ttie janti-monopolist. diamptp. ficfte gudi-|koito|altßt greenback · 2019. 3. 21. · ttie...

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~4 - ' - , . , . . ....... . diamptp. County Attorney; G. W, Morrill, Anoka, Democrat. County Recorder; A. A. Allard of Anoka. GREENBACK TICKET. I For Representative in Congress, Ist District WILLIAMMEIGHEN, Of Fillmore county. A Greenback county convention was held at Winona Oct 19, when E. D, Fellows was nominated for senator. H. O. Billings, Edward Ely, and H. B. Waterman, representatives. The Democratic nominees were endorsed for auditor and attorney. For Representative n Congress. 2a District, GEORGE C. CHAMBERLAIN, Of Dakota County. For Representative in Congress, 3d District, I. DONNELLY, 01 St. Paul. POLITICAL MEETINGS HON. IGNATIUS DONNELLY will address his fellow citizens as follows: STATE TICKET. For Judge of the Supreme Court, O. M. MEAD, Of Rice Conntv. Glynden, Saturday, Oct. 26. Moorhead, Monday, 28. Detroit, Tuesday, 29th. Perliam, Wednesday, October 80th. Elizabeth, Thursday, Cct. 31, at 1 p.m. Fergus Falls do. at 7p. m. Poinme de Terre, Friday; Nov. 1. The above meetings will be held in the evening; speaking to commenoe about 7:30 o’clock. Friends of the cause are requested to give the neces- sary notice and arrange as to halls. For State Auditor, O. 11. PAGE, Of Olmsted County For Clerk of the Supreme Court, W. G. JEI3B, Of Meeker County. HENNEPIN 30J J TY ZHUH32K NDM- INFIONS. For Auditor—ll. F. A. Drukham mer. OUR CONGRESSIONAL CAND Register of Deeds—A. F. Alkeny Sheriff— E. A. Cramsie. County Attorney—R. C. Benson. Coroner—Dr. L. Damm. Surveyor—A. 11. Branch. Senator —Hon. Eugene M. Wilson, Representatives—C. B. C. Dough erty, Minneapolis; F. A. Clark, Min neapolis; A. 1\ Lane, Champlin. DATES. Your choice Money, or Brains which ? If Mr. Washburn should happen to be elected he ought not to berate the greenback, for it will have contributed to his success more than all things else. We know that some very dishonest men have been managing Mr. Wash- burn’s canvass, and we know that they have immense pecuniary interests at stake in his electiou—interests so great that they could well afford to spend tens of thousands of dollars to have a Congressman in Washington whom they could rely upon to protect them from exposure and from the apprehend- ed necessity of being called upon to answer for the frauds they have com- mitted, and by which they have pro- fitted.—Pioneer Press. MEEKER CO. NOMINATIONS. Senator; V. P. Kennedy. Representative; YVm. M. Campbell. County Auditor; G. B. Phelps. Register of Deeds; Aug. T. Koebner, County A ttorney ; L. C. Spooner. County Surveyor; J. P. Mann. County Commissioner, 2nd dis Thomas Vinaeke. DAKOTA CO. NOMINATIONS. State Senator; C. I*. Adams, Vermilion Representative, First District, Charles B. Lowell, of Hastings. 2 dis.; Nathan Ku'erscm, of Hampton .'ld, Cornelius Guiney of Mendota. Washburn’s sole reliance is money. The three liandred thousand dollars which he made by his swindling fail- ure gives him the money to attempt to buy his way to congress.—Globe. 4th, George W. Dilley of I'armingtou sth, Edward P. Hyland, of Lakeville, County Auditor; Michael Scanlon oi Mendota. Commissioner, Second District, John Ferris of Hampton. 3d district, John Bresnehan of Mendota. EDITORIAL NOTES. Towm elections in Connecticut show good Greeuhack gainß, RICE CO. NOMINATIONS. Senator; Philo Woodruff, of Faribault, Representative, Ist district, Osman Os manson of Wheeling. 2d dis., Elias Hobbs of Northfield, Banning speaks at Anoka on Satur- day evening of this week, A new Greenback paper in New Hampshire, the Granite State, .Id dis., George W. Turner, Faribaul 4th dis., C. B. Jackson of Morristown. sth dis.,N. H. Swaine of Forest. The Mainites in Minnesota will find our letter from Maine interesting read- ing. Auditor; E. B. Van Horn, Faribault Court comm., George M urphy, do. Supt. ef schools ; C. W. Eye, do. County commissioner, 3d dist. I). Cav- anaugh, of Faribault. sth dist., Tim othy O’Grady, of Forest. The Globe copied last week two ex- two excellent articles on the currency reform. Donnelly is making a thorough cam- paign. He speaks once every day, and sometimes twice. mmmm b KAMSKY CO. NOMINATIONS. At a regular meeting of Council No. 5, of the National Greenback party of Ramsey county it became necessary to remoddle the ticket hereto set forth in consequeneo of several resignations. The following is now the authorized ticket: The membership of the O. E. S. in Connecticut is 1791. The G. C. recom- mended the new ritual. Are not the remarks on the recent elections found on our first page, pecu- liarly encouraging ? District Judge, W. Wilkin. Probate Judge, C. N. Bell. Bhenff, James King. Auditor, Charles Fassavaot. Senator, 23 dist., William L*. Kelly. 24th dist., C D O'Brien. Representative, Ist and 2d wards, T. Reardon. Do. 3d ward, J. Mainzer. Do. 4th ward, L. I>. Hodges. Do. sth ward, James Smith Jr. Read the remarks of Senator Thur- man on the national bauks and the Ohio campaign, found on another page. Next week will be the last paper we can issue before election, and in it we shall have a few earnest words to say to Greenback voters. Anoka has 53 campaign subscribers for the Anti-Monopolist, and is the banner town. The second largest is Northfield with 48. For Representative from county, S. Nadeau. County commissioners, J Wagner, J F Hoyt city ; E O Rene, county. Superintendent of Schools, Eugene Hendrickson. So far in the fall elections the Re- publicans have lost ten members of congress. Of these the Greenbackers have taken five. A Greenback delegate convention met at Lamberta, Redwood county, October 12tli. At this meeting Charles Porter, an old Republican, offered the following resolution which was unani- mously adopted: ‘‘Whereas the Na- tional Greenback party has no candid- ate for representative to congress in the second congressional district, and Whereas Hon. Henry Poehler in his letter to Mr. Cook, has fully endorsed the National Greenback party, there- fore Resolved that we endorse Hon. Henry Poehler, and recommend him to the support of the Greenback party of Redwood couuty.” If you w ill make it your religious duty to take every thing by the smooth handle, you will save yourself a great many unhappy hours. The Rice couny Greenbackers met in the court house at Faribault, Oct, 1C and nominated a full ticket which will be found elsewhere. One year ago we scarcely had an outspoken Greenback paper in this State except the Anti-Monopolist; now we have a dozen. The communication of C, B, Lowell of Hastings, was received Tuesday, too late for insertion this week, it will appear in our next. Those who love the greenback should see that their vote is cast for men who, by the necessities of their circumstan- Anoka co. nominations. c ‘* A county convention was held on Saturday last when the Greenback and Democratic parties united on the fol- lowing nominations; County commissioner; John C. Smith of Oak Grove, Greenback. ces, will hvve to labor in their Friends of the Greenback erase in any towns in the 2d congressional dis- trict, outside of Dakota and Rice coun- ties, can procure them by writing to this office. Auditor: H. E. Lepper, of Anoka, Greenback. Sheriff; J. C. Frost, Anoka, Dem., the preeent incumbent. Judge of Probate. Hiram Tims* ton, Anoka, Greenback. The Greenback party is now an or- ganised power in a very bugs number of tbe counties of this Stefa. One v-,'-V TTie JAnti-Monopolist. year ago it had no organization in even a half dozen. Ben, Harrison of Indiana, wanted an “idiot asylum” for the Greenback- ers: now, that he can’t be elected sena- tor from the State, he is mad enough to go into an asylum himself, In the south there is a general com- ing over to the Greenback party of both whites and blacks. In North Carolina a colored man has been nom- inated for congress by the new party. The failures of 1878 up to Sept. Ist, when the bankrupt law expired were 8768, liabilities $197,000,000 ; against against 5565, and $141,000,000 for the same period of last year. We give this week our indictment of the Republican party. We chai'ge them with a vast amount of injustice, ci'ime and wrong, and whoever votes for that party, votes to perpetuate this wrong against his own interest and the interests of the laboring classes. Long Lake Oct. 14th, 1878. An Independent Greenback Labor club was organized in the town of Medina, last Saturday evening with thirty charter members. At present we have over 100 names signed to our constitution, and we shall increase this to to another An earn- est working organization of this kind is needed in every town in the coun- ty, so that we may he able to pell the full strength of the party in Novem- ber.— Workman. Scarcity of money makes labor the slave of capital. An abundance of money makes cap- ital the servant of labor. Scarcity of money concentrates wealth in the hands of a few—leaving the masses destitute. An abundance of money distributes wealth equitably among all classes of people. Scarcity of money strengthens the aristocracy at the expense of the com- mon people. * Scarcity of money eventuates in the destruction of free institutions, by degraitingthe people below the stand- ard of self-government. Its path is toward feudalism for the few and barbarism for the many. It is incompatible with progressive civi- zation and human freedom. The Republican convention of Car- ver county resolved in favor of specie resumption and that the inevitable loss by irredeemable and unlimited paper currency would fall on the laboring classes.— Ex. The Republicans of Carver county are challenged to show wherein specie resumption can possibly be of one cent’s advantage to them or anybody else, except bankers and bondholders. They are further challenged to show that our greenback currency is either irredeemable or unlimited paper. And they are still further challenged to show that anybody has ever suffered any loss by it, or that any inevitable loss through it can ever fall on the laboring classes. We pity these blind devotees of party, led by demagogues as blind as themselves; for they remind us of tbe olden days when blind fanatics took the life of their best friend, the Savior; aud the prayer used is the appropriate one by which to address the heavenly Throne in behalf of these Republicans. Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do. speech, which was well received. Mr. A. P. Lane spoke in reply to Col. Hicks, (Republican, and champion of the school book ring in the last legis- lature,) Mr. Lane is a townsman of ours—one of the real workingmen, who earns his bread by the sweat of his brow, is a good speaker and ready debator—candidate for the legislature in the 27th district, and one who. if elected, will look after the interest of the laboring class, and has the ability to set forth their wrongs and defend their rights. Progkess. Supreme ignorance dictated the above resolutions, for it can be proved, that the Greenback system of finance would save every workingman of them at least one hundred dollars every year. It would lessen his taxes, increase the value of his farm, give him better prices for his produce, and more of the comforts of home for his family. Yet he will fight it! Poor, blind partizan * Champlix. Oct. 9, IS7B. Editor Anti-Monopolist The National Greenback party is making good headway in this town, which has heretofore been almost solid Republ.can having bad only from three to fifteen Democratic votes out of a total of 70 to 90,—this year we calculate to divide—and give them the smallest slice. Matters in Maine. Liberty, Oct. 5. Editor Anti-Monopolist: Chase oilers his paper, the Chroni- cle, from now until aster a Greenback presideht is elected for two dollars. Our town contains 260 voters. Be- fore our state election we counted 76 Greenbackers. We afterwards raised the number to 85. When the votes were courted I was surprised to find there were only 49 hard money votes, paupers and all. I say paupers, be- cause one was led up to the polls, and threw a straight hard-money vote. Such votes make paupers, for hard money and hard times always go together, and hard times are always characterized with suffering and poverty. A 1 manner of dishon- orable means were resorted to steal our votes. A Greenbacker when going to the polls was handed a vote by the postmaster. Upon discovering that it was for hard money, he told the postmaster he did not propose to vote that way. Upon which the postmaster told him if he did not he would not pay him what he owed him. A prominent citizen of this town went to Belfast in camp-meeting time and while there was invited to the house of a wealthy citizen to taste of his punch, and there met with Eugene Hale, candidate for congress. After the beverage had been passed, conversation turned upon politics. All said that Hale was sure to win, and Mr. Hale said he had no doubt about it, the only question being whether his majority would be large or small. Finally Mr. Hale asked the gentleman from Liberty what his views were. He replied that he was a Greenbacker, doubled and twisted and dyed in the wool, and that if Mr. Hale came to his place he might hear him give five Greenback lectures every day. Mr. Hale remarked that he would get ex- hausted, to which he replied that he was a breech loader, and never got exhausted. Well, the election is over in Maine, but if it were to come off in Novem- ber we would not have to get the leg- islature to elect our governor. Peo- ple thought after election politics would die down, but several in our town that were then in favor of hard money are now Greenbackers. Re- publicans here are sick and dis- gusted. The people are studying finance and intend to keep «n studying without the aid of foreign teachers who only teach them to steal, and who by legis- lation pay $125.000,000 for the silver we are now using. We want more greenbacks, less bank notes, and the bonds to be be paid off according to the original contract; and we are bound to see it done. Wayland Knowltox. SQUEEZED TO THE LOWEST POSSIBLE We have a live Greenback clnb—- hold meetings once a week, and are in hopes of winning over to our ranks all but about a dozen Fossils. who are determined to votdihe ticket labelled “Republican” till Gabriel blows his trumpet—or at least till Grant gets bis lesson learned of the and emperors of the old world, and comes back and establishes .his strong government, or empire, and then be his most obedient subjects. We have had two good Greenback rallies—last night Mr. Kelly of Bt. Raul favored os with an excellent speech, and the ladirs cheered ns with their preecnoe and one of tn—. Mrs. M. J. Colburn) made t aksrt POINT “I give the farmer the lowest grade his sack contains, and submit that it is just what lie is ent ; tled to.”—Leon- ard Kennel!, inspector for Minneapo- lis Washburn mills, in a card in the Pioneer Press. Oct. 13. HOW THE TABLES ARE TURNED. The Inter Ocean says: “The strang- est thing about it is, that certain Re publicans belonging to the party, that was father of the Greenback, and the defender of its name and reputution, should in the course of fifteen years, when every promise has been redeem- ed, and it stands before the world honored, turn about to slmder this offspring as “rag money.” while its old enemy con.es to the front in ful- some praises.” Exactly so, come to lowa and you will find that our Re- publican editors and politicions are the vilest copperheads, while many who received that epithet in time of the war “now come to the front” bringing forth fruit meet for repent- ance. Strange turning of the tables. So it is, many a drunkard becomes re- formed. while an upright man takes his place in the gutter.— Salional. HE WILL BE ELECTED. Donnelly is having rousing meet- ings wherever he goes, an 1 enthusi asm is s'reading. Let the Democra- cy stand firm and he will be elected, there is no doubt about it.—St. Cloud Times. There is no question about it—ev- ery man who is not a bondholder or a moneylender who votes against the National Greenback party this fall, goes directly against his own interest. He really consents to allowing him- self to be robbed and virtually assists in the robbery. The Wilmar Gazette says: “Money is a scarce article in that county at present, but be bears no one advocat- ing the Greenback measure as a means of relief.” It is evident the phonograph has not yet reached that benighted re- gion. OUR STATE lICKET. The National Greenback state tick- et deaerres the notice of every voter, had especially is It the ticket forth* farmers of Minnesota to support. Now why? First, the candidates stand upon the grand principles and platform of the same money and the same privi- leges for all classes. Second, the men are men of the class that is burdened. They know the wants of the class and the need of a remedy. 0. H. Page, candidate for state au- ditor, is a farmer living in Olmstead county. He is an able man. a good speaker, and has for many years been a He has eveiy- thing to commend himself to the large mass of voters in the state. W. G. Jebb, the candidate for clerk of the supreme court, is a well knows farmer of our own county. He lives in Union Grove, is a vigor- ous writer ahd speaker in defence of Greenback principles. —Litchfield In dependent. Hon. I. Donnelly was greeted by a large and intelligent audience at this place on Friday evening, and his ad- mirable and convinciugly logical speech of two hours and a half was listened to with marked attention and without any signs of weariness on the part of his auditors. The speech abounded in telling points, and well told anecdotes, eliciting frequent ap- plause. His masterly arraignment of the wheat ring was just what the farmers desired to hear, and it will go far toward giving Mr. Donnelly votes that might otherwise be counted for the candidate of the ring. It was made very clear to a good many that Mr. Washburn is not the man to rep- resent the farmers’ interests. Mr. Donnelly’s greenback arguments, de- livered in his clear and forcible style, are well calculated to set men think- ing seriously on the financial ques- tion and we should not be surpristd to hear soon of a number of green- back converts in this section. Mr. Donnelly was followed in a short ad- dress by Major Newson who, as a life long Republican, urged the support of Mr. Donnelly as the real friend of the producing classes an.! the enemy of plundering monopolies. —Lac Qui Parle Co. Press. HOW THEY CHEAT THE FARMERS The Minneapolis Millers’ associa- tion. through Bill King’s and Dave Blakely's newspapers and Bill Wash- burn's speeches, claim that they pay for wheat almost as much as is paid in Milwaukee and Chicago for the same grades. This claim is absurd upon its face, although the figures given apparently warrant their pre- tense. For instance, the prices of wheat on Wednesday were: In Mil- waukee—No 2. 78 cents; No. 3. 64 1-2 cents; No. 4,561-2 cents. In Min- neapoLs—No. 2, 72 cents; No. 3, 63 cents; No. 4, 48 cents. The difference between the two markets shown by these figures is not very great, and on their face the figures sustain the claim of the Washburnians that a fair price is paid for wheat. But the colored gentleman in the fence comes in just here: When a farmer offers a load of No. 2 wheat it is graded by the Minneapolis ring as No. 3, and instead of getting 75 cents, the market price of No. 2 wheat, he receives but 63 cents, the price of No. 3. The same wheat, if taken to Milwaukee, will grade No. 2 and bring 78 cents a bushel. It will be seen that the Minneapolis purchaser has a clean margin of fifteen cents a bushel above the Milwaukee market. Not infre- quent. however, No. 2 wheat is still further reduced in grade by the wheat Shylocks, and a difference of thirty- eight cents a bushel cioited. The proofs of such reductions in grade are overwhelming, and convict the Washburn tribe of wheat sharks of the most barefaced swindling of the f wraers. Here is another case that smells strongly of robbery. At Melrose, in Si earns county, abont eighty miles fro n Minneapolis, No. 4 w heat brings but 28 cents a b ishel. T.iis is twenty ceuis below the market qnotation at the latter place. The cost of trans- portation surely does not amount to twenty a bushel, or sixty dollars a car. Then, all the No. 4 wheat purchased at Melrose is pronounced by good judges to lie a fair quality of No. 3 wheat, and if properly graded would sell, at Minnea|*olis prices, for 63 cents a bushel. This gives the purchasers thirty-five cents a bnshel, out of which they will have to pay perhaps five cents for transportation and handling. This is a pretty round profit, it must be confessed, for these honorable millers to pocket! It is not the market prices of this, that or the other grade of wheat of which the farmers complain, That is regulated by the law of supply and demand. But they do complain, and with very good reason, of the dis honest practices of the hired tools of the Washburn gang of wheat Shylocks in fahitiying grades, and thus de- liberately robping them of from twenty to a hundred and fifty per cent, of the product of their labor. The combination, conceived in sin and brought forth in iniquity, is sap- ping the life blood of the state. It was organized for robbery by a gang of consienceless knaves, the chief of whom is now seeking to represent his victims in the Congress of the United States. Such brazen effrontery is without a parallel in American politics. It most and it shall be re- buked.—St. Paul Globe. The national beaks have » capital of and they have loaned to the people MHttMm. la them inhatkm ia that f p. $ fiCfte gudi-|Koito|altßt ¦*. STATE ORGAN OP THE Independent Party OF MINNESOTA. This party is now established reality iu the state of Minnesota, sustained by thousands of votes, with organizations in several coun- ties and a perfected state organi- zation. It will enter the field next year prepared to make a still more vigorous canvass for success; com- mittees and*clubs willbe organized in every county, and it will not give up the contest until it has carried the slate or forced th© dominant party, whichever party that may be, to adopt its princi- ples. The Independents need in such a battle a STATE ORGAN, to which they can look for defence, lor facts and arguments. The Anti-Monopolist proposes to constitute such an organ. PRINCIPLES, It willbe devoted to the estab- lishment of the following princi- ples: I. That no peace can come to a distracted and embittered country through either of the old party organizations;—they represent the passions and resentments of sec- tions and the wrath and hates of a terrible civil war. 11. 1 hat the success of a new party upon new issues would as- suage the evil passions of the coun- try; divide up the popular vote up- on a new basis; destroy the race- poiitics. of the south, and assure the nation peace and repose. 111. 1 hat the powers of govern- ment should not be med to en- rich the few and impoverish the many, but to arrest the aggres- sions and cunning of the few. In other words “to take care of the poor, because the rich can take care of themselves.” IV. 1 o this end a policy of finance is neceessary which shall insure employment to labor, pros- perity to the whole people, and the crushing out of all tendencies to aristocracy and claws pnveleges. \. 1hat it is not so necessary to resume specie-payments for the benefit of the capitalist, as it is to resume prosperity for the benefit of the impoverished and suffering multitude. VI. That the demonetization of silver was intended to increase the value of money at the expense of labor, and to enrich the creditor cluss; it is a reversion to barbarism and can only produce the most de- structive consequences. VII. That all the paper curren- cy required by the people should be issued directly by the general government, without cost to the people, beyond the cost of printing it; and that we are opposed to the withdrawal of the greenbacks. We ask all parties who agree with us in the support of these principles, to aid us placing the Anti-Monopolist iD every house in Minnesota. We are entering upon events which will either de stroy liberty or establish it firmly and forever on the face of the earth. Lei each do his part toward the circulation of the truth. W e trust each of our subscribers will act as an agent to so.icit sub- ! scribers for the Anti-Monopolist, f We propose to make it a first I class Newspaper; also to devote space each week to literary and scientific matter; and to fearlessly in onr editorial columns every public question which msy concern the welfare of the people, TERMS. Our terms will be as follows, we i prepaying postage in each case. tf Single copy one year $2.00 {j six months LOO * three « 50 f * six weeks 25 In clubs of five or more, to one address, as follows: For one year SLSO each For six mouths 85 each With an extra copy, free, to the party getting up the club. Show this to your neighbors. All papers will be discontinued at the close of the period paid for. poiATius Dowklly, Proprietor.

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Page 1: TTie JAnti-Monopolist. diamptp. fiCfte gudi-|Koito|altßt GREENBACK · 2019. 3. 21. · TTie JAnti-Monopolist. year ago ithad no organization in even a half dozen. Ben, Harrison of

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diamptp. County Attorney; G. W, Morrill,Anoka, Democrat.

County Recorder; A. A. Allard ofAnoka.GREENBACK TICKET.

IFor Representative in Congress, Ist District

WILLIAMMEIGHEN,Of Fillmore county.

A Greenback county convention washeld at Winona Oct 19, when E. D,Fellows was nominated for senator.H. O. Billings, Edward Ely, and H.B. Waterman, representatives. TheDemocratic nominees were endorsed forauditor and attorney.

For Representative n Congress. 2a District,GEORGE C. CHAMBERLAIN,

Of Dakota County.For Representative in Congress, 3d District,

I. DONNELLY,01 St. Paul.

POLITICAL MEETINGS

HON. IGNATIUS DONNELLYwill address his fellow citizens asfollows:STATE TICKET.

For Judge of the Supreme Court,O. M. MEAD,Of Rice Conntv.

Glynden, Saturday, Oct. 26.Moorhead, Monday, 28.Detroit, Tuesday, 29th.Perliam, Wednesday, October 80th.Elizabeth, Thursday, Cct. 31, at 1 p.m.Fergus Falls do. at 7p. m.Poinme de Terre, Friday; Nov. 1.

The above meetings will be held inthe evening; speaking to commenoeabout 7:30 o’clock. Friends of thecause are requested to give the neces-sary notice and arrange as to halls.

For State Auditor,O. 11. PAGE,

Of Olmsted County

For Clerk of the Supreme Court,W. G. JEI3B,

Of Meeker County.

HENNEPIN 30J J TY ZHUH32K NDM-INFIONS.

For Auditor—ll. F. A. Drukhammer.

OUR CONGRESSIONAL CAND

Register of Deeds—A. F. AlkenySheriff— E. A. Cramsie.County Attorney—R. C. Benson.Coroner—Dr. L. Damm.Surveyor—A. 11. Branch.Senator —Hon. Eugene M. Wilson,Representatives—C. B. C. Dough

erty, Minneapolis; F. A. Clark, Minneapolis; A. 1\ Lane, Champlin.

DATES.Your choice Money, or Brains

which ?

If Mr. Washburn should happen tobe elected he ought not to berate thegreenback, for it will have contributedto his success more than all things else.

We know that some very dishonestmen have been managing Mr. Wash-burn’s canvass, and we know that theyhave immense pecuniary interests atstake in his electiou—interests so greatthat they could well afford to spendtens of thousands of dollars to have aCongressman in Washington whomthey could rely upon to protect themfrom exposure and from the apprehend-ed necessity of being called upon toanswer for the frauds they have com-mitted, and by which they have pro-fitted.—Pioneer Press.

MEEKER CO. NOMINATIONS.Senator; V. P. Kennedy.Representative; YVm. M. Campbell.County Auditor; G. B. Phelps.Register of Deeds; Aug. T. Koebner,County A ttorney ; L. C. Spooner.County Surveyor; J. P. Mann.

County Commissioner, 2nd disThomas Vinaeke.

DAKOTA CO. NOMINATIONS.

State Senator; C. I*. Adams, VermilionRepresentative, First District, Charles

B. Lowell, of Hastings.2 dis.; Nathan Ku'erscm, of Hampton.'ld, Cornelius Guiney of Mendota.

Washburn’s sole reliance is money.The three liandred thousand dollarswhich he made by his swindling fail-ure gives him the money to attempt tobuy his way to congress.—Globe.

4th, George W. Dilley of I'armingtousth, Edward P. Hyland, of Lakeville,County Auditor; Michael Scanlon oi

Mendota.Commissioner, Second District, JohnFerris of Hampton. 3d district, JohnBresnehan of Mendota.

EDITORIAL NOTES.

Towm elections in Connecticut showgood Greeuhack gainß,

RICE CO. NOMINATIONS.

Senator; Philo Woodruff, of Faribault,Representative, Ist district, Osman Os

manson of Wheeling.2d dis., Elias Hobbs of Northfield,

Banning speaks at Anoka on Satur-day evening of this week,

A new Greenback paper in NewHampshire, the Granite State,

.Id dis., George W. Turner, Faribaul4th dis., C. B. Jackson of Morristown.sth dis.,N. H. Swaine of Forest.

The Mainites in Minnesota will findour letter from Maine interesting read-ing.

Auditor; E. B. Van Horn, FaribaultCourt comm., George M urphy, do.Supt. ef schools ; C. W. Eye, do.County commissioner, 3d dist. I). Cav-anaugh, of Faribault. sth dist., Timothy O’Grady, of Forest.

The Globe copied last week two ex-two excellent articles on the currencyreform.

Donnelly is making a thorough cam-paign. He speaks once every day, andsometimes twice.

mmmm bKAMSKY CO. NOMINATIONS.

At a regular meeting of Council No.5, of the National Greenback party ofRamsey county it became necessary toremoddle the ticket hereto set forth inconsequeneo of several resignations.The following is now the authorizedticket:

The membership of the O. E. S. inConnecticut is 1791. The G. C. recom-mended the new ritual.

Are not the remarks on the recentelections found on our first page, pecu-liarlyencouraging ?

District Judge, W. Wilkin.Probate Judge, C. N. Bell.Bhenff, James King.Auditor, Charles Fassavaot.Senator, 23 dist., William L*. Kelly.

“ 24th dist., C D O'Brien.Representative, Ist and 2d wards, T.Reardon. Do. 3d ward, J. Mainzer.Do. 4th ward, L. I>. Hodges. Do. sthward, James Smith Jr.

Read the remarks of Senator Thur-man on the national bauks and theOhio campaign, found on another page.

Next week will be the last paper wecan issue before election, and in it weshall have a few earnest words to sayto Greenback voters.

Anoka has 53 campaign subscribersfor the Anti-Monopolist, and is thebanner town. The second largest isNorthfield with 48.For Representative from county, S.

Nadeau.County commissioners, J Wagner, J FHoyt city ; E O Rene, county.Superintendent of Schools, EugeneHendrickson.

So far in the fall elections the Re-publicans have lost ten members ofcongress. Of these the Greenbackershave taken five.

A Greenback delegate conventionmet at Lamberta, Redwood county,October 12tli. At this meeting CharlesPorter, an old Republican, offered thefollowing resolution which was unani-mously adopted: ‘‘Whereas the Na-tional Greenback party has no candid-ate for representative to congress in thesecond congressional district, andWhereas Hon. Henry Poehler in hisletter to Mr. Cook, has fullyendorsedthe National Greenback party, there-fore Resolved that we endorse Hon.Henry Poehler, and recommend himto the support of the Greenback partyof Redwood couuty.”

If you w ill make it your religiousduty to take every thing by the smoothhandle, you will save yourself a greatmany unhappy hours.

The Rice couny Greenbackers metin the court house at Faribault, Oct, 1Cand nominated a full ticket which willbe found elsewhere.

One year ago we scarcely had anoutspoken Greenback paper in thisState except the Anti-Monopolist;now we have a dozen.

The communication of C, B, Lowellof Hastings, was received Tuesday,too late for insertion this week, itwillappear in our next.

Those who love the greenback shouldsee that their vote is cast for men who,by the necessities of their circumstan-

Anoka co. nominations.c ‘*A county convention was held onSaturday last when the Greenback andDemocratic parties united on the fol-lowing nominations;

County commissioner; John C. Smithof Oak Grove, Greenback.

ces, willhvve to labor in their

Friends of the Greenback erase inany towns in the 2d congressional dis-trict, outside of Dakota and Rice coun-ties, can procure them by writing tothis office.

Auditor: H. E. Lepper, of Anoka,Greenback.

Sheriff; J. C. Frost, Anoka, Dem.,the preeent incumbent.

Judge of Probate. Hiram Tims*ton, Anoka, Greenback.

The Greenback party is now an or-ganised power in a very bugs numberof tbe counties of this Stefa. One

• ’ v-,'-V

TTie JAnti-Monopolist.year ago it had no organization in evena half dozen.

Ben, Harrison of Indiana, wantedan “idiot asylum” for the Greenback-ers: now, that he can’t be elected sena-tor from the State, he is mad enoughto go into an asylum himself,

In the south there is a general com-ing over to the Greenback party ofboth whites and blacks. In NorthCarolina a colored man has been nom-inated for congress by the new party.

The failures of 1878 up to Sept. Ist,when the bankrupt law expired were8768, liabilities $197,000,000 ; againstagainst 5565, and $141,000,000 forthe same period of last year.

We give this week our indictment ofthe Republican party. We chai'gethem with a vast amount of injustice,ci'ime and wrong, and whoever votesfor that party, votes to perpetuate thiswrong against his own interest and theinterests of the laboring classes.

Long Lake Oct. 14th, 1878.An Independent Greenback Labor

club was organized in the town ofMedina, last Saturday evening withthirty charter members. At presentwe have over 100 names signed to ourconstitution, and we shall increasethis to to another An earn-est working organization of this kindis needed in every town in the coun-ty, so that we may he able to pell thefull strength of the party in Novem-ber.— Workman.

Scarcity of money makes labor theslave of capital.

An abundance of money makes cap-ital the servant of labor.

Scarcity of money concentrateswealth in the hands of a few—leavingthe masses destitute.

An abundance of money distributeswealth equitably among all classes ofpeople.

Scarcity of money strengthens thearistocracy at the expense of the com-mon people.* Scarcity of money eventuates in thedestruction of free institutions, bydegraitingthe people below the stand-ard of self-government.

Its path is toward feudalism for thefew and barbarism for the many. Itis incompatible with progressive civi-zation and human freedom.

The Republican convention of Car-ver county resolved in favor of specieresumption and that the inevitableloss by irredeemable and unlimitedpaper currency would fall on thelaboring classes.— Ex.

The Republicans of Carver countyare challenged to show wherein specieresumption can possibly be of onecent’s advantage to them or anybodyelse, except bankers and bondholders.They are further challenged to showthat our greenback currency is eitherirredeemable or unlimited paper. Andthey are still further challenged toshow that anybody has ever sufferedany loss by it, or that any inevitableloss through it can ever fall on thelaboring classes.

We pity these blind devotees ofparty, led by demagogues as blind asthemselves; for they remind us of tbeolden days when blind fanatics tookthe life of their best friend, theSavior; aud the prayer used is theappropriate one by which to addressthe heavenly Throne in behalf ofthese Republicans. Father, forgivethem, for they know not what theydo.

speech, which was well received. Mr.A. P. Lane spoke in reply to Col.Hicks, (Republican, and champion ofthe school book ring in the last legis-lature,) Mr. Lane is a townsman ofours—one of the real workingmen,who earns his bread by the sweat ofhis brow, is a good speaker and readydebator—candidate for the legislaturein the 27th district, and one who. ifelected, will look after the interest ofthe laboring class, and has the abilityto set forth their wrongs and defendtheir rights. Progkess.

Supreme ignorance dictated theabove resolutions, for it can beproved, that the Greenback system offinance would save every workingmanof them at least one hundred dollarsevery year. It would lessen his taxes,increase the value of his farm, givehim better prices for his produce, andmore of the comforts of home for hisfamily. Yet he will fight it! Poor,blind partizan *

Champlix. Oct. 9, IS7B.Editor Anti-Monopolist

The National Greenback party ismaking good headway in this town,which has heretofore been almostsolid Republ.can having bad onlyfrom three to fifteen Democraticvotes out of a total of 70 to 90,—thisyear we calculate to divide—and givethem the smallest slice.

Matters in Maine.Liberty, Oct. 5.

Editor Anti-Monopolist:Chase oilers his paper, the Chroni-

cle, from now until aster a Greenbackpresideht is elected for two dollars.

Our town contains 260 voters. Be-fore our state election we counted 76Greenbackers. We afterwards raisedthe number to 85. When the voteswere courted I was surprised to findthere were only 49 hard money votes,paupers and all. I say paupers, be-cause one was led up to the polls, andthrew a straight hard-moneyvote. Such votes make paupers, forhard money and hard times alwaysgo together, and hard times arealways characterized with sufferingand poverty. A 1 manner of dishon-orable means were resorted to stealour votes. A Greenbacker whengoing to the polls was handed a voteby the postmaster. Upon discoveringthat it was for hard money, he toldthe postmaster he did not propose tovote that way. Upon which thepostmaster told him if he did not hewould not pay him what he owedhim.

A prominent citizen of this townwent to Belfast in camp-meeting timeand while there was invited to thehouse of a wealthy citizen to taste ofhis punch, and there met withEugene Hale, candidate for congress.After the beverage had been passed,conversation turned upon politics. Allsaid that Hale was sure to win, andMr. Hale said he had no doubt aboutit, the only question being whetherhis majority would be large or small.Finally Mr. Hale asked the gentlemanfrom Liberty what his views were.He replied that he was a Greenbacker,doubled and twisted and dyed in thewool, and that if Mr. Hale came to hisplace he might hear him give fiveGreenback lectures every day. Mr.Hale remarked that he would get ex-hausted, to which he replied that hewas a breech loader, and never gotexhausted.

Well, the election is over in Maine,but if it were to come off in Novem-ber we would not have to get the leg-islature to elect our governor. Peo-ple thought after election politicswould die down, but several in ourtown that were then in favor of hardmoney are now Greenbackers. Re-publicans here are sick and dis-gusted.

The people are studying finance andintend to keep «n studying withoutthe aid of foreign teachers who onlyteach them to steal, and who by legis-lation pay $125.000,000 for the silverwe are now using. We want moregreenbacks, less bank notes, and thebonds to be be paid off according tothe original contract; and we arebound to see it done.

Wayland Knowltox.

SQUEEZED TO THE LOWEST POSSIBLE

We have a live Greenback clnb—-hold meetings once a week, and are inhopes of winning over to our ranks allbut about a dozen Fossils. who aredetermined to votdihe ticket labelled“Republican” till Gabriel blows histrumpet—or at least till Grant getsbis lesson learned of theand emperors of the old world, andcomes back and establishes .his stronggovernment, or empire, and then behis most obedient subjects.

We have had two good Greenbackrallies—last night Mr. Kelly of Bt.Raul favored os with an excellentspeech, and the ladirs cheered nswith their preecnoe and one of tn—.Mrs. M. J. Colburn) made t aksrt

POINT“Igive the farmer the lowest grade

his sack contains, and submit that itis just what lie is ent ; tled to.”—Leon-ard Kennel!, inspector for Minneapo-lis Washburn mills, in a card in thePioneer Press. Oct. 13.

HOW THE TABLES ARE TURNED.The Inter Ocean says: “The strang-

est thing about it is, that certain Republicans belonging to the party, thatwas father of the Greenback, and thedefender of its name and reputution,should in the course of fifteen years,when every promise has been redeem-ed, and it stands before the worldhonored, turn about to slmder thisoffspring as “rag money.” while itsold enemy con.es to the front in ful-some praises.” Exactly so, come tolowa and you will find that our Re-publican editors and politicions arethe vilest copperheads, while manywho received that epithet in time ofthe war “now come to the front”bringing forth fruit meet for repent-ance. Strange turning of the tables.So itis, many a drunkard becomes re-formed. while an upright man takeshis place in the gutter.— Salional.

HE WILL BE ELECTED.Donnelly is having rousing meet-

ings wherever he goes, an 1 enthusiasm is s'reading. Let the Democra-cy stand firm and he will be elected,there is no doubt about it.—St. CloudTimes.

There is no question about it—ev-ery man who is not a bondholder or amoneylender who votes against theNational Greenback party this fall,goes directly against his own interest.He really consents to allowing him-self to be robbed and virtually assistsin the robbery.

The Wilmar Gazette says: “Moneyis a scarce article in that county atpresent, but be bears no one advocat-ing the Greenback measure as a meansof relief.”

It is evident the phonograph hasnot yet reached that benighted re-gion.

OUR STATE lICKET.The National Greenback state tick-

et deaerres the notice of every voter,had especially is It the ticket forth*

farmers of Minnesota to support.Now why?

First, the candidates stand uponthe grand principles and platform ofthe same money and the same privi-leges for all classes.

Second, the men are men of theclass that is burdened. They knowthe wants of the class and the need ofa remedy.

0. H. Page, candidate for state au-ditor, is a farmer living in Olmsteadcounty. He is an able man. a goodspeaker, and has for many years beena He has eveiy-thing to commend himself to thelarge mass of voters in the state.

W. G. Jebb, the candidate forclerk of the supreme court, is a wellknows farmer of our own county.He lives in Union Grove, is a vigor-ous writer ahd speaker in defence ofGreenback principles. —Litchfield Independent.

Hon. I. Donnelly was greeted by alarge and intelligent audience at thisplace on Friday evening, and his ad-mirable and convinciugly logicalspeech of two hours and a half waslistened to with marked attention andwithout any signs of weariness on thepart of his auditors. The speechabounded in telling points, and welltold anecdotes, eliciting frequent ap-plause. His masterly arraignment ofthe wheat ring was just what thefarmers desired to hear, and it will gofar toward giving Mr. Donnelly votesthat might otherwise be counted forthe candidate of the ring. It wasmade very clear to a good many thatMr. Washburn is not the man to rep-resent the farmers’ interests. Mr.Donnelly’s greenback arguments, de-livered in his clear and forcible style,are well calculated to set men think-ing seriously on the financial ques-tion and we should not be surpristdto hear soon of a number of green-back converts in this section. Mr.Donnelly was followed in a short ad-dress by Major Newson who, as a lifelong Republican, urged the support ofMr. Donnelly as the real friend of theproducing classes an.! the enemy ofplundering monopolies. —Lac QuiParle Co. Press.

HOW THEY CHEAT THE FARMERSThe Minneapolis Millers’ associa-

tion. through Bill King’s and DaveBlakely's newspapers and Bill Wash-burn's speeches, claim that they payfor wheat almost as much as is paidin Milwaukee and Chicago for thesame grades. This claim is absurdupon its face, although the figuresgiven apparently warrant their pre-tense. For instance, the prices ofwheat on Wednesday were: In Mil-waukee—No 2. 78 cents; No. 3. 64 1-2cents; No. 4,561-2 cents. In Min-neapoLs—No. 2, 72 cents; No. 3, 63cents; No. 4, 48 cents. The differencebetween the two markets shown bythese figures is not very great, and ontheir face the figures sustain theclaim of the Washburnians that afair price is paid for wheat. But thecolored gentleman in the fence comesin just here: When a farmer offers aload of No. 2 wheat it is graded bythe Minneapolis ring as No. 3, andinstead of getting 75 cents, the marketprice of No. 2 wheat, he receives but63 cents, the price ofNo. 3. The samewheat, if taken to Milwaukee, willgrade No. 2 and bring 78 cents abushel. It will be seen that theMinneapolis purchaser has a cleanmargin of fifteen cents a bushel abovethe Milwaukee market. Not infre-quent. however, No. 2 wheat is stillfurther reduced in grade by the wheatShylocks, and a difference of thirty-eight cents a bushel cioited. Theproofs of such reductions in grade areoverwhelming, and convict theWashburn tribe of wheat sharks ofthe most barefaced swindling of thef wraers.

Here is another case that smellsstrongly of robbery. At Melrose, inSi earns county, abont eighty milesfro n Minneapolis, No. 4 w heat bringsbut 28 cents a b ishel. T.iis is twentyceuis below the market qnotation atthe latter place. The cost of trans-portation surely does not amount totwenty a bushel, or sixty dollarsa car. Then, all the No. 4 wheatpurchased at Melrose is pronouncedby good judges to lie a fair quality ofNo. 3 wheat, and if properly gradedwould sell, at Minnea|*olis prices, for63 cents a bushel. This gives thepurchasers thirty-five cents a bnshel,out of which they will have to payperhaps five cents for transportationand handling. This is a pretty roundprofit, it must be confessed, for thesehonorable millers to pocket!

It is not the market prices of this,that or the other grade of wheat ofwhich the farmers complain, Thatis regulated by the law of supply anddemand. But they do complain, andwith very good reason, of the dishonest practices of the hired tools ofthe Washburn gang of wheat Shylocksin fahitiying grades, and thus de-liberately robping them of fromtwenty to a hundred and fifty percent, of the product of their labor.The combination, conceived in sinand brought forth in iniquity, is sap-ping the life blood of the state. Itwas organized for robbery by a gangof consienceless knaves, the chief ofwhom is now seeking to represent hisvictims in the Congress of the UnitedStates. Such brazen effrontery iswithout a parallel in Americanpolitics. Itmost and it shall be re-buked.—St. Paul Globe.

The national beaks have » capitalof and they have loanedto the people MHttMm. la them

inhatkm ia that f

p.

$

fiCfte gudi-|Koito|altßt ¦*.STATE ORGAN

OP THE

Independent Party •

OF MINNESOTA.This party is now established

reality iu the state of Minnesota,sustained by thousands of votes,with organizations in several coun-ties and a perfected state organi-zation. It will enter the field nextyear prepared to make a stillmorevigorous canvass for success; com-mittees and*clubs willbe organizedin every county, and it will notgive up the contest until it hascarried the slate or forced th©dominant party, whichever partythat may be, to adopt its princi-ples.

The Independents need in sucha battle a

STATE ORGAN,to which they can lookfor defence,lor facts and arguments.

The Anti-Monopolist proposesto constitute such an organ.

PRINCIPLES,It willbe devoted to the estab-

lishment of the following princi-ples:

I. That no peace can come to adistracted and embittered countrythrough either of the old partyorganizations;—they represent thepassions and resentments of sec-tions and the wrath and hates of aterrible civil war.

11. 1hat the success of a newparty upon new issues would as-suage the evil passions of the coun-try; divide up the popular vote up-on a new basis; destroy the race-poiitics. of the south, and assurethe nation peace and repose.

111. 1 hat the powers of govern-ment should not be med to en-rich the few and impoverish themany, but to arrest the aggres-sions and cunning of the few. Inother words “to take care of thepoor, because the rich can takecare of themselves.”

IV. 1 o this end a policy offinance is neceessary which shallinsure employment to labor, pros-perity to the whole people, andthe crushing out of all tendenciesto aristocracy and claws pnveleges.\. 1hat it is not so necessary

to resume specie-payments for thebenefit of the capitalist, as it is toresume prosperity for the benefitof the impoverished and sufferingmultitude.

VI. That the demonetization ofsilver was intended to increase thevalue of money at the expense oflabor, and to enrich the creditorcluss; it is a reversion to barbarismand can only produce the most de-structive consequences.

VII. That all the paper curren-cy required by the people shouldbe issued directly by the generalgovernment, without cost to thepeople, beyond the cost of printingit; and that we are opposed to thewithdrawal of the greenbacks.

We ask all parties who agreewith us in the support of theseprinciples, to aid us placing theAnti-Monopolist iD every housein Minnesota. We are enteringupon events which willeither destroy liberty or establish it firmlyand forever on the face of the earth.Lei each do his part toward thecirculation of the truth.

W e trust each of our subscriberswill act as an agent to so.icit sub- !scribers for the Anti-Monopolist, f

We propose to make it a first Iclass Newspaper; also to devotespace each week to literary andscientific matter; and tofearlessly in onr editorial columnsevery public question which msyconcern the welfare of the people,

TERMS.Our terms will be as follows, we i

prepaying postage in each case. tfSingle copy one year $2.00 {j

“ “ six months LOO“ * three « 50 f* “ six weeks 25

In clubs of five or more, to oneaddress, as follows:

For one year SLSO eachFor six mouths 85 eachWith an extra copy, free, to the

party getting up the club.Show this to your neighbors.Allpapers will be discontinued

at the close of the period paid for.poiATius Dowklly,

Proprietor.