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Show i . X'. li i . i . .M ft.: y'J r 4"' . ' ( . ( ' ' . V. ' .! ' . t H'-- V . V ' - , ' I - , H : nil.- : J . ' k. . . XK. V i . ; ' , ' ! - . . !?.: . - . . ' 'I'' ? ' . . Jf ' . , . . 1 45-- ton-tribut- will hand In the pMieral matter that they rieeire to aHnr In the ensiling Issue, not later than .Tuesday morning, and local item- noting than Friday evening, of each week. : Address all commhnfcatlons to 1 i u r ! T Box 512, Washington To., ii; ! !il I I " !: i i i Mi.' - ( f r! y f i f. i!i I: ill f M i i! : ii( i ; - . hi ! t ! i'i ;i: n III ;;i Hi i H ! i I i b ; v ! Mi . 1 I : T i 1 i;t n ii i j iiii 5i! - Saturday, October 17, 189. For President, T. William Sryan. For Vice President, Arthur fSowall. If every Patriotic xVmerican will purchase American goods, only, Jor his consumption, lie will ma- 1 ! Entered at the Poet Office at St. George. Washington Co.. 'Utah, ns second daes matter, March 27, 1896. , u i:i bT. GEOHOR, UTA0. - 1 :i. THE UNION, . :l i they can. - s V rt i s. t . ' . : V . ' ffrs ' V- ,7 i,w. , V , i i. 'K . V: i tl- s -- v n . s 'H ' fl ' J i '.4 ' terially aid in lessening the out- flow of both Gold and Silver, and help to build np our home maim- factnres. Justly so in Utah. If oar own Industries are encouraged to their utmost capacity, it will stop just that much money from going out of our state, and win be building np our home Industries. We have Factories that manufacture excellent cloth of various kinds; Factories & shoes shops where Boots and Shoes ore and can be made; Sugar Factory; and many other Industries; all of which what they can to help the people to keep their money at home, bat there is such a fad of desiring something that is from abroad, that many of the Industries that are already established are not patronized to their fullest capacity. Tho main thing we want and need is more money iu sufficient quantities that when a man does a Job of work, the employer can be able to pay. the cash, then the workman can go and get .what he desires and pay the money, and so, the money will keep passing around, and if we have Homes Industries of the various kinds needed to supply the people with the various articles they need, without sending abroad, then om money is kept at home. If we get free coinage at 16 to 1, our silver and gold miners can take their bullion to the mints and receive the coin for it at par, and .then a Silver dollar will be just os valuable ns a gold dollar. The miners will then work their mines more extensively and will need supplies for their workmen, and being able to turn their bullion into coin, can pay cash for their supplies, then the farmers will see Coinage, the benefit of Free whether they ever see it before or not. Then will be the time when our Home Industries will take a " . Brilliant Object Lesson Teaches Nothing, A COMPOUND BONESET PILLS never in favor wkh free coinage a great remedy for headache, in men, and was excepted by' them digestion and uvn complaints, only because they lacked the votes Sugar coated. 2Scts. All stores to secure something better. lw A..-7 Free coinage, so far from requirr. ing .the government to buy silver, try VS! merely requires it to, stimp dollar marks upon silver as it now does upon gold, and to return the silver so a H. stamped to the person who may have delivered it. The objectipn which all persons .except gold mo9 ' nometallists raise relates, not to this stamping, but to the amount of grains which it is proposed to put into' ' each piece of silver stamped. v If $ the amount suggested were 775 A grains instead of 412.5, they would not object . They would: describe such a silver dollar as equal to the O El because of the alue the gold dollar, 1st bullion in each would be about the ten same. But free coinage men say n that.the value of the. bullion in each an would be the same if the quantity W uc were the required 412.5, grains, If point of the argument being that silid ver bullion is more thaq id times as filvl cheap as gold "bullion now, because and only because, government gives of Washington and Diagonal Sie: eel Cr. id fictitious a to gold value through eli Utah., Si George, the coinage which it denies to silver. at This is the silver coinage issue. And El to imply that free coinage hen are mt the silver to llg asking buy HENRY H. government utt at an inflated price, or to buy it at ne all,' is to make a misrepresentation One door east of P. 0 St. George, Utah, lvi which admits of no explanation tk MANurAoiumm A Dcalm in but malice or ignorance . Cleve- at nd land Recorder. Furniture, Doors, Sash, Cubboards, : 1 . - ' s " ij . --AnldBa&iHsS . r v ; ' Shoes,, and . , ABE THE PEOPLE FOOLS? - ! (I! 'C ors hnd-Iri- Sf v m & ; " ( $i-7- -- 'll r; v o.. r 1 $1-0- 1 : . tor, 1 r f: V' Vi : iff'' Ul o- , , , " ?.i. r;i a : 1: V;-- . new impetus, and home People will 'feel more like using apd Published every Saturday at wearing home productions. , So we hay let us all work for the St' George, Washington Co , Utah, Fre Coinage of Gold and Silver at 16 to 1, and let us have a new EDITuB k PBuFitlaliOa. era of plenty of money, for once in our lives, ; at! least, ami not wait TERM3- IN ADVANCE. One copy, bne year, until other n.'.tions agree to the $1JW Oae copy, six montbe. for ihe Uinted States large .46. plan, One coi y, three months, , enough, rold enough, and ought ' to . SATES OP ADVSaTSma. be independent enough to steer week; month : 6 month; a e veur. One inch, her own ships without asking aid $14.00. $3.uo. V column, 7S I9.sa or 3 00 5S coo. help of foreign powers, that core 3911a 19.50. column, to.50, 8.7 column. 17.0a Jana. nothing for the United States, 2"Local notices In ifadlnx type, ten only to get all the money (whether cents a line, each inaeitinn. gold or silver) out of its People rfujHfCt fully reqiet tlmt 7-- Yr- . THE UNION, t L, ' v '';'. : r K.' V ' - :V- - a'., - Av- . U i ; - . Jt ii'f 'its i ' 1 . !?,: li ' H7'? 'i-j f, V' " V'-- ' " - ,j Si:1 ' ri- - In cld times, under old-fashion- Which ed governments, the people were considered as children, to be slapped or petted as their wise rulers saw fit, but. as ; far as we know, in those good or bad old times, the people were not generally considered fools. This view of their intelligence was reserved for the end", of the nineteenth century, and the advocates of the gold standard. If proof be needed that the gold party considers the people fools, it is found in the Mexican dollar. trick. A large firm in Chicago and a large newspaper in Philadelphia have recently offered to their employes the option of receiving tr.eir wages in a certain number of the United States dollars or nearly twice the same number of Mexican silver dollars. Therefore, free coinage is rohbrv, anarchy, repudiation, etc.! Was ever such an insult put upon )the intelligence of the ' American people? Because the present demand of silver bullion has given it a certain value, it must ' always have the same value, no matter how the demand for it varies! That is what the people are asked to believe and what the gold advocates try to prove by their object lesson. Why did they not make the offer of a certain number of American gold dollars or double the same number of American (not Mexican) silver dollars, or even paper dollars? Because they are not fools, though ' they think the people are. To say that the American silver dollar has twice the value of a Mexican dollar, because the former is redeemable in a certain quantity of gold, and the latter not so. is m2rely to trifle with the truth. People consider not whether a dollar will buy so much gold, but whether it will pay a dollar's indebtedness, public or private, and they value it accordingly. An American is worth as much silver dollar y as a gold dollar, and the people are not such fools as not to know this in spite of the silly attempts to bulldoze them with the Mexian dollar trick. Irish World. . . to-da- THE FACTS IN THE CASE. The Silver Coinage Issue Plainly and Un- mistakably Stated. Those newspapers which tell their readers that under free coinage at sixteen to one the government would pay $1.29 an ounce for 69 cents worth of silver, and elementary financial catechisms more for than for publication. Under free coinage the government would buy no silver. The last silver purchase law we had was given to us by John. Sherman. It was self-enlightenm- ent New and Large , selling at prices, at the store of Mrs. A. E Price, RIDING. " e t 4 . ba Bureaus, Tables, Stands, Ac. IEMOCBATXC PARTY ' PLATFORM . Furniture neatly repaired on short notice. Prices low. We demand the free and unlim- ited coinage of both gold and silver at the prevent legal ratio of 16 to i, without waiting for the aid or consent of any other nation . We demand that the standard silver. dollar shall be a full legal tender, equally with gold, for all debts, public and ,r Democratic National private . Platform. 1896. Free coinage means that silver and gold bullion shall be coined without charge by the United States mints. Unlimited coinage means that all the gold and all the silver presented at the United States mints shall be coined into money. The ratio of 16 .to 1 means that the number of grains of pure silver in a silver dollar shall be sixteen times the number of grains of pure gold in a gold dollar. By full legal tender is rnent that when a debtor offers either gold or silver to a creditor in any sum whatever the creditor is bound to accept the same and discharge the debtor from his liability.- Logan Journal. eir V.. m pt Jil t e 6 Who has taken fhe trouble to have an encouraging word for the Union in publicf d e D i mi ne at Him Store y; ipt 1 is tl os Latest Novelties in Ladies and Childrens Hats, Bon- c nets, Caps, Etc., Etc., Etc. Fresh from New York and Chicago. ' Dont buy your Fall, and Winter Hats until you see them. T D uv Burial and Temple clothes a spec- DSt Jll ialty. A1 . . t Julia A. Macdonald, Proprietor. , i6-o- m At Dr. Ivins residence. MARKET, WCRTHUD Notwithstanding the high McKin- QROSBy & hire for ley tariff bill, the price of J than no or little was laborers higher PROPRIETORS, they have been under the so called Utata., free trade. If the poor man was Ment on hand at lowest market prices. only benefited by high tariff, instead of the various syndicates receiving tWTiOcated at Canaan market. the main benefit, then we would be 2otf in for high tariff. St. George, House Pymm St. .1 . e e. bu - ft; EAT ay art s P B( Dl in dV io: na )h ei m k) George, Utah. let People having relatives in irei Chicago or vicinity, and would Meals Beasonable, like to have them visited by one of Good stabling. eh m our elders, or gain any information PROP. JHO PYMM, el from them, will do well to address ALSO DEALER IN lw elder C. D. Fjeldsted, 466 Mil- JEWELRY, STATIONERY, ur ETC. III. GROCERIES, CIGARS, waukee Avenue, Chicago, 8 |