Too Dear for General Use. Candidate BRYAN presented, in a very con- densed form, the essence of the money ques- How Silver Will Get Into Girealation. tion when he said, in his speech at Wash- ington last Saturday : ‘The gold stand- ard is bagl because the man who has nioney can profit by the risein the value of that money without using it in cominerce or trade.”’ The value of money has been rising ever since gold has been the only standard, with the result that it has been more profitable o - - Epitor. : : working as hard for it as you do now ? T™ nf] QUOT IQ iQ Democratic National Ticket. The answer is this. FOR PRESIDENT They say, suppose we have free coinage of silver. From a Speech by Wo H. Harvey, Author of Coin’s Finaneial School. It will only benefit the silver hallion owners. How will it get into circulation. How will you get it without When the silver bullion owner takes it to the mint it will be coined into money and hauled back to him, or, the paper representative, repre- sentative money, wiil be handed him, while the mints coin it later. The first thing WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN, of Nebraska. FOR VICE PRESIDENT ARTHUR SEWELL, of Maine. Democratic State Ticket. { to lend it than to put it into productive | business in which there might be a risk. | The consequence is that the money lender | has flourished while the business man has ! become bankrupt. By making money scarce, as has been he will do will be to pay the railroads the freight on it; this part will go into circu- lation by being paid to the employees of the railroad, and from them to the board- mg houses and farmers, who supply the boarding houses, and to the merchants, where the railroad employees buy their goods. He will next pay the smelter that smelted it, the refiner that refined it, and they will pay it to their employees. He will next go up the mountain where the miners are delving in the ground and he will pay the men in their shirt sleeves, the miners who have mined it, he will pay done by the demonetization of silver, its value is appreciated. It is made too much of a luxury, instead of an article of com- YOR PLEGTORS AT-LARGE, mon use. Itis converted into something THOS. G. DELAHUNTY. that brings a premium which is counted by THOMAS STERRETT. | the bond-broker and money lender, the > 2 frame | consequence being that industry and every ee day business are denied the share of this motive power that is necessary for their | operations. | Is there any mystery in the fact that FOR CONGRESSMEN AT-LARGE, DeWITT C. DeWITT, of BRADFORD. JEROME T. AILMAN, of Juniata. FOR DISTRICT ELECTORS, John H. Keenan, John M. Carroll, | Albert M. Hicks, Chas. J. Reilly, | Samay 4 Len 5 4p Hol | when money is made too dear for general Thos. McCullough, ucien Banks, . : : John Hagen, A. J. Brady, use, as it has been made by the single gold Michael Delaney, George W. Rhine, standard, stagnation prevails in every de- the owners of the burro trains that packed it down the mountains. the manufacturer for the machinery that hoisted it out of the ground, and for the powder that blasted it from the earth, and when he is through putting it into circu- lation he will be a fortunate man if he has 10 cents on the dollar left. He will pay Letter of Umted States Senator J. D. Cameron to National Republican League, June 11, 1894. John B. Storm, Thos. A. Haak, Chas. F. Reninger, Chas. H. Schadt, Thomas R. Philips, Chas. D. Kaiser, John K. Royal, William Stahler. Democratic County Ticket. John C. Patton, William Weihe, Samuel W. Black, Judson J. Brooks, John J. McParland, | C. H. Aikens, i Seymonr 8. Hackett, | FOR CONGRESS, J. L. SPANGLER. ( JAS. SCHOFIELD. { ROBERT M. FOSTER. For Sheriff—W. M. CRONISTER. For Treasurer—C. A. WEAVER. ! For Recorder—J. C. HARPER. ! For Register—GEO. W. RUMBERGER. | | ForCommissioners— { IR EAR | For Assembly— { FRANK HESS, | any other nation. i swered as follows: For Anditors— § B. F. KISTER, For County Surveyor—J. H. WETZEL. For Coroner—W. TU. IRVIN. | A 8100,000 Steal—Curtin and Womels= dorf Will Vote for It. In the event of the Republicans controll- ing the next state Legislature with the great majority that characterized the last one, there will be no limit to the jobbery it will engage in, and no restraint upon its disposition to squander the state funds. It would have every encouragement to adopt such a course of extravagance, for its members would not be illogieal in conclud- ing that they were sent to Harrisburg for no other purpose than to waste the state reve- nues, if after their disgraceful conduct of last session the same party were entrusted with the same power. ! With such encouragement of extravagant | legislation the ingenuity of such a legisla- | tive body would be exercised in devising | schemes for spending the public money. There are henchmen who have not been provided with official places, and new of- | fices would be created for their accommo- | dation and the greed of those who have been put in office would demand bigger pay. Why should this not be done, if that which was done by the last Legislature in in that line of official extravagance was not reproved by the people, but rather ap- proved by giving the same party a chance todo it again ? Among the profligate schemes there will be an attempt made to pass an appropria- tion of $100,000 to pay the expenses of MATT QUAY’S sham senatorial investiga- ting committee. When it was appoint- ed it was given out that it would not cost the State anything, as it was represented that the citizens’ commit- tee of Philadelphia was so auxious to have the municipal rottenness of that city probed by the senatorial investigators that it would furnish the means to pay the ex- pense. Investigation was never intended to be made, and nothing is heard of parties in Philadelphia willing to foot the bill. DAVE MARTIN says that he was approached by QUAY with the offer that if he (MAR- TIN) would help to influence the Legisla- ture to make an appropriation of $100,000 to pay the committee its alleged ‘‘investi- gations’’ would be stopped. The upshot of that disgraceful and cor- rupt farce will be that all the parties en- gaged in it, the MARTIN faction as well as the QUAY gang, will unite in getting a hundred thousand dollars out of the state treasury and divide the swag between them. Will the voters of Centre county send two Representatives to the Legislature who will assist in that kind of appropriation ? - CURTIN and WOMELDORF will both vote for this appropriation if elected. Governor HasTINGS will favor it in order to secure QuAY’S good will in his senatorial contest and to help HASTINGS, the members from his home county, if Republican, will be expected and required to support this out- rageous steal. Are the tax-payers of Centre county ready to say that $100,000 shall be voted out of the treasury for such purposes? If not they should, without regard to party feeling, vote for Messrs. FOSTER and ScHo- FIELD, both of whom are pledged and will vote against this appropriation. ——A gnake crawled into a church, near Morgantown, - W. Va., on Sunday, and caused a stampede of the congregation that had assembled to hear the regular Sunday preaching. Snakes are devils in disguise and that is just about the way his satanic Harry Alvin Hall. of the public crib. Think you well before ' voting, for then you will cast your vote for | the stalwart young man from Huston. majesty is doing every day, stampeding the forces of the church. It would not he so if there were more christianity and not 80 much hypocrisy. i begin te think this matter over. partment of business? -———W. M. CRONISTER has as his op- ponent for sheriff ABE MILLER, the chronic office seeker, kicker, and feeder on the fats Bismarck for Silver. He Says That Free Coinage by this Country Would Have a Salutary Effect. DALLAS, Tex., Sept. 20.—Governor Cul- berson, on July 1st, wrote to Prince Bis- marck, asking for his views on himetai- | lism and the likelihood of the United States Government being able to adopt and main- tain such a financial policy independent of Prince Bismarck an- FRIEDRICHSRUE, Aug. 24, 1896. HoXNORED SIR:—Your esteemed favor of ways had a predilection for bimetallism, but I would not, while in office, claim my views of the matter ‘to be infallibly true when advanced against the views of ex- perts. I hold to this very hour that it would be advisable to bring about between the nations chiefly engaged in the world’s commerce a mutual agreement in favor of the establishment of bimetallism. Considered from a commercial and in- dustrial standpoint, the United States are freer by far in their movements than any nation of Europe, and hence if the people The single gold standard seems to us to be working ruin with violence that noth- ing can stand. If its influence is to continue for the future at the rate of its action during the twenty years since the gold standard took possession of the world, some generation, not very remote, will see in the broad continent of America only a half dozen overgrown cities keeping guard over a mass of capital and lending it out to a population of dependent laborers on the mortgage of their growing crops and unfin- ished handiwork. Such sights have been common enough in the world’s history, but against it we all rebel. Rich and poor alike; Republicans, Democrats, Popu- lists; labor and capital; railways, churches and colleges—all alike, and all in solid wood faith, shrink from such a future as that. : i % * * %* i # A vast majority of all parties agree that the single gold standard has been, is and will be a national disaster of the worst kind. What is still more strange, almost Nine-tenths of mankind are hostile to the, single gold standard. Most of the great European nations ahd their governments dislike it. South America re- jects it. The whole of Asia knows only silver, and India, which contains five-sixths of all the subjects of the British crown, is as hostile to it as ourselves. Yet the bankers of London have said that we must submit, and we have submitted. So strange a spectacle has never been seen in our history. Argument, and even the compulsory proof brought by world-wide ruin, seems to be helpless against this the whole world sympathizes with us. Our 70,000,000 people are unanimous against it. astounding power. pleasure paralyzes mankind. * * * * What is the use of argument when we are all convinced; and when at least nine-tenths of all the civilized and uncivilized world agree ? holds us to the single gold standard by the force of her capital alone, more despotic- ally than she could hold us to her empire in 1776. England The mere threat of her dis- The whole agricultural class, the whole class or classes of small proprietors, the farmers that make the bulk and sinew of our race; the artisan whose interests are bound up in the success of our manufacturers; all these join hands with what is left of their old enemies, the landed aristocracy of Europe, to protest against a revo- lution made for the benefit of money lenders alone. ’ Showing Its Effect. of the United States should find it compat- | ible with their interest to take independ- ent action in the direction of bimectalli=ni, I cannot but believe that such action would exert a most salutary influence upon the consummation of international agreement and the coming into this league of every European nation. Assuring you of my highest respect, I remain your most obedient servant, BISMARCK. CAL. WEAVER is a man whose honesty and integrity no one disputes. ‘Whatever of success he has made of life has been gained by dint of hard personal work. He is making friends in the county and should be the next treasurer. Odious Discrimination. All kinds of rail-road discrimination is odious. The kind that gives one class of shippers the preference over another is the rankest injustice, and is directly forbidden by the constitution of this State, but Re- publican Legislatures have failed to pass enactments to enforce it. It is the kind of railroad discrimination that has made a small class of men enormously rich and broken down the business of others. Mo- nopolies like the Standard oil company made their immense accumulations through this kind of injustice. But there has appeared in this political campaign another kind of rail-road discrim- ination, equally unfair and quite as odious. | Every accommodation and facility has been afforded in carrying the pilgrims to Canton to hear MCKINLEY drivel the mo- nopoly doctrine of protection to the wealthy interests, while it is with the greatest diffi- culty that rail-road accommodation can be secured for those who wish to attend Dem- ocratic gatherings where the interest of the people are advocated. The money power, in which the rail-road companies and other corporations are in- cluded, never before made so open and de- termined an effort to control the election, and never before did wealth so offensively display its intention to govern the country. ——At the last gold meeting in Philips- burg Congressman W. L. HICKS, of Altoona, began his speech by building a great pro- tection wall around the United States, then he concluded by tearing it down again. The Congressman must be follow- ing in the tracks of the great Duke of Yorkshire, who marched his men up the hill, then marched them down again. -——MEYER and HECKMAN are the plain, practical men who ought to be commission- ers of Centre county. It is not too soon to Get them in mind and keep them there until you're sure they will be elected. acquired zeal for the abominations of Mc- KiNLEYI=M, which it used to view with alarm and point at it with abhorrence, | charges candidate BRYAN with effrontery lin claiming that the nomination of a candidate for President on a free silver platform has been bringing gold to this country for the last few weeks. But why has he not as good a right to make this claim as the goldites would have to blame his nomination with driving gold out of the country if the yellow metal were going the other way, which they certainly would do? The fact is that gold is being im- ported in unusually large quanity since the free silver nomination, a fact that at least refutes the gold-bug assertion that the mere apprehension of free silver is enough to turn the other metal in the direction of Europe; and indeed we can not see why it should not justify Mr. BRYAN’S claim that the gold is coming in on account of his nomination. We are not willing to agree that when a good thing is in progress the MCKINLEYITES have the exclusive right of claiming that it is the result of something which they have done. When gold is coming into the country and manufacturies are beginning to start up why should it not be attributed to the prospect of BRYAN’S election ? The County Ticket. The nominees presented by the Demo- cratic party for the various, county offices to be filled this fall constitute a body of men, whom you might do well to study up. As compared with those who have been pitted against them by the Republican party in the county they are men eminent- ly superior in every respect. The gold -forces recognize that there is an overwhelming sentiment for silver in Centre, which is one time they admit the truth, but you should know the trick they are going to resort to in their effort to carry the county. It will be their plan to trade votes for BRYAN in return for com- plimentaries to different .aembers of their ticket. Thescheme will be so well worked that a different trade will be offered in every precinct in the county, so that it will have the effect of electing their entire ticket. What we want to call your attention to is this. There will be a handsome natural majority for Mr. BRYAN in the county and it would be #oolish to try augmenting it | by unnatural means. Men who will vote | for the silver candidate for President ought to do so from pure conviction that they are voting for their personal benefit. If ad- vances are made to you to trade or make deals, remember that there will be duplic- ity and that, above all things, the county | ticket ought to be looked after. Read the WATCHMAN. I ehureh. Bryan at Divine Worship. The Philadelphia Record, in its newly | At the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, in Washington. WASHINGTON, Sept. 50.— Accompanied by his host, Mr. Bryan attended services this morning at the New York Avenue Presbyterian church. The announcement of this fact attracted to the church a num- ber of persons not accustomed to worship there, but the edifice was by no means ferowded. Mr. Bryan was not a stranger to the members of New York Avenue Daving his congressional career, and while Rev. W. A. Barlett was pastor, Mr. Bryan was a frequent attendant upon his services. He usually escorted his fath- er, a tall striking looking man, who was blind or nearly so. To-day Mr. Bryan had a seat in the pew occupied by President Lincoln, who attended the church under the pastorate of Rev Dr. Gurley. Rev. Dr. Radcliffe, the pastor, had no knowledge of the intended presence of the presidential candidate until he reached the house. There was only the slighest refer- ence in any part of the service to the pend- ing political struggle. In his prayer the preacher asked that in this time of commotion the Lord would be with the people, and that the president whom they might select would be one of the Lord’s own choosing, giving the coun- try ‘‘peace and honor.” Mr. Radcliffe’s text was taken from the story of Solomon’s dream, ‘‘Ask What Shall I Give You.” At the close of the services Mr. Bryan went forward to the pulpit, as had been his custom, and spoke a few words to the preacher. Many of the congregation took advantage of the opportunity to press for- ward and pay their respects. As he left the church there was a slight cheering by the crowd that waited for his appearance. John Bardsley Pardoned. HARRISBURG, Sept. 21.—Governor Has- tings this evening signed his name to the pardon recommended by the board of par- "dons for John Bardsley, the embezzling city treasurer of Philadelphia. The par- don was recommended by the board some time ago, but the Governor would not ap- prove it until he had gone all over the papers. The pardon will be mailed to- night and Bardsley will be freed to-mor- row. Governor Hastings’ action-was based entirely upon Bardsley’s ill health and the fact that last week he sustained a stroke of paralysis. Bardsley was released from prison, on Tuesday evening, and went, at once, to the home of a friend, near Philadelphia, where it is hoped he will recover his lost | in Philadelphia to-day than there were Ave health. Fitzsimmons Arrested. in Arranging a Prize Fight. NEW YORK, Sept. 21.—Bob Fitzsimmons | was arrested at the Bartholdi hotel and | do not cat. (Laughter.) ] 5 | s? By increasing dollars-in | take the following table, which shows, to a taken to police headquarters to-day. The arrest was made on a warrant charging Fitzsimmons with a misdemeanor in ar- ranging a prize fight in thiscity. - Fitzsim- mons was arraigned in general sessions court, this afternoon, before Judge Fitzger- ald. The court room was crowded. Fitz- simmons leaned on the railing in front of the judge’s desk and looked straight at the judge. He carried a silk hat in his hand and wore a Prince Albert coat. His man- ager, Martin Julian, stood beside him, but ! he had no counsel. Mr. Bryan’s Republican and QGoldite Philadelphia Turned Out to See and Hear the Leader of the Campaigning Record the greenbacks even if the government ex- Broken. § ercises the right to redeem them in silver dollars instead of gold. (Applause.) When they tell you they want a dollar that will buy as much as any dollar in the world they Plain i places, - | a gentleman said : People as No Other City in the Country Has— A Regular Football Rush Necessary to Get Through the Crowds at the Lafayette. PHILADELPHIA, ‘Sept. 22.—William J. Bryan left Wilmington at 10:05 this morning stopping at Chester where he made a short speech and arriving here shortly after noon. A crowd of about 500 were gathered at the Broad street station of the Pennsylvania railroad and cheered heartily as he passed hurriedly to his car- riage escorted by the Democratic City com- mittee. At the Hotel Lafayette, Mr. Bryan’s headquarters, a small crowd had gathered and cheered as he drove up. After being introduced to the members of the New Jersey State committee, Mr. Bryan went to luncheon. At 1:30 Mr. Bryan took a carriage and was driven to the ferry where he took a boat for Washington park, a resort on the New Jersey side of the Delaware below this city. - Arriving there Mr. Bryan found a large crowd assembled in the grove. He’ was escorted to the stand and introduced by William J. Thompson, the owner of the park and a prominent Democratic politician. A burst of cheering greeted the nominee as he came forward and he at once began to speak. . In all Mr. Bryan’s campaigning he never drew crowds of greater magnitude. The Academy of Music was entirely inadequate for the principal Bryan demonstration. It was packed from floor to gallery. The doors had to be closed early in the evening, for the building would hold no more, and those inside were pressed together. as tightly as could be. But the throng inside thd academy was as nothing in point of numbers compared to the packed masses inthe streets On Broad street outside the Hotel Lafayette a great crowd choked progress for more than an hour before Mr. Bryan left the hotel for the academy. Passage to vehicles was impossible and even the extra squad of policemen, who were sent to clear a way for Mr. Bryan at the entrance, found much difficulty in forcing their way through. When Mr. Bryan left his rooms to enter his carriage several hundred men, who had been held in check in the lobby and cor- ridors of the hotel, broke through the line of guards and rushed after him pell mell. With Mr. Bryan was Chairman Curley, of the city executive committee, ex-Congress- man Kerr, of Pennsylvania ; Congressman Sulzer, of New York, and members of the local committees. Several of these were caught in the rush and failed to keep up with the candidate. Furniture was over- turned and a crashing of glass bore witness to the great rush that marked Mr. Bryan’s passage through the hotel. The candidate was sent flying along the corridors without regard to dignity, pushed through a narrow doorway and raced to his carriage by way of the Sansom street en- trance, thus eluding the crowd on Broad street. : There was another crush at the academy, but Mr. Bryan was finally landed on the stage looking very much like the centre rush in a football game after attempting the flying wedge. Outside the academy was another mass of humanity, packed deep in Broad street and looping over into the adjoining thoroughfares. It was a good natured crowd and seemed willing enough to be entertained by campaign orators who spoke from trucks and other conspicuous Mr. Bryan said at Washington park : A speaker went from Philadelphia to Ten-| nesee and told them the gold standardwas the |- best in the world and that we had it for’ twenty years and when he had got through a “Do I understand you to say the gold standard is all right? “Yes” he said. ‘‘Do I understand you to say we have had it for twenty years?’ “Yes more than twenty years.” Then he said: “Why are we not all right !” (Laughter.) If the gold standard is a good thing and we have had 1t these twenty years why is it so many fail to appreciate its blessings ? I will tell you. Be- cause its blessings have ¢nly reached a few peo- ple who like it. Lincoln was once asked what he thought of a certain man’s speech. He said : ‘I think a man who would like that sort of a speech would be pleased.” (Laugh- ter. That is the way with the gold standard. A man who likes that sort of a thingis very much pleased with it, but the number who like it is growing less each day. I met a prominent man yesterday who said that un- til the Chicago convention acted on the sub- ject he had never investigated the money question and never supposed there was any- thing in it; that the papers did not seem to consider it worth thinking about. They re- garded it as a craze and he did not have time as a business man to pay any attention to crazes. But when a great national party adopted a platform making the money ques- the paramount issue he began to think about it. That was only a few weeks ago. He got | to be a crank. He said tome "If we don’t win this fight it is going on until we do win and I don’t care how many years it does take. (Applause). I can’t appreciate the feeling of that man, I went through the same experi- any man who talked about money was a harmless crank, I did not listen to his argu- ments. They had no weight with me. Six years ago I began to study the question, try- ing to find out what was right, because I was taught to believe if a man would ground him- self on what was right he could wait for other people to come to him. I wastaught to believe no man could afford to be wrong no matter how many were in his company. I studied the question, I read books on both sides and compared them and the more I read the deeper became my conviction until I be- came so firmly of the opinion’ that there could be no prosperity in this country until free silver was restored that I was willing to risk all I had or hoped tohave on the correct- ness of that conclusion” (Great applause.) products here largely. Where do you get your consumers ? Wine out the farming pop- ulation and where will you ‘sell the goods you produce? You virtually wipe out the farmers as consumers when you drive down the price of their products so they enly real- ize enough to pay taxes and interest. You have many truck farmers. When they take what they have to sell into town they * find the market is rather dull and what they get is small compared to what it used to be. Does it mean the people of Philadelphia are | their taste for the goods you produce? No, | there is as much good taste as ever if they I could get a chance to try it on Sopsing ; ; {| How are you going to increase your markets? On a Warrant Charging Him With a Misdemeanor | By A of people able to | buy what you produce? Will you do that i by making dollars dearcr? | or silver or greenhacks. not as hungry as they ever were ? I venture the assertion there are more hungry people years ago, Is it because people have lost No, dollars do They devoura good deal but they How are you going | not eat. to create markets ? say they want property as cheap here as it is anywhere in the world. (Applause.) The gold standard ucwspapers think we won’t be able to get silver into circulation if we have free coinage. 1 want to tell you they will be mighty glad to have subscrip- tions paid over in silver dollars, if these peo- ple whom they have been trying to destroy in the interest of foreign capitalists will con- tinue to take their papers into their houses. Mr. Bryan continued : ‘‘Against this wait- ing policy with twenty years of adverse ex- perience behind it we offer an aggressive pol- icy, by which the United States will lead the nations of the world to the restoration of gold and silver as money. You say it is American to brag about what we can do. I reply that it is English, you know, to think we can’t do anything. (Laughter.) We have reached a great crisis and the question presented to the American people is, shall the United States have a financial policy of its own, or must the people receive their fi- nance ready made from some foreign land. (Cries of ‘no, never.””) Itisa question up- on which much will depend. I beg you when you vote to consider the responsibility which rests upon you, and so vote that you may tell your children without a blush for which policy you voted in 1896. (Applause.) A Kentucky Banker Gives His Reasons. From the Cincinnati Enquirer. Mr. D. C. Collins, one of the oldest bank- ers in this country, and who has for the greater part of his life been connected with the Northern bank of Kentucky as a gov- erning officer, which bank was chartered by the State of Kentucky in 1835, and has continued its charter under state law up to the present time, and has passed through all of the financial troubles since its or- ganization, including the civil, war, with- out ever refusing to pay a lawful demand on presentation, now presents to the peo- ple his opinions, formed from experience and great study, on the present financial situation, in a pamphlet of 70 pages, called “Sound Money. What is It?’ All voters should read it. We give a quotation from the addenda of the second edition, viz: Labor—Is the only means of bringing wealth into active use. Therefore, the services of the laborer is of prime import- ance and should be rewarded accordingly. Capital—Is secondary as a help in produc- ing wealth, and, therefore, should not be exalted above labor. Money—Represents the exchange be- tween the two factors, and as the volume of money is increased you must certainly increase the price of labor, and thus better the condition of the laborer. With gold as the only standard the volume of money cannot be augmented, and therefore, prices of products and labor cannot be increased, even if full confidence was restored. Debts—Existing debts amounting to at least $100,000,000,000 must be paid with- out rebate or reduction. With present prices and money conditions can we pay them ? Interest—On all of our indebtedness must be paid, which, at the low average of 4 per cent., would amount to $4,000,000,- 000 annually, a large part of which must be paid to a foreign people, and this with- out regard to the prices of products or labor. Taxes—Which never grow less, and are now enormous, must be paid without re- duction. What do they amount to? Na- tional, state, county and municipal ? YFixed Charges—All of these items that I have named are fixed charges against labor, apd the monetary conditions will not | ¢hange them. Living—There are 70,000,000 of people to feed and clothe, with many other in- cidental expenses, some part of which ex- pense is affected, by money conditions ; others are not, all of which must be pro- cured by labor. Will the millions of toilers surrender their independence and dignity by aiding to debase themselves in fixing upon this nation the single gold standard ? ° If I asa farmer should abandon a por- tion of the best of my farm and allow it to go to waste, you would call me foolish. Is not that exactly what the advocates of a gold standard would do with our great sil- ver mining interest ? Single gold standard means an increase . of therate of interest to all borrowers of money on account of the decreased volume of money in use. Single gold standard means that we sur- render the control of our financial system to a few brokers in New York, who then can dictate their own terms and eonditions or stop specie payments at any time within 10 days, as they could control all of the available gold. STOP AND THINK ! © They Get It. “I want a dollar that is worth a dol- lar,”’ shouts the fool farmer, and he hauls two bushels of wheat to market that have ence myself. Until six years ago I thought | cost him $1.40 to produce—and gets it. “TI want a dollar that is worth a dollar,” yells the silly planter, and he carts to mar- ket 15 pounds of cotton that have cost him $1.30 to make—and he gets it. ‘I want an honest dollar,”” howls the la- boring man, and he does $2 worth of work —and he gets it. “I want an honest dollar,”’ shrieks the hide-bound merchant, and he advertises his goods at panic prices—and he gets it. “I want the earth and all thas is on it,”’ says the money owner, and he quietly makes his notes and mortgages payable in gold—and he has almost got it. But the people of the United States, just now, are listening with serious, even dan- You people are producing manufacturing | gerous, attention to the summary of John A. Logan : ‘You may theorize and argue until you are hoarse, yet you will fail to get the peo- ple to prefer low prices to high ones for their products. They know that one bush- el of wheat at $1.25 in currency will buy one acre of Government land, while it takes two and a half bushels at 50 cents to, purchase it, 2 know that $1 in paper, if legal tender, will pay $1 of taxes as well as $1 in gold. They know well enough from experience that if you run down prices by lessening the currency there will be no correspond- ing decrease in taxes and salaries of county, state and municipal officers, nor in the debts they owe.” though it be gold. They This Shows Where the Money Is. From the last U. S. census report we the hands of the few. No, you have got to ! nicety, in whose hands the money is. restore prosperity by stopping the fall ot | prices, so men will sell what they produce to get money to buy what you produce. (Ap-! plause.) : A silver man can almost like any kind of money. see, who was making a speech. He said he was not particular about the money. He | liked gold and silver and paper, and in fact a | little counterfeit would not be objectionable. | (Laughter.) Now, we don’t care for any counterfeit, but we are willing to take gold, And we will take ne / Millionaire ... He is like the governor of Tennes- | Rich......... Home owners., Homeless... : “Average | = iNumber; _'per | Total families | family. | for class. Class 1,047 83,000,000.$12,000,000,000 1,002,218, 28,735! 30,500,000,000 4,994,001 2,015] 14,560,939, 343 coer 6,509,796 418 2,795,808.000 Read the WATCHMAN during the campaign. It is cheap, it is failedn: it is .