Free Coinage of Silver and the Restoration of the Money of NN ABOR’S DEMANDS. ORCANIZED the Constitution. SOME SOLID FACTS FOR THE WORKINGMEN. To the Members of Organized Labor and all other Producers and Toilers Through- out the United States: In view of the general distress now prevailing throughout our country, which has existed for so many years and which will continue until remedial legislation is en- acted—and all this occurring, too, at a time when our granaries are full to repletion, and when, in the natural order of things, our producers and toilers should be en- joying to the full the fruits of their hard and conscientious labor—it seems to us that the time has come for united action on the part of those who create the wealth of the country. The respective demands and platforms of principles of our several organizations set forth our opinions as to the causes that have brought about this condition of things. Inasmuch as the leading representatives and friends of all our organiza- tions have placed one of the causes of the tribulations of our beloved republic to the departure of our government from the wise bimetallic financial policy of Wash- ington, Jefferson and Hamilton, and the substitution therefor of the present mono- metallic policy recommended by European money owners and advocated by their American allies, we, the undersigned officers of industrial, agricultural and com- mercial organizations, have thought it best, at this particular time, to submit for your careful consideration a synopsis of the legislation respecting the precious metals enacted in this country since the foundation of this government, that you may judge for yourselves as to what portion of such legislation was enacted in the interest of the producing and what in the interest of the non-producing classes, and as to whether or not the shrewd manipulators of our finances foresaw that the result of their work would be to largely help in the subjugation of the people. Whatever the object, certain it is that before the demonetization of silver and the enactment of other financial legislation which our organizations condemn, 3,500 bushels of wheat, or 35,000 pounds of cotton, was the annual pay for our congress- men and senators, while to-day 10,000 bushels of wheat, or 100,000 pounds of cot- ton, barely suffice. Before demonetization, 35,000 bushels of wheat, or 350,000 pounds of cotton, per year, would have paid the salary of the president; to-day he receives the equivalent of 100,000 bushels of wheat, or 1,000,000 pounds of cotton. And in like proportion it is with all other fixed salaries and incomes. Was such legislation just? Was it honest? Does it not necessarily follow that the demoralization of the food-producing sections of the country, through failure to procure reasonable prices for their products, causes the manufacturing sections to accumulate excessive stocks, and that, in consequence of a poor market, hundreds of thousands of operatives are thrown out of employment, thus robbing them of the power, even at the low prices, to purchase the necessaries of life: Again, is it not obvions to every one that the striking down of one-half the world’s volume of money makes the remaining half a comparatively easy matter for capitalists to control and manipulate, and thdt toilers, to obtain money for the pur- chase of their food supplies, are placed i at the mercy of the foreign and American money sharks, who, hy contracting the currency, can force a panic or famine in money at their supreme will ? Would they be guilty of such a crime? We only say in reply, look at our pres- ent helpless condition. Does it not seem to you, in the light of the facts here given, that, where in the midst of plenty there is widespread suffering and unhap- piness, there is considerable meat in the refrain from Wall street: ‘‘ Dig on, ye toilers, dig; the legislative button that we press will do the rest !”’ The first coinage law enacted under the constitution, as recommended by Hamil ton, concurred in by Jefferson and approved by Washington, provided for the free and unlimited coinage of both gold and silver, the silver dollar containing 371} grains of pure metal. In 1837 the mint laws were revised, and the standard for both gold and silver was made nine-tenths fine; that is, nine-tenths pure metal and one part alloy, the number of pure silver grains to the dollar remaining unaltered, viz: 371} grains. This law established our present ratio of 16 to 1. In August, 1865, the public debt, which grew out of the war, reached its highest point, the debt, less cash in the treasury, being $2,756,431,000. The debt was not payable in gold. No bonds or other government obligations were ever made spe- cifically payable in gold. The interest on the bonds was made payable in coin, the greater portion of the principal of the original bonds in lawful money, and the re- funding bonds in coin—not gold coin, but coin of either gold or silver. In 1869 the principal of the bonded debt was also made payable in coin. In 1870 the standard of coin was by the refunding act nominated in the bond; that is to say, all the obligations of the United States were then declared payable in either gold or silver, of the present ratio, at the option, not of the bondholders, but of the people of the United States. All the acts passed since the close of the civil war, it will be observed, were in the interest of the bondholders, and against that of the producers and toilers. But it remained for the year 1873 to witness the crowning blow of all. In that year, an innocent-appearing bill, entitled “An Act Revising the Laws Relative to the Mint, Assay Officers and Coinage of the United States,” was successfully pass- ed through congress. : The bill purposely omitted, from the list of the coins to be minted, the silver dollar. By that clandestine act, of which the people and the people’s representatives were ignorant, and by the subsequent act of 1874, adopting the revised statutes, silver was demonetized, and the world’s volume of ultimate redemption money was reduced from about seven billions to three and one-half billions. In 1878, after the discovery of the crime of 1873, congress passed what is known as the ““ Bland Bill.” This bill was vetoed by President Hayes (John Sherman be- ing secretary of the treasury), and congress passed the bill over the veto. The act of 1878 added to our volume of money over 370,000,000 standard silver dollars. In 1890, what is known as the ‘‘ Sherman Act ’’ was passed as a substitute for the «Bland Act’’ of 1878. This law further increased our volume of money over $150,000,000. Under the Bland and Sherman laws over $500,000,000, or about $9 per capita, were added to our volume of money. As all reflecting men are agreed that the present distress is due to a scarcity of money, we must leave it to the imagination as to what would now be our condition if the gold standard men had had their way, and our present insufficient volume of money were half a billion dollars less. The Sherman bill was adding over fifty millions a year to the money of the coun- try when in 1893 its repeal was imperiously demanded by European financiers, through their American allies; and, although the people’s representatives made one of the grandest efforts ever witnessed in behalf of the producers and toilers of our country, yet the power of the financial institutions of Europe was so great that our people were compelled to submit to temporary defeat. Now, the question is: What do the tens of millions of victims in this country, to the diabolical gold standard policy of Lombard and Wall streets, propose doing about it? Submit to subjugation, or demand in no uncertain tones the immediate restoration of silver as standard money? No! they will no longer submit to such injustice! And therefore we earnestly recommend the adoption of the following resolution: « Wedemand of the present congress the immediate return to the money of the constitution as established by our fathers, by restoring the free and unlimited coinage of both gold and silver at the present ratio of 16 to 1, the coins of both metals to be equally fall legal tender for all debts, public and private, as before the fraudulent demonetization of silver in 1873. « We also condemn the increase of the national debt in time of peace, and the use of interest-bearing bonds at any time.” Signed: J. R. SOVEREIGN, Grand Master Workman, Knights of Labor. JNO. W. HAYES, Grand Secretary and Treasurer, Knights of Labor. SAMUEL GOMPERS, President of the American Federation of Labor. MARION BUTLER, President of the National Farmers’ Alliance and Industrial Union. H. H. TRENOR, General President, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America. : P. J. McGUIRE, General Secretary, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America. P. M. ARTHUR, Chief of the United Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. . C. A. ROBINGON, President of the Farmers’ Mutual Benefit Association. ’ FRANK P. SARGENT, Grand Master of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen. : F. W. ARNOLD, Grand Secretary and Treasurer of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen. @® . JOHN MCBRIDE, President of the United Mine Workers of America. — ee —————————————— The Latest Democratic Ticket in New York. NEW YORK, September 28.—The regular Democratic ticket of the state of New York, revised by the state committee this evening is: For Governor, Wilbur F. | Porter, of Watertown ; for lieutenant gov- ernor, Fred C. Schraub, of Lowville ; for associate justice of the court of appeals, Robert Titus, of Buffalo. It was supposed to be settled that Elliot Danforth, chairman of the state committee, would be placed at -t11€ head of the ticket to fill the vacancy caused by the decli- nation of John Boyd Thacher. eleventh hour Mr. Danforth, who had been in telephonic communication with Senator Hill, decided that he would not permit his name to be used. He told the committee and the managers of the Democratic cam- paign got together and decided to push Wilbur E. Porter up from second place to first and to make F. C. Schraub lieutenant governor. No changes were made in the third place on the ticket. The Way a Republican Paper Views the Bardsley Pardon. From the Ebensburg Herald. On Monday John Bardsley, the embez- zling city treasurer of Philadelphia, was pardoned, Gov. Hastings signing the doc- ument that set him free. It is said that Bardsley was sick, and to save the life of this convict he was pardoned. He stole millions, yet he is a free man. If some poor mother had stole a loaf of bread to save the life of her starving child, she would have been permitted to die in prison. Our belief is that Bardsley was pardoned for the express purpose of conciliating certain political factions in this State. To pardon Bardsley was simply to encourage crime, and the Governor who signed the pardon is the same Governor who helittled himself in Ebensburg at a court trial about a year ago. Shame! There is Nothing for the Farmer Any More. “From the Doylestown Democrat. pes. It don’t seem to matter what sort of crop the farmer sends te market in these days, there does not appear to bea very encouraging price for it. The Hunterdon county Democrat tells the story of a Red Bank farmer who recently shipped 58 bar- rels of apples to New York. When the freight, cartage and commission were de- ducted he received $7.81 for the shipment, which is a little over thirteen cents a bar- rel. The barrels cost fifteen cents each and are not returned, making a net loss of two cents per barrel, or $1.16 on the shipment, not counting the cost of raising, picking and marketing. Work for 500 in Iron Mills. Resumption in Factories at Hollidaysburg and Ty- rone. tions will be resumed to-morrow at the El- eanor iron works here, and. at the Tyrone iron works, in Tyrone, this county, after a long period of idleness. These two plants are controlled by R. C. Neal & Co., of Har- risburg. They will give employment to five hundred men. ——Read the WATCHMAN. At the | Hollidaysburg; JPa., Sept. 28.—Opera- A Big Purchase. Hon. John Wanamaker Buys the Business of Hilton, Hughes & Co. PHILADELPHIA, September 28.—Robert C. Ogden, of the firm of John Wanamaker, returned from New York this evening and confirmed the report of the purchase by his firm of the entire business of the late firm of Hilton, Hughes & Co., of New York. The transaction includes the purchase of all the real estate of the original firm of A. T. Stewart & Co., consisting of the great store at Broadway and Tenth street, the stable and outfit of the delivery service i and all the merchandise. The Philadel- | phia firm will enter immediately upon the occupancy of the premises of its new pur- chase and will run the business upon the same lines of the Wanamaker store here. The senior partner of the successors of Hilton, Hughes & Co. is John Wanamaker, who was postmaster general in President Harrison’s cabinet. Mr. Wanamaker’s establishment here is one of the largest | general stores in the world and does an i enormous business annually, and the ex- | postmaster general is credited with being a millionaire several times. Nothing could be learned here of the amount involved in the purchase of Hilton, Hughes & Co. Big Mills Starting Up. Ten Thousand Employes Given Work by the Resump- tion. MANCHESTER, N. H., Sept. 28.—This morning all departments of the Amoskeag company started up with a full set of hands. This establishment has 8000 employes, who have been idle since August 8. WARE, Mass., Sept. 28.—The Otis com- pany’s cloth mills, in this town, which have been running on half-time for six months, started up on full time this morn- ing. There will be a slight change in the prices paid for piece work. The company employs 1800 hands, and if trade warrants .| will run all winter. AMESBURY, Mass., Sept 28.—The Ham- | ilton.. woolen mills, employing 800 opera- | tives, started up this morning permanent- {yy after an alternate shut-down aggregat- "ing five weeks. | Mrs. Edith Randolph Became Mrs. Wm. C. Whitney Yesterday at Noon. No Display of any Kind. Ex-Secretary Admits the Engagement was Quite Recent. Bride is a Beauti- ful Woman. BAR HARBOR, Me., Sept. 29.-—William C. Whitney was married to Mrs. Edith S. Randolph, widow of Captain Arthur Ran- dolph, of the British army, at high noon | to-day. There was no invitations and no bridal party. One representative of the bride’s family, Frederick May, Mrs. Randolph’s brother, acted as usher. A very few of the most intimate friends of Mr. and Mrs. Whitney were notified yes- terday, but until then the engagement even was not known. Kansas Safe for Silver. Poll of the State Shows a Majority of 50,000 for Bryan, TOPEKA, Kan., Sept. 29.—The allied free silver forces have made public the re- sult of a poll of the State. J. Mack Love, chairman of the Democratic state commit- tee, says Bryan will carry Kansas by 50,000 majority, if the figures do not go above that. Bryan in New York. He Spoke in Tammany’s Historic Wigwam Last Night. | NEW YORK, Sept. 29.—It has been many | a decade since the historical Tammany wigwam has held such a mass of humanity | as that assembled there to-hight to hear | William J. Bryan and others speak. Al- | though 6 o’clock was the hour set for the ! proceeding to begin, three hours earlier the doors of the famous meeting place were be- sieged by a clamoring throng. Tammany was determined that every word uttered by Mr. Bryan should be heard by those in the | hall, and, with this end in view, had erected a sounding board, in the shape of a canopy, directly over the speaker’s posi- tion on the platform, the candidate stand- ing under it while speaking. - The meeting was called to order by John W. Keller, the presiding officer of the evening, at 7:45. At that hour over 5,000 persons congregated in the hall. Mr. Keller delivered a short speech laud- | atory of Mr. Bryan and Tammany hall and in denunciation of Mr. McKinley. Resolutions were read endorsing the platform adopted at the national conven- tion held in Chicago and the state Demo- cratic.convention at Buffalo and the candi- dates named on those occasions. mpm New Advertisments. OR SALE.—Good seven room house on Allegheny street, fisnoionts. Apply to 40-13 BROWN, Jr. ANTED—AN IDEA—Who can think of some simple thing to patent? Pro- tect your ideas; they may bring you wealth. Write JOHN WEDDERBURN & Co., patent attor- Se Washington, D. C., for their $1,800 prize of- er. ’ 41.31. ANTED — SEVERAL FAITHFUL men or women to travel for responsible es- tablished house in Pennsylvania. Salary $780- payable §15 weekly and expenses. Position per manent. Reference. Enclose self-addressec stamped envelope. The National, Star Building, Chicago. 41-49-4m. DMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE. — Let- ters of Administration on the estate of Elizabeth Calderwood,deceased, of Taylor Twp., having been granted to the nndersigned, notice is hereby given to all parties having claims against said estate to present them duly authenticated for payment. H. H. OSMAN, 41-38-6t © Port Matilda, Sept. 21, 1896. IENERGETIC. MEN to so A N T E D licit orders for our hardy | Nursery Stock. Expenses land salary to those leaving BY THE (home, or commission to ol, agents. Dymanen; I ~ (Employment. 1e busi- CHASE Bos easily Learned. Ad- Sa [dress The R. G. CHASE NURSERIES |C0., 1430, S. Penn Square, Philadelphia. 41-38-2t. (me river Salmon, Finest Goods 15¢. 20c. and 25c¢. per can. SECHLER & CO. New Advertisments. OR SALE AT A BARGAIN.—Two comp ete Ball Shingle Mills with Jointer, Bolter, Slitters, Drag Saws, Boilers, Engines, Shafting and Belting. One 10 h. p. and one 20 h. boiler and engine on wheels. Four two-flue oilers complete. One Saw Mill with Edger and fixtnres., Address, H. LOEB, DuBois, Pa. 41-26 T= OUR HAMS, BREAKFAST BACON AND DRIED BEEF. THEY ARE VERY FINE. SECHLER & CO. OR SALE.—Second hand and in excel- lent condition. ONE 60 HORSE POWER BOILLER. ONE 40 HORSE POWER ENGINE. 30 pulleys, all sizes, and a large lot of shafting. The engine and boiler are complete, with all fix- tures, brasses ete. 41-37-6t. KS. M. BUCK, Bellefonte, Pa. FE tIoN AL. Office of W. FRED REYNOLDS BELLEFONTE, PA. To WaoyM 11 MAY CONCERN : This will certify that I have used the TmstLe EXTERMINATOR manufactured by Mr. Samuen Winte, of Bellefonte, with satisfactory re- August 31st, 1896. .sults, and I cheerfully recommend its use to any- one who wishes to get rid of this pest. JOHN C. MILLER, Manager for W. Fred Reynolds. Persons desirous of securing farm or township rights can obtain them by applying to Clement Dale Esq., Bellefonte, Pa. 41-35-1m. A UDITOR’S NOTICE.—In the Orphans Court of Centre county, in the matter of the estate of Adda C. Showalter, late of Philips- burg, Centre county, Pa. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed an auditor, in the above estate, to distribute the funds now in the hands of J. C. Stoner, executor, to and among those legally entitled to receive the same. And that he will meetin his office, in Bellefonte, on September, 25th, 1806, at ten o'clock a.m. for the duties of his appointment. Parties interested will please attend. E. R. CHAMBERS, 41-35-3t Auditor. 12 Fish, of allk nds at Very Low Prices. New Cheese SECHLER & CO. Fauble’s Katz & Co . Limited. HAVE YOU SEEN OUR LINE OF MEN'S ALL WOOL SUITS. price. You will find asking $10.00 for exactly Hx $5.00? They are the Greatest lot of goods ever shown at that other stores the same suits. FAUBLES’, Bellefonte, Pa. HE G EE. LOBE. DRY GOODS, CLOTHING AND MILLINERY. Another new departm ent added to the many attractions of this popular store. We have devoted our entire second floor to the sale of MEN’S YOUTH’S AND CHILDREN'S CLOTHING. Our claim for your patronage is ‘‘Superior quality of material used.” “The highest degree attainable in workman- ship, every garment being made in our own work rooms in Philadelphia and subject to careful ex- amination before being placed on our counters.’ AND LASTLY. GREAT CONCESSION IN PRICES. We guarantee every ¢ garment we sell and cheerfully refund the money if, after examina- tion, they prove unsatisfac tory. We sell no Shoddy stuff and every garment we sell will prove dependable. We will sell you Child’s Suits from 4 to 14 cc 6s ¢ 6 ‘6 yrs. : . better goods 73Cts 98cts. OUR GREAT LEADER full Double Breasted Child's Suits either Black or Blue and guaranteed «STRICTLY ALL WOOL.” Youths}Suits from 14 to 19 yrs. good wear- ing cloth $2.48. Over 50 styles Men's ¥ good Cassimere Suits to select from, ranging in price from $4.85 up to $20.00. We sell you a strictly all Wool Suit for $5.00 Boys Overcoats from $1.00 and upwards. Mens Overcoats from $2.50 and upwards. Immense variety 40-15 to select from. KATZ & CO. L’td. Makers of low prices and terror to all competitors. vt Pd ~~ A J