Show f BROWN AHDMRSBROWH 4 Two HcKinlcy Disciples Have Gone East jj WILL CALL ON HANN4 JIAIIAVAT MEN 3IAKIXG A STRUGGLE STRUG-GLE FOIL GOLD tc Circular from the Hallway Age Di8 tributed Among Kjiu > Ioycc Lct i ter from an Employee of the Big Four UeimblJans Afraid oft of-t Charlie Pence Harmony Still Lacking Other Political News Senator Brown is sly devlish sly lo quote an old expression Matters political I po-litical are not as bright for the man fl e from Canton here in Utah as they might be so it has been decided that i herculean measures tMall be undertaken under-taken I Coin is wanted Not the publication issued in Chicago under that name r there have been too many of those distributed dis-tributed in this and other sections but J cold coin Sound money if you please I Campaigns require casn and cash isnt plenty in this neck of the timber So Arthur decided to go east He left yesterday morning without saying a word to any one except his wiLe and I for fear that women could not keep a I secret he took her along with him in order that the matter might not leak r out outBut little information could be obtained ob-tained concerning Arthurs destination but from what are presumed to be authentic i au-thentic sources it appears that he will i visit Mark Hanna while absent HeR He-R I will also call at Canton and walk on McKinleys grass When he returns the fact will be noted not-ed by his appearance on the streets < > < 3 > < S > > That subsidized organ of the gold faction t fac-tion that weekly periodical which has for a mission the advertising of car ff couplers and the dissemination of gold literature that quasi magazine which advertises Its mission as being one for benelltting the men who work in they the-y several departments of railroads but at the same time is doing all it can to I foster the interests of the officials I against those of the brawn and muscle 1 The Railway Age is making a struggle this year to induce the employees of all the great corporations which thread the a country with bands of steel to organize I fJ and work for McKinley Hanna Pier pont Morgan Rothschilds Co It is Renting paid for its work from the campaign fund of the party of protection I i pro-tection and poverty there can be no doubt of that fact Each week it sends out a sound money supplement In this frantic appeals are made to railroad Fi rail-road men to organize and work for the r interests of Great Britain Theste supplements sup-plements are scattered broadcast They find their wayat the expense of the L gold partyto every section house on the line They are flung into every railroad rail-road boarding house they are placed on the seat of every fireman and engineer en-gineer and they find them when they climb into the cab they are laid on the I t desks of every clerk and minor official i Up to date few of these have been I I r tent to this city but this week it appears ap-pears there was an effort made to carry thc war into Africa Several hundred hun-dred were sent to Salt Lake yesterday t and distributed among the employees of the several companies here by emissaries emis-saries of the gold faction This one i however is a honey It 5sJ i a sort of ti blood and thunder rawheadandbloody dY I tr bones sort of document One would y think from the reading that the country coun-try was in a terrible state Judging from the reading it has been sent allover I all-over the United States in great quantities i quan-tities and that must have cost Mark r Hanna something The language begins be-gins by a headline in big black type l and the complete concern is a appended r append-ed edRead oh ye misguided and reflect I RAILWAY ENl EN-l over the country the earners of I 44 wages are stirring They are arising i shoulder to shoulder to face the assault of the free silver forces on their welfare and their homes You railway men have I the power to protect yourselves Your votes alon will stem the tide in many a doubtful state And what have you to I gain by having your wages paid In dollars gIn worth fifty cents What will the wreck of the nations industries profit you you 4 have no silver to be made into coin but I only your labor and your brains for capital cap-ital For your honest work you have aright a-right to get your pay in honest dollars not in do lars that are worth half that I value to you while the other half goes to I the owner of the mine i Organize therefbre and work Railway Men of the South The Southern South-ern organs of the Free Silver party say I they do not believe that the railroad employees em-ployees of the south can be organized to I work against the Democratic party and its candidates CarL you not Can you I not be organized to work for your own I 4 protection and against having your wages r 1 paid In dollars worth thy cents Will you be intimidated by demagogues sheltering I themselves behind the name of a great historic party a party which ha repudiated repud-iated them their doctrines and their candidates can-didates Will you let these men hoodwink hood-wink you into voting for your own and I your countrys ruin Give them the lie Organize and work Orjanize < Railway Men of the West The organs of the mine owners say that you are being dictated to and influenced into voting for sound money What Do you need dictation and influence to persuade you to vote for the preservation of your own r livelihood The Railway Age appeals to your reasonto your patriotism your Instinct of selfpreservation The influence in-fluence which we wield is the influence of the truth that we set before you The dictation to which we ask you to listen 1 Is the dictation ot your own intelligence i t and your own conscience F Stand up in your strength and tell these t men that you cannot be played with and made Into puppets for their profit Or ganlze and work Railway Men of the East You who live in the older parts of the land know the value of home surroundings and steady employment You are told that a cyclone is coming from the west to sweep you from old moorings and break the ties which have so long bound you to all that is good In life Are your reasons a unsteady un-steady that a prairie gale can siiaKe tnem Has the love of your country so weaxenea that it is at the mercy of the winds Can st any blast of argument convince you that 1 you need to have your wages cut In two Shall a boy orator come at this day to teach o what panic and bankruptcy mean and what repudiation and shame Show your resentment of the insolent invasion Organize and work Railway Men of the Country Band yourselves together into sound money clubs At every shop and terminal in evPI yard and office and station organize organ-ize Let your Influence reach out beyond your own numbers to those of the public with whom you come in contact to the travelers the farmers and the businessmen business-men whom you meet in your daily life I rests with o to repel the attack on your I on wageearning power Reason with those whom you meet and plead with r them You have on your side all that is honest and Just and true and your own prosperity a well as the nations Is at sake Organize therefore Call on us fore for-e re and for help Organize and work 000 The last paragraph is a gem Canon Can-on us for literature and help What construction can b placed o the word help It sounds suspiciously I sun a thog Mark Hennas barrel was behind be-hind it Literature and help Send o the help and never mind the literature With the help literature cart > be easily procured < > 0 r railroads too are busy One of the leading citizens o ttids city is im receipt of a IclJter from a reSaSlve 0 young m who is in the employ of the Big Four at Cincinnati A pe I rue of tihe same showS the straits 1 A wWcJi the Honnncrats a they are I designated by that great silver paper the New Tork Journal are In and the mefthods they are adopting to inttmi date their employees The writer says The rfailway men down here who favor free coinage and they are legion a saying nothing but sawing a tremendous mendous lot of wood It IB impossible 10 exaggerate the i coercive measures employed by the railway rail-way companies The wages of the men I nave been s reduced since the prevalence preval-ence of hard times a t now be a mere pittance So many of them are idle that those who have pcsitkras such as they with suc a tey are cling to them wit the tenacity and desperation of a drowning man fondling a board in midocean The railway employee a s completely intimidated and alarmed for the safety of their positions a to b distrustful of each other and ore even afraid < o voice their political I views over their pipes or mugs I among their closest friends The bulldozing tactics of the railway I rail-way companies while wholly incompatible I incom-patible with the usually independent spirit O railroad men are nevertheless bound to hurt Bryan with this particu I lar class of voters Every railroad office of-fice in town is flooded with gold literature litera-ture and the men are afraid to talk anything but gold We have a 16 to 1 scarecrow constantly revealed t our terrified gaze The supply department of this lone resembles Republican headquarters Having gold continually ally dinned into their ears and the bright prospect < f having the material stuff transferred to their pockets will certainly have an effect with the more timorous animals You remember the little story about how a continual dropping drop-ping will rock wil wear away a rck The heads of the various depart ments in each of the Big Four offices met precisely on the day that the open letter to President Ingalls I which I sent you was promulgated and the officials tihereupon proceeded I to organize a Nonpartisan Sound orgize r NonpatSan I Money club each member pledging his vote and influence against the party of free silver Every employee of the company in this vicinity except a few who were not dependent upon their positions joined it No poor man had the temerity to decline As 0 matter of policy I felt constrained to jon the club attend the weekly meetings meet-ings etc The conditions were such that I did so without the slightest compunction About ten others in our office all out and out Bryan men took membership when I did We had a qudet conference beforehand and reluctantly agreed upon tihis mode of reluctnll agree upo tMs procedure as our only alternative the information having reached me from a authentic source that iff we declined be to join our positions would not worth 16 to 1 dozen im the markets of the world This is a sod sad commentary rn American freedom however we a afforded a slight degree de-gree of consolation by thinking of ejection day and humming that Kittle song entitled we wont do a single thing to him No general circulars have as yet been issued t our men although thousands of President IngaJls interview inter-view which appeared in a Republican paper were struck off in neat form with brimstone headlines and a copy addressed to the employees on payday by the officials A Republican congressman spoke at lengitSi to our club last i Saturday The general apathy which distinguished the large audience bespoke the popularity of Bryan and the cause he represents The speaker and the officials appeared amazed that his well rounded peribds and irridescent platitudes were greeted with such feeble applause At the suc conclusibn of his address n palefaced blacklisted railroad man with a sad blalste rlr ma vit sa eye and fedonscraps appearance asked him why is it that a railway 30 man who was discharged June 1S94 could no longer obtain railroad employment in this country without changing his name The speaker faced the interrogator with a smite df imbecility and look of an idoit and essayed a reply butfound himself utterly ut-terly bereft of the power of speech He finally regained control of his faculties and uttered these thrilling and extremely soul satisfying words You had better see the superintendent superin-tendent perhaps he can inform you and took his seat The audience gave him the laugh by making not a sound While believing tat free coinage if given a fair trial would benefit this country I have always had my doubt about the ability of this government to preserve the parity of the metals under a unlimited 16 t 1 law when about half the people and the wealthiest and most potenc half at that are opposed t such a measure and would put forth their strongest efforts to make the law a failure You remember the free trade fable and I believe that history will repeat itself and that these capricious Americans against a free will vote a protest agins fr policy before the law can redound coinage bor te c r dound t the countrys welfare and prosperity thereby dealing a double blow to bimetallism in America without with-out mentioning the ruin and disaster which would immediately follow Its enactment Notwithstanding this I eaCent propose to vote for Bryan and it will be done with as much enthusiasm as any vote he will get Partly because I prefer a man t a tool but more for the reason that I consider the question ques-tion of freedom of greater moment than that of money In this campaign th paign it is Bryan and freedom against I McKinley is aside Hanna and savery cKiney I side issue I To he specific I believe the coercion I which is being indulged in wH tend to reduce Bryans vote a relates t I the railroad men e tlC measures I are so awtiAmerioan s thoroughly i repugnant t the common sense of mankind s contrary to our most malt tradition than it will highly cherished tdion tun il wi yield the most satisfactory results in i other quarters of all factors contributing contribut-ing to the election of W J Bryan U the United States of America Ohio stands a good show of going I Democratic Dmocrrc < > 00 I I Several Republicans who are of exceedingly anxious to see the course Republican candidates for district I judges successful were at work yesterday yes-terday trying to create a boom for certain I cer-tain Democrats who are not in the I field for the nomination the avowed i purpose being to weaken if possible the support of Charles J Pence in the I Democratic judicial convention on Saturday Sat-urday The effort is a clear give away I of the fact that the Republicans have tle hope for carrying the Third dis I ltte trict and also that they are very aso much afraid of Mr Pence The result I of the wirepulling however has simply I I sim-ply been to increase the popularity of I Mr Pence and add to his strength < > 0 < S > The members of the Democratic I held at I county committee a meeting I county headquarters yesterday afternoon I after-noon at which B T Lloydi was elected as chairman of the committee and J C Ivins secretary A statement of the financial condition of the committee was also made and the funds found to be in fair condition although contributions contri-butions thankfully will be received cheerfully and I 000 A caucus of the delegates to the state convention at Provo will be held at Unity hal on Third South street this evening All delegates from this county who can attend are requested to be on hand early as there is considerable con-siderable business to transact 000 I From information gathered at Republican Repub-lican county headquarters it appears that the convention to nominate county officers will not be held until the 7th of the coming month and the convention to nominate members of the legislature several days later on There will be two sets of primaries called and two delegations elected The i chairman of the county committee states that the party is having a hard time to select a successor r Wnitte more The nomination of Waldemar Van Cott has carried consternation into the ranks and timber is being looked for Elmer Jones is considered I a strong man for the place and there t ll J 1 ri t is some talk of having Frank B Stephens Steph-ens put up for the place The nomination of Van Cott ends what few aspirations George L Nye had for the place because George does not carry enough guns for the battle 000 A sample of the harmony which prevails pre-vails in the ranks of the Republican party can be found in the following between conversation which took place tween John T Axton the football politician Lou C Johnson tician of the Fourth and Lu To son of the Second the man who is going to vote for Bryan and Sewall and wants all other Republicans to do the same John and Lou were discussing discuss-ing the situation in front of the post office Said John t Lou The Republicans Repub-licans can win if we have harmony but oil factions should be Tecognized I McKinley men are not given places on the county ticket I stall vote the Democratic ticket from top to bottom with sues the exception of the national is I suesYou are just like me was John sons retort I a McKinley man is I placed on the ticket I shall vote the Democratic ticket without any exception I excep-tion whatever |