w^a p.i f -b;^;^^.' .#' ^-^c^. '-r!^^T^^o^ <■- .-^"^ .^ ^0 =5 . ^:.":'%"^^ / s '' ^^ '/ c- \' . ' -^^ .^^' ; %.. '^ v v>' V •\' 3^% "00^ ^ ' / „ c s *> x'^ ^ v^^^ . vOo. ^: '' ""^ V^ ^ JF:-.... . •>>. ^ . * « I V «^ ./.".OS" ^V ■'^. ,^^ ''^^. v-^^ x^^ .0 o ^0' ^"^-. ^y x^^. v_...>;->^-^^' v>^ V' ^ ^^ ■■-■ " >A^^-- .0 c- 00 K 1 » '^ oV n >, v-es' o5 "^ci- •"■^.s.^ ^^ '•*i. \' * .^^ ^o 0^- ^'' r i./, * •. N o ^ A^'^ -P. ■p '^^ ,^\ 1^ ' ^ ^- TfT <^'^/ A-^' / '/. 'c ■V ^^^ /•% .^^' •>-- 0^ .-^' .^^■^ /^ \0c?^ " V — -■, :. - ^ ^ ■ ..,__^ T nOc>. i.- ■O »^" A REMARKABLE BOOK. >uld be in the Hands of Every Voter. .* -'Ill faren the land, to hastening ills a prey. Where wealth accumulates and men decay." CIVILIZATION. VAN AND THE TIMES, r-JW'tvaji 13 "V :^2/M->~ > B FRANCIS R. (JOLE, Ph. D., LL. D., OF^THE CHICAGO BAK. ^|t of "The Citizen Sovereignty Association," Director of ■ 'College i of Citizenship," Etc. lO Cents. Unej of the greatest campaign documents ever issued in the history Uf American politics. ^^'' lable, honest, vivid and fearless presentation of the ! uentjous questions of the pending campaign, from a historic, '^tifi^- and statesman's standpoint, SOMETHING RED HOT FOR THE CAMPAIGN. Mrs. Malaprop said to a visiting friend, as^I!5"*TSI'fi'ZIIS^d her a . hero ! if you'll read that contentively you'll get lots of inflammation.' if you but go over this little work contentively, intentively or attenl will get lots of inflammation and a heap of information on the great q\ the hour. An old lady, on htanng a minister remark "The world is full oi said she didn't believe it, so little of it found its wa}' into her purse, She haj pened to be living under the gold standard. Copyright 1896 by Francis K. Cole. ' To the common people, the producers of the land, To Liberty's great defc nding band, Who have placed the signet of their co^yjiajfwiiwg power On all civilizations, in spite of despot, dungeon and tower Who, from the promontories of equality and the ballot Will never conic down to be plutocracy's valet. In time of peril > ou don't stand on a per cent, and hoi After the war is over, for an honest? dollar; To you, whose burning wrongs are to conflagration fanned By plutocracy's dojngs and "The public be damned," To the great common people, the glory of the state, This little book I dedicate. The Author. Definitions. Bimetallism, double standard and free silver mean the same thin^ betore the law as full legal tender money and free and equal access to i6 to r means that, as both gold and silver are precious metals amount of silver in the world is less than i6 times that of gold, and ratio was i6 to i before it was fraudulently demonetized, i6 oz. o; coining should be equal in value to i oz. of gold. The old Roman economists said that the value of money was n quantity of it in circulation than in the substance in which the unit was and this was incorporated into the Pandects of Justinian. Ricardo commodities should rise or fall in price in proportion to the increase tion of money, I assume as an incontrovertable fact." Note. Statistics used on this volume are mostly taken from U. S. Statistical Ab Reports, U. S. Bureau of Treasury Statistics, and the standard English statistici' and Sauerbeck. This Pablication will k supplied in large quantities at reduced pri Address the author, 1127 Association Building, equi ;he mi and rice .live ore in ;mbod id "1 am sa . -x, 1 Mu v.^'^ ces. Jhioago- iF GIVILaIZAT^ION. 13:^.1^ Ji^isr .AJluious ministry. Now that the clouds of prejudice have cleared away we see the cupidity, moral turpitude, sijurious patriotism and political blindness of the I ime. (iarrison, Lovejoy, Phillips, all ijhilan- thropists and friends of man, were de- iiou'iced as their country's enemies and attacked by mobs, while the petty nin- compoops of part}' were given the seaLs of olHce and hailed as statesmen. 'I'iiink of it, slavery proclaimed the token of peace, the bond of union and the sum of national greatness! Al- uiost incredible, it stands a fact in his- tory; the awful spectacle in the mem- ory of living men. But the pomp, noise and authority «)f this gigantic wrong didn't overawe manhood, silence the voice of con- '^cience. nor confound the abiding wis- erate them as easily as men, as the work is always divided into special de- l)artments; and as they can be hired for less, generally get the jobs, throw- ing their fathers into involuntary idle- ness, thus making the child su^jport the parent, overturning immemorial custom and reversing nature's imperial decree. IMMIGRATION, CORRUPTION, ETC. Another matter that must not be iQst sight of in summing up the causes -V*- of our distress is the fiact that immi- '4 ration has been landing- on our shores ^^o iiiillions of ijaupers and ignorant for- ^ t igners till the overworked and disor- dered bowels of our republic cannot iissimilate them into our system of iiulependence and free institutions, These things, together with corrup- tion in oihce and favoritism in legisla- tion, such, for instance, as allowing iu- ut only after the injury was done and our protected industries stocked with foreign cheaj) labor. See the report of the Blair Senate investi- gating committee and testimony of labor officials, etc. Whenever working- men became dissatisfied with their w ages and would strike, the paui>ei*s of TJussia, Italy, etc., would be brought \u to take their places. Whole colonies of American workingmen have been swept away from these industries by this sys- tem. Because manufacturers have the prices of their products raised, thus enabling them to pay better wages, does not necessarily make them do so. Gould could have afforded to jjaj' his bootblack five dollars, yet he but paid his little nickel. Supply and demand you know comes in again, together with the rela- tive resiilt accomplished. Here in the United States more than in any other country the' productivity has been on the gain. An illustration of how w^ages are affected thereby: In 1850 in Mas- sachusetts each laborer produced 43 yards of print cloths; in 18S4 he pro- duced 102 yards, an increase of 143 per cent., and his wages jumped from 05 cents a day to $1.05, while the labor cost of the article decreased 33 per cent. .James G. Blaine, admittedly a good authority on tariff", while Secre- tary of State siiid, speaking of the cot- ton industry: "Undoubtedly the in- equalities iu the wages of English and Aiuerican operatives are more than counlerbalanced by the greater elti- cieucy of the latter," C. S. Hill, statisti- cian, republican, in argument before Tariff Commission, said our manufac- turing product in 1«S2 was $8,000,000,- 000, made by 5,250,000 hands; England's $4,000,000,000, by 5,140,200 hands. Here we see the American workman could be paid double the wages of the British without any tariff whatever. Our con- sul at Tunstill, England, reported that in cotton manufacture our productive capacity is 33 per cent, g-reater than England's and 72 per cent, greater than Germany's; in woolen manufacture, 23 and 40 per cent, more respectively. TABLE, COMPILED FROM TENTH CENSUS, SHOWING VALUE OP VA- RIOUS MANUFACTURED PRODUCTS. PER CENT. OF LABOR COST AND RATE OF DUTY EXISTING. Value of -g-^ ?>-g Industries. product. Labor, i-— £1 3 Ph o * Carpets $31,792,802 $6,835,218 21.5 47 Cotton" goods.. .210,950,383 45,614,419 21.6 50 Iron pipe, wr't.. 13,292.162 1,788,258 13.5 20 Oil, castor 653,900 44,714 6.8 194 Oil, linseed 15,393,812 681,677 4.4 54 Woolen .goods.. 160,606,721 25,836,392 16.1 70 Worsted goods. 33,549,942 5,683,027 16.9 68 *P«r cent. These facts conclusively prove that the workingman has received little benefit from this protection that does not protect, and that the farmer and the great body of the people were put under tribute to the big- manufactur- ers. This it is that makes protection a fraud and a snare, breeds great trusts and makes the people distressingly poor, while Carnegie and his ilk rear castles on the friths of Scotland and in Bingen on the Rhine. Is it possible that the people have forgotten the days of the McKinley tariff in 1892, when under a republican administra- tion labor troubles broke out all over the. land; riots at Homestead, the mi- litia called out in Montana, troops or- dered out in Tennessee, etc.? This it was that caused the avalanche in 1892, in favor of wiping out the rotten sys- tem, and had Cleve land proved true to the platform on which he was elected and bj' w^hich he secured the votes of the electorate, tariff would not be heard of in a day's travel. The Loan fisherman was elected on an anti-mo- nopoly platform, but has shown him- self to be the agent of plutocracy and the pliant tool of Wall, Lombard St. & Co. Here is something that brings enue will tall in that proportion ihis out in bold relief the inadeyuaey of is what happened. Under the Me We;^^ nrot^ction as practiced. The duties are bill the revenue was a surplus oi *y,yi4,- riommodities, thus protecting them 454 in 'D. f .^^^^74 m '.. ,G. «0. .00 hom foreign competition. The com- deficit in '94 The VVilson bil took ei- .rities are ownid by the big man- feet July 1, '«J4, and left a deficit of •acturer. The workingman owns his $42,805,223 in 90. From this we see l.boi-this is not protected from cheap that McKinleyism is far from a tonic, comnetmon t le cheapest kinds of for- The last year of the McKmley bill wit- "rabor coming into the United nessed a shrinkage of $72,000,000, while States without imposts, let or hin- the Wilson bill shovved an increase of drance, and underbidding the Ameri- $27,000,000. The balm of free silver c?n Nearly 800.000 of these immi- must be put in Atlas' wounds ana his grants landed during the last two tired feeling driven headlong before a years. John Bull says: "Blame h-your large bromo-seltzer dose of Bryanism. bloomin' heyes, hif you don't let in This done. Atlas would rise to his full my goods, Hi'll bring' over my factory stature of yore, i^rices would go up and and men." Foreign capitalists own and business boom. The following official control most of our large industries, figures show that the Punch and Judy They and home capitalists combine to ]H-rformance of tariff and protection is further personal ends. When litiga- neither the cause of hard times nor the tion was protracted, cumbersome and remedy: expensive a century ago in England, a TARIFF RATES, hiwyer was defined as a gentleman Ad Valorem Rate of Duty. 1892 1894 thai rescued your estate from your S^; ft^e/. uZam?faV^^red:;:: i:^ l^St enemies and kept it himself. But pro- Iron, etc., manufactures 55.40 68.41 tected Barons transplant the laborer's ^elfher' and manufactures of:: 33:fi6 ll'^\ enemy into our midst and appropriate Distilled sinrits 171.34 108. .54 all the protection to themselves. The ^,^S|^ft^^fasses: etc::: :::::V;::: 19.1 13:% charge is also made against the Wilson M^ood, etc 15.70 14.80 Protection bill that it provides insuffi- Wool, ^-^jf-^-- ed.::::::::: 41.07 4i:07 cient revenue. But it is not right EXPORTS AND IMPORTS. that all taxes should come out of the ^ear Exports. Import.. common people, and the Income tax is9i $884,480,810 $S44,91fi.l9fi would supplement it with abundance. 18| 930,278.148 827,402,462 The present tariff under normal con- jj;,94 S92'l43:547 654,995.151 ditions would even .supply the requisite 189,5'::. .! 807,508,165 731,969,965 amount. Everyone knows that con- According to the above, tariff makes traction of the currency always entails little difference with the country's con- a lowering of yirices. Now, our money ditions and the charge that importa- supplpy was cut in twain in '73 by de- tions under the Wilson law were so monetizing silver and retiring many enormous that the foreigner captured greenbacks. This caused the panic of our markets and made our workshojjs 1873-77. be it remembered, when the idle is unqualifiedly false. In '93 the Kepublica.ns were in full power. De- importations were $135,000,000 more monetization inaugurated a falling of than under the Wilson bill. One of prices, and sagacious statesmen of the the English gentry thought, from the time predicted a continuing decline, high time the servants were having on This decline was partially checked by one occasion, that they must have been the partial recognition of silver as monkeying Avith the Avine and forth- money from 1878 up to 1893, when the with proceeded to examine the top of Sherman bill was rejiealed. ^Money is the cask, Avhen he was advised to exam- nn .\tlas holding on his shoulders the' ine underneath. "Blockhead," the huge world of prices. In '93 he Avas so country gentleman stammered, "don't wounded and maimed and Cleveland you see the wine is missing at the top, made him so Aveary that he sunk terri- not the bottom?" This is the position bly under his precious load, and prices of the mi.sguicled republicans to-day; have been getting lower ever since, they see the deficiency at the surface XoAv, as most of our tariff duties are and scorn to examine beneath. No, the ad valorem (on the A-alue), it follows tariff is not an issue in politics this that the rcA'cnue diminished. An in- year, and the difference between the stance: If an import is Avorth one dol- McTvinley and Wilson bills is immaterial ]ar, and the duty is 50 per cent., the reA'- to the masses. No two tariffs Avere ever enue Avill be 50 cents, but if the price alike, but these resemble each other al- of the import falls 20 joer cent, the reA-- mostasmuchas Shakespeare's Dromios. i'resideut tjrant, in his messaj^e to Con- gress in 187.'!, advised tlie removal of the duty on certain Icinds of wool, and the McKinley bill had over :(,()()() articles on the free list, and whenever tariff sched- ules are ehanj^ed it is the bif>- establish- ments represented in the lobby that get the x)lums. Let us revert to THE INCOME TAX, something- more imjjortant. A small tax on incomes of $5,000 and upwards would swell to sutliciency the depleted streams of revenue. In 1805, when our aristoc- lacy, compared to what it is now. was as a crawling- caterpillar to the gorgeous butterfly, it realized our g-overnment $72,000,000. This tax is just and politic. It does seem to me that such a, measure needs no plea, much less ajjology, on the rugged mountains, rolling- prairies and ill the pensive valleys of patriotic Amer- ica. It is the ]n-opcrt.y of the rich that imjilores protection. It is this that in- cites envy and invites lawlessness. This it is that is defended by armories, guard- ed by the police and provided with the jiroteclion of the fire department. An Income tax is a matter of justice. Be- sides it is the policy of government to ]ay the burdens thereof ui^on those wlio can best bear them and feel them the least. It is really sad to see men who struggle hard to keep the w^olf of want from their door, echo the flimsy and dishonorable objections that plu- tocracy makes against it. The man who makes $5,000 and over annually and objects to paying- his mite toward the maintenance of the g-overnment under which he makes and enjoys it, is not fit to be an Anierican citizen. Like the man who has no music in his soid, "he is fit for treason, stratag-ems and spoils," and should not be trusted. The income tax tacked on to the Wilson bill was torn to pieces and declared unconstitu- tional by the watch dogs of plutocracy, the supreme court. The Constitution can be changed if the court cannot. Now we come to the cream of civiliza- tion, the backbone of the nation's sta- bility, the ]nire. philanthropic, sacri- ficing-, exemplary gentlemen of the world, who wanf an TTonest Dollar (?) and condescend to run the financial affairs of the ignorant, helpless people. Of course, you anticipate whom I refer to, the immaculate. BANKERS. Josh Billings said: "Young- man, don't g-it down on yur knees before the world — if \u do, it won't be long er the world will insist on yur giting down a peg lower. So if we kneel to the bankers it won't be long- ere they'll insist oji us begging- on our vest buttons if we are fortunate to have any then." They have well followed out Josh Bil- ling's recipe for making- rei)utations: "Tew mak a, big reputashun, giv pub- licly and steal privately," and dazzled the world with their public gifts. Yes, these men are all honorable, and look after the interests of the common people with all the affectionate care that the Avolf lavishes upon the lamb. 'J'hese men have United States interest-beai-- ing- bonds and under the National Baidc- ing- law enacted for their benefit they init them in Uncle Sam's hands and forthwith issue currency to 90 per cent, of the face value thereof, while the farmer or store-keeper must put tlieiir seciiritles, on A\hich ])erhaps they draw- no interest, into the hands of the bank- ers, and get but 20 or 25 per cent, of their real value and pay seven per cent, for it in the bargain. Any man with a pennyweight of brains in his head and an ounce of candor in his make-U]) will admit that the bankers have a rank s])ecial privilege. He also knows that there is not enoug-h of metallic money to meet the demands of business and that putting the issuing- of paper curency into private hands is a mighty danger- ous expedient. Garfield said: "Who- ever controls the volume of money of any country is absolute master of all industry and commerce." Bankers own stock in other monopolies, and other monopolies own stock in the banks, so v.lien the smaller business men need money they have to go to their rivals to save them, thus the mono])olists have been crushing out all their competitors. It is imperative that this should be stopped. When Reed, All ition and others screech about Uncle Sam getting out of the banking- business they are simjjly try- ing- to befog the issue, which is that the banks must get out of the govern- ing business. The leaders of the G. O. P. were bold enough in tiheir last convention to urge for the presidency a. Londion banker, Levi jMorton. of the firm of Morton, Ilose & Co., and repub- lican governor of ])lutocraticNew Y^'ork. If the republicans succeed this year their logical candidate in 1900 will be Baron de Bothschiid, the lord high ex- ecutioner himself. Let the g-overnment issue the ])a- per direct to the people and more peo- ple will be employed in banking. Rates will come down, and the riet earnings go to carry on ])iiblic improvements and lessen taxes. The jjcople should also ;\ tiiul equikible nienns of gelling- posses- sion of the RAILROADS, and regaining the empires of land that hMve been shamelessly graitedto scheming corporations styling them- selves Union Pacific, Santa 1\', etc., ^vhere this can be legally done on ac- count of broken agreements, violated clKirters, etc. In the first place the highways of a nation are the peoples'; in the second plat^e franchises an- spe- cial privileges and sliouldn't be toler- ated in a republic; in the third place, ihey «in be run more economically by t lie government without discrimina- tion's to places, houses and combines for patronage, and fourth, it would give employment to twice the number of men now employed therein, raise wages, cut the rates to the people, and return a. stream of revenue into the nation's treasury. Last year the net earnings of the railroads in the United States were $o22, 539,276. Some Euro- ])ean countries already own their rail- roads. (Germany operates hers, pays higher wages than before, employs 13 men to the mile, while here priA^ate cor- |)orations employ but four, and their rates have been not only cut down to the ])eo])le, but considerable amounxs are annually paid into the coffers of the nation. Carefully compiler! statisticsgive. the cost of running 14 cents a mile a coach, all told. This includes entire outlay of the company, fuel, engineer, etc., train and section hands, station agents, cost of repairs, stilaries of all officials and employes, even covers lobby- iiig and bribing at the various seats of legislation. As a coach carries 80 on an aveixige, it makes the total cost of travel a mile ])er person, one-sixth of one cent, or six miles for one cent. With such rates people could occasionally visit their sisters, cousins and aunts. If the government ran the railroads, advan- tages Avould l)e numerous, more persons would be employed, better wages paid, shorter hours and millions put into the nation's treasury, no tremendous strikes threatening to paraly/e trade (whoever lieard of a strike in the Post Office?), rates would be cut and freight lowered. There was a time in '03 w-hen miners Av(>re starving and farmers burning corn. They couldn't make a profitable exchange, because the railroads' was the lion's share. With loAver freight, the fruit rotting on the trees and ground of California could be exchanged for the products of our mills and factories, providing, of course, if there was a suffi- cient medium of exchange (money). Over and above all, the earnings wouldn't find their way into monopo- lists' pockets, to round up in European pleasure-seeking, and the purchase of monarchial titles. There would be no more .$15,000,000 duke transfers. On the contrary, the money would be cir- culating- among the people. I never saw a strong reason urged against the gov- ernment ownership of railroads. The objection that the government can't do it is puerile. Does not the government run the Postal business? This putting railroads in politics is all nonsense. The right kind of civil service will keep the machinery in good working order. Even now the United States courts run many of the largest roads through re- ceivers, and the curious pirt of it is w-hen the court gets it out of difficulty and on a good, paying basis, it turns 't over to monopolists and railway kings to be wrecked again. A bachelor M-rot-^ to a maid, in view of matrimony, of his virtues, ond went on to say he was pa- tient in afiiiction, as she could tell from his large, classical nose. The mafd re- plied: "He was patient indeed to bear the affliction of that nose 40 years." The people are particularly patient to stand the beak of the Vampire Monojio- lists these many years. Pascal said: "If Cleopatra's nose had been a littl? shorter, the face of the world would be changed." If we would cut off the bloodsucking beaks of the banks and railroads the face of American civiliza- tion Avould be beautiful, its ugly fea- tures softened and the w-hole radiate with universal joy. REFERENDUM AND PROPORTIONAL REPRESENTATION. As a tree is judged by its fruit, so a government should be judged by its laws. Why is there so iTiuch special legislation on our statute books, and so much corruption in office? Because the people have little to say about it. Their representatives are the masters and do as they please; no matter how treacherous to their constituency, or to what extent they violate the pledges on which they secured election, they cannot be removed. When another elec- tion comes around new questions arise and command attention, old wrongs are forgotten or lost sight of and other un- trustworthy men sneak into office, to again do the bidding of monopoly and neglect measures that w-ould promote the general good. In a discussion over the official conduct of a legi-slator, one neighbor asked of another what he really did, anyhow, and was answered: "What has he done? Wby, he built / \ two houses and started a store." Is not this about all the general run of them do? Local and special interests are served, the public domain freely granted in chunks as larg-e as princi- palities without consulting- the owners, the people, much less gaining their eonsent. The policy of government should be to make it as easy as possible to do right; to make dishonesty and bribery as hard as possible and remove unholy temptation. Our present sys- tem throws the doors of fraud wide open and sets a pi-emium upon di.shon- esty and perfidy. The people should have the veto pow er over special legis- lation and franchises. The talk of sending rich men to oftice because they don't need bribe money is all bosh. They may be honorary (onerary) and chaste, but are not the common people intelligent and chased; the patches on their trotisers seem to say so. The dogs of special legislation are ravenous and cunning, lender normal couditions, such as existed in the early days of the republic, when the country could boast of a sterling-charactered yeomanry, and before property was exalted and labor degraded, when wealth was fairly well distributed and ere ^Mammon and his withering creed held sway o'er the na- tion, it was not so much needed; but now, since manhood ha.s l)een so under- mined, wealth so centralized, and cor- porate interests so inimical to the com- mon welfare, it is a crying demand of the times. There will be no bribery and deals when there are no franchises to give away, and no selling of votes when the votes do not insure the delivery of the goods. Xo, let the people take a hand in legislation. They have been frozen out long enough. Adopt that statesmanlike, scientific, efficacious re- form, the initiative and referendum, h\ ^^ hich the ])eo])le can initiate beiie- ticial legislation by po))ular petition, and also, when desirable, compel the submission of any law to the great jury of the peo})le for approval or rejection. Then no such lobby poetry as the fol- lowing would be inspired: "Midas, they say, possessed the art, of old, Of turning whatsoe'er he touched to gold; Modern monopolists reverse it with ease, Touch with gold and turn 'em as they please." Campaigns would then reach a max- iinnm of education and a minimum of ])ers,onalities. This law should be sup- plemented with the imperial mandate by which obnoxious officials could be recalled during their tenure of office. It should also be supplemented by civil service and proportional representa- tion, by which the legislature and gov- ernment would be a true counterpart of the people. Each party would be represented in the halls of legislation to the force and extent manifested in the elections; no more, no less. Xo im; aginary lines of district boundaries ai'e to be allowed to disfranchise minori- ties and rob them of a voice in the gov- ernment. The senate committee on rep- resentation once reported: "Propor- tional representation is a system of great merit." Our system of districts you readily see can be so arranged by the party of power at the time of dis- tricting, so as to capture for the party as many of the districts as possible. If 100,000 votes are cast and say 20 sen- ators are to be elected, 5,000 should be sufficient to elect one. If there are four parties, republican party casts 35,000 the democrats 30,000, the populists f?5.- 000 a.nd the prohibitionists 10,000 votes; the repul)licans under our present sys- tem would likely elect all the senators, while the other 65,000 people wouldn't be represented at all, whereas an equit- able division would be seven repub- licans, six democrats, five populists and two proihibitionists. Garfield showed in the lower house, in '70, the non-effective- ness of the vote and annihilation of the freeman's will: "In my judgment it is the weak point in representative gov- ernment, as now organized, that a large portion of the people are disfranchised. There are 10,000 democrats in my dis- trict voting year after year without any more hope of having a representa- tive on this floor than in the commons cf Great Britain." Gerrymandering should cease. It is high time the gov- ernment should cease holding- ixp such examples of injustice to the eyes of its citizens. All these systems work splen- didly in Switzerland, in several Eu- ropean and American cities. "\Yherever tried it has proven a signal success. They verily could be called the acme ])urifiers of politics and legislation. When put in use the poet will feel com- [lelled to reverse his lines about the world. After saying this is a pretty good place to live in, he went on: "But to borrow or beg or get one's own, It's the worst world that ever was known." WAR AND EDUCATION. "Were half the power that fills the world with terror, Were half the wealth bestowed on camps and courts, Given to redeem the mind from error. There were no need of arsenals and forts." War, the wholesale murder of fathers, husbands, brothers and sons, should 9 be (liscouragecL Othello's occupation slioukl be changed to the sohooliua.ster. The cxi>enclitiire of our War and jS'avy departments in '93 Avas $79,817,857— $49,- 041,492 more than the expenses of main- taining- the ])ublic school system of the combined divisions of the South jVtlan- tic. South Central and Western States. This excess for war, too, while the illit- erate above the ag-e of ten, according- to the 1890 census, averag-ed, over 22 per cent. l'>rig-ham Young- said: "li tali's greatest resources were its women." And Brig-ham not only knew the re- sources of his state but also how to husband them, even if he was Young-. We should have less military and more education, so t'hat the rising- citizens of our states coidd know more of the g-ov- ernment under which they live, its re- sources and how to husband them. A word as to the character of education. It should not be a cramming process, and sliould be made as ag-reeable as pos- sible. 1 often think the jjupils would g-et along- as well and enjoy it more if they ]/ut less dates in their heads and more in their stomachs. Education shoidd flavor of the original significance of the Latin term, e, out, duco, to lead; to lead the inner man into outer life. More consideration should be given to the unfolding- of the character. The educa- tion should also be practical, with less lang-uages, dead or living, (one tongue is sutTicient, especiall}' for women), geometry, etc., and more of that which bears on humanity and everyday life, physically, mentally, morally, political- ly, industrially, commercially, socially. A comjjany of jokers were passing re- marks ujjon the shortness of a certain nuin's legs and one propounded: "How long -should a man's legs be, anj^how?" Bin Nye replied: "Long enough to reach the ground." So our education should reach the terra tirma of citizen- ship and the laws that govern the growth and health of the bodj% mind, society and the state should be taught and understood. Then if we had an aristocracy it would be of nature's creat- ing-. It would differ from t.hat described in Pope's lines: "Virtue they find too painful an endeavor, And content themselves with decencies forever." But an all-pervading aristocracj' of brains and character. Other questions, such as alien owner- shi]) of our land, (English and Scotch hold 20,000.000 acres, a Hollond syndi- cate "j.OOO.OOO, and a German 2,000,000,) postal savings banks, good roads, gov- ernment banking, land, and suffrage (.Miss representation in Congress would not be as bad as our present Mr. mis- representation), with just this reminder of the liquor traffic in the unique ver- biage of Mrs. Malaprop "intemperance is a monster with many heads, and creeps into the family like any conda or alli- gator and destroys its peace and hajipi- ness forever. But thank heaven a new Erie has dawned upon the world and soon the hydrant-headed monster will be overturned. Isn't it strange that men will put enemies in their mouths to steal away their heads?" will be skipped, to come to money — the great- est question that now agitates the pub- lic mind, the one that disrupted the po- litical parties and arrayed ])lutocracy against the commonalty. The UNMISTAKABLE ISSUE ( r the pending campaign is whether we want a gold standard, gold bonds and bank currency, or a bimetallic standard, government currency and no bonds, especiallj' in time of peace. The republican party stands for the former, the Jefferson ian democrats, Lincolnian republicans and populists for the lat- ter. Let tis take a resume of financial history, state irrefrag'tble facts ' and draw the inevitable conclusions. In 1792, with almost the first breath of national life, congress, acting on the report of Hamilton, concurred in by Jefferson, provided the young repub- lic with a bimetallic system of money at the ratio of fifteen to one, made the silver dollar . of 371^4 grains of pure silver the unit of value. In 1S34 the ratio was changed to 15.9SS (called six- teen) to one, but left the unit as before. Our daddies decided that in case of a change in the legal ratio the change .should be made in the rich man's money. Besides gold is more portable, and the same quantity is 16 times as valuable as silver, and instead of circulating- ac- cumulates in vaults, etc. In 1853 a law- was passed changing the weight, etc., of fractional coins and limiting their legal tender to five dollars, but still left the standard dollar unchanged. In 1373, without a word of warning and with the sneaking stealth of a midnight thief, John Sherman sli])ped through congress an act under the unpreten- tious title of "an act revising- and amend- ing the laws relative to the mint, assay ofRces and coinage," which in effect struck down about half the supply of our money. This assassination of sil- ver is the crime that, like Banquo's ghost, will not down, though the sheets of otir dailies, which are likened to cot- ton sheets, because so many lie in 10 tiuMU, has ofttMi pi'onoimcod it dead, written its epitaj)!!: "Lunacy, once ciazy, now dead." It still walks the i:if>ht and consigns to fast in the fires ol public condemnation Cleveland, Sher- man et al., till the foul crime done in its days of nature are burned and imrged iiway in its complete remonetization. Why did they do it? The answer is ])lain as way to parish church. The large holders of money and credits have alwaj'shad their bloody hands u[X)n the fair throat of legislation; being alert as to what affects their interests and immutably concerned in making money (their property) scarce. Scarce money means dear money, and dear money means cheap property. David ITume, the historian, says: "It is the proportion between the circulating money and the commodities in themar- Ivct that determines ])rices." Ricardo and a host of economists agree with him; btit, bringing in the opinions of noted thinkers on this point is like citing authorities on two and twomalve four. In 1816 England, at tlie instance of the incipient money power, went to a gold basis. By the same insidous in- fluence Germany went to a silver basis in 1857, as the discoveries of gold in California indicated an increasing sup- ])ly of that metal. But later the gold supply diminished, while silver in- creased year after year. This led Germany to demonetize silver, making the first step in that direction in 1871, and completing it in 1873; the same year France and the United States de- monetized it. No satisfactory explana- tion has ever been advanced for these acts, so vitally affecting property' and business. It was done so sleek here that no one understood that was the purport of the innocent-looking bill excepting Sherman and a few others. President Grant didn't know that it demonetized silver till long after the trick was ac- complished, and said he wouldn't have signed it had he known its intent. From that day the money power has been growing stronger and absorbing the wealth of nations, till to-day it is tre- mendous. The house of Rothschild con- trol $2,000,000,000 of property, one-half in money and bonds and paper immedi- ately convertible therein. The entire stock of gold in the ^vorld is $4,080,800,- 000, so (he house of Rothschild controls one-quarter of the gold in the world. Croesus wouldn't be in it to-day. Chaun- cey ]\rontebank Depew said at a ban- quet of magnates in New York not long since that they had a combination down there that could stop every wheel of industry in the land in 48 hours, and bring such a pressure to bear on con- gress that it dare not resist its de- mands. My countrymen, we have now met this monster face to face; the gauntlet has been picked up, and fight we must. The enemy is now upon us in the disguise of protection and "sound money." Shall this be a government of the pampered few? or be in fact "The land of the free and home of the brave?" DEMONETIZATION CONSEQUENCES. Let's trace: The demonetization of silver apd the destruction of greenbacks most certainly caused the panic and hard times of 1873 to 1877. No change of tariff schedules induced it. The ever operative law of supply and demand affects the value of gold. The coinage of silver about equaled that of gold. The demand for both, as the people were developing the vast resources of the country, was great and increasing. Therefore, cutting the supjjly of money one-half meant great appreciation of the remainder, though ijerhajis not 50 per cent, at once. The gold then in circula- tion must be taken into consideration. At that time, though, little was circu- lating, as it was before the resumption of specie payments and Germany had just started to a gold basis, taking- most of the floating gold of this and other countries. This check in the money supply started the money strin- gency. As a matter of course prices fell, and falling prices caused loss and business demoralization; they in turn destroyed confidence, making a full- fledged panic. This panic was not relieved till 1878, when the Bland-Allison act was passed through the agitation that took place in behalf of more money. This com- promise act (Bland intro hat Dantiean regions is this Cleveland, Bankers. McKinley, Rothschilds syndi- cate to lead us? It's time we were striking for our families, liberty and our native land. The scene reminds nu- of Mrs. Partington and Isaac. Ike \va^ bolting a whole pie and she exclaimed: "Don't be so glutinous, dear, or you'll get something in your elementary canal or sarcophagus one of these days that will kill you." If these bankers and plutocrats persist in being so ravenous they will get something into their saroophagus, and it will be done with mighty little ceremony, too. It will require in principal and 'n- terest .$500,000,000 to pay for the bonds so far issued and we've derived no ben- efit from it whatever. A lady wishing to preserve some small lieer asked her butler what was the best way to save it and he, very business-like, replied: "Put a barrel of good ale alongside of il." The way to save our gold reserve is to put lots of silver alongside of it. The Tnited States could have coined the seigniorage in the treasury, (it lay there idle to the extent or tens of millions) or issued certificates therefor, or even is- sued greenbacks. If Bankers and For- eigners will pay a premium for our Bonds (payable in coin, g-old or silver) I guesis the people will take their own oreenbacks at par. Right here lets make another comparison. Spain ha.s 2.20 in gold per capita and floats at nar 11. SI in paper; Ca.nada. 1.92 in gold and 7.04 in pai>er; the United States has 9.09 in gold and we've only 6.90 in paper. See how many htmdreds of millions we could safely have issued. That this issuing of bonds in times of peace is defended seems to me to add insult to injury, and shows their crocodile posi- tion towards our free institutions. Do you know it takes more of the products of labor to pay our national debt now than it would right after the war? In '06 it was .$2.S27,sr)8.9.')9, since then we've paid in interest alone $2,035,000,000 and appliiKl the further sum of $1,700,000.- 000 upon the principal, making a total of $4,335,000,000, but still we owe Sl,- 237.500, and the eminent historian. Dr. Red path, has figured that even this re- mainder of the debt is worth more to it~s bloated holders than the entire debt in 1806, and that to pay it off now re- quires 51,339,000 more barrels of pork, 046,000,000 more bushels of wheat, 425,- 000,000 more pounds of cotton or 4,496,- OOO.OOOmore poundsof bar iron than itdid March 1. 1866, when the nominal amount was 2^4 times greater than now and after we have already paid on it almost twice the original sum. "The people have paid and paid for 30 years and in the end have paid just this — Nothing." 13 IJouse ye. Amea-icons, oi- ye'll sui-i-ly bo slaves Avithout a home. Are ye satis- fied -svith the present conditions and going to vote for Mc-Kinley and their continuance? ^'o, rise in your might while you have the omnipotent ballot in your hands and in the name of Hu- manity demand deliverance from this all-devouring money power. SHAVER Is the \)eople"s money. It circulates among the people. Gold is the money of the classes and is kept for reserves, and finds its way into vaults and hidden corners. It is easily cornered, and all of it can be j)ut in a room of 22 cubic feet. What are soiue of their snake ar- guments against silver? That it is a cheap money. The money use of these precious metals constitutes almost 50 per cent, of the entire use. About 1873 the arts used less than 50 iier cent. Therefore, when the use of silver as money was surreptitiously taken away, the demand for it fell over 50 per cent., and the demand falling, the price liad to fall also. Some j)eople are so impreg- nated with the idea that law can't put \alne into anything, as to lose their rea- son on the subject. The silver advo- cates don't want the United States to say that silver is worth so much, but they simply want the United States to o])en its mints to silver as it does to gold. That is, make it possible to con- vert silver into money, and as there is an insatiate, I might say, demand, for money, the law of supply and domand would come in and do the rest. An il- lustration: Congress wouldn't raise the value of lumber by saying it should be $100 a foot. But suppose Congress (if it had the power) should say that lum- ber shall not be used for anything but matches, under penalty of imprison- ment, how much do you suppose the lumber in our lumber-yards would bo worth? This is exactly what Congress did with silver. It took away its free access to the mints and limited its use to small change. Now, in the case of lumber, other building materials, such as brick and stone, would rise in vahio, as there would be a greater demand for them, as they would have to take the ])lace of lumber. Likewise, gold went u]i when it had to meet the old demand of both gold and silver. These pluto- crats who demonetized silver, and now- set up the cry of cheap money, have literally smitten Silver, the star-eyed (loddess of ])ros]^rity on both cheeks, and rai.sed the suspicion that the god- dess blushes because of other im])roper conduct. But in spite of this da.stardly treatment, silvei' valiantly holds it.'- own. in its relation to other comiuodities. An ounce of silver will buy as much col- ton, corn, wheat, iron, labor, etc , as it ever would. Here is a table: Year. Wheat, bu. Cotton, lbs. Silver, oz. 1S73 1.25 18.2 1.2!» 1S76 1.20 12.9 • 1.15 1879 1.07 9.9 1.12 1882 1.19 11.4 1.13 1885 86 10.6 1.06 1888 85 9.8 .93 1891 85 10.0 .90 1892 80 8.7 .86 1893 63 7.0 .72 " This table shows conclusively that gold must have appreciated. Mr. (iiffin, statistician of the London board of trade, a goldbug, admits that gold has 1 doubled in purchasing power. In re- gard to the lumber illustration, it must not be forgotten that the demand for money is always at a tension, while in building it isn't, and again that the supply of gold is limited, and that of brick and stone is not. The charge has also been made that silver has fallen in value because of improvements in and cheapness of its mining. But about the same kind of machinery is used in the mining of gold, and as gold mining has been stimulated by its rising value, the improvements and inventions therein are a little in advance of silver mining. Yet gold hasn't come down. Carlisle said in Congress in 1878 that he be- lieved the variance between gold and silver teniporary, and that the single or united action of nations interested therein would establish the old ratir> firmer than ever, and that mankind would be fortunate if the production of gold and silver would keep pace with the increase in population, commerce and industry, and continued: '"This conspiracj^ which seems to have been formed here and in Europe to destroy one-half of the metallic money of the M'orld is the most gigantic crime of any age, and its consummation would entail more misery than war, ])estilencc and famine." This Judas Iscariot of democ- racy, who hasn't manhood enough to hang himself, now says that the demon- etization of silver in 1S73 was but the recognition of a condition that exi.sted. that is, silver was getting so cheap and plentiful. This, too. in the face of the iindeniable fact that silver was worth three per cent, more than gold the very day it was demonetized, and the relative output of these metals in weight didn't exceed sixteen to one till 1882, nine years after the passage of the nefarious act. The world's output in 1S73 was: gold. .$96,200,000; silver, $81,800,000. Here is .14 n, table of the output from i;'.>:2 to i892: Year. Gold. Silver. 17'j2-1J<00 $106,407,000 $328,800,000 1801-10 118,152,000 371,677,000 1811-20 76,063,000 224,786,000 15,21-SO 94,479,000 i;il,444,00(i 1831-40 134,841,000 247,930,000 1^41-48 291,144,000 25y,520,00ri 1851 67,000,000 40,000,000 1S61 113,800,000 44,700.011(1 1871 107,000,000 61,050,0m) ISSl 103,000,000 102,000,000 1885 108,400,000 11S,.500,000 ISnO 118,849,000 172,235,000 1892 138,861,000 196,459,000 Total 15,633,908,000 $5,004,961,000 In 1895 it was: gold, .•T;iTy,9G5,GU0; sil- ver, $215,404,000. While silver had as free access to the mints as g'old, it varied little from sixteen to one in value; from 1('S7 to 1S7;5 it never reached hig-her than 16. 17-100 to 1. The reason is clear, there is such an ever increasing- demand tor money (\vhen silver can be con- verted into money the demand extends to silver) the value- will be sustained. .Metals that vary as litte as silver and j^okl did during 200 years of equality, when the relative outputs changed froni time to time, changing- from three of silver to one of g-old, from 1790 to 1840, and from two of gold to one of silver from 1340 to 187.'J, make good money ;incl the moment silver is restored to its former equality with g-old the old ratio will be easily maintained. There is in the world to-day but 15^^ to 16 times the amount of silver that there is of gold. Silver as well as gold is the money of the constit\ition, of our daddies, the common people and ])rosperity. Let's have more of it. There never can be a general and substantial rise (though there may be a local and temporary) in prices and property without an in- crease in the volume of money. Some say falling- prices are due to inventions and machinery, but wasn't the intro- duction of machinery between 1S60 and 1873, relatively as great as between 1S73 and 1896? Yet prices rose 22 per cent, in the former period and fe'l 30 up to 1893. Since then, in the varnacular of Pat, they hev tak'n da dangdest fall .since the fall of Adam. :movement of prices in oold. Year. Foods. Metals. AH prices. 1872 122.2 117.3 127 2 1875 IIG.O 104.4 113.4 1878 r5.5 ?0.8 9f).9 1881 lin.9 91.1 105.7 1884 10S.9 81.0 9t.4 1S.<57 IOi.2 74.9 92. G 1S91 103.9 74.9 92.4 Others claim overproduction is the cause of our distress. Overproduction! When millions are going- aronnd half clad and half fed. When we hear such talk it's evident the Fool Killer must have run up against the long and short man in some dark alley. No, it is under consumption, persons w ear one suit for years, where before tiiey'd have a now .•>uit for every season. They haven't the wherewith to buy. Here is a table of consumption of staple articles per capita ;n the I'nited States: Year. Cotton, lbs. Corn, bu. 1892 24.03 30.33 1S93 17.17 23.66 1894 15.91 22.76 Year. Wheat, bu. Coffee, lbs. Wine. 1892 ..5.91 9.63 .44 1893 4.85 8.21 .48 1894 3.41 8.01 .31 Xo! Under-consumption. The only overproduction is tramps and million- aires. It's right in order, though, for some of these penny-in-the-slot-get- what-you-want professors to demon- strate with their mathematical certain- ties that this consuming- of less g-oods is due to the improved methods of eat- ing-, less waste, etc. So many board out no^v — in parks and highways. Iiig'ht here let me touch on McKinley's star sentence (granrlstand l)lay) : "It is better to open the mills to the labor of America than to open the mints of the United States to the silver of the world." If McKinley wasn't the tool of the money power, he'd be consistent enough to protect silver mining-, one of the greatest industries of the west. They would employ labor which in turn would need food, clothing-, furniture, etc. Open our mills. But will McKinley inform us how industries can be run without money? If he says: "On credit."' why don't they run now? I think I showed under "Protection,"' that the McKinley and Wilson bills would al- most be taken for twins, but does rais- ing the tariff do away with the neces- sity of money? If not, his remedy is inadequate, for he ignores the scarcity of money. All ought to know money is needed to carry on industry and trade, and without silver there's practically no money for that purpose. One doesn't meet a gold piece in a month's journey. The merchants who are stoop- ing- to the ^fexican dollar trick-mule performances and railing against sil- ver are stabbing- their best friend. The opjjosition coruscate many g-ems of consistency, such as "Law^ can't add value toanything-"and"thissilverheresy will simply enrich the silver mine own- ers." They also say the silver dollar is only worth 53 cents.yet they won't take 99 cents for one. (Silver, bear in mind, is no more redeemable in gold than gold is in silver.) But the ko-i-noor of these brilliant gems is that "All the United States can do is to stamp the weight and fineness of the metal on the coin, law be- 15 ing l)0^vel•less to ^'we valiif to anythinf^-. Yet they tell us they want an interna- tional agreement; that is. they think if i:nglanri and Oerniany will also stamp weight and fineness on silver the 53 eents of silver will climb to 100 cents. l!iit these men view consistency in the same light as the church sewing society views silence; something not to be tol- erated. ICdward .\tkinson. the bull i)up of phitocracy, says if us half-witted and idiotic followers of Jetferson and Lin- coln succeed in getting free coinage we'll have a flood of silver and terribly depreciated money. It never troubles this pugnacious, flea-flavored barker to point out where this vast reservoir of silver is. Even if we have a flood of silver, isn't that better than a dearth of gold? How much silver available for money is there in the world? The last mint rejjort estimated it at $4,070,500,- (100. I{us.sia and Egypt have $6.31,200,- 000 of it in subsidiary coin in ratios from 12.90 to 15.()5 to 1. Therefore, we would get none of that. There is $;i.-)0,000.000 in India, $115,000,000 in China, $(iS,00(),0()0 in Japan. Asia has N00,()00,000 inhabitants, making its money about $2.50 per capita, and little or no gold. Eurojie has 400,000,000 population and $1,000,000,000 full legal tender silver, or .$2.50 per capita. These people cannot get along without any money at all ; in fact, it is hard to imag- ine them getting along with any less. Who could collect this silver, distribu- ted as it is among 1,200.000,000 people of all shades of color, language, politics and religion, and every j)erson averag- ing over seven acres of territory? What would be exchanged for the silver? (lold? Xo, for there is no more gold than silver in the world, so the exchange would be even. In goods? In that case, business would be benefited to meet the demand for wares, etc. But why go on? It would be as imiiossible to get all this silver into the (Tnited States as to get all the water, creeks, etc.. of the globe into the Atlantic ocean. As the prosjjectsof rain from this source are confessedly slim, let us turn to the annual output. In 1894 it was 167. 752,- ."•61 ounces. This was not fully traced to its ultimate use, but it can be esti- mated approxinuitely. About 100,000,- 000 ounces went to the coinages of the difi'erent countries, and the remainder to the arts and manufactures. Now, then, if we had free coinage, we proba- bly would get the major portion. If we got 80,000,000 ounces, which is four- fifths of the coinage of the world, we would only he getting, at $1.20 an ounce. $100,000,000; this, distributed amon.g 71,000,000 people, would be about $1.40 per person. Sir Hector M. Hay, a mem- ber of the largest bullion business firm in the world, said last j-ear that "the visible supply of silver in Europe didn't exceed £3,000,000." So, you see, from all sources the per capita wouldn't be raised to but $1.65. Do you think we need an ark for such a deluge? Our in- crea,sing population, industry and com- merce can take care of all and cry for more. PER CAPITA TABLE. Gold. Silver. Paper. Total. United States... 9.09 9.08 6.90 20. 07 United K'gdom.14.18 2.88 2.92 19. ^'S' France 21.54 12.85 2.31 36.70 Germany 12.65 4.35 1.78 IS. 78 Belgium 8.87 8.85 8.26 25.98 Austria 3.00 2.81 3.38 Mexico 41 4.13 .17 4.71 Ee-ypt 17.65 2.20 19.85 Greece 23 1.36 19.09 20.68 Netherlands .... 5.87 12.02 7.64 25.53 Portugal 8.27 5.28 11.81 25.36 From above it is seen our per capita is less than Belgium, Portugal, France and Netherlands. Although ours is figured at $25.07 yet, deducting the amount of money lost, destroyed and melted down by smiths and uKinufacturers, which was estimated at about $4,000,000 in the single year 1890, the amount taken abroad by tourists, etc., will bring it below $20. I think tTie Americans can stand a few more dollars. I've seen men with a biigg'er load than that, and they managed to live through it. In fact, the days of our greatest prosperity was when we had over $50 per capita, after the war. In estimating the circulation of that })eriod I don't overlook flu $700.- 000.000 or $800,000,000 United States T-.'JO bonds, which were in small denomi- nations aiid legal tender. The Director of the mint misrepresents the facts by- not stating' this fact in the tables of those years, just like the goldbug niis- re]iresentations of the silver dollars coined prior to 187.3. They state only $8,000,000 silver dollars were coined, leaving the inference that that was all the silver the Ignited States were using under bimetallism, when the facts are. $8,000,000 was coined in silver dollars. $1.35,000,000 in fractional coins and $100,- 000.000 of the silver coins of other coun- tries were circtdating as legal tender by virtue of United States laws. Prof. Langhlin, head of the economic depart- ment of the Standard Oil literary bureau, sometimes called out of respect for learning the Chicago University, says we don't need so much money as formerly, banking facilities are such, etc. Well, there has been no improve- 16 ments in banking- since 1873. Prior thereto we had a circulation of over $50 per capita (no more than it would no\\ be with the world's silver within our borders), and times ^vere never better. He also says that credits now gener- ally take the place of money. If so, it is a grievous fault and on-ievously have we suffered from it^ Let's examine. Credit depends upon in the last analy- sis whether the person has money or it is rea.sonably supposed he can get it. Credit may increase the volume ol business, and in that case, increases the demand for money, and then if the money is not there in quantities enough to pay all, a crash comes and panic sets in. This is why America and England suffer so from iKinics, which are almost nnknown in France, where the per cap- ita circulation is fairly large. We would like to know if the professor does 9.": l)er cent, of his business on credit? CiTover didn't succeed that Avay. He needed money and. of course, it had to be the Mongolian metal. Another of their boggiemen is that silver will de- grade lis to the LEVEL OF MEXICO and China. What a splendid oppor- tunity for some transcendant genius, some brilliant intellectual Murat Hal- stead to predict that America will sink to the depths of Chinadom inside often .■".ears becans?, forsooth, Ainericans nse rice. XoAv for the comparison of wages, etc. What if wages are lower in Mexico and China than here? Those countries have very high tariffs and perhaps these make wages low. But to be serious, we have seen (under the head of protec- tion) that wages depend on many things, such as climate, people, ma- chinery, productivity of labor, per cap- ita of circulation, etc. [Mexico's circula- tion is $4.71 per capita. China's is less. In both these countries the climates are against the inhabitants, who are, by the way, only half civilized, and work with crude implements, thus producing little, and that of the inferior kind. lUit with these disad\'antages, le+'s see ho^v Mexico's Morkmen compare Avith gold-standard Austria in wages. Offi- cial statistics, Austria, 1894: Calkers, painters, etc., from $.3 to $4.50 per week; iron and brass workers, $2.40 to $3; hemp mills in Buda-Pesth, laborers, $2.50; hacklers, $4.14, and breakers, $r^..50. Mexico: C. A. Brown treasurer of the Mexican Central 'railroad writes and is quoted by W. C. Ford, of United States treasurj-- bureau of statistics. 1800: Laborers, 50 to 75 cents a day; breakmen, $45 to $50 per month; ma- sons, from $1 to $3 a day; carpenters, same; 1S95, carpenters, $1.50 to $3.50, and mechanics, $1 to $5 a day, according to skill. So, you see, Mexico's conditions, while not as good as United States', are better than gold Austria. Besides, busi- ness is going right along in Mexico. Kailroads are being built, and her re- sources developed to a happy extent. Was the United States uncivilized prior to 1873, when we had the bimetal- lic standard? Were Washington. Jef- ferson, Franklin, Lincoln. Phillijjs and Emerson barbarians. Xo, nol U. S. went through the greatest civil war in history and attained the lead- ership of the nations of the earth on that basis. Germany rose to her im- perial greatness among the ])owers of Europe on a silver basis. Let's hear no more of this childish bosh of silver de- grading us. Imagine Mexico trying to getalongon an exclusive gold basis with $0.41 in gold per capita. Silver is a winner, its success is demonstrated, but the gold standard has been tried in the balance for 23 years and found wanting — the earth and the fullness thereof turned over to the moneyholders. The next thing encountered is this man of straw solemnly christened. INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENT. As a dummy it is a work of art. but let's examine its anatomy and see what's realh' to it. It is the function of a sov- ereign g'overnment to say what shall be the monej' of its people, and nations have always exercised it without regard to the feelings or dictates of others. The only exception in all the eventful years of history was in 1865, when the Latin Union, composed of France and the smaller nations of Belgium, Switz- erland, Italj", later Greece. This was simply an agreement to mint coins of the same denomination and make them legal tender among them. But in all likelihood the United States will never, or not for many years, succeed in bring- ing England and Germany into such a treaty. These nations are more hope- lessly dominated by the money power than the United States. The money power will never consent to it. Several international conferences have been held and nothing accomplished. Their only object is to fake the pub- lic. All have noticed that nothing is heard about them until the people get warm and excited about their money wrongs, and then the papers are full of what is about to be done by inter- national agreement and that it will be accomplished soon now if we only keep cool and don't be so rash as to legislate 17 lor ourselves. A year or so ago, when silver was agitating the iieople, an as- sociation of great banlss mu.st;- continue and as to sol- diers' pensions, they, unless a change comes, will be swept away entirely. Even people fancying themselves se- 18 (-•lire on niortf>af^es will find the niort- was with siiver-nsing- countries. Again, ijagor can't pay and that on the mined (Jermany had a silver standard between market the secured property is without '57 and '73, but did you ever hear of buyers and worthless. Thisg'old stand- German3^ being- shut off from the trad- ard unless changed will honeycomb our ing- world? JN'ow let's consider: civilization. This prating about not l>e- rpj^E PRESENT STANDARD. ing big enough to mi i i-x ■ ,, ^ <• ^t ■ '^ • I Jie goldites charge a.ll sorts of thuigs LEGISLATE FOR OURSELVES. to the .silver men and sav villainy is IS unAinencan. A\ hen we were but 13 afoot. Well, it's about time the pluto- states along the wilderness of the east- ^-j.^ts were hoofing it. They, in alarm. e.rn seaboard with 3.0()(),0()0 people we ery: "The crazy silverites are going to defied and conquered l':ngland. Are we trifle with the measure of values," but now with KS states and other territories ^ve reply: "It is you that have trifled and T1,()()0,()()() people going topusillani- ^^ith it, we but mean to restore it, and mously surrender? The United States jf tbere is any honesty in you you'll IS th*' greatest nation on the face of the help do it. We feel the people are honest earth in point of wealth, resources and now, they have been straightened by cir- business. It leads in agTiculture, and curastances. The alarm is taken up by according to Mulhall, the English sta- insurance, real estate and mortgage tistician, is away ahead in manufac- men. Thev talk of repudiation and tures. In 'SS the United States stood .$7,- cheap money, look wise and speak with 2()0.()()0,00(): France, $2,300,000,000; Ger- the air of authority, adding, they handle many, $2,100,000,000; Austria, $1,200.- and deal in money and know whereof 000,000; Italy, $600,000,000. The United they speak. They have l>een likened to States more than ecjualed tihe aggregate the'striped inmates of Jolict. who break of the nations named. The carrying and cut stone all their lives, but know trade of the world is 1.540,000.000 tons nothing of geology. These fellows J carried 100 miles annually; 1,400,000.000 i^iow about values," usury, etc., but are in railroad traffic and the rest in ship- densely ignorant on the science of ping. The United States carried SOO,- money. Tliey talk so because of their 000,000 on railroads, alone, which is 60,- contact with deep, wily bankers. I 000.000 more than the world's land and ^^ant to say right here the people don't water traftic. Ifncle Sam is big enough believe in alchemy— they leave the black to take care of himself and :\IcKinley art to such princes of darkness as Sher- will have a hard time in convincing the man, Cleveland and their coterie, old man he is still in bib and diapers. We THie country's indebtedness is, public are also told we must have the same and private, $40,000,000,000. All our gold standard 'as other nations or trade will will not pay interest thereon for three be interferred with. Most of these ar- months. All the gold and silver guments don't merit serious considera- wouldn't pay the appropriations of the tion, but as they frequently emanate billion-dollar congress. Our foreign from college professors, T don't see that debt is between $5,000,000,000 and $6.- we can do anything but pity their jaun- 000.000,000. Forigners hold millions of diced minds. They should be treated our National. st.Tte and municipal bonds, rather than answered. I will advise most of our stock yards, railroads, many them to go to some chemist and get a flour and steel mills, much land and all mixture of five grains of the essense of the breweries. Interest, dividends, etc.. manhood, five drops of concentrated en this amount yearly to $250,000,000. spirits of reason and a grain of silver to When times are fair the balance of trade sweeten, and take three times a day in our favor is about $150,000,000, leav- till cured. Nations trade back and ing $100,000,000 to pay in gold. Last forth and all around. Exports and im- year we mined $17,000,000 (more than ports are offset against each other and ever before.) The arts used more tban by means of this clearing house system half. The amount used thus is con- only balances, which are small, are set- stantly increasing. Table for the tied in money. We trade in the Orient United States from Book on Coinage and no ditiiculty is experienced by rea- Laws, etc. son of our different money standard. Year. Production. Used in Arts. England had a single standard since 1886 35,000,000 13,069.520 1861 the Ignited States a double stnnd- ''''*'*'S 33,175,000 16,514, 8-!2 loiii, i.iie I niieti r>TaTes a aouDie sta.na- ^^^ 32,84.5,000 l7,6.55.fH;'. . ard up to 1873, yet who ever heard of 1892 33,000,000 19,329,074 trade interference from that score. How long can we meet the gold in- Ernest Seyd. the Englishman who ar- terest on our foreign debt? We are al- ranged the deal with Sherman, said in ready on its way to chancery to be '80 that 80 per cent, of England's trade wound up. The gold standard means 19 America't ruin ajitl civilization's doom. The num who don't know these facts, is criminally ignorant and the man who does and stUl talks gold utters treason against his country and his fellow man. THE SENTINELS OF LIBERTY. The generals of humanity, who led the march of civilization, have warned us of our foe. .TefFerson, who had faith in the people and wrote the Declaration of Independence without waiting for an international agreement, said: •■]^ank- ing institutions are more dangerous tiian standing armies." Calhoun said in 1H34: "I'nder the operation of the banking system there is a strong tend- ency to create a moneyed interest that is dangerously antagonistic to the com- munity." Gen. Jaclress of my land shall sustain thee in thy pious work." Lincoln's prediction came true. Cor- ],orations are enthroned, labor de- graded, corruption is in high office, and "the money power is seeking to prolong its reign by working on the jirejudices of the people," and (recogniz- ing the integrity of the American peo- ple) have started the cry, "dishonest dollar." repudiation, etc., and, like the slave power, it is denouncing the real friend of man as the enemy of our coun- try, calling him anarchist, etc.. and .>-ay- ing he wants to ruin the credit of the government." These so-called an- archists have as lofty a conception of duty and a heart as responsive to the needs of the people as anybody that ever lived, and that is why they rebel against the existing conditions. THE SITUATION. The people are like the man in Dante's "Inferno," who was doomed to make a rope of hay to reach to the outer world of light and liberty, but while he vvas intent on twisting his life rope some wild asses were behind a wall. 20 entinj;' it up with tranquil .-md perpet- ual delight. So the active portion of the people have been patientlj- working- to p-et their life ropes to extend to the outer circle of liberty and debtless- uess, but the bloated asses of phitoc- laey. who place riches and vanity above country and liumanity. have been ap- propriating the fruits of their labor, and they are as deep in the despond of indebtedness as ever. It will even i;et worse if W. Buncombe McKinley iiets in power. The greenbacks will then be retired and interest-bearing bonds issued in lien thereof, so that our decreasing stock of gold, stored in vanlts and held as reserves, will be our only money, except what the banks see fit to issue. They exjjand and contract the circulation at their sweet will, to the people's bitter sorrow. The bank circulation was recently extended to $-178,000,000. This will turn the coim- Iry over to the legal pillage of Eoths- child and his banking cousins as ef- fectually as ancient Rome was turned over to the plunder of Attila and the I tuns. No one will have property he can call his own or have rights that they will be bound to respect. A30ung attorney was rising to flights in a case, growing warm over angels, weeping willows, etc., when the judge inter- rupted him, with: "Get down to busi- ness; this is a case of hog stealing." 80, when these tyros begin to rise to the heights of '"Dollars as untarnished as the national honor," they shoidd be reminded that this is a case of stealing. If it were only hog stealing it wouldn't be so bad, for the hogs are in the banks and monopolies, but it is a case where the whole people are having their all filched from them by a subtle financial system. The Shylocks and kindred hordes under the once-glorious banner of the republican party, with William Buncombe ^NIcKinley at their head, are LOW in the field. The note of dread- ful preparation has been sounded. Bim- conibe fears there is more than one Richmond in the field. All the bankers, all the bondholders and monopolists liave left the democratic party: all the big dealers have bolted the ticket, and all the obsequious politicians and cor- poration attorneys and unthinking- business, laboring and professional men have followed like a yellow poodle after a stylish rig. On the other hand, all the farmers, the backbone of the re- public, thinking business and intelligent laboring men and all statesmen who "Will not narrow their mind And give up to party what was meant for mankind," liave thrown aside the petty distinc- tions of party and under the banners of humanity and prosperity have rallied around the magnificent leadership of William J. Bryan, the sturdy champion of oppressed America. Who is he? is it asked. He is the son of nature, reared after her own heart, amid the bloom of flowers, the song of birds, the ripple of brooks, sunny slopes and rug- ged forests. Child of Destiny, Man of character, worth and ability; rising- like Lincoln by his own genius, enter- prise and perseverance from the hum- blest station in life to the highest place in the hearts of men. He served the people of Nebraska honestly, faithfully and honorably two terms in congress. He has the principle of Jefferson, the judgment of Washington, the will power of Jackson, the eloquence of Phillips and the statesmanship of Lin- coln. Thrice blest man, with the char- ity- and enthusiasm of youth in his heart and the learning and wisdom of age in liis head. His record is as untarnished as he hopes to see the pi-osperity of his country. It has with eagle captious eye been scrutinized from infancy up. liis onlj' malfeasance is that he is 36 .\ ears of age. I've looked up the charge in the Statutes and in the Draconian and ^Mdral codes. The crime isn't men- tioned in any law. But extortion, bribery, usury, robbery and false pre- tenses are. The charge is nothing. Alexander of Macedon, after conquer- ing the then known world, died sighing for other worlds to conquer at 32. Na- lX)leon invaded Austria at 28, and at 30 was the rider of France. Jefferson wrote the grandest of political docu- ments, the Declaration of Independence, when 33. Pitt was prime minister of England at 25 and Webster was the first man in America at 30. William J. Bryan stands clear of every charge, tried and trusted. "Will the people's rights maintain Unawed by influence, unbribed by gain." He knows it is one of the eternal verities of nature, one of the funda- mental laws of the social organism that no state can enjoy permanent prosperity, develop normally, attain real national greatness nor long en- dure where injustice dwells in its sys- tem, education neglected, equal oppor- tunities denied, one class favored to the detriment of the other. He said in his Coliseum speech that the word business- man so long has been limited to the banker, the man who walks into the board of trade and speculates on stocks and the man who clips coupons and sits 21 iu back parlors and wrecks railroads, and that the title ought to be extended to the farmer who j^lows, the miner who digs ore out of the earth and the mer- chant who keeps a corner grocery, etc., and that instead of legislating to make the rich prosperous, that their prosper- ity might leak through on those below, we ought to legislate to make the masses prosperous, as such prosperity would find its way up to all. Every ad- v.iuce in civilization is a broadening of l)ase. and the leaders in this new move- ment for a broader fraternity, more jus- tice, equality and prosperity are noble men, all of them. Bryan, Altgeld. Wat- son. Harvey, Teller, Weaver, Sibley, Pennoyer, Towne, Butler, Bland, Jones, Allen, Sewall, Waite, Donnelly, Stone, Taubeneck, Schilling, Warner, Petti- grew, George, Coxey, Daniels, McGlynn, Stewart, Tillman, Van Dervoort, etc. Woman's inspiring and elevating influ- t nee in the sacred cause is also getting much in evidence. All hail our deliver- er. The plutocratic guns of two hemi- spheres are turned on our dauntless leader. Let's form a phalanxaround him. "Humanity with all its fears, With all its hopes of future years Hangs breathless on his fate." Let's form the embattled square about our gallant Wellington of America. We are in the thickest of the battle. Tor- rents of ijatriotism have fallen during the night and the moral foundations of the enemy's road have fallen in and^Mc- Kinley is trying to ride to victory over the prostrate form of our country and the bleeding bodies of his fellow-men. It is Waterloo. The combined forces of plutocracy have met the allied armies of humanity. That they will be van- quished is the prayer of reform and the hope of thp people as they, with visions of the cross and thorns before their aching eyen, anxiously wait glad tidings of success. I isr r) E x:. Pagre. Civilization, church and state 1 Slavery, its abolition 1-2 Hazard circular, banks 2 Rebellion and Lincoln's prophecy 2 Centralization and machinery 2 immigration, special laws, etc 2 Labor, child: eight-hour day ?, Reciprocity 3 Protection, origin of, etc 4 Protection, average, during war 4 Protection, average, W. and McK. bills 4 Protection, factors in wage problem.. 4 Protection, England, Germany, China 4 I'rotection, foreign paupers hired 4-5 J-'rotcction, Blaine on wages 5 Protection, table of labor cost, etc 5 Protection, riots under McKinley law. 5 I'rotection to capital, not labor h Protection, immigration, .Tohn Bull 5 Protection, panic of 1S73, etc. Atlas... 6 I'rotection, revenue 1S92 to 1S95 6 Protection, rates, exports and imports (5 Protection, free list. Grant, etc *; Income tax C-7 Bankers : 7 Railroads 7-S Referendum, representation, etc S-9 War and education 9 The issue, silver 9 Rothschild and world's gold 11 Demonetizations of gold and silver 11 Demonetizations, consequences 11 Bland-Allison act It Royal gold and silver commission 11 Silver, India, etc 12 Baring Bros.' failure 12 Sherman law and its repeal 12 National debt, etc 13 Page. Silver and commodities, table of 14 Gold appreciating, prices, etc 14 Output of gold and silver 14 Overproduction 15 IVIovement of prices 15 McKinley' s star epigram 15 Atkinson and flood of silver 15-lfi Per capita circulation IR Fixed incomes, etc 18 Credits and banking facilities 16-17 Level of Mexico, etc International trade , International agreement United States big enou.gh, etc.. Country's indebtedness Insurance, real estate men, etc History repeats itself Gold used in arts .. 17 ... 19 ... 18 ... 19 ... 19 ... 19 ... 20 .. 19 Shylock under republican banners 21 Bryan, alliances, etc 21 Business men 21 Fundamental law, etc 21 Quotation from Gladstone 18 Quotation from Rothschild IS Quotation from Lincoln 2,20 Quotation from Garfield 7, 9 Quotation from Blaine 5, 20 Quotation from Jefferson 20 Quotation from Calhoun 20 Quotation from Jackson 20 Quotation from Webster 20 Quotation from Lowell 20 Quotation from Carlisle 14 Quotation from IT. S. Mon. Com. Rep.. IS Quotation from Grant 6, 11 Quotation from Hume 10 Quotation from Seyd 19 Quotation from Giffen 14 Quotation from Hay 16 THE GOLD-BUG CREW, Published in JS'A TIONA L BIME TA LL/ST, May, jSgd. A favorite at commercial clubs' banquets, English operas, etc., and special!)' adapted for Cleveland and the bankers. Tune — from the opera, Pinafore. Solo, Cleveland — I am the captain of the gold-bug crew. Chorls, Bankers — And a right good captain, too. Solo — You're very, very good, and be it understood, I am in for the gold right through. Chorus — We are very, very good, and be it understood. He is in for the gold right through. Solo — I can trim, fleece and steer, with any banker here, And I manipulate for a big firm. I hold in absolute scorn, those who' re lowly born And I'll never take a third term. Chorus — What, never? (Solo) — No, never. What, never? (Solo) — If they sever. Chorus— If they sever, no more term. Then here is a yell, and a big smile, too. For the last-term captain of the gold-bug crew. Solo — I've done my best to enrich you all. Chorus — And with you everybod}' is content. Solo — That's an everlasting whopper, and I think it onlv proper To return the compliment. Chorus— That's an everlasting whopper, and he thinks it only proper To return the compliment. Solo— With my foreign war jingo, I've concealed the gold lingo, And fooled them with the noise. But oh, this silver host, haunts me to the utmost; But I ever fool these voting boys. Chorus — What, ever? (Solo) — Yes, ever. What, ever? (Solo)— Mostly ever. Chorus — Mostly ever fool these voting boys. Then here is a yell, and a good health, too. For the bunko captain of the gold-bug crew. Solo — Our gold bark is frail on this silver sea. Chorus— Don't be afraid, w-e'll all back thee. vSoLO — You're awful, awfully kind, but I think you rather blind; But perhaps you'll not agree. Chorus — We're awful, awfully kind, but he thinks us rather blind; Now, we will not agree. We'll support McKinley. Solo — For bimetallism I'll declare, international though, beware; And the daily press will be our wand. I'll urge to partisan activities, appointees of all nativities; And I'll never issue another bond. • Chorus — What, never? (Solo)— No, never. What, never? (Solo) — Not for awhile. Chorus — Won't issue any more bonds for awhile. Populace — We'll surely go fo ruin, and hades, too. While our Ship of State has a gold-bug crew. Francis R. Cole. Geniral Bragg is the logical candidate of the gold democrats i Hanna's auxiliary ) as their movement is nothing but a general brag. Reform's Motto — In non-essentials harmony, in essentials unity, in all things charity. THE SPEECHES THAT BOOMED THIS SPRING.^ The speeches that boomed this spring, tra-la l^ Breathe promise of silver sunshine, As the nightmares and terrors they bring, tra-la To the Cleveland and Sherman ring, tra-la And the whole Rothschild combine. And the whole Rothschild combine. And we feel things are brightening as we sing, Of the significant speeches that boomed this spring. Tra-la-la-la-la, tra-la-la-la-la, The speeches that boomed this spring, tra-la, etc. The speeches that boomed this spring, tra-la, Papers say are not in the race. Vampire of gold has under its wing, tra-la Conspirators and that sort of thing, tra-la With a philanthropy painted face. With a philanthropy painted face. We can see whenever they talk or sing. They're bothered with the speeches that boomed this spring, Tra-la-la-la-la, tra-la-la-la-la. The speeches that boomed this spring, tra-la-la, etc. The speeches of Bryan are grand, tra-la, And have aroused this broad land. We'll be brought to original barter, tra-la, Little gold and much salaried barker, tra-la, Prime money increase, not credits expand, (repeat) Bimetallists have the faith of a martyr. And these speeches are only a starter, Tra-la-la-la-la, tra-la-la-la-la, The hide of McKinley is tanned, tra-la-la, etc. There is no gold in the sun tra-la, So scientists have us advised, And we think that they can't be in fun, tra-la. Else our hash would be pretty well done, tra-la And our sunshine demonitized. (repeat) Isn't it good, Sol is out of reach of their gun. Or our days would be by Standard Oil run, Tra-la-la-la-la, tra-la-la-la-la. There is no gold in the sun, tra-la-la, etc. Though we're in a very good humor, tra-la, Uncle Samuel is very sick. There are well founded rumors, tra-la, That Uncle has monopoly tumors, tra-la. All over his body politic, (repeat) We mean that tumors and parasites all. Will experience a most dreadful fall, Tra-la-la-la-la, tra-la-la-la-la. Though our humor is anything but gall, tra-la-la-la, etc. Ther'e a i6 to i specific, tra-la, That with fusion works like a charm. Uncle Sam is industrially rheumatic, tra-la. His Rothchildetis symptoms are emphatic, tra-la. But this specific will banish the harm, And raise the mortgage off the farm. We've come to the sound conclusion. That an international agreement is a delusion, Tra-la-la-la-la, tra-la-la-la-la. Uncle will take this specific with fusion, tra-la-la-la, etc. Francis R. Cole. WE'VE GOT A LITTLE LIST. Tune— from the Mikado. Our distress is due to "Want of confidence" say the Two Johns. And they show a long list, a very lengthy list, , Of business failures which they'll restore by issues of gold bonds. But we think their game is this, we think their game is this, To enslave our people by debt to lords at home and o'er the sea And prepare for a king and a monied aristocrac3^ But of their -financial folly and crimes we've had to much Of their perfidious inconsistency and Shylock's clutch. In sophistry and servility they all may persist, < They never will be missed. They never will be missed. Chorus — We've got them on the list, we've got them on the list; They'd none of them be missed, they'd none of them be rnts.se. I. Foreign capitalists, to this country won't come to invest, On in enterprises enlist; or in enterprises enlist. Unless we have a single standard, Cleveland has confessed. But they never would be missed. They never would be missed. If our Statesmen would only to America be true And recognize our silver, which is honest through and through, And thus give real protection to our home industries. And by more money, make us independent of the fleas, Of fleas who banquet on our punches, and give us their big fist. They never would be missed, they never would be missed. Chorus — Though Grover was elected on a plank of tariff reform, That wasn't what was wished, so he went and'fished. While his fellow lackeys over the Sherman Law did storm ; It's repeal they wished; they had the turkey dished. If that bill was only repealed then good times would come, But huge debts and idle shops, is their promised millenium. But Uncle Samuel knows exactly where to place the blame When the Wilson and McKinley Bills differ little in the main. Sam has a free silver remedy on which he will insist. And he's making a long list of political physicians to be dismissed. He's making up a list, of quacks to be dismissed. ' Chorus — McKinley with his "Dollar", as the nation's honor untarnished, "Sound Money and Protection", and other phrases elegantly varnishtii, Has shown himself to be the very master of empty platitudes And a candidate more fit for a wealthy pastorate, or tutorship of dudes. Bryan is for the masses, has general honesty and an army of facts and figures, That is slashing the opposition like razors and the niggers. Bryan wants the prosperity that climbs up, not that of leaking down, He wants to make the country thrive and good times settle in town. So he has given Sam some lists of some large and small taitiff s Including all monopolists, with their unholy grists. Chorus — Uncle Sam is now rolling up his sleeves,and doubling up his tist, And Cleveland, Sherman and McKinley will unceremoniously be dismissed. None of them will be missed; Except by John Bull missed. Francis R. Colk. Speak thy thought if thou believest it, Let it jostle whom it may, Even although the foolish scorn it Or the obstinate gainsay, Every seed that grows tomorrow Lies beneath the clod today. Where would be our free opinion, Where the right to speak at all. If our sires, like some, mistrustful, Had been deaf to duty's call. And concealed the thoughts within them, Lying down for fear to fall. Chas. Mackey. BEFORE TAKING. r>,.i:M ii.jiilers bou^'lit U. S. Bonds during the var in (greenbacks worth 45 to 60c. Sherman speech Feb. 27, '67, "I say that equality Hid justice are amply satistied if we redeem hose bonds in the Bame kind of money of tht \ ame intrinsic value it bore at the time they vf re issued." Again in a letter Feb. 20, '68. 'Tht' Vjund holder can command only the kind )f money he paid, and is a repudiator find ex ortioner to demand money more valuable than 10 gave." Attain in a letter to W. S. Grosbeck, ,'ineinnati, O., "The uncertainty of the relation etween the two metals is one of the chief argu- nentfl in favor of a monometallic system, but irL'iiments. showing the dangerous effect upon ndustry by dropping 1 of the precious metals lutweight in my mind all theoretical objections o the bimetallic system."' AFTER TAKING. John Sherman, after Seyd, the bond broker hypnotized him in '73, and eased his itching palm and taught him to become a millionaire on $5,000 a year. "To refuse,to pay these bonds in gold would be repudiation and extortion." Speech, Aug. 15, "96. at Columbus. "This matter of fiee coinage of silver and the de- gradation of the standard of value involves noij only questions of money, but honor and good faith. Contemplate for a while the inevitablt result of free coinage of silver. It would violate every money contract since '79. We shrinii( C.\RLISLE.1878.— with an ample currency, : from any measure that will either robordo m industrious people will speedily rebuild injustice to lender or borrower. Its impossible heir works of internal improvement and re- pair losses of property, but no amount of in- liistry or economy on the part of the people •an create money. When the government •reates and authorizes it, the citizen may icquire it, but do nothing more."' C/iicax^o Trihuue: fan 14. 'y8. Editorial.— Hamilton and Jefferson con- •urrcd in the wisdom and necessity of having I double standard, the purpose being to con- Vr the option on >the debtor to pay in either netai. Tho.=e great statesmen clearly saw the trouble and disaster that a single standard would bring upon the country. The retention of til*' option by the debtor to pay in silver or u'old is vitally important to the welfare of the people and must nev^r be surrendered."' Col. Cockrill, editor of the Commercial Aavertiser to estimate the wrong done to creditors by the scaling off of nearly 3^ of debts due them. "Honest John Sherman didn't consider the debtors when he doubled their debts by strik- ing down silver {% their morey) in '73. Honest John Sherman. Carlisle and the TrihuUe are now busy trying to make it understood that a double standard is a me;e vagary and none but idiots, fanatics and repudiationists and anarch- ists ever believed in such rot, and that govern- ment is powerless to make money, all it can d6 is put its stamp on the metal and let it circu- late at its market price, like potatoes or pork. A", v., wrote a few years ago, a con- The article showed: let. fcssion, as it were, of the way papers are run at the present day. That the great metropolitan newspapers (especially of the East), are largely owned by non- residents; 2nd. That the editor is a mere figure head, representing the European proprietor; .'{rd. 'I'hat these papers have gone to seed in the last decade and run solely for money as the proprietor dictates. Specimens of the i=eedy newspapers: "There seems to be but one remedy and it must come— a change to land owners on one hand, and tenant farmers on the other, something! similar to what exists in the old countries." — N. V. Times (Rep ) 'The American laborer must make up his mind henceforth not to be much better off than the foreign laborers. Men must be content to work for less wages. In this way the working- man will be nearer that station of life to which it has pleased God to call him.'' — A. F. liW/J (McKinley, Democrat.) "There is too much freedom in this country rather than too little." — India)iapolis Joiima,. (Rep.) "The most wealthy must govern in every state, and will, regardless of 'any attempt to depiive them of that \\^\iX.''— Richmond, Va., Whig (McKinley, Democratic.) '•It is astonishing, yea, startling, the extent faith prevails in money circles in New York,- t hat we ought to have a king."' Whitelaw Reid, New York Tribune: — (This is the outlaw Reid that ran for vice president on Republican ticket in '92.) Again the Republican caitiff says: "The time is near when the banks will feel compelled to act strongly. The machinery is now furnished by which, in any emergency, the financial incorporationf^ can act togeiher on a day's notice, with such power that no act of congress can resist its decisions." James Buell, Secretary National Banker's Asfociation, often said: "We hav arranged the program for both parties and the people can exercise their choice of men. They haven't succeeded in arranging the program this year. The spirit of '76 has been re- monetized and is good legal tender to pay off such debts of ingratitude evidenced by the above. If the people don't rise in their might in this election, the ballot will be restricted the middle class reduced to paupres. and liberty will be terribly depreciated and dis- appear from the curr( ncy of independent thought, and repudiation of republican institu- tions be the order of the day. Patriots awake ! Reverence no more the power, That grinds you to the dust of misery. "Hail that glorious season by gifted minds foretold When men shall live by reason and not alone by gold." CO ^•.^ ^' 1^ ^> o. 00' ■ * « 1 » " \v , , ... , < K^^^. ^> * .A 00' o V- -0 \' > -.. -^ a\ 00^ >0 o. \'^^r^^ « I ^ ■ \\ .0 >0 c ■^. ^^■ .^^•V. ,~s . \ I R "^y-. V^ ;V' ^^•> ■^> ,0 c '00^ .0- ^\#^ ^.^^^ •X -6- V- V s^^ ^':' .' " • * '^ 5. "" ,0*^ s'"'*/-^" ^^' S^^^. cP\ ■-i ^^^ o.'^- ^^. .^^' •^> ^. -^.-^ s- -^ vV' ^ %^' •v-^ * .\^ C^^' % ^ W' ' » .'0 1 -Cf) A -^ .0 > -T*^ '^C> ^'^s'^ 0^ Vc5-' '^'^--^S' .^ .^^ "^^. ^. ,i o "" ^^^'"^-^ V '^^ ' '^/. "' 7j^" .^^ ^c^.