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equal and exact jus'bice toall l xlii no 34 salisbury in c thi rsday october m 1895 one dollar aye a k nations bow to them fothschilds more powerful than armies and navies the eleren biror.s work in concert for gain — golden rules laid down by th founder of thi r i:»uo a cen cry ago •: den '•-■'■.' republi in md written from when a par rnal ma • < up ■•■finan ■wined hilds is iuesti ■very j ■■er but not ■roi er of i led by the itar ■; this hebrew . the eu - the pas 1 lost • held in • defeat or twing • ■■the war in 1 ways them car . . . :. . - - w : family is i -. .. be $ ] ; en these for i a the jvorld ■amounts re are ele i h of them euroi ■fixed ' aeed rorn the i : j . dealer in i uned md eve his pawn e the • ■' aan the red .. | . vn as the who waa no - in iir for the ears b i a hard sr.rugg m going to the wall ; mapped out certain ul which he . . ■: a iherei to , nt in the ■numerous banks to • then and for that in force lozen i i is from now :: . and usui jyed in i time : t thei a man will not tell ' -■'. another is • - s - ■rk in any ■'. iuq tie i ■■isiness and he . ■• geu of a pres at clerl in g nothing : rhe roi • skillful pro rro ing soi ■one of ihi ■a 1 t ha - ■■■.,■■• ■ving touring d at the n inva great reds • id ha i i local repul i - • ■■• ■i n : ■' a - ■• ■ed ■<,-.■• ■e news f na frankfort the el placed 15,000,0 ler rothschild for safe keep this sum was his son tan in england napoleon heard n every way to induce the banker to give h up i on • rent a : minutely examined and - menace and intlmida i:i per ■■he rtook to ] bob ing an '■be rel i to tal i there di talk of putting him under arrest ' napoleon did not quite care to venture c ■violence and an eff 3 man by the ■promise of gain 1 •■• \ to him < h of the ■if e ' would deliver the other ill the ofsciai they promised him 3 receipt - r a cer j i tlflcate proving that ilded i - nd hat he was blameless for the e:r.ire of the entire amount ] but th banker had already decided i ■all trusts were sacred and re i ■' ised | in 1 c 14 the elector returned to frank " ' the 15.0c 00 francs were pnid ' = ":: c ter ■■of r>o deposit - 3 • .• . • ■os the ... 0ug thj considerable um wae in real i : itr the cornerstone of the family's for tune wealthy marriages has also bei i of the creed of the family in 1801 tl e son who had settled in london marrk 1 the daughter of a rich banker t r ""; barnet cohen this nathan rothschild was on the battlefield of waterloo and by a won derfully quick r;p reached londo be the real news had been receive i government he was on the iff of wellington and the minute he saw the defeat of napoleon was certain kneck speed to 0 i tl the risk of his ad was on the sto k exi i xt morning at that time ed only knew of the brat part o th ■at napoleon waa again destine j to conquer rothschild's gloomy air and the adroit rumors put in rcu]acion argued the worst for england th prices of securi ; rrific rate at the proper time rothschild put his agent at work buy ing everything in sight later came the news of wellington's victory rothschild is said to have cleared f 1 ?.- | 000,000 by this shady trick bismarck has been forced to bow to the moneyed power of this family in 1866 the prussian government demand ed an indemnity of 25,000,000 from the city of frankfort the rothschilds sent word to bismarck that if any at | rempt was made to enforce the levj hey would break every bank in b f lin this was no idle threat as bis marck well know and h mccub the inevitable baron alphonse dc rothschi i i whom the infernal machine was re cently sent is the head of the paris ; bank he has like all the jew usur i era strong ideas on the labor question and has made many enemies in conse quence three years ago he expressed : these views en the labor problem i do not believe in the so-calle '. labor movement i am confidant that the workingmen are satisfied with their condition and have neither cause nor desire to complain they are i am convinced indifferent to progress to mre some agitators make plenty of noise bu f that amounts to n i they do not influence the honest and reasonable workingman in considering th labor movement it is necessary however to distinguish bharply good from bad workmen only the idle good-for-noth ings de?:nr th eight-hour day ous men fathers of families \" : iong as they think necessary for anm *~.\ aretr cfcliareits needs is much loose talking nowadays about the danger of so much capitnl in the hands of a few men this is all rub bish some men are richer others sre poorer it is the money which circu lates which fructifies frighten and threaten capital and it vanishes because we can make it van j ish see capital is like water grasp it violently and it slips through your j fingers treat it gently dig a canal ! bonds in which to lead it and it runs wherever you will capital is a coun \ try's fortune it represents the energy intelligence thrift and labor of the people capl or apart from : unhappy exceptions which seem i unavoidable each shares in tht peo ple's capita according to his intelll gone energy and work ac and inter si t all if you know ! iiow to work the bteme — and the rothschilds do if a • - contented with his strike i.and get shot down by the ;■they did at homestead and pullman it is unjust to compare a rnn capital and intelligence faculties invention and kno any gross brutal workman who a to his work only the intelligent work of his hands these view wen not plea - excitable masses of paris pert internal machine was an echo of i of the eleven barons nathani fre ' and leopold are ioi ited in dun alphons . gusl i . edward \ and janios in paris nai na and william in frank new york be'.monts art the agei the united states orn idea of their riches can b from the fact that sine » 1815 1 raised for great britain a ■■than 1,000 000,000 for lu ■000,000 for prussia 200,000,00 france 400,000 i 1300,0000,000 for rus ia 125.00 for brazil from $< i 70 000 000 and they took through the bel mont syndicate 150,0 ■of th iss i of united states boi i by cleve land and carlisle to b plain the roths hild octopus is today ruler of the un and their gold commands and navies of the world if peace happiness and pros over come back to the pe world it will be when the power ■rothschilds has the earl iy the net ] products of the world rothschilds ■-■■•■enough in do interest on th hold over th government costs money and ? th item of kt?er • • toma wrii food every year the or : leeper ip debt ombine of gold owner — stu iy oi d tp on page 6 ■■- tians have ] uted the jews the rothsc dow getting even ivith cl : more too without guns a tgh 1 .. i power of usury alone the roth ire fast reducing the so-called i ians to the level of serfs slaves and rainps if the people quietly staj . ■■■impo ; jltion do they deserve anythii i better , denver road hang the bank officers who stole 35,000,000 agt year from d^pcwitvrs public ownership a popular objection very clearly answered would have a tendency to take tol liics out of the public civil serrlci rather thsn to iuereai partisan power of the omcehohlerp the movement for public control and own srship of natural monopolies seems to be gathering force everywhere r representatives of radical or vative thought be in power they to be forced almost as of neces bity into a further and further exten sion of the power of government ever heretofore left largely to the \ management of individuals this tend t ency receives a fresh illustration in proposals just made by the new con , servative government in england ; through its colonial secretary mr lain "': : : the advent of the conservative party to power in england one migh for a sharp reactioi c?ed socialistic tendencies : of the b r j iberal reign we migbl te cessation of efforts ; to anjly the principles of the factory quiet : lumbering of the eight nent and above all no fur her it tor the application of e public ownership to | the transportation lighting and kin i dred nionopciics but lo here comer chamberlain colonial secretary oi an 1 alleged reactionary government in a , speech which is described as the one jh of the week that will be remem red asking the imperial govern ment cf england to go into the busi ness of railroad building in tropica africa for the development of english colonial interests located there if railways are needed in tropical africa they should be built under colonial or la administration rather than be i ver to private speculators y is reported as saying he lared that many of the brit - m in the condition of un tates which could be de ■a judicious invest i imperial money lemand of the conservative en tary contains the very meat and kerne of the demand for public rip of natural monopoli mntry an extension of the pow er of the whok people through gov ■hen necessary to bring results demanded by the ■i a demand may be in ■iud 1 l n movement in the united . ivernment railroads a post rapl and muni lip ■'■ow a if gas wat ■ct ric-lighi works r illroads aoi er page mr edward rose ■■omaha bee who has tudy of the results of ■i of natural monopolies ; iind and other european bat seems to us to be one cf the main popular objections to : movement for pub lic ownership of national monopolies possible danger of increasing power of the office-holding class mr guing for a postal te!o graph and say3 great objection iigain the pos - •.; in this country is thai i ■rina into operation more politi i cal offices i regard this as ono of the ; most important aud beneficial features of the whole affair it would bo an en redge for the greatest possible the civil service it would i brine into the postal service from 25 i 000 to 30,000 skilled operatives whose ■services could not be dispensed with i these would naturally !■- dividi varic is politics as every other class of citizens whose trustworthiness and value would be increased by the knowl edge that they could not vt displa ' by an political partisan thin has been the esp riei h >■:■■■■britain ■■■■: ■■once • tl : ■tal service under govern ment control and the civil service act nd you would soon be able to plac all departments of the government under the same system and a large share of the public nuisance incident to office holding would b done away with ing the officers free to inquire into and learn their duties to their office and to the public 1 ' w v:s inclined to agree with mr rosewater that th increase oi called office-holders resulting from in i public ownership of natural monopol vould as he intimates tics out of the public i civil service rather than to increase the r n i".!s?n p?wer of the osice-hold'ng class as the railroads telegraph lighting and other monopolies came under public control the people would lly e more and more . . ag . •!• ■' men in charge instead oi mere partisans tlw . would demand that a man's politics ! be the las thing to be considered in ■deciding his fkness for the position of } engineer an the public railroad or manager of the public lighting plant thus might we not conclude that the i ownership would result in educating . the public to demand that all depart i ments of government should be brought under more strict civil-service-reform rules the voice are we fishwormsv m bat has become of our national backbone there can be no doubt about it that if the united states were to adopt a silver basis tomorrow british trade j would be ruined before the year is out every american industry would be pro ed net only at ho:ne but in every r market of course the states would suffer to a certain extent through havh . their obligations abroad j in gold but the loss in exchange under this head would be a mere drop iu the bucket compared with the profits to be ' ap i ■" .> tb marke b of south v:ii ; a.sia to say nothing of europe tiie marvel is that the united i states ha ■seel the op • for th a . ssity in the v.iy of commercial and pros » : i edly : ' would have been ■lone oi ; i the ab ■; london finan one of the highest financial orld doc-s it not seem trange — remark bly strange that in the light of these crequent admissions an the part of brit ish journals ova statesmen as to the advantages that accrue to great britain by reason of our financial policy r-aying nothing of the object lessons constant ly presented to us here at home that we will go on year after year on lines of policy that are eo injurious to our wn and of such great ad vantage to our english neighbors will not the american people have we become a nation of chumps has statesmanship in this coun to e i ? patriotism and national pride dying out have •■none of thi it 1 animated our forefathers what ms become of our national backbone ip and the vor acious gr ■i of her finarich rs has after a third of a century of intrigue and cunning i igns succei ded through the mo le conspiracy ever i sprung upon a free people in reducing american republic to what is prac ticallj a brii h depend ncy by arti ing scheming have our ;■ipli bees reduced to a condition iu ij worse than < ; •:■■gainst which | our forefathers rebelled accomplished mgb intrigues with our modern i benedict arnolds what she failed to ac eompli3h by force of ami on two sev eral oi ' ms bringing us prostrate at the feei ol british greed and avarice how much longer will our patience endure when will the american peo ple arouse and shake off this accursed yoke of oppression oh cor men ' strong men men of hearts of courage - j who dare to think and to act aud vho arc not given over god of mammon maj the god of uatioi = arouse our people to a sense oi the wrongs inflict ed upon them of a lie de ra rlntion to which we are descei cling by n of thi povert ind distress i of the trasses and prompt th m to exercise an intelligent use of the j power of the ballot placed in <]<■■*■hand ttei dangers may be | averted a patriot resigns consider the militia h constant menace lo peace a few day ago colonel edgar how ! ard of the nebraska state militia banded governor holcomb his resig nation and said i am opposed to i ii ite militia root and branch i re . i r as a constant menace rather than an aid to the public peace the state soldiery throughout the union has been organized always at the be hest and often at the dictation of cor porate capital which asks that the tate plunge its bayonets into the breast of organized labor in order to ompliance with organized capi lands here is an ac knowledgment from a military man truly significant and substan tiate of labor papers and agita or i ■; no question it is lawning upon r.?el£nt:cus tiamen thai they are being mi toola of to overawe and browbeat nat ■■peaceful citizens in the interest j of a selfish class governor holcomb in accepting colonel howard's resig j nation declared that.he respected 6uch sentiments populi ta aa a rule have j • • ■militia cleveland ■i direct law-making nit1at1ve and referendum greatest of reforms ; introduce this system and strifee at the roots of party tyranny and stop eitravaffunce cupidity and political ; bribery the initiative and referendum form j f government which is being agitated ' from one ocean to the other and adopt ■j by a great many labor organizations is becoming more and more popular very day and means that the people i 5liall rule and settle all questions na ional state and county the u m b press of tacoma wash says the , form of the initiative and referendum : is proposed and formulated by the ' di | rect legislation league as an amend , j ment to the constitution of any - : : and which might be used is given as | follows 1 the right to approve or reject pro ! posed state la^-3 shall rest with a ma ! jority of the citizens of the state the j right to approve or reject the proposed lav of political subdivision of the state such as county city town township borough or village : shall rest with th majority of the citizens of such subdi vision the method of such approval | or rejection shall be that known a the referendum 2 the right to propose laws of the state shall in addition to being ex ercised by members of the senate ami the house of assembly rest with any proportion of the citizens of the state between 5 and 25 per cent which may be determined by statute law the right to propose laws of any political sub-division of that state such as coun ty city town township borough or j i village shall in addition to being ex ; ercised by members of its legislative body as at present rest with any pro portion of its citizens between 5 and 25 per cent which may be determine 1 i by a law of such political sub-division the method to be employed in so pro posing measures shall be known as the initiative the operation of the initiative is mandatory but regulated by constitu tional provisions the referendum acts as a constitu tlonal limitation of legislative and ex i ecutive power and by virtue of ti : power proposed legislation by the peo ple's representatives i referred back to hem for indorsement or rejection under the operation of legal provisio of all the reforms in our political machinery this surely is the best and foremost in its ameliorating and re forming pewer it is an effective means of removing the wto'e train of social and political evils that burden the people and would do much to i • store to them their long lost rights the introduction then of the initia tive and referendum into our political systi in would be a great and benefici tl reform it is admitted that it is oui duty o obey the laws but that dii implies another duty embodied in tl righl to approve or reject the la 1 that v e tmisl obej . boi h b for a n after legislation if necessary and ii ultimate ratification rest with the clear majority of all the voti i - m the nation state or i ther sub-divis ions of these i roduce this system and btriko ■i the root : of party (,\ ranny and stop ex travagance cupidity and political rol b ry and lay an ax of ( i onom lo i iv eery roots of scheming corruption h l893 the city of haverhill ma .. by a unanimous vote adopted direc legislation through the initiative and i referendum secured by the persistenc and take-no-denial attitude of the workingmen demanding justice and fail plaj as supreme qualities thai should distinguish the legislative and executive power of their public . ei \ ants b the adoption of this one prin ciple they secured a common ground in re ird to all abuses monopolies and i common plank upon which all reform part can stand this grand theory of political ma hinery and of sovereign power in the hsrvk of the people wherein it has had practical operation has proven in hemispheres a most thorough and peaceful revolutionary institution :■. -. regards the initiative ir has been used in our own country since before its ex istence as a nation in belgium 1892 through the use ol tho referendum the law of suffrage was completely changed for the bett before that year the suffrage was n stricted to 140,000 votes by the use of the referendum the people for id the enactment of a reformed law in creasing it to l,000 f 00u an increase of th suffrage to over seven times the previous franchise all this was accomplished bei nisi a private canvass proved tho truth of the fact that the whole people were clamorous for it and bj their uncom promising attitude they dominated the senate the aristocracy the army the time-serving legal lights and royalty itself the sovereign will of the peo ple interpreted by its vote overcame every obstacle in a country hereto the scene of riot bloodshed and tumultu ous agil ation but the existence of this po i •■v does not mean that any and ail mea ures hat seek legislation must "■• submitted to a vote of the people but it does mean that the power exists ani that when the people wish to do i ' th • can demand a popular vote on any measure that they consider likely to bo hurtful if it should bec»me statutory . r no such weapon in the hac i of the people against the politicians so peaceful aa this one may be rar.de it includes every reform in the circle ol its grasp .. dump your surplus silver a r thlt office dleai b republicans want a chancs they will shovr the people how to pretper ' give us republican rule for a singie decade and we will show the people the beneficence of republican legisla tion every man who wants work will have it we will restore our merchant marine to the proper place and increase our white strong armed squadron so they can command the respect of all nations we will show the people a policy that is american in every fibre '' the above are the words of senator frye of maine at a republican banque given at bridgeport conn shades of the departed only give em a chance only want a single dec ade now what nerve the senator has and he had it with him at that banquet this may be styled the sublimate of gall armor-plated cheek minus blow holei ' only been out of power a little more than two yeara when they had had thirty years of rule during which time the republicans came as near sending the country to the devil as it was pos sible for them to do and since the dem ocrats took hold the republicans have aided them in every species of vicious legislation suggested during the thirty years of republican control the curse of monopolistic rule was fastened upon the country trust and combines have grown up and flour ished as never before in the history of any ration class legislation hap been the rule and so deeply is plutoc racy entrenched that oven conservative men are free to predict revolution as a means of freeing thf people the causes that have brought the country to where it is today chief of which is the present financial policy — originated with the republican party which was aided and abetted by the democratic party the present democratic administra tion has not deviated one iota from the policy of its republican predeces sors and yet we are now told that if the republicans are given another chance they will bring prospeity to the county why didn't they do it when they had j a chance of thirty year duration senator frye asks for a decade — only wants ten years to undo what it took thirty years to build up that's too long give the populists control of this government and they will cleanse the augean stables in less than one year i and ring relief to the people inside of i sixty days after conpr^s convenes the republican party and the dem ; ocatic party hive both been weighed \ in the balance and found wanting democracy is dead and republicanism will soon follow there will br no more chances for either one of these old parties as the people arc too thor ' oughly aroused to place any confidence in t hem their records of venality and hypocrisy ire so black and damnable that they cannot longer deceive the peopl letthng out the cat the mam object 1 to curry british frt\or i ik prai ti e of letting the cat out of the bag is one more honored in the breach than in the observance for all that it is almost au involuntary proci ■. a sub idized wall tre i or gan printed thi ■sentence last week ■the victory in ohio of the sound nione men will do more to reassure nervous peopl than anything eng ■...' inj to i n fact that the united states arc on a sound money basis and onc again there is a good inquiry n.ol only for united states government bonds it likewise for our i ■iroad securities ' !■. ■•■: then that our . tate am ; paigii j i year are being carried on with wary ey to lombard streel and thi roth 1 i ■the ta^t that there o ' demand for our railroad se curities is a good thing for the rail road . and since that demand depends entirely upon our thralldom in gold monometallism the railroad power is tins silver as a further proof oi this consider last week's announce meni of the monetary trust [| ma ; " the skeptical britishmind will realize thai silver lunacy in the united states has losl its lustre and tbal this country after all is the best place u)v british money it may be the large profi operators of london who hi now relatively rich from gold spei ulation will conclude to cover their 3hori sales and sav a part of their money i is wall sliced official utter ance upon tl e ethics and economics of the monetary question there are many ways of letting the cat out of th bag and wall street appears to be master of them all twentieth cen tury silver too heavy how the bankers are squirming j aboul silver they are alarmed at the prospect t i twenty-five million j dollars annually stolen from depositors ' would weigh seven hunded and fifty j tons if ii was all in silver just think i of it if all taken al or :< would re j ou jj . 12,000 to carry it would | m eleven miles long | e yer y man load i down with over a hundred and i ;: ! " " f silver j some of fh?rn like a an would get ! caught to i - uch 1 l0 col fones who was oust i '• st loui re ; pressing ip tor the people i3 ■r an 1 manager of the i •■dispatch but b in and the •- 1 to tu r n him out we don't want money that i as cheap as the supreme court of this . but we •■■mt i ■'..'■■oheap the october bl i.i.i i |\ shows how the farmers are beciu "»<~ to make a profit on rhrir products the october bulletin of tbc igr cmtural department just issu 1 ihat when the question raid out it was snpp os < ! the drought then prevailing '•.,. th onh ,; "••"-' r '• ' - unprehended i ,■irv " a:ls l : -■■'■■[ t to tin !,. lf tbv ver^i i .•■!;. p fts i could not be fores a from which greater loss reeultetl iu bo ■:■sections than from the drought ! ' lv i " i orts iudicnted hu ubun clftuce f vegetables and breadstuffs it vvaa desired to ascertain what was tli outlook lor the meat snpply hn.l wint progress farmers were making towards improving the quality ami condition of their moat-producing stock commissioner patterson is s deeply impressed with the necessity of north carolina farmers raising their own bread nd meat and is bu thoroughly convinced tb.it it is the es sential policy on which their peruia nent prosp rity must be based that thi in w y to the qu stion are puitic i ulurh rnitifying a decided mnjority of the answers receive 1 show increase of number nn<l i improvement f both hogs and cattle and ( i per cent say that there is a decided tendency of the farmers to r>iise more of their own meat supplies , end to improve th grade of both cat ; tie and hogs a large proportion as sign the stork law as the cause of this improvement in cattle and hogs an i bwera to questions of injury by drought to certain crops and information uf damage by the subsequent frosts giv en by many correspondents relate to portions of the state only where the 1 crops were not fully matured it in diiliruk therefore t calculate the ef fect on the conditi ii of each crop for the stnt it large but from the ben i information it is believed th tt cotton i more than 65 per cent of an aver i iiv crop in 1 it may full lower corn : must recede a few i ointa trom its sep j teniber condition the inert used hcto i age uf course remaining the same hs in [ september report the late irish po tato crop buffered badly and reports indicate but little over half a crop tobacco in thf eastern counties was nearly all housed bnt in the mid lie and western counties the frost did much damage how much it is impossi ble now to estimate the mean novinber temperature in 50 degrees the warmest novembci v..i thai of 1890 54 degrees the cold est thai of 1887 17 degrees the highest recorded temperature for the month was 80 degrees the lowest 17 tii nv rage date on which the lir^t . killing frost occurs here in oct 2f from tnih it will be seen how phenomenally eurly were the severe frosts thin autumn november is not rainy month for in one year only six-hun dreths of an in h fell during its 30 day piedmont air line ocotknsun fcmedile of mssk.vsek tkai1h northbound yl s 5o.l*l\o.18 u.m ortnbfr 6 iso ,,", " ji°duly e8nn dully lv atlanta t 1.0 nil up 7 50a 4 p 4 ofp " atlanta e t loiip'lilsa 5<a 6 dpi 6 ujp " norths u56a v vi 62>p " uufopl 10161 7 " baiuetville 2i'5j uolt u044 7*»p 6:j2p " lulu 2 23 ii ■4 xfsv 1 " ' ineiia 11 26 8 3 " mt a:.-y ! .: -) « 1 3 r r 35 ' p 11 xocco :■isa ii i3 9 iii | " hetttmiuswr i i smkili227p ' ► j'p " senet-a i inj i tip .. ... \ 6 p " cemral * r i3aa|l20pl 10p " oreeovilla . •, ■>,, - y . ,, ,. g -. ,. " piitriirjurg 6l8p|<il>i s2.p mm3v " gaffiify 658a m l(j|i '• buckilurj ... 7 ocii 7 i-y « i»j lo:»p 11 kuifs mt ! 7 3-ia •'. 0 ' " gusvonia 75:5a ■"> si 1 ar i hhrl.tte 8 aiip 8 33 * p i 0o ! ar dhiiviile uiqonl 1 p 11 jop 4 lua ar rirhmoni 6-0a|640 ■s » i ar waabiiigton ■: u 9 4f>|i ! 11 s ! " bal m at i r f -« li 2i 1 l"p : " fhi!ade)pbiii 0 vi 3 ■>■» s47p ! " >•■■■» york . - - 6 mi lv n y p r k | i ..■i 12 n j 11 vk 11 j'nit lio k ' ,]. 7 _"« 1 12p 11 bihimort . u iu !) ■,-* ■i-w " weshi gton . jlotii ill 15 ' ■.• '• rk-hmoud c0»;12 p 00a ... ' - " danville 5 so >■» i f . i pp : " < harlotte • - - ; ' -' » " gnstoni !• ■•• ■■" k.ng's .:-. . 1 ; . . " blmcksburs . u<aa 12 10 2i«p 4 •■■• " gftffm ■■- - ! . " spananhurg 1 j7 12 u u i 5 i " r.-i.v e -' • a 44<.j j ; " centra 1 i5p 2 ba ' . ' ' i>a " & qtl rt ... 3 ik 6 0 (■" w esttniuai«ri ■, " toa-oi oa 5»p 6 00a i " ml i ■■i 40p b3"a » :_» " ( orufcl - 7 4 ip c us •' lnla i ha 8 12p 6 r " tt»ir.e . » , ' * 8-«p 7 2jb 9 4 11 buf i'i ... : ■"".■! 4 " koicrusi . : » ar atlanta e t •» .' . i joa i v at.n'a ' t i • - » a a.m 1 !• m ' m do a ' n njgbt km s7 and 38 we«jia£tol i & ithweatern ve»-til ilen limited l •■gh '' man tleep beiwnn kew york tad nm ' l<5fr a th iug-ioa atlanta and ■»:••] ►■rn tw<-en new yo t ' ifcfl f wa-h ; - ton atlantaani birmins ■' lag can koa ffi ci-i 6 lnia ■• i - l u pleepipg car bem ■u sew orleana ad hew yorx kot.31aod32 i .-;'-.■■dn v er tlironghl ill ma blecpers b«tv ■,. ■la*»ut*f1a wmbtagu ..■'.:• it1 « '-■n dection •-■••- i.nrf w th o l,«nd r.n ■■■-• .■- ; ■- _ >■i:i be operated 1 - ■■- i mi:«l uu '', vtednmdatc aud i - • iiujectioa from i.u l&iit t bi hraond ■.- - • • :.- r g eti will batoleat a ■•* t train ko 32 koa.uud i2.pnllmaji slerpion caj b;!te ricboioiij !•'■■■'•'•• i r"l uieentl w a tfrk 8 h hardw1ck gen'l r*»s ag't as g«n p ar t va5i.i.sc:0n d c aila.mi q w b eydeit snpcrir.tenjant cn»10ttr w h oriei ;• m cl'lp fits'lsapc traffic m wambihw 1 ft vauwtlw jf . «* c parent y thb dzv/lrdam from whos ifl ' ai ijtocb dirty d(/6s demonetizing nf p irfi i.i.___ffiisit afc tr l demagogues f . ,^\ ,^ 7 z)£5/(?rv3 <>*
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1895-10-31 |
Month | 10 |
Day | 31 |
Year | 1895 |
Volume | 63 |
Issue | 34 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was |
Creator | John H. Mills, Manager |
Date Digital | 2008-12-29 |
Publisher | Watchman Publishing Company |
Place | United States, North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury |
Type | Text |
Source | Microfilm |
Digital Format | JP2 |
Project Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
Description | The Thursday, October 31, 1895 issue of the Carolina Watchman a weekly newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina; this is the first issue we have that has the Publisher as the Watchman Publishing Company |
Rights | The SA of NC considers this item in the public domain by U.S. law but responsibility for permissions rests with researchers. |
Language | eng |
OCLC number | 601557004 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1895-10-31 |
Month | 10 |
Day | 31 |
Year | 1895 |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was 5123217 Bytes |
FileName | sacw18_18951031-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 8:04:40 AM |
Publisher | Hamilton C. Jones |
Place | United States, North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury |
Type | Text |
Source | Microfilm |
Digital Format | JP2 |
Project Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
Description | An archive of the Carolina Watchman a weekly and semi weekly newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina |
Rights | The SA of NC considers this item in the public domain by U.S. law but responsibility for permissions rests with researchers. |
Language | eng |
FullText |
equal and exact jus'bice toall l xlii no 34 salisbury in c thi rsday october m 1895 one dollar aye a k nations bow to them fothschilds more powerful than armies and navies the eleren biror.s work in concert for gain — golden rules laid down by th founder of thi r i:»uo a cen cry ago •: den '•-■'■.' republi in md written from when a par rnal ma • < up ■•■finan ■wined hilds is iuesti ■very j ■■er but not ■roi er of i led by the itar ■; this hebrew . the eu - the pas 1 lost • held in • defeat or twing • ■■the war in 1 ways them car . . . :. . - - w : family is i -. .. be $ ] ; en these for i a the jvorld ■amounts re are ele i h of them euroi ■fixed ' aeed rorn the i : j . dealer in i uned md eve his pawn e the • ■' aan the red .. | . vn as the who waa no - in iir for the ears b i a hard sr.rugg m going to the wall ; mapped out certain ul which he . . ■: a iherei to , nt in the ■numerous banks to • then and for that in force lozen i i is from now :: . and usui jyed in i time : t thei a man will not tell ' -■'. another is • - s - ■rk in any ■'. iuq tie i ■■isiness and he . ■• geu of a pres at clerl in g nothing : rhe roi • skillful pro rro ing soi ■one of ihi ■a 1 t ha - ■■■.,■■• ■ving touring d at the n inva great reds • id ha i i local repul i - • ■■• ■i n : ■' a - ■• ■ed ■<,-.■• ■e news f na frankfort the el placed 15,000,0 ler rothschild for safe keep this sum was his son tan in england napoleon heard n every way to induce the banker to give h up i on • rent a : minutely examined and - menace and intlmida i:i per ■■he rtook to ] bob ing an '■be rel i to tal i there di talk of putting him under arrest ' napoleon did not quite care to venture c ■violence and an eff 3 man by the ■promise of gain 1 •■• \ to him < h of the ■if e ' would deliver the other ill the ofsciai they promised him 3 receipt - r a cer j i tlflcate proving that ilded i - nd hat he was blameless for the e:r.ire of the entire amount ] but th banker had already decided i ■all trusts were sacred and re i ■' ised | in 1 c 14 the elector returned to frank " ' the 15.0c 00 francs were pnid ' = ":: c ter ■■of r>o deposit - 3 • .• . • ■os the ... 0ug thj considerable um wae in real i : itr the cornerstone of the family's for tune wealthy marriages has also bei i of the creed of the family in 1801 tl e son who had settled in london marrk 1 the daughter of a rich banker t r ""; barnet cohen this nathan rothschild was on the battlefield of waterloo and by a won derfully quick r;p reached londo be the real news had been receive i government he was on the iff of wellington and the minute he saw the defeat of napoleon was certain kneck speed to 0 i tl the risk of his ad was on the sto k exi i xt morning at that time ed only knew of the brat part o th ■at napoleon waa again destine j to conquer rothschild's gloomy air and the adroit rumors put in rcu]acion argued the worst for england th prices of securi ; rrific rate at the proper time rothschild put his agent at work buy ing everything in sight later came the news of wellington's victory rothschild is said to have cleared f 1 ?.- | 000,000 by this shady trick bismarck has been forced to bow to the moneyed power of this family in 1866 the prussian government demand ed an indemnity of 25,000,000 from the city of frankfort the rothschilds sent word to bismarck that if any at | rempt was made to enforce the levj hey would break every bank in b f lin this was no idle threat as bis marck well know and h mccub the inevitable baron alphonse dc rothschi i i whom the infernal machine was re cently sent is the head of the paris ; bank he has like all the jew usur i era strong ideas on the labor question and has made many enemies in conse quence three years ago he expressed : these views en the labor problem i do not believe in the so-calle '. labor movement i am confidant that the workingmen are satisfied with their condition and have neither cause nor desire to complain they are i am convinced indifferent to progress to mre some agitators make plenty of noise bu f that amounts to n i they do not influence the honest and reasonable workingman in considering th labor movement it is necessary however to distinguish bharply good from bad workmen only the idle good-for-noth ings de?:nr th eight-hour day ous men fathers of families \" : iong as they think necessary for anm *~.\ aretr cfcliareits needs is much loose talking nowadays about the danger of so much capitnl in the hands of a few men this is all rub bish some men are richer others sre poorer it is the money which circu lates which fructifies frighten and threaten capital and it vanishes because we can make it van j ish see capital is like water grasp it violently and it slips through your j fingers treat it gently dig a canal ! bonds in which to lead it and it runs wherever you will capital is a coun \ try's fortune it represents the energy intelligence thrift and labor of the people capl or apart from : unhappy exceptions which seem i unavoidable each shares in tht peo ple's capita according to his intelll gone energy and work ac and inter si t all if you know ! iiow to work the bteme — and the rothschilds do if a • - contented with his strike i.and get shot down by the ;■they did at homestead and pullman it is unjust to compare a rnn capital and intelligence faculties invention and kno any gross brutal workman who a to his work only the intelligent work of his hands these view wen not plea - excitable masses of paris pert internal machine was an echo of i of the eleven barons nathani fre ' and leopold are ioi ited in dun alphons . gusl i . edward \ and janios in paris nai na and william in frank new york be'.monts art the agei the united states orn idea of their riches can b from the fact that sine » 1815 1 raised for great britain a ■■than 1,000 000,000 for lu ■000,000 for prussia 200,000,00 france 400,000 i 1300,0000,000 for rus ia 125.00 for brazil from $< i 70 000 000 and they took through the bel mont syndicate 150,0 ■of th iss i of united states boi i by cleve land and carlisle to b plain the roths hild octopus is today ruler of the un and their gold commands and navies of the world if peace happiness and pros over come back to the pe world it will be when the power ■rothschilds has the earl iy the net ] products of the world rothschilds ■-■■•■enough in do interest on th hold over th government costs money and ? th item of kt?er • • toma wrii food every year the or : leeper ip debt ombine of gold owner — stu iy oi d tp on page 6 ■■- tians have ] uted the jews the rothsc dow getting even ivith cl : more too without guns a tgh 1 .. i power of usury alone the roth ire fast reducing the so-called i ians to the level of serfs slaves and rainps if the people quietly staj . ■■■impo ; jltion do they deserve anythii i better , denver road hang the bank officers who stole 35,000,000 agt year from d^pcwitvrs public ownership a popular objection very clearly answered would have a tendency to take tol liics out of the public civil serrlci rather thsn to iuereai partisan power of the omcehohlerp the movement for public control and own srship of natural monopolies seems to be gathering force everywhere r representatives of radical or vative thought be in power they to be forced almost as of neces bity into a further and further exten sion of the power of government ever heretofore left largely to the \ management of individuals this tend t ency receives a fresh illustration in proposals just made by the new con , servative government in england ; through its colonial secretary mr lain "': : : the advent of the conservative party to power in england one migh for a sharp reactioi c?ed socialistic tendencies : of the b r j iberal reign we migbl te cessation of efforts ; to anjly the principles of the factory quiet : lumbering of the eight nent and above all no fur her it tor the application of e public ownership to | the transportation lighting and kin i dred nionopciics but lo here comer chamberlain colonial secretary oi an 1 alleged reactionary government in a , speech which is described as the one jh of the week that will be remem red asking the imperial govern ment cf england to go into the busi ness of railroad building in tropica africa for the development of english colonial interests located there if railways are needed in tropical africa they should be built under colonial or la administration rather than be i ver to private speculators y is reported as saying he lared that many of the brit - m in the condition of un tates which could be de ■a judicious invest i imperial money lemand of the conservative en tary contains the very meat and kerne of the demand for public rip of natural monopoli mntry an extension of the pow er of the whok people through gov ■hen necessary to bring results demanded by the ■i a demand may be in ■iud 1 l n movement in the united . ivernment railroads a post rapl and muni lip ■'■ow a if gas wat ■ct ric-lighi works r illroads aoi er page mr edward rose ■■omaha bee who has tudy of the results of ■i of natural monopolies ; iind and other european bat seems to us to be one cf the main popular objections to : movement for pub lic ownership of national monopolies possible danger of increasing power of the office-holding class mr guing for a postal te!o graph and say3 great objection iigain the pos - •.; in this country is thai i ■rina into operation more politi i cal offices i regard this as ono of the ; most important aud beneficial features of the whole affair it would bo an en redge for the greatest possible the civil service it would i brine into the postal service from 25 i 000 to 30,000 skilled operatives whose ■services could not be dispensed with i these would naturally !■- dividi varic is politics as every other class of citizens whose trustworthiness and value would be increased by the knowl edge that they could not vt displa ' by an political partisan thin has been the esp riei h >■:■■■■britain ■■■■: ■■once • tl : ■tal service under govern ment control and the civil service act nd you would soon be able to plac all departments of the government under the same system and a large share of the public nuisance incident to office holding would b done away with ing the officers free to inquire into and learn their duties to their office and to the public 1 ' w v:s inclined to agree with mr rosewater that th increase oi called office-holders resulting from in i public ownership of natural monopol vould as he intimates tics out of the public i civil service rather than to increase the r n i".!s?n p?wer of the osice-hold'ng class as the railroads telegraph lighting and other monopolies came under public control the people would lly e more and more . . ag . •!• ■' men in charge instead oi mere partisans tlw . would demand that a man's politics ! be the las thing to be considered in ■deciding his fkness for the position of } engineer an the public railroad or manager of the public lighting plant thus might we not conclude that the i ownership would result in educating . the public to demand that all depart i ments of government should be brought under more strict civil-service-reform rules the voice are we fishwormsv m bat has become of our national backbone there can be no doubt about it that if the united states were to adopt a silver basis tomorrow british trade j would be ruined before the year is out every american industry would be pro ed net only at ho:ne but in every r market of course the states would suffer to a certain extent through havh . their obligations abroad j in gold but the loss in exchange under this head would be a mere drop iu the bucket compared with the profits to be ' ap i ■" .> tb marke b of south v:ii ; a.sia to say nothing of europe tiie marvel is that the united i states ha ■seel the op • for th a . ssity in the v.iy of commercial and pros » : i edly : ' would have been ■lone oi ; i the ab ■; london finan one of the highest financial orld doc-s it not seem trange — remark bly strange that in the light of these crequent admissions an the part of brit ish journals ova statesmen as to the advantages that accrue to great britain by reason of our financial policy r-aying nothing of the object lessons constant ly presented to us here at home that we will go on year after year on lines of policy that are eo injurious to our wn and of such great ad vantage to our english neighbors will not the american people have we become a nation of chumps has statesmanship in this coun to e i ? patriotism and national pride dying out have •■none of thi it 1 animated our forefathers what ms become of our national backbone ip and the vor acious gr ■i of her finarich rs has after a third of a century of intrigue and cunning i igns succei ded through the mo le conspiracy ever i sprung upon a free people in reducing american republic to what is prac ticallj a brii h depend ncy by arti ing scheming have our ;■ipli bees reduced to a condition iu ij worse than < ; •:■■gainst which | our forefathers rebelled accomplished mgb intrigues with our modern i benedict arnolds what she failed to ac eompli3h by force of ami on two sev eral oi ' ms bringing us prostrate at the feei ol british greed and avarice how much longer will our patience endure when will the american peo ple arouse and shake off this accursed yoke of oppression oh cor men ' strong men men of hearts of courage - j who dare to think and to act aud vho arc not given over god of mammon maj the god of uatioi = arouse our people to a sense oi the wrongs inflict ed upon them of a lie de ra rlntion to which we are descei cling by n of thi povert ind distress i of the trasses and prompt th m to exercise an intelligent use of the j power of the ballot placed in <]<■■*■hand ttei dangers may be | averted a patriot resigns consider the militia h constant menace lo peace a few day ago colonel edgar how ! ard of the nebraska state militia banded governor holcomb his resig nation and said i am opposed to i ii ite militia root and branch i re . i r as a constant menace rather than an aid to the public peace the state soldiery throughout the union has been organized always at the be hest and often at the dictation of cor porate capital which asks that the tate plunge its bayonets into the breast of organized labor in order to ompliance with organized capi lands here is an ac knowledgment from a military man truly significant and substan tiate of labor papers and agita or i ■; no question it is lawning upon r.?el£nt:cus tiamen thai they are being mi toola of to overawe and browbeat nat ■■peaceful citizens in the interest j of a selfish class governor holcomb in accepting colonel howard's resig j nation declared that.he respected 6uch sentiments populi ta aa a rule have j • • ■militia cleveland ■i direct law-making nit1at1ve and referendum greatest of reforms ; introduce this system and strifee at the roots of party tyranny and stop eitravaffunce cupidity and political ; bribery the initiative and referendum form j f government which is being agitated ' from one ocean to the other and adopt ■j by a great many labor organizations is becoming more and more popular very day and means that the people i 5liall rule and settle all questions na ional state and county the u m b press of tacoma wash says the , form of the initiative and referendum : is proposed and formulated by the ' di | rect legislation league as an amend , j ment to the constitution of any - : : and which might be used is given as | follows 1 the right to approve or reject pro ! posed state la^-3 shall rest with a ma ! jority of the citizens of the state the j right to approve or reject the proposed lav of political subdivision of the state such as county city town township borough or village : shall rest with th majority of the citizens of such subdi vision the method of such approval | or rejection shall be that known a the referendum 2 the right to propose laws of the state shall in addition to being ex ercised by members of the senate ami the house of assembly rest with any proportion of the citizens of the state between 5 and 25 per cent which may be determined by statute law the right to propose laws of any political sub-division of that state such as coun ty city town township borough or j i village shall in addition to being ex ; ercised by members of its legislative body as at present rest with any pro portion of its citizens between 5 and 25 per cent which may be determine 1 i by a law of such political sub-division the method to be employed in so pro posing measures shall be known as the initiative the operation of the initiative is mandatory but regulated by constitu tional provisions the referendum acts as a constitu tlonal limitation of legislative and ex i ecutive power and by virtue of ti : power proposed legislation by the peo ple's representatives i referred back to hem for indorsement or rejection under the operation of legal provisio of all the reforms in our political machinery this surely is the best and foremost in its ameliorating and re forming pewer it is an effective means of removing the wto'e train of social and political evils that burden the people and would do much to i • store to them their long lost rights the introduction then of the initia tive and referendum into our political systi in would be a great and benefici tl reform it is admitted that it is oui duty o obey the laws but that dii implies another duty embodied in tl righl to approve or reject the la 1 that v e tmisl obej . boi h b for a n after legislation if necessary and ii ultimate ratification rest with the clear majority of all the voti i - m the nation state or i ther sub-divis ions of these i roduce this system and btriko ■i the root : of party (,\ ranny and stop ex travagance cupidity and political rol b ry and lay an ax of ( i onom lo i iv eery roots of scheming corruption h l893 the city of haverhill ma .. by a unanimous vote adopted direc legislation through the initiative and i referendum secured by the persistenc and take-no-denial attitude of the workingmen demanding justice and fail plaj as supreme qualities thai should distinguish the legislative and executive power of their public . ei \ ants b the adoption of this one prin ciple they secured a common ground in re ird to all abuses monopolies and i common plank upon which all reform part can stand this grand theory of political ma hinery and of sovereign power in the hsrvk of the people wherein it has had practical operation has proven in hemispheres a most thorough and peaceful revolutionary institution :■. -. regards the initiative ir has been used in our own country since before its ex istence as a nation in belgium 1892 through the use ol tho referendum the law of suffrage was completely changed for the bett before that year the suffrage was n stricted to 140,000 votes by the use of the referendum the people for id the enactment of a reformed law in creasing it to l,000 f 00u an increase of th suffrage to over seven times the previous franchise all this was accomplished bei nisi a private canvass proved tho truth of the fact that the whole people were clamorous for it and bj their uncom promising attitude they dominated the senate the aristocracy the army the time-serving legal lights and royalty itself the sovereign will of the peo ple interpreted by its vote overcame every obstacle in a country hereto the scene of riot bloodshed and tumultu ous agil ation but the existence of this po i •■v does not mean that any and ail mea ures hat seek legislation must "■• submitted to a vote of the people but it does mean that the power exists ani that when the people wish to do i ' th • can demand a popular vote on any measure that they consider likely to bo hurtful if it should bec»me statutory . r no such weapon in the hac i of the people against the politicians so peaceful aa this one may be rar.de it includes every reform in the circle ol its grasp .. dump your surplus silver a r thlt office dleai b republicans want a chancs they will shovr the people how to pretper ' give us republican rule for a singie decade and we will show the people the beneficence of republican legisla tion every man who wants work will have it we will restore our merchant marine to the proper place and increase our white strong armed squadron so they can command the respect of all nations we will show the people a policy that is american in every fibre '' the above are the words of senator frye of maine at a republican banque given at bridgeport conn shades of the departed only give em a chance only want a single dec ade now what nerve the senator has and he had it with him at that banquet this may be styled the sublimate of gall armor-plated cheek minus blow holei ' only been out of power a little more than two yeara when they had had thirty years of rule during which time the republicans came as near sending the country to the devil as it was pos sible for them to do and since the dem ocrats took hold the republicans have aided them in every species of vicious legislation suggested during the thirty years of republican control the curse of monopolistic rule was fastened upon the country trust and combines have grown up and flour ished as never before in the history of any ration class legislation hap been the rule and so deeply is plutoc racy entrenched that oven conservative men are free to predict revolution as a means of freeing thf people the causes that have brought the country to where it is today chief of which is the present financial policy — originated with the republican party which was aided and abetted by the democratic party the present democratic administra tion has not deviated one iota from the policy of its republican predeces sors and yet we are now told that if the republicans are given another chance they will bring prospeity to the county why didn't they do it when they had j a chance of thirty year duration senator frye asks for a decade — only wants ten years to undo what it took thirty years to build up that's too long give the populists control of this government and they will cleanse the augean stables in less than one year i and ring relief to the people inside of i sixty days after conpr^s convenes the republican party and the dem ; ocatic party hive both been weighed \ in the balance and found wanting democracy is dead and republicanism will soon follow there will br no more chances for either one of these old parties as the people arc too thor ' oughly aroused to place any confidence in t hem their records of venality and hypocrisy ire so black and damnable that they cannot longer deceive the peopl letthng out the cat the mam object 1 to curry british frt\or i ik prai ti e of letting the cat out of the bag is one more honored in the breach than in the observance for all that it is almost au involuntary proci ■. a sub idized wall tre i or gan printed thi ■sentence last week ■the victory in ohio of the sound nione men will do more to reassure nervous peopl than anything eng ■...' inj to i n fact that the united states arc on a sound money basis and onc again there is a good inquiry n.ol only for united states government bonds it likewise for our i ■iroad securities ' !■. ■•■: then that our . tate am ; paigii j i year are being carried on with wary ey to lombard streel and thi roth 1 i ■the ta^t that there o ' demand for our railroad se curities is a good thing for the rail road . and since that demand depends entirely upon our thralldom in gold monometallism the railroad power is tins silver as a further proof oi this consider last week's announce meni of the monetary trust [| ma ; " the skeptical britishmind will realize thai silver lunacy in the united states has losl its lustre and tbal this country after all is the best place u)v british money it may be the large profi operators of london who hi now relatively rich from gold spei ulation will conclude to cover their 3hori sales and sav a part of their money i is wall sliced official utter ance upon tl e ethics and economics of the monetary question there are many ways of letting the cat out of th bag and wall street appears to be master of them all twentieth cen tury silver too heavy how the bankers are squirming j aboul silver they are alarmed at the prospect t i twenty-five million j dollars annually stolen from depositors ' would weigh seven hunded and fifty j tons if ii was all in silver just think i of it if all taken al or :< would re j ou jj . 12,000 to carry it would | m eleven miles long | e yer y man load i down with over a hundred and i ;: ! " " f silver j some of fh?rn like a an would get ! caught to i - uch 1 l0 col fones who was oust i '• st loui re ; pressing ip tor the people i3 ■r an 1 manager of the i •■dispatch but b in and the •- 1 to tu r n him out we don't want money that i as cheap as the supreme court of this . but we •■■mt i ■'..'■■oheap the october bl i.i.i i |\ shows how the farmers are beciu "»<~ to make a profit on rhrir products the october bulletin of tbc igr cmtural department just issu 1 ihat when the question raid out it was snpp os < ! the drought then prevailing '•.,. th onh ,; "••"-' r '• ' - unprehended i ,■irv " a:ls l : -■■'■■[ t to tin !,. lf tbv ver^i i .•■!;. p fts i could not be fores a from which greater loss reeultetl iu bo ■:■sections than from the drought ! ' lv i " i orts iudicnted hu ubun clftuce f vegetables and breadstuffs it vvaa desired to ascertain what was tli outlook lor the meat snpply hn.l wint progress farmers were making towards improving the quality ami condition of their moat-producing stock commissioner patterson is s deeply impressed with the necessity of north carolina farmers raising their own bread nd meat and is bu thoroughly convinced tb.it it is the es sential policy on which their peruia nent prosp rity must be based that thi in w y to the qu stion are puitic i ulurh rnitifying a decided mnjority of the answers receive 1 show increase of number nn |