHue 4n II i'7 tlio fcomincr campaign, but we would 1 rlmlnd them that this issue is one has, tp a large extent, forced itself to the front and it will stay ter) till settled. We admit that ' t fee free and unlimited coinage ot I ll'iy clr ' al o n o ' would - not afford- the j?" . nedMl relief, but it will bo a bin ,n Btnpan the right dnection and will inai a big Populist victory, because tlfe tliactment of a free silver law wl Istablish the Populist principle ottfia!t raonev, it' will prove what PpilistBhavo been saying all along, ually that if is the law that makes mtyeh, and that moneu is simply a entire of law. When this idea is eHbtisbed by practice, it-will be an oaiy Inatterj to get a still greater in ert s in the volume of money by ; ; udLibnaI-greenback currency until theyaliount shall have become large i enQTUi to meet the business require r met.rtsfoi tue country, so mat tno I gridilg credit system may be dis itenie! with. ' in, it is certain that the next Populist platform will not stop at the but tion Jemandor free coinage ot silver, Vill demand the abolition of na ,9 , t )aiiks anddeclare for legal tenqarlcurrency issued r by the gen- era! dvcrnment without the inter- ycni jbi of nutiohal banks. In short,, fnuncial plank of the Omaha II rift rl 0rl . the plat IU if U I TV 111, IIV UVU'U, OIUUU jJtilV Inylthe same as now, and upon tical this TMue the campaign will be made. Thie' sfeems to be the prevailing sen iimcjaf nbw, and it -will, W6 believe! be avwise course to pursue. Alt tho ,fforsof the oid party itos to keep the jhEncial question from the from willfprbvo l'ruiiless. It is the burn ing tjilestion ; in American politics and uhs old party traitors will have to meei it face to face in the coming 1 :;ontE ItibJrders on mockery for the goldbg8 to sing praises to the tJ3am ra AJbraham Lincoln, tho man whoj warned the nation of the I schemes of these enemies of a free peoie Lincoln was J t h e great ix-har 4pon of greenback money. II I was rrct a Republican of the present l! Tpee are lots of patriots (?) wait- mg ) serve the people m om-uai i capapi TfieiPeopie's party ia a mrghty PARTY METHODS. j For years the old j:ui ty pros has taught it followers ihi.t itV dishpr eet lo bolt a convention. They work on tb'is plan:'-: " : '; ' Early in the, campaign they call ownship and county contentions. Vhvy move heaven and earth, so to peak, to get everybody to attend i hese conventions. They make tlijeir followers believe itbat their: party will give them any kind of candi dates and,it elected, any kind of laws Key want.' But as soon as the na ioiml convention meets and the mo iiopoly nerving wing of the party nominates its man and vadopts its platform, (as it always does, and al ways will do) the rank and file ot the party begins to kick, but the bosse8.put a quietus on them by telf ing them that it's the meanest thing in the world for a man to pariicipau in the conventions! and then i refust to stand by the nominees, and by applying the parly lush in this man ner, they hold motft ot theirjM16wr ers In line and get' them to vole lor their enemies. -This t-ame old racl- - ef will be workei this -edr, trut h t with tho same results as heretofore CJie people are learning from past experience and will put a little com- mon senwo in their polities this year Already a number ot earnest free silver Democrats in this State have 1 ! j announced their intention lo bolt the national convention as so6n as it nominates a gold bug, and thik they have a right: to do and it U their duly to do iti In makjng thin assertion we are aware that it is no in accord with the teachings: of par ty politicians heretofore, but; it is in accord with honesty and jit is in accord with the. broad principles of popular government upon which this republic was founded. We claim that free silver Democrats have a right to participate; in the national convention, because the Southern wing of that party have taught in all the past that their.par ty is a free silver party, and they aie teaching, now that the D PtfrvLstances. T If fur cratic parly is a tree silver It is this principle that the common people want to see enacted ipto law, ana it their delegates who go' to the-national-convention should pledge the support otjftreei silver -mien to a gold bug candidate, they would not only bo acting diwhonestly, but, would be aHMuming powersf not del egated to them, , Inasmuch as. t tu rn ero success lif any political party is not the object ot itis supporters, it is dishonest, tor anj' part of (its delegates t'aerifico any great prin ciple just for party harmony imd party success. " ! " Old line party" beneficiaries tiike pleasure in referring to Senator Butler as one who bolts conventions and they therefore say Senator Bulk ier is dishonest. The difference be tween himand thee partyites is that Senator Butler believes in placing principle above party, and he iur ther believes that it is not only right buf the duty of free men to bolt the conventions of any party, thatjre-. pudiates a great principle that! its voters thought was the established creed ot the parly, while the party bus teach-that tho success of their party is paramount to every other consideration and they put every man down as a traitor whoj stands in the way of the office seekers. This blind adherence to party has been tho curse of this country, and when a man commits himself to his party regardless of the principles it advocates and practices, ho becomes a party 'slave and animpediment to popular government. It is contra ry to the spirit and intent of a re publican foi m f f government for men to tie themselves to anyj party machine, and it is a hellish doctrine which teaches that a man has do moral right to acf. independently in politics, even after ho has partici pated in the convention cf some po litical party. Yes, Who is lip? . Concerning Mr. "Junius' who- 1 writing voluminously and ' non luminously lor the Charlotte Observ er, ;ve wonder if he is aIo Mr. Mris es Gone, of the plaid trust. Caucasian. S j -The Some think hero lit might be the editor. But whoever it is, ho calls every silver man and party that de clares for irco silver, a traitor,; a crank and no democrat. Then has the audacity to say if the Democralr ic party declares for Silver, he will support it. So of all tho fools and traitors, he is tho b igges t -H ick ory - ill Mercury, if; A Western paper remarks: Did you ever pinch a dog's fail and watch. him turn around and bite his tail instead of bitingyou? Yoil doubt less thought the dbg foolish. I But tho peohie have dorio the same thing for many years, a When-plu!tocracy pinched the5 people, the people be- gan fighting each other insteadof' fighting plutocracy. See the pointy ABOUT "HONOIt. i It may bo, said that the muvimcnt tor Democratic-Populist fusion in iJprth Carolina died : before it was heart hf nnni ;n lUliffir and born, so nearly unanimous has been J . . ... - , the revolt against tho uli' of enter taininc such a proposition even for an instaut Democrats understand I iuai tney can nave po avaungs .wuu a man totally devoiu ot honor, as is inHtv nf 9i(in n.iii ihM 1 Senator Bu.Ur- V know 1 l,i. it in H.- 0t -o00 h quit the gang, rtKorinnl,ir,inrt'm nhnr.hr against a muii, but that his ihlical act for last four years justifies u, j to even uis puny menus c:.. not sue a ger Intelligencer. ': Wfl wntilil 'nns the' nhnvfl hv nn .n,0A A ; .. un w " i Mra -..rv.H,(V,a, :. tne pian oi campaign to oc practicea by the small calibre party bug editors. We notice that week after week tfie Wadesboro M. & I. has been barking at Senator Butler and yelping something about "honor," and this time it concLded that it is . miftn ovuwuo. siring V v. l v. . ... . , j - i - i i vv- -s .-vw..w. , rtur ickit-u liiii unmd iicinpr hnn hnpn I hna hrnn lirturlitwr l Mr Knllpr ivr! i putting him down as one of the meanest men that ever lived in the u. .. li .uL-...':..;:- .. :.iJcum,tanceiS 1 rao3 unhesitatingly otuie anu luioem itBuuiauu. u ' ti ...: I same oiu eung, out an u,t uuee 11 uis- covers that it is a "serious thing" to charge a roan being dishonest! VVe want to tell the editoirvf the. above' sheet tbut it depends largely upon t's a serious thin or not. If a man who livvs an'j honorable, consistent s - I" . life charges ' anothtr; with being dis honest it could properly be called a 'serious thing," but when a party buLf newspaper brings such a charge against a political opponent, there is nothing at all "serious" about it, but 11 it, is iFmWTff7iia.rraonv. and KeeD k- ... i inrr withl papers of this character, .w.V----- U I tor they hove-no standard to go by except thai laill down by their party bosses and under that standard they could charge the purest man on eaith with being, "devoid of honor," but we-submit that a charge coming from such a feource could not bo con sidered 'serious" under anv circum- tber proof is needed to show that the Wadesboro Messengor-In telligenper's tidea of honesty is in direct opposition to what honesty really is,! we have only to note . tho fact that! said paper is doing all it can in its own weak way to get the voters who f read its columns to swear allegiajnce to a party whosn tien for ---ctOQO 000, or even 81. record has proved it to bo the most without the! consent of those who dishonest -political party that ever must pay nSj Is it not the power of held the reu:H of government Hince a king, despot and tyrant? Let thv this republic, was established. Yes- people thini of thie; it is an act re it is trying to g.-t'tho people of its cenlly perpetuated in this country, own county (Ansflfn) to commit Let us aris0 and apply the bridle to themselves unequivocally and unre- the beast which threatens destruc servedly to the nominee of the' na- lion to the vehicle of government by tional Democratic convention when there is a thousand chances to one that the nominee will be a gold bug and tho Messenger- Intel legencer has repeatedly stilted that the Dem ocratic party of Alison county is in favor of free coinage of silver. We hope the Messenger-Intelligencer will have respect enough for the senso ajid conscience of its readers not to o'urfte'n them with any mNjre essa3'8 on honest! The Charlotte Observer says that it has it from reliable sources that Senator! Butler has agreed to a fu aion wittr the organized Democracy on certain terms. It- must a be very re lie able source. The Caucasian has it direct from Senator Butler that this charge is untrue. Senator Butler says that he bad every time slated, when such an arrangement has been ropoed or suggested, that in his- opinion the People's party would never fuse or co operate with tho Democratic machine. He says that the people's party will not co operate with those who support the nominee of the Democratic part' for President, but that the People's, party is ready to receive into its ranks or! to co-operate with, those who repudiate the gold. and monop oly policy of the party of "perfidy aud dishonor.' Canic-asjan. ! Senator Harris says he will con tinue the fight for silver, but only inside the Democratic party. We do not doubt that Harris' position is entirely satisfactory t' the gold bugs. Ho has been in Congress for many years and injjLhat time has seen silver stabbed to death. How much longer will it take him to get free coinage through ;tbe Democrat- ic party? The people need no bet- ter proof that "Harris and bis sort are frauds.-Current Voice. Wo learn that there aro several hundreds of pooplo in! Wilmington, mc6t of them perhaps with families, who aro out of employment and but little prospect of getting any. soon. Their condition is distressing and their necessities most pressing. Shall they bo allowed to suffer, perhaps some of them to starve? Here is-a chance for benevolence to do its blessed work. Wiliminton-MJP-00! .LlbertJ ,ies bleeding, avance senger, Another Man Bolts ilie ,D"iicaey Capt. "Bill" Dav. the great bul- ctOQ, vr .u f - .u ! Eastern Worth Carolina the man who cou,d mako a county havim: three Kepubhcan voter ti one Dein ! in ocratic vote, give -a Democratic iria- on "u uoue rigm in ie ing iuo nj nwurais, ouiwo uhiik no nan gone the wrong plaice fur salvation. 1 to card to the Now and Obsercei hel ga 8 J ' To tho Editor: 1 1 -was in Washinu- Joas old Democracy "flops over and l? w days ag, and ai the same time Capt. PcebU and Mr. Ed Chambers Smith was in the citv I was ot prd-entt the confer ' I enco looking to "nave the State " or I tor any other purpose. My mission wa,s to eerve a Tnend ' Only this uuu uutumg inure. ,1 . s :.. . t -.-' I I rtirarii t ha i 1 1 1 in IMrkflH I i i-r i linaas a fight between the PopuUs. anil Kepubliean parties. Or it you 1 . .1 uivivi. uchtccu duuiiu iuuicv aim inflation. Bet seen vagaries of ...."..l it.s. i . .1 I vi I is.m It It Mn hi) At tna ludii, in. I rcst to the public what my politi I - . .11 . . . T . k I -auuci win. ue unuer tnese c.r x HDa VQle the Na'liona Ke . . puDIlcan tlCKet lii yti. icket ii) ' Very truly, W. II. Day. Halifax, N. C, Feb. 26, 1896. And we think we remember the Charlotte Obsver to have 'said re- cem 11 toe Democrat- c part had pore men like Capt. Bill Day. On this particular mat- ter there is not much difference in The Caucasian and the Observer. The Democrats recently lost i Kitchen. Later t b e i r Fountain u u , ..,.. .1 i .1 ... l i . r iuey nave iosi i.i if. r i :l v r iiar n'lri.vi i ii inn iiu rv i -r-j- ---i " l s I and Jhrn a n d thirsting to Exchange Clippings. After all the American people seem to be more interested m the Democratic majority, it really in ta Jeffersonian doctrine of finance than ,Vor of free silver, 103 over tho Re- tho Monroe doctrine of. territorial- acquisition. The latter only attrac e d their attention ;momentarily, when-they are again absorbed in the all important question of whether American people should submit to the English )jo!d standard and Eng lish commeruial and political rule. News. A Is it'rigbt Jthat, one man should have the power to mortgage a na i the people. Missouri World The United States can go it alone on silver as well as it can o it alone on the Monroe doctrine. We are not consulting Europe as to the po sition wo should tako refraruinur Hawaii, the Venezuela boundary line, oi the Nicaragua canal and we don't have to consult any nation on earth as to whether we will admit to our miiHs for free coinage the silver mined from our own grand and rich ?mountains. News, Port Huron, i Don't be fooled any longer by the deceitful ( word bimetallism. The time's come when things should be ncUaA b-i their right names. 13lt.a'Itt metal Li 8 rn has a thousand strings to it. What we want is free silver, and " - -fl there is only one way on earth to express it. "Wo demand the tree coinage of silver at the ratio of 16 to 1, without waiting ibe consent of any nation on earltt." Tljere is nothing ambiguous about that. It means jdst what it says, and says just what it means. Even the law yers could not twist it to mean any thing ehje.-r-Operator. Konds! Bonds. Every dollar invested in bonds is so much money retired from useful business.-Many of our people by robberu and rascality have grown so riohjtht bonds at 1 per cent would give them immense incomes, but a 3 per cent bond is a bonanza. They don't want to be bothered with bus iness. In fact tbey regard business as disgraceful. "Tain' tKnglisb, you know." With Cleveland as president they get all the bonds they want Then the Heed bond bill as it passed tho house would dothe same. Mon ey is in the saddle, the people are on loot, cfl any of them destitute, and the condition growing worse: every day. , Voters of America, aro you blind or simply party partizan fools, that you can't see the situation? iThe country is going to the dogs. in fact the dogs have it now. "lie- form isl necessary," jet us on to St Louis for union and victory. j ? The angel of healing ha disty rbed the waters, let us all get into the is suetae. Silver Knight. Siiine YaTnalile Poiitival I'actK, - Vti the Peop'e's parly i due ll.o nedil of agitating th mo;-t y q-ics- ion for j'eare pat. It u t ho only national party that ever declared 0r 16 to 1 or any other ratio, and nfl its (-ffijrts to aronse the peoDle this vital snbiect it has had to . , .... , contend with both the old parties Qw that the people have become fairlv etlucated, and are beginning understand not only the cause of iheir misfortunes, but also, who are resDonsihle for them, tho trea her nretends to be silver's best and only available friend. That this elaim i , . , f vnolI' unI'iniletl any unprej.ia.ceo . y a 1 1 man will understand when he ex amines the record made. by the par tv Ilore it is- 1. The Fortv-ninth Conu-res- hav J a democratic major. 01 pm o. idoo, Kiueu o... Pruv.u.a , , t f . 1 1 pur luuimo auu uiiuiuucu lyuiuasc ui un-L;u., ir,a 1 J 'K c.uuu.i.v ...ajv.. w4 u, on tue utt u.eu, .... 4 JI A vanl-k 1 W 1 I IM I I ed a ireecoiuage bill at a ratio of 16 lO Ik m. n 3. The same Congress on July 13 of the same year, overwhelmingly defeated another free coinage bill, 16 to 1, after it had passed a Repub lican Senate, and when it was well understood that a Kepubliean rres- ident, although individually opposed lo free silver, had naid" he would ap- prove it, if passed by the Democra'- ic Iloupe. 4 Ou AuguH 23, 193, the Fifty- third Congress "called ir. extra sef-- i. i -M i . i i r . . i sion oy iur. wjeveiiim ueieaieu a mil. 1 1 ru i nnr utr i m r nu nuirH m f & fo . . silver at 16 to 1 by a two thirds vo e. majority over both Republicans and Populists ot 83, but the ton Poptf vot ed for the bill, thus making tho Dublicans. There were 217 Democrats on the flror of the House ,when this vote was taken, and 101 voted for the measure and 116 voted against it. So, then, it will be seen, if nobody but Democrats bad been present and voting, the bill would have been defeated by.a majority of 15. 5 On the name day uamely, '.Au gust 23, 1893, the same Democratic Congress voted down a second prop osition to com fsilver free, at a ratio o.' 17 to 1, by a slill greater mnj r- ' 6. On the same day this same Congress voted down another prop osition, looking to "the parity" of the two, metals at 18 to 1. 7. On l tie same day another' bill providing for the free 'coinage of sil ver at 19 to VWH9 defeated. 8 On 'he same day another prop osition looking to the tree and un limited coinage of silver at a ratio of 20 to 1 was snowed under in a Democratic House. And thus it was fiyo bills provid ing for the free and unlimited coin age oi silver were beaten in a re presentative body now professing to be the triendof the white metal an fast as the clerk could call the roll. And don't forget, honest Democrat ic reader, that in every solitary in stance a majority of your Democrat ic Congressmen voted against silver, and in iavor of the single gold stan- 9. On November 1, 1893, the Fittvtbird Congress, with its 83 Democratic majority over all, voted down an amend aient offered by Mr. Bland to a pending bill, which amendment provided for the free and unlimited coinage of silver at 16 to 1. 10. On October 27, 1893, the Un-' ited States Senate, having a Demo cratic majority ot three over all, and when the four Populist Senators were counted for silvej the majority over the Republicans was eleven, defeated Senator Stewart's amend ments providing for free eoinage of silver at 16 to 1. 11. In February, 1895, the Fifty third Congress being in session with a Democratic majority in both Houses, and a Democratic (so called) Executi ve, the Finance Com mittee of the Senate, with Dan Voor hees Chairman, and a majority of Democrats on the committee, killed in the committee-room the last prop osition made for the free coinage of silver at 16 to 1. Thus it will be seen that in nine years the Democratic party in Con gress has killed eleven free' silver bills, and wholly failed and refused to rebuke "the crime of 73" When the parly had the power to restore free silver, it refused. Now that it is powerless to do anything, its leaders, especially in the South, are-profuse in their promises, what they intend to do right next time. The man who cays he believes they are in earnest this time is either a credulous idiot or knowingly aiding in making another platform 4,to get in on," and wilfully deceiving the public. Special Ttrf 6 la. 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It will Ictre no track in the field, it will.cot you noicing to invcticate., and war prove just 0a Ih'nsr vnu hare been lfkine tor. . W make other farm Implement and city can furnish you with the best aJI-ttecl wbecla Did You Hear Anything Drop? Well, may bo yon wero not listening but the bottom hns dropped out of the price of Job P RINTING and it was knocked out by a Populist printing house. Tho Harrell Printing House" was con sidered the lowest priced ,Kous.3 in the State until the Pops ot o doing business at the Homo Printing House Wo quote a few prices which speak for tho ni sei ves : OLD PRICE. $2.50.' 1.HK Lot). OIK PKICB. $1.75 M .50 1000 500 250 PACKETIHEADS OLD PRICE, $2 50 1 .50 ' 1.00 : 'out I lUUt. it.w .45 lt00 2r0 Other kinds of printing donr? at us low rates. If any othor house will '-lo your work for lo9. money, let them h.uvo it Wo (ill no order unless cash ac companies it. THE HOME PRINTING HOUSE, MAE3HVILLE, K- 0. KING OF FRUIT LAXATIVES HAS NO EQUAL. ' vfV .V -.eO' l.o - Makes Happy Homes, Mothers ; and Children. PBICE, 25 Bd 50 PER' BOTTLE. FOR SALE BY PRUGGISTS. YOURS FCR HEALTH, ft. Weed Medicine Gompanx I ALEXIS, ILL. TITHE BOSTON PIANOS For DURABILITY, BEAU TY, SWEETNESS OF TONE and LIGHTNESS OF TOUCH ARE UNEXCELLED. ''! If you want blah grade Piano at medium; price, buy tbe Boston. . If yon want aa attractive case, buy tna Boston. If you want tbe best Action used In any piano, buy the Boston. FHE BQSTQR P1M0 G8., South Buckeye St, I WOOSTER, O, VANTED-AN ibEAlio0 thing to patent ? Protect your Ideas ; tbey may bring yon wealth. Write JOHN WKDDEIU BUHN & CO., Patent Attorneys, Washington. D. C, for their 81,800 prize offer. - - 1 - i r r i i f: -!?r.fl; ' - f) 5
The Plow Boy (Wadesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 18, 1896, edition 1
2
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