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The Farmers' Advocate from Winfield, Kansas • 1

The Farmers' Advocate du lieu suivant : Winfield, Kansas • 1

Lieu:
Winfield, Kansas
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1
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

VOL 0. WINFJ KLI), KANSAS, WKKK ENDING SATUllDAY, NOVEMBER 17189J, NO. 51 WEALTH IS THEIRS GRAND OLD PARTY. DEMOCRAT MATTERS. THE SOME HAVE RENEWAL OF PROGRESS AND PROSPERITV.

WIDOWS LOTS OF WHO CASH. The. Fall of I'onulUm. Ono of tho consolations which come to all good Americans as the result of Tuesday's work no matter which of the two great parties they may aillili-ato with is the evidence of a complete change of heart on tho subject of Populism among the people of the West their public debt. In other words, the debt remaining was, because ol tho increased purchasing power money, as burdunsomo us it was at the beginning of the fifteen yours referred to.

Applying this to tho history ol debt reduction in the United States wo may suy in all truth that by its rapid reduction of tho debt when price The Tarty ofl'nnlca. Before tho Republican party obtained control in 1801 panics of greater or less sverity had occured at intervals of about twenty years. The dates commonly stated are 1817, 18II7 and 18.17, Millionaire hikI llPiiutlful anl Result of the Sweeping Victory Strike, Wages and Money Let 'I hem Shut Down" The Wallop tome of Them Are Muy Marry Again -ArcomplUhed Thi-y Darti. ana tney may Ue accepted as essent Defy diphl'i ially ing of Wilson. There were three panics in six years, From the last of them the country re When alio puts it on and holds court Hho Is the most admired woman in, thy 400 of either Europe or Aiuericn.

Quite different from these, and a widow only by law, yet is Mrs. now shining in New York society. Mrs. liurke-Rocke lives at her fatherVhome, and has with her the two sons, twins, that beur a strongreseiiiblanee to their grandfather, Frank millionaire. Mrs, Hurke-Roche had.

a marriage settlement which left her enormously wealthy, and tho money is still hers. It is understood, though never confidently stated, that the trouble with her husband rose from personal differences, and not from the extravagances of the latter. Anyway Mrs. Rurke-Roche is at home now, dressing more beautifully than ever, and handling tho ribbons over finer horses than fall to the lot of any other woman in New York. wore high boforo grold had grontlj appreciated tho Kepublican party earned tho gratitudo of American people to a dogree but little loss than that which it acquired by saving tho Union and freeing tlio slaves.

lksnvor It Means Keneweit rronperlty, LD WELLER'S Tlio ono conclusion from tho covered with great rapidity, and by 1800 it was once more in tho full tide of prosperity, as that high Republican famous advice to Sum, "Beware of tremendous rovolution at tlio polls which dwarfs all others is that tho authority. Mr. Morrill, of Vermont, the alders," is in no way heeded by admitted in 1801. country is placed thereby upon tho straight road to a return to business prosperity. lieyond and above tho triumph of party stands tho great fact in 1801 the Republican party took the hclnnind at once began to promote tho.se to whom the charms of women are the mot i forces by which lifo Wnget anil Money.

No ono ever has heard of a wheat flold or a cotton plantation striking because its product brought a low price in tho market. Hut in recent unhealthy speculation by substituting that the material interests of this na- a protective tariff for a revenue tariff. 1 -it tion will from to-day take heart, that iv pusseu oy rapiu stages trom com years it lias been a very common industry will revivo, that conlidenco and South. The same men have dono the voting this year who two years, ago piled up the Populist majorities. The fact that these majorities have gone, indicates a change of conviction-and better than all a courage of convictions which proves that no amount of partisan infection may keep an American citizen from voting what he verily believes is right.

The rise and growth of state- socialism, whicli was called for short, Populism, in Western America, was phenomenally rapid- Six years ago it was unknown. Four years ago it cast its first ballot; two years ago it achieved its lirst signal victories in a half dozen Western states. If the principles had stood the test of time, Tuesday's result would have been far different. Rut the socialistic idea that the government can do for the individual what the individual cannot do for himself that idea was weighed and cast aside. The men who cast out Populism are t.day loudest in raising hosannas of joy that the deed is done.

These men who went astray and or no women will be restored, that tho pall of mis paratively moderate protection to extreme protection. In the meantime it yum are more constant thing to hoar of luborlng men striking because of tho low prlcos offered fortune will be lifted, and that the If this fair widow marries again the ly supplied with worshipers at their added much fuel to the fire of specula in the market for thoir product, which is their labor. fair shrines than are those once bound tion by enormously inflating the cur by matrimonial chains. Nor are any disasters of the past will be quickly repaired and forgotten in a new era of prosperous activity. It was to complish this result more than all else In this we find an explanation of rency, flooding the country with irredeemable green-backs of uncertain and of womankind, even among the pro verbially attractive debutantes, the fluctuating value.

that tho people of this country wont cause of more wakeful niirhts nor tho fact that wages have not fullen along with tho price of wheat and cotton. We may woll imagino that if they could do so our wheat fiolds and our cotton plantations would protest to the polls and voted almost in a 1 he Republicans claimed that both the high tariff and the extensive-issues deeper heartburnings. body to return the Republican party to power. J. heir wisdom will be vin of paper money were necessary in order to provide insans for the suppress And this is just as it should be in very many cases at least.

For there are, within easy mention, a score of dicated by the result. at tho low price which is offered for their product. Cotton which brought ion of the rebellion. The protective We can rest assured of a safe and icumres oi tne tarin certainly were 19 cents in 1878, is selling at cents, lovely widows with not only beauty for their portion, but with accomplish- stable policy in the conduct of this not necessary for that purpose, and government from this time forth. ments, fine presence, sympathetic and wheat which oneo brought $1.80 brings only 50 cents now.

Tho plantations and fields ara not to blame. The nation has spoken. It has ex there are good reasons for believing that ample means could have been ob hearts and riches as well. have repented should not be reviled. They did what they in the first place honestly.

They followed the pressed its mandate in terms that the The palm for all these things except Tho soil is as productive and tha most obstinate or careless must heed extreme youth, must be given to Mrs, will o' the wisp, believing it with all quality of the product as good as they What does this mean for the immodi tained without issuing irredeemable paper money, and that the cost of the war would not have been much more than half what it was if none had William Astor, who, though she has were twenty years ag-o. Hut there ate luturer it means that all our grandchildren, is not yet an aged heir hearts to be a beacon light. They followed it up out of party lines; they followed it in the face of party traditions; they followed it to the very has been no voice raised nor hand stretched forth in protest powerful woman by any means, and who has been issued. great interests will have the rest that they so much need from change and the threat of change. We may tako plenty of good looks, fine health and, ue that as it may, the next great enough to cone with the crushing of course, an abundance of money to to ourselves the assurance that there effect upon prices of an advancing monetary standard.

recommend her. bitter end. Then they retraced their steps painfully, yet manfully. They found the folly of their former way will be no more disturbing innova On the other hand ad vancing civili tions. Tho harassed business of tho It is said of Mrs.

Astor that she cares not at all for the society of men, preferring to shine now by the graces of Vitt 1 zation has declared that the condition United States will now call upon the sr of the laborer shall bo better than it and Tuesday they voted as Americans. There is not much to fear from men of that stamina. They may be fooled vast recuperative resources behind it, SIRS. WILLI iM ASTOR. was in tho days when labor meant, if and from this time forth will go stead hppy man will secure not only a ereat not slavery, a qualified serfdom, The fastly and confidently forward toward panic came tour years ahead of time.

The interval was reduced from twenty years to sixteen years. The panic was far more disa irjus than that of 1857. It took the country more than five years to recover from its effects. And when the country recovered from its prostration it was only to pass into another and even more wild state of speculative delirium which culminated in the Grant Ward failure and 'khe panic of 1884, which extended to all tie great eastern centers of trade and finance and brought partial paralysis upon the business of the entire coun once, but they cannot be trusted to hug their folly. They are tho people whom Mr.

Lincoln referred to when he the certainty of better times. elevation of tho laboring- population is tho strongest evidence that there ha.H beauty, famed on both sides of the ocean, but a woman who speaks several languages and is an amateur actress of There -ill be no immediate changes her daughters and, particularly, by the new society appearance of Mrs. Coleman Drayton, whom Mrs. Astor is "introducing" again after a long absence from her mother's home. Rut it is a fact that very many men admire Mrs.

Astor greatly, and should she ever care to re-enter the field of matrimony, she would find suitors as many been a real genuine advance in civili great power. Nothing but the express zation. With this elevation has come said "you cannot fool all of the people all of the time." Partisanship does not hold them from following their wish of her father keeps her from ap power power to hold last to what in the tariff, says the St. Paul Pionoer Press. There will be no immediate changes in the financial policy of tho government.

The innovators have been rebuked. Those proposing pearing on the stage at all charitable has been achieved and to struggle for judgments; pride does not keep them that which is still bettor. Laboring from admitting their error. The gatherings. Last winter at the theatricals given by Mrs John Rloodo-ood men havo learned thiit the divine and Mrs.

Oliver Sumner Ten.ll Airs still other and more reckless changos have been ground to the earth beneath try. The interval was now reduced right fcf kings to rule is not so sacred election Tuesday showed this conclusively, and there is much comfort to every American in demonstration of that thesis. K. C. Star.

Rurke-Roche withdrew her promised as tho divine right of laborers to or the people disapproval. There will be scarcely more than two working ganize ana to striKo lor better wagos support at the last minute because her father so dislikes the notoriety of the stage. Here is certainly a matri monthB in this winter's session of con- and improvement in condition. They have insisted upon their rights. gress.

The majority in the houso will monial prize. They have demanded adequate be broken and discouraged. Tho dis- to the condition in which they have a MISS ANNIE SEASHOLTZ. cordant elements in the senate will bo farther from harmony than ever. There will bo no legislation between this and the fourth of March that will right to maintain themselves and their families.

They havo refused to let their labor be treated as a helpless. from 15 years to cloven years. Then, after another season of depression, the country was seized with another raging fever of speculation, and in 1890 came another collapse. While the Republicans, under the leadership of McICinley, were heaping on more tariff fuel and trying to relight the fires of speculation, a Republican Secretary of the Treasury was pouring forth millions upon millions of public money in a desperate effort to stay a panic which had already spread from New York to Doston and Philadelphia ard threatened to involve the entire icmisyivrtiiia Olrl Who Will Bear the Torch of Christianity. Miss Annie Seasholtz, the subiect of unresisting commodity.

disturb the existing status. After that The income tax feature of the new tariff law is one of the most righteous provisions of the bill. It is a law which taxes people on what they have and on what they are making. The theory of the McKinley law was to make people pay taxes on what they consumed, that in their clothing, their farming implements, their machinery, their everday necessities of life. Under such a system the poor man pays as much as the rich.

Rut this new law adds the tax on incomes. When a man is making This is why labor has maintained date a new congress will come into itself so woll in tho face of an appre power; and in that body the houso will certainly be Republican by a con siderable majority, and the Demo ciating money standard. Woggs havo boon hold up becauso laborers have demanded that it bo so. But it se'ems that a time has come when even the crats will no longer have absolute our sKetcli, is the daughter of Charles Seasholtz of Northumberland, Pa. Ilei father died when she was 7 years of age, and the mother with her three young children removed to the home of her parents in Paint township.

In 1884 she came with her family to Northumberland. Annie was converted at the Raptist church in 1881. She was a pupil of the public schools and control of the senate. That situation, too, precludes the possibility of any power of organized labor is unable to resist tho crushing effect of gold mon country. Ry the most extraordinary efforts, which nearly exhausted the re-souices of the Treasury, the fanic was arrested for the time being.

The interval was now reduced from eleven considerable changes. The country, therefore, stands facing a period in more than $5,000, over and above his expenses, ho makes it off of other people and he should help bear the burdens of taxation, by paying a tax on his income! Let the good work go on. ometallism. Tho weight ol falling prices drags the rate of wages down. Depression in business throws thou which it can accurately forecast and depend upon tho stability of business MRS.

SARTORI8. conditions. graduated at the high school in the "class of '89." About four years ago she first thought of devoting her life to mission work. In 893 she entered sands of men out of employment, and the competition of thosa i3 bocomiun- can estimate the value and the effect of this only by considering what as she could count. Her wealth is very great too great for the income is $300 or $100 per day.

Her period of mourning is just past. harder and harder for tho mora fortunate to resist Denver Republican. tne opposite condition has wrought in tho way of destruction. For lack of Another of the widows, well along years to six years. After an another season of artificial stimulation, this time a very brief one, came the grand crash of 1893.

The interval was now reduced from six years to three years. Four panics in twenty years under Republican policy, against three panics in sixty years before the Republican party first took the helm! That is the un vitable record of the Republican 'Jhe Topiillit llurlal. certainty, of confidence in the future in years though still very attractive, It appears that the Republicans, unsatisfied with their material progress in breaking "the solid South" under the fairest election system in use since tho war, are determined to "clinch their victory," as they say by unseating most of the Democratic -members of the next House, and attempting ra-ernctment of the force The our industries have well-nigh gone to Next to tho election of a Republi is Mrs. Hicks-Lord. This remarkaWe woman is in poor health now, no doftbt rum.

1 o-day they stand face to face with stable conditions. Trade knows can house of representatives, again bringing to tho front in one branch of the government practical business principles, which have been lately party. thrust aside and ignored, the most from the many and varied scenes of hqr life. Rut those who visit her Washington square in her palace home say she will recover and yet grace society at home and abroad as of yore. Mrs.

Hicks-Lord rejoices in the full name of Annette Wilhelmina Schenek Wilkens Hicks-Lord. She is twice a desirable result of the contest of ballots is the crushing defeat of tho Populists in the West. Times is not warning Republicans of what it is their interest to let alone, but it is potent to the "way-faring man, though a fool," that if the Republicans attempt any such thing they will not break the solid South, but perpetuate it for twenty years more. Kansas City Times. Ihis faction which is nothing- Call la the Best.

There is not a bit of trouble about Democratic principles. Democratic voters are as true and as numerous as they ever were. Democratic leaders have failed to widow, having been married loner more than a crowd of honest but visionary citizens fallen into fanaticism had a pretty rapid Growth un to that the tariff will not bo altered. Business knows that the financial system will not be changed. The sure consequence of this is the revival of prosperity in every part of the country.

Looking forward to a complete restoration of Republican policy, and feeling safe from the continued disturbance that was threatened, every man will now goto work to rebuild his fortunes so disastrously affected by this long depression. Manufactures will revive. Commerce will grow. The capital that has been locked up in safety vaults will venture out. Money from abroad will once more be offered for investment.

Tho clouds are rolling away, and the fair day of prosperity is about to dawn. the bee-inning of this year, savs the to Mr. Hicks, who left her with an annual income of which she inareased to $150,000 upon the death of her second husband, Mr. Lord, who was over 80 years old when she mar Cincinnati limes-Star. It had become even more dangerous than was the old Co oper-Pomeroy-Carey party that was buried in the seven ioresee dangers and have refused to make a common cause of avertin them from the party.

It is they who have been weak. What is the remedy for the weakness of the Democratic party this year? No There is an almost universal sentiment throughout the south and west that the next Democratic nominee for the Presidency of the United States be a western man, and it is entirely probable that sentiment will prevail. Too long, already, have the western people neglected their interests in this matter and supported candidates selected ties. The elimination of Pnnnlism ried hun. Among the startling events of this great woman's career was her conversion to the Roman Catholic church, will have an elfoct almost as one man has the panacea.

His not salutary as the overthrow of the free- for any one' man, whether he is the President of the United States or a trade Democracy. It puts an end to the raff-baby pronairaridn. The ro- ANXIK SEASHOLTZ. Dr. Simpson's missionary training Institute, attended two years and graduated as fully competent to become a worker in foreign missionary fields.

On Sunday evening, Sept. 36, a farewell missionary service was held in the Raptist church in honor of Miss Seasholtz. On Wednesday, Sept. 28, she bid farewell to home and friends and left for New York, where in company with a band of volunteers, she sailed for India. For two years she will be in Akola Rerar, India, learning the Marats language.

from the extreme eastern portion of the country. There are as able, and honest men in the west as the east and the interest of the west are as great and varied as the east. college club debater, to tell the Democratic party what to do to be saved. The party itself is the authority which Is to prohounce upon policies. In every county and city Democrats who have the welfare of the party at heart should meet and discuss the party's welfare; and should be indifferent to the mere personal fortunes of any politician.

This is not a time for personal ends to be considered. It is the time for conscientious voters to domption of Kansas and Colorado is a special cause for jubilation. Nothing better could possibly happen for those states and the entire West. Populist rule has impaired credit, driven away capital, destroyed private credit in short, it has been a general curse. The people are thoroughly disgusted and have hurled the party out of power.

The Republican victory in yreat as were the results of sthe voting from tho political point of view, momentous as it was in its effect upon the future of parties, the surety which it carries with it of an improvement in business conditions is the best and most welcome message of the returns. Every American citizen can go to his work with a light heart and a cheerful countenance, bocauso now we are started once more upon the road to national prosperity. The glee of tho tax-eaters over the supposed defeat of Congressman Dock-ery is echoed by the Chicago Record by reason of Mr. Dockery's alleged opposition to the World's Fair "because Kansas, with a corresponding- collapse of the Populist party in other Western states is a distinct gain for sanity in politics. confer with each other.

Whatever in experience, ability and consiientious service politicians have Democracy and the I ubllo Debt. During the month of October the to offer is to arbiters are be welcomed. Hut the the men who vote. it was a Chicago enterprise." It was a genuine pleasure to Mr. Dockery to discomfit all of these enemies by proving to have been honestly and fairly elected.

He fought the tax-eaters because they were a useless burden to the government, and in so doing, if for no other reason, deserved re-election. public debt increased nearly inn Til. Suspended on HlRh. An accident, which might have terminated fatally, happened to C. F.

Wait, balloonist, at Capac, recently. In making an ascension, and a height of 1,000 to 1,500 feet, he seized the parachute for the descent, and in some I way the small cord which held the parachute to the bar of the balloon (only a cord one eighth of an inch in diameter) became entangled around the bar of the balloon. He claims li uuu. j-uia is ono oi tne eitects of a Democratic administration. Decrease in the debt was a characteristic of Space Will Xot Permit a Complete List.

In a half column or so of hysterics a New York paper wants to know "what is the matter with Hill, Grant and DemocracyP" According to high authority, perfidy and dishonor are among their numerous ailments. The autopsy will disclose the others. Republican rule, and the importance MRS. 1IICKS-LORD. when she was baptised in Rome by Mgr.

Capel; another was the way she of this is all the more weighty when Come to an understanding and organize. The principles are all right; the people are all right. Agreement and solidification in party organization are the remedies for the times. Get together in the counties and towns, where organization begins. Call out the party's besttalentaud most sincere diciples.

Pay no attention to personal taicen in consideration with tho an- It is not a matter of invidious distinction for tho Republic to say that the defeat of Richard P. Rland and Champ Clark will prove the sorriest preciation of gold and the consequent increase in the purchasing power of untied the string before he attempted to drop. Any way, it resulted in the inverting of the parachute, leaving him suspended in the air with only the small cord to hold him. He remained quiet, not darina- to mnkn nn juuuey. writing in 1893, Mr.

Court day's work the Republicans of Missouri ever did. Mr. Bland may yet be in The Walloping; of Wilson. Those who believe things might have been different if congress had enacted the Wilson bill as it came from the ney, the distinguished member of parliament, said that if the appreciation of gold had been only ten per cent, it would have represented all that the English Washington, with more power to him than he ever had before. entertained in 1'aris; and again the manner 'in which she excited international wonder by giving up her home abroad to the German empress when the latter wished to visit London.

This unselfishness from a petted belle brought old Mr. Lord prostrate at her feet. Mrs. Hicks-Lord's most famous jewel, in a collection ol the finest private ewels in the world, is a stomacher which cost just a quarter of a million. macaines, 11 there are any about.

Think of the Democratic party and of the Elkinses, Filleys, vultures and ct birds to whose benefit the defeat of the Democracy inures. The governments of States and nation must be redeemed by the party of the Constitution. St. house will have considerable difficulty in explaining away the walloping of Wilson and the somersault of his effort to raise himself by the cord to get hold of the bar above him. After a little further ascent the balloon began to descend, landing him with considerable force, but not enough to hurt him seriously.

He was afterward so completely prostrated from the shock that a phyiician was summoned. pie had done in tteen years in the the preceding fif-extinguishment of Certainly the man whose party is beaten Is opposed to the introduction of the Australian ballot law as a dangerous foreign innovation. state Kansas City Journal. viouia aepuDiic..

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