VOL. 42. The Huntingdon Journal. (Vice in new JOURNAL Building, Fifth Street. TII HUNTINGDON JOURNAL is published every Friday by J. A. Nasu, at $2,(4) per annum IN ADVANCE, or $2.;10 if Dot paid for in six months from date of sub scription, and f 3 if not paid within the year. No paper discontinued, unless at the option of the pub lisher, until all arrearages are paid. No paper, however, will be sent out of the State unless absolutely paid for in advance. Transient advertisements will be inserted at TWELVE AND ... A-HALF CENTS per line for the first insertion, !MTV( AND A.-HALF CENTS for the second and FIVE CENTS per line for all subsequent insertions. Regular quarterly and yearly business advertisements will be inserted at the following rates : 13m 18m19m 1 1 yr 1 13m 1 6m 19m lyr lln 4 501 5 50 8 001 1 4ccal 9 00118 00 $27 $36 2" 500 8 0010 00112 001}iccd118 00;36 00 50 65 3 " 700 10 00 14 00 18 00 4 001 33 0060 00 65 80 4 " 8001400 20 00118 0011 c 01136 00 60 00 80 100 All Resolutions of Associations, Communications of limited or individual interest, all party annonacements, and notices of Marriages and Deaths, exceeding five lines, will be charged TZN CZINTB per line. Legal and other notices will be charged to the party having them inserted. Advertising Agents mast find their commission outside of these figures. All adve,rtiting accounts are due and collectable when the advertisement is once inserted. JOB PRINTING of every kind, Plain and Fancy Colors, done with neatness and dispatch. Hand-bills, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, &c., of every variety and style, printed at the shortest notice, and everything in the Printing line will be executed in the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. Professlonal Cards. TR. G. B. HOTCHKIN, 204 Mifflin Street. Office cot' 11 ner fifth and Washington Ste., opposite the Post Of fice. Huntingdon. Unnel4-1878 TA CALDWIL'LL, Attorney-at-Law, No. 111, Srd street. 1./. Office formerly occupied by Messrs. Woods & Wil liamson. [apl2,'7l DA. B. BRUMBALJGII, offers his professional services I/ to the community. Office, No. 623 Washington street, ene door east of the Catholic Parsonage. [jan4,'7l HYSKILL has permanently located in Alexandria if to practice his profession. [jan.4 '7B-Iy. Ee. STOCKTON, Surgeon Dentist. Office in Leigter's E. O. building, in the room formerly occupied by Dr. E. J Greene, Huntingdon, Pa. [apl2B, '76. GEO. B. ORLADY, Attorney-at-Law, 405 Penn Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [n0v17,'75 GL. ROBB, Dentist, office in S. T. Brown's new building, U No. 620, Penn Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [ap12.71 H.C. MADDEN, Attorney-at-Law. Office, No.—, Penn . Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [apl9,'7l TSYLVANUS BLAIR, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, tl • Pa. Office, Penn Street, three doors west of 3rd Street. Dan4,7l T W. bIATTERN, Attorney-at-Law and General Claim Agent, Huntingdon, Pa. Soldiers' claims against the Government for back-pay, bounty, widows' and invalid pensions attended to with great care and promptness. Of fice on Penn Street. Lian4,'7l T 8. GELSSINGER, Attorney-at-Law and Notary Public, Huntingdon, Pa. Office, No. 230 Penn Street, oppo site Oourt House. [febs;7l K FLEMING, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa., L)• office in Monitor building, Penn Street. Prompt and aareful attention given to all legal business. [augs,74-6mos WILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney-at-Law, Hunting- VT don, Pa. Special attention given to collections, and all other legal business attended to with care and promptness. °Rice, No. 229, Penn Street. [apl9,'7l Miscellaneous AVERILL BARLOW, 45 South Second Street, Has the largest and best stock of Fu . BNITURE, IN PHILADELPHIA. All those in want of Furniture of any quality, examine goods in other stores, then call and compare prices with his. He guarrantees to sell low er than any other dealer. Every ar ticle warranted. [ jan.2s-Iy. FOR SALE. . CHOICE PMIG LANDS MINNESOTA AND DAKOTA, BY THE Winona & St. Peter Railroad Co. The WLNIONA & ST. PETER R. R. Co., is now offering for sale, at VERY LOW prices, its land grant lands along the line of its Railroad in Southern Minnesota and Eastern Dakota, and will receive in payment therefor, at par, any of the Mortgage Bonds of aaid Company. These lands lie in the great wheat belt of the Northwest, in a climate unsurpassed for healthfulness, and in a coun try which is being rapidly settled by a thriving and indus trious people, composed to a large extent of farmers, front the Easleru and the older portions of the horthweetern States. 11. M. BURCIIARD, Land Agent, for sale of Lands of said Company, at MARSIIALL, LYON COUNTY, MINN& SOTA. GEO. P. GOODWIN, Land Commissioner. General Office of Chicago & North-western Railway Co., thicago, 111. . . . . To all persons requesting information, by mail or cab erwise, Circulars and Mai,s will be sent free of cost by said Land Commissioner or said Land Agent. [mchl-8m Patents obtained for Inventors, in the United States, Cana da, and Europe at rednced rates. With our prin cipal office located in Washington, directly opposite the United States Patent Office, we are able to at tend to all Patent Business with greater promptness and despatch and less cost, than other patent attor neys, who are at a distance from Washington, and who have, therefore, to employ "associate auorneye.', We make preliminary examinations and furnish opinions as to patentability, free of charge, and all who are interested in new inventions and Patentsare invited to send for a copy of oar "Guide fur obtain ing Patents," which is sent free to any address, and contains complete instructions how to obtain Pat ents, and other valuable matter. We refer to the German-American National Bank, Washington, D. C ; the Royal Sweedish, Norwegian, and Danish Legations, at Washington; Eon. Joseph Casey, late Chief Justice U. S. Court of Claims; to the Officials of the U. S. Patent Office, and to Senators and Members of Congress from every State. Address: LOUIS BAGGER & CO., Solicitors of Patents and Attorneys at Law, Le Droit Washington, D. C. [apr26 '7S-tf 411ai ,. • A LECTURE TO - YOTT.NG MEN_ A Lecture on the Nature, Treatment, and Radical Cur• of Seminal Weakness, or Spermatorrho,a, induced by Belt-Abuse, Involuntary Emissions, Impoten cy, Nervous Debility, and Impediments to Marriage gen erally; Consumption, Epilepsy, and Fits; Mental and Physical Incapacity, Ac.—By ROBERT J. CULVER WELL. M. D., author of the "Green Book," Ac. The world-renowned author, in this admirable Lecture, clearly provee from his own experience that the awful consequences of Self-Abuse may be effectually removed without medicine, and without dangerous surgical opera tion, bougies, instruments, rings, or cordials ; pointing out a mode of cure at once certain and effectual, by which very sufferer, no matter what his condition may be, may are himself cheaply, privately and radically. Sent, under seal, in a plain envelope, to any address, on receipt of six cents, or two postage stamps. Address the Publishers, THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL CO., 41 Ann St., N. Y; Post Office Box, 4586. July 19-9moe. CHEVINGTON COAL ♦T THE Old "Langdon Yard," in quantities to suit purchasers by the ton or car load. Kindling wood out to order, Pine Oak or Hickory. Orders left at Judge Miller's store, at my residence, 609 Mifflin at., or Ouse Hayman& may 3,'78-Iy.] J. 11. DAVIDSON. HROBLEY, Merchant Tailor, No. • 813 Mifflin street, West Huntingdon Pa., respectfully solicits a share of public pat ronage from town and country. [octlB, SCHOOL of every B OOKS variety, cheap, JOURNAL STORE. at the , t 1 f•t s e ... 11 1 - ... 41t V . - 7- r ~ :. 1 ,i, • Ti - 7 'l,rb "V.l t tt• - 1.• . . I 11 d... 0 n _ ~.._ .. ij i 4 l • - A U ir ii i . 41 * X ‘}fiL._ -.._ _ii_ 1 i . ' 4WV 0 Printing The Huntingdon Journal, PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING, -IN THE NEW JOURNAL BUILDING, No. 212, FIFTH STREET, HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, TERMS : $2.00 per annum, in advance; $2.50 within six months, and $3.00 if not paid within the year 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 o o 00000000 PROGRESSIVE 0 REPUBLICAN PAPER. 0 00000000 SUBSCRIBE. 00000000 o o 0 o 0 0 o o ggigg3g TO ADVERTISERS : Circulation 1800. FIRST-CLASS ADVERTISING MEDIUM 5000 RENDERS WEEKLY. The JOURNAL is one of the best printed papers in the Juniata Valley, and is read by the best citizens in the county. It finds its way into 1800 .homes weekly, and is read by at least 5000 persons, thus making it the BEST advertising medium in Central Pennsyl- vania. Those who patronize its columns are sure of getting a rich return for their investment. Advertisements, both local and foreign, solicited, and inserted at reasonable rates. Give us an order. Mggggg JOB DEPARTMENT p a l Or ;,.... w C = ‘.., Cr I CD I 10... 0 a 1 CD i n rr m' C s. fa. joa 171 o ;7 1..1 1- , -4 CD 1. P... DC et, IS 0 -.1 PR - COLO Stir All letters should be addressed to J. A. NASH, Huntingdon, Pa. El2titsts' *Jur. Come, listen to me for a while, my lad Conic, listen to me for a spell Let that terrible dram For a moment be dumb, For your uncle is going to tell What befell A youth that loved liquor too well A clever young man was he, my lad, And with beauty uncommonly blessed, With brandy and wine He began to decline, And behaved like a person possessed ; protest The temperance plan is the best. One evening he went to the tavern, my lad, He went to the tavern one night, And, drinking too much Iturn, brandy and such, The chap got exceedingly "tight;" And was quite What your aunt would entitle a "fright." The fellois fell into a snooze, my lad, 'Tis horrible slumber he takes— He trembles with fear, And acts very queer— My eyes I how he shivers and shakes When he awakes, And raves about horrid great snakes. 'Tis a warning to you and me, my lad, A particular caution to all— Though no one can see The viper but he— To hear the poor lunatic bawl, "How they crawl All over the floor and the wall I" 00000000 Next morning he took to his bed, my lad, Next morning he took to his bed ; And he never got up, To dine or to sup, Though properly physiced and bled ; Next day the poor fellow was dead. You've heard of the snake in the grass, my lad , Of the viper concealed in the grass ; But now you must know, Man's deadliest foe Is the snake of a different class ; Alas! Tis the v i per that lurks in the glass. Vinces (tory. TWICE ENTRAPPED Years ago, when Pike's Peak was the centre of attraction to the gold finder, as the Black Hills are to-day, I, with a mul titude of others, went and returned with but little of the yellow metal to show for the endurance of mining hardships. My venture, however, was not entirely unprofitable, for, as luck would. have it, an opportunity was offered to benefit others in benefitting myself I had become restless and discontented through ill success, and threw up claim after claim without very thoroughly "prospecting" any of them. One day I visited a mine said to be pay ing, having a curiosity to see such a one, and here met a character that changed my whole purpose. Among the miners was one, a low browed, black-eyed, dark-corn• plexioned man, whom I recognized as a desperado that I had seen in New Orleans two years before, and on whose head was placed a large reward. He was changed into almost ancther be ing with his various means of disguise, but withal I was certain that I knevi the man as the very one I bad seen in the criminal box and convicted of robbery and intended murder. I watched him until the suspicions were made doubly sure, and then dispatched a letter to the proper authorities in Louis iana, informing them that the escaped convict was there, and that I would keep my eye upon the villain until the officers of the law could arrive to secure him. It would not be safe, I thought, to trust the secret to any one among the miners,. for I did not know who could be trusted, and it would not be a very pleasant under. taking to attempt to handle him single handed. He was powerfully muscular and armed to the teeth, besides his desperate character and small regard for human life would make him an ugly customer to con tend with. Under the pretense of being out of money, employment was obtained to assist in digging. There was no risk in this, for Mezler, alias Benson, I was convinced, did not recognize me ; indeed, it was doubtful whether he had ever noticed me before, as I had no personal acquaintance with him, so I worked on day after day until a full month had passed before any reply came to the letter of information that had been sent. At last a brief note was received, ask ing further instructions as to the where abouts of Mezler, sent down from Denver, to which I immediately replied, asking the officers to arrive at the gulch after night fall on a certain evening appointed, and I would meet them outside the mine and have everything in readiness for the arrest of the criminal. On the afternoon of the day appointed For the meeting, I managed to get hold of Mczler's revolvers, and having filled the barrels of blank cartridges, felt that a good work had been accomplished. His knife I could not get away from him without awaking suspicion, 51 concluded not to make the attempt. But two men came to make the arrest, not so many as I had hoped for, as it was uncertain what resistance would he offered on the part of Mezler's messmates. We, however, concluded to run the risk and make the attempt. I was to lodge with Benson, as he was called among the miners, and repaired to the tent as soon as the plans of operation had been matured. B a 0 Ile sat in the lodge smoking his pipe, and paid but little attention to me am I entered. I sat down on a stool, and both remained silent for a time. I could see by the light of the dim taper that Mezler was troubled about something. At last he broke the silence by setting his black, glistening eyes upon me,and in a hoarse voice he growled between his teeth : "You are a devilish scoundrel !" .-c5 .-: co 't:l so —, CD a• I started as if a bomb shell had hit me, but instantly controlling the emotion, I replied firmly : "Your words, sir, demand an explana tion. I allow no man to talk to me in that manner." 0 O. cfl co" "Whether you do or not," he growled, "you are ! You are here for a false pur pose. You have tampered with my pistols to-day. I have loaded them again, and have a mind to empty a barrel now in your -head !" he concluded with an oath, at the same time slipping a revolver from his pocket and holding it threateningly in his hand. I saw that I must change the tactics or lose the game, and perhaps my own life. Rising to my feet, I said : "Benson, you are a Southerner, are you not ?" Delirium Tremens. RV JOHN H. SAXE BY C. LEON MEREDITH. HUNTINGDON, PA,, FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 6, 1878. "I am," was the cold reply "So am I, and to show you that I am not a coward, I will meet you at the table rock alone, and at a distance of five paces show you who is the better man. If you are a true Southerner you will not shoot a man down in cold blood for imagined wrongs." "How soon do you want the lead of my pistol ?" he asked with a sneer. "As soon as we can get to the rock.— The night is not so dark but what we can get a fair range. Mezler arose as if ho was but going to a dinner, and saying "come on," passed out of the cabin and walked off in the direction of the table rock, which was not more than fifty rods distant. I kept quiet until we had passed the cabins of the miners, and then talked loud enough of our trouble to let the officers know that I was luring him away, for I knew that they were on the alert, and had probably heard all that had taken place at the hut. We reached the rock, down beside which gurgled a mountain streamlet. The stars above shone down with a deadened light, while away at the north a heavy, dark cloud now and then sent out an electrical flash that spread for an in stant a peculiar gloom over the scene. I made some unnecessary delay, hoping the officers would pounce upon the convict and check the proceedings, but they did not pat in an appearance. Mezler came close to me and hissed in my ear that I was a coward, and if I had any message to leave to submit it at once, as he intended to blow the top of my head off before another five minutes should pass. I replied with a light laugh that I would be able to convey in person any messages I had to send, and I was only waiting for him to decide upon a plan of action. "Very well," was the reply in a freezing tone, "if left to me, let us stand five paces apart, backs to the south and eyes upon yonder thunderhead and wheel and fire at the first flash." "Very well," I answered, in as collected and indifferent tone as I could command, "measure the ground." Soon we were in position, and I found myself in an attitude that was not looked for or desired, as it was not my purpose to shoot Mezler, or to be shot by him. We cocked our revolver arid stood wait ing for the signal that would be very sure to bring fatal results to one if not to both of us. I determined to carry out the duel now that things bad gone so far, and breathlessly watched for the action of the elements. A half minute passed in profound si lence, save the mournful gurgling of the brook, then there darted out a lurid flash, but just before it came a terrible oath from Mezler. I turned, and just in time to see him felled to the earth, and to save my shot. The officers had knocked the pistol from the hand of the desperado, and thrown him upon the rock. The work of binding Mezler and start. ing him off for Denver was quickly per formed, the next day found us on our way to Louisiana, with the prisoner firmly se cured. He was identified and remanded to prison, but before parting he found oppor tunity to whisper in my ear that be the time long or short, he would murder me if he had to go to the ends of the earth to do it, as soon as he escaped from confine ment. I received the reward, a snug sum of money, and engaged in business as before my exploit in the land of gold. • Time passed on, and I had almost for gotten the oath of the convict, when one evening, while stopping in a hotel in a Southern city, and during the time of the rebellion, I read with no little interest that Mezler was again at large. Then the curse of the villain came back to me with all the f)rce that it had at first been received. I had noticed during lounging hours in the bar room a dark eyed man, with heavy whiskers, watching me closely, but thought nothing of it, further than a certain familiar look of the features, until seeing the news paragraph. The strange man had then disappeared, but the matter gave me no little concern. I thought, however, my apprehensions might be groundless, and said nothing of the matter, but took my lamp and went up to my room. I set the taper low, to allow it to burn during the night, and tumbling into bed without undressing, went to sleep after several hours spent in restless meditations. As to the time I slept nothing definite can be told, but suddenly my eyes flew open. A restless fear was pressing upon me. What had awakened me I did not know. The room was empty and all was still. Finally, concluding that it was a vague apprehension, I changed my position and tried to sleep again. After a time I passed into a restless doze, when I was startled by the sharp click of my door luck. Lying quiet, I watched the key with breathless anxiety. It turned from pincers on the opposite side, and then the door gradually opened, and the burly frame of the same strange man that 1 had seen in the evening, entered. In the hand of the intruder there was a gleaming knife, and with cat-like tread he moved to my bedside. My revolver was coJted and held in my right hand under the light spread that covered my breast.— My eyes, although apparently closed as if iu slumber, were sufficiently open to al low me to watch his movements. The demon gleamed upon me with evi dent satisfaction. He measured with his eye the location of my heart, and then lifted the steel high above his head to make a fatal blow. There was not another instant to be lost, and the thought for the first time flashed through my mind, what if the weapon should miss fire ? My finger pressed the lock, and a deaf ening report followed. I leaped to the other side of the bed, while the knife fell from the hand of the fiend, and he made for the door. As it happened, there was a closet door on the side of the room next to the hall close to the one for entrance, and through this the desperado plunged, and I followed, turning the key as soon as he was fairly in. The report oP the pistol brought a dozen men to the room at once, and after I had told my story the closet door was opened and the occupant ordered to walk out and surrender himself, which he promptly did, as he was suffering severely from a shat tered shoulder blade. The ball from my revolver had made powerless the muscular arm raised against my life. After binding the fellow, I said to him "Mezler," for, as the reader has believed, it was no one else, "this is twice for me; will you give it up now ?" Bringing his teeth together so that they cracked as if made of steel, and uttering a fearful oath, he said : "Stone and iron will not hold me until you are the food of worms." "I will see to that," I replied, as we started the fellow off to the station. lie cursed like a maniac at first, and then settled into sullen silence. 1 felt better when I knew that the iron doors ofprison were closed upon him again, but still was ill at ease, for I knew that Mezler would kill me at any time should he escape, or at the expiration of his Ben tepee. But relief came soon. A few months after the third incarceration the convict died in his cell, and I breathed easy again. ~clecx JisuUan. Select Proverbs, Past labor is pleasant. Think of case but work on. Poverty is the mother of all arts Quarreling dogs come halting home. Running hares do not need the spur. Quiet persons are welcome everywhere. Pains to get, care to keep, fear to lose, That which is well done, is twice done. The present, fashion is always handsome. Sit in your place and none can make you rise. Poverty craves many things, but avarice more. Pay as you go and keep from small scores. Provide fir the worst, the best will save itself. Take time while time is, for time will away. . Setting down in writing is a lasting memory. See, listen and be silent, and you will live in peace. Speak well of our friend, of your enemy say nothing. Riches, like manure, do no good till they are spread. The best throw upon the dice is to throw them away. The stone that lies not in your way, need not offend you. Speak little and to the purpose, and you will pass for somebody. There are no coxcombs so troublesome as those who have some wit. Some have been thought brave because they were afraid to run away. The foolish Alchimest sought to make gold of iron, and made irou of gold. What the Sun is Mad© Of. A discJvcry of importance to science is announced by Dr. Henry Draper, of Hast ings on-the-Hudson. It is well known to students of the spectroscope, that while the black lines that indicate the presence of metalic vapors are so abundant in the solar spectrum as to leave no room for doubting that most, if not all, the metals are ignited in the sun, there is yet an ab sence of the lines that characterize nearly all the non-metalic substances. Hydrgoen is excepted from this sweeping rule, but there are many reasons for classing•that gas with the metals. Various theories have been put forward to explain the absence of non metalic lines from the solar spectrum, and the fact has ever been used to throw a doubt over the nebular hypothesis, which necessarily assumes that the constituents of the sun cannot greatly differ from those of the earth. Dr. Draper's discovery, if it be confirmed, shows that at least one— and probably several—non•metalic sub stances are present in the sun. In a paper read before the American Philosophical Society last month, he gave the details of experiments which appear to prove that oxygen forms one of the sun's constituents. lts presence is indicated in the spectrum, not by black but by bright lines. To make this more apparent, Dr. Draper has photo graphed with the spectrum of the sun a "comparison spectrum" of commen air— the air being ignited by the electric sparks of a Leyden jar. The "comparison !spec trum"gives the bright lines of the oxygen and nitrogen, and also (from the terminals of the battery used) those of aluminium and iron. The lines of the metals serve to check the accuracy with which the two spectra—of the sun and of air—are match ed. Proverbs for Subscribers. "A wise son maketh a glad father," and a prompt paying subscriber causeth an ed itor to laugh. "Folly is a joy that is destitute of wis dom," but a delinquent subscriber causeth suffering in the house of a newspaper maker "All the ways of a man are clear in his own eyes," except the way the delinquent subscriber bath in not paying for his news paper. "Better is a little with righteousness," than a thousand subscribers who faileth to pay what they owe. "A just weight and balance are the Lord's," but that which is due upon your newspaper is the publisher's thereof. "Better is a dry morsel and quietness therewith," than a long list of subscribers who cheated' the printer. "Better is the poor man that walketh in integrity," and payed' his subscription, than the rich man who continually telleth the "devil" to come again. "Judgments are prepared fur scorners, stripes fur the backs offools," and everlast ing destruction to him who payeth not for his newspaper. "Hope deferred maketh the heart sick" is a proverb sadly realiz3d by the publish er who sendeth out bills. "A righteous man hateth lying," hence an editor waxeth wroth against the sub scriber who promises to call and settle on the morrow, yet calleth not to settle. "It biteth like a serpent and stingeth like an adder" when the adder gets thro' adding up the accounts due from his subs. —Whitehall Times. IN matters worldly, the more occupations and duties a man has, the more certain is he of doing all imperfectly. In the things of God this is reversed. The more duties you perform, the more you are fitted for doing others ; what you lose in time you gain in strength. IT is just to forget all kindness done us by those with whom we live for a little pain, which, after all, may have been giv en unintentionally ? Our National Finances ! What Secretary Sherman has to Say About Them ! He Discusses the Coin and Currency Questions—How we are Getting Back to Hard Pan—The "Bonds" —Judge Thurman's Fallacies Exploded—We Must Keep Our Promises An Interesting Speech for Thought- ful . Men ! Secretary Sherman addressed a large and enthusiastic meeting at Toledo, Ohio, on the night of the 21;th ult. lie spoke as follows : I naturally suppose that you desire me to speak mainly on financial topics. My official position for many years in the Sen ate connected me with the financial legis lation of Congress, and my present office requires me to carry into execution these laws. They relate mainly to the public credit, the public debt, our coin and cur rency, and the system of taxes by which the Government is supported. These topics are necessarily interwoven with each other, but each canvass brings some of these into more prominence than others. What I want is the largest amount of currency that can be maintained at par with the established coin of the country. From the diversity of our wants we must have many different kinds of money, to measure great wants and little wants. We must have coin money and paper money, and plenty of both. What I contend for is that, though our money may be of many kinds, it must have the same purchasing power. The essential qualities of all good money are stability, equality, and convert ibility. The dollar of one kind should buy as much as the dollar of any other kind. Depreciated money cheats the ignorant and the unwary, and enriches the money-changer. The poor man whose dependence is upon his daily labor is the victim of depreciated money, for he must take what is offered and is always paid in the poorest money. No distinction should be made between coin money and paper money, or between the noteholder and the bondholder. The money provided by the Government should pay all debts and be used for all debts. Subject to these con ditions I am for the largest amount of each kind of money demanded for the wants of business, and if you will agree with me in these general propositions there will be no quarrel between us. THE MOST IMPORTANT QUESTION OF THE CANVASS Our paper currency is now happily brought to very near par with coin. Will you insist upon keeping it with par, or will you, by repeating the resumption act, retrace the steps already taken and embark again upon the sea of irredeemable paper currency ? Shall our paper money hereaf ter be redeemable in coin upon the demand of the holder and be maintained at par with coin, or shall it be what its friends call a flat" money, irredeemable in coin, depending upon the daily trade marks of bankers and brokers for its value, and upon the changing majorities in Congress for its amount and qualii,y ? It was the Republican party which de vised and issued the greenbacks, and which has thus far sustained them and advanced them by slow and gradual processes to par with coin. No doubt there have been hon est differences, as it is natural there would be, as to the means by which the result has been brought about, but there should be no difference among Republicans as to the desire the money contrived by their policy, and the chosen instruments by which the forces of the United States were marshalled during our war, should be made and kept equal to coin. However, varying currents of public opinion or tem porary depression of industry may tend to disturb the public judgment, it should be the will and duty of the great party to which we belong to make good the promi ses printed on the face of their United States notes, especially when it is demand ed not only by the national honor, but by the clearest public policy. This money is our own, in which we naturally take pride. We guarded it in its cradle when it was reviled and derided by our political adversaries, at a time when it was said it would wander like Cain with a mark upon its brow, dishonored and repudiated. We believed in it then and we believe in it now. WE PROMISED TO REDEEM TLIEM IN GOLD When we issued it we promised to re deem it in coin, and every fresh issue was accompanied by a fresh promise. In 1866 we not only, by law, promised to redeem it, but provided for the gradual contraction of the amount. In 1868 we suspended the contraction, but renewed the promise. In 1869 we Solemnly pledged the public faith to redeem these notes in coin. No step, however, was taken to redeem these pledg es; and, under the stimulus of inflation, speculation ran riot, visionary schemes were entered upon, extravagance prevailed, until in September, 1873, the bubble burst, prices fell, the wild delusions of the time were dissipated, and business men had to face the inevitable evils that always come from irredeemable paper money. Then, after 15 months debate in Congress and before the people, as a remedy for the evils we were suffering, the Resumption Act was passed. The only object was to make our paper money equal to coin. It was not the best possible measure, hut was the only one that could be agreed upon. It was very general in its provisions, but did not give ample power to prepare for and to maintain resumption. It did not abolish the greenback. On the contrary the green• backs were expressly to be retained to the extent of $300,000,000 as a part of the permanent currency of the country, and this was, on the Ist of January, 1879, to be made as good as coin, to be redeemable in coin, and to be issued and reissued as the money of the people, the foundation of our currency. This was to be the fulfill ment of our promises. This was the an swer to those who said the greenback would never be redeemed. When I assumed the duties of my pres ent office, after careful study of the whole question, I determined that it would be necessary to accumulate, in addition to the surplus revenue, the sum of $100,000,000 of gold coin, and that it ought to ba accu mulated at the rate of $5,000,000 a month from the Ist of May, 1877, to the date of resumption. It was confidently declared by those who opposed the law that it would be impossible to accumulate this coin with- out putting up the price of gold, and thus defeating the object, but the experiment showed that it was not only feasible, but a Ivantageous to the current business of the country. We accumulated readily during the 8 months of that year at the rate of 85,000,- 000 a month, with gold constantly decli ning in price. This process was arrested by the debates in Congress, and the threat. ened repeal of the Resumption Act, but was again resumed in the spring of this year, when it was found still more easy to accumulate coin by the sale of 4/ per cent. bonds, and the original plan was executed sooner than was anticipated, by the more rapid sale of bonds, so that on the 10th of this month the Treasury of the United States was supplied with $209,011,753 15 gold and silver, coin and bullion. WREN IRREDEEMABLE PAPER MONEY IS JUSTIFIED. Irredeemable paper money is only justi fied by war carried to the extent of national peril, when the life of the nation is at stake. It ought to be redeemable as soon as the public exigencies will permit. It is not money, but the promise to pay money. These are axioms of political economy, the truth of which all experience has demonstrated. We issued this money only in the midst of such a peril. Our error, if any, has been that we have de layed too long the measures of resumption. Now, when they are almost complete, and gold and silver and paper money are prao tically convertible one into the other, when there is the same money for the bond holder and the noteholder, the rich and the poor, when silver can be had for notes, and gold in ample stores awaits the day of redemption, we Republicans should not debate the question of the repeal of the resumption act. I can imagine how a man deeply iu debt and hoping to evape bankruptcy may de sire to cheapen the money in which his debts are to be paid, but why should a laboring man, whose daily toil is measured by the money he receives, desire to cheapen that money ? Why should a farmer who sells his productions for money desire to lessen its purchasing power ? Why should a prudent, thrifty, industrious man en gaged in any occupation who hopes by his thrift and industry to accumulate for him self a competence, desire to have his labor measured by a money of unstable value ? It is the interest of every one engaged in industrious employments who is not a speculator or a broker, to have a fixed standard of value. If any of you who labor are farmers, mechanics, or belong to any of the industrial classe3 of life, and have hope from a depreciated money, you will be greatly misled. The position of the Republican party is in favor of greenbacks restored to their normal condition of paper money, equal to coin and redeemable in coin on demand of the holder, while the position of the Dem ocratic party, as stated by Judge Thurman, is in favor of the issue and maintenance in circulation of $668,000,000 of United States notes without any provision what ever for their redemption or their conver sion into coin. This issue is distinctly made, and for one I distinctly accept it.— We favor paper money redeemable in coin, ,and the largest amount that can be main• tained at par value with coin, while he favors an amount of paper issued directly to the Government, not convertible into coin, with no provision for its redemption, and to an amount that no one has claimed can be maintained at par value with coin. WHY THURMAN'S PLAN IS WRONG, His plan would directly violate the pro visions of the loan laws, under which both United States notes and bonds are issued and which limit expressly the amount of United States notes to $400,000,000 This wonid be a violation of public faith, and would do inconceivably more harm than it could give profit to the Govern ment. This scheme of his encounters directly the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, and would, no doubt, be held unconstitutional because it provides for a very large increase of United States notes in times of profound peace, where oo such exigency as is contemplated by the Constitution or decision of the Supreme Court exists to justify such an issue. It would at once drive out of existence the whole system of National Banks which have been the means alone by which State banks have been prevented from issuing circulating notes. The only franchise the National Banks receive from the Govern ment which induces them to maintain their corporate existence is the right, under limits fixed by law, to issue circulating notes. Take this rom them and they would at once cease, without exception, to be National banks, and would be organized again, as before the war, into State banks, with such powers as any State might give them. The inevitable effect of this policy would be to revive again the system of State banks without any common organi zation, without any security for theipnotes, upon such terms as any State might pre scribe, and thus all the evils of State bank money, which the people experienced be fore the war, will recur again. Nearly a generation has passed since the incongruous system of paper money which existed be fore the war was swept away by the Na tional Banking Act. It is safe to say that the injury done to the people of the United States by the failure of these banks, by the uncertain value of their paper money, by its limited local circulation and by sue cessful counterfeiting was annually greater than the interest of the entire National Bank circulation of the United States. Judge Thurman computes how much the United States would save if it issued $322.000,000 more of greenbacks and re deemed that amount of bonds. Ido not stop to examine this computation, but I only wonder why he stopped at $322,000,- 000. Why not save the entire interest of the public debt by issuing greenbacks for the whole of it ? Why not repudiate it at once ? That would, according to his com putation, save the entire interest of the public debt, or $93,000,000, with no other loss than the loss of national honor. What assurance has he that $322,000,- 000 will satisfy the more advanced lights of repudiation ? low will he pay out the $322,000,000 ? Will he claim the right to pay the bonds at par with them ? Does he deny the moral and legal obligation by which they are to be paid in coin ? Does he propose to repudiate the act of 1869 ? The immediate effect of the commencement of such an issue would depreciate the notes lower and lower; would widen more and more the gap between the notes and coin would revive again the distinction between the bondholder and the noteholder—gold for the bondholder and depreciated paper money for the people. It would at once stop the funding operations under which we save one-third of the interest of the national debt. No man would buy either a four or a five or a ten per cent. bond in the face of an act of repudiation. Again, as the notes depreciate it becomes more difficult to provide coin for thopayment of the interest, or would be repudiate the obligation to pay the interest in coin ? He says he is in favor of receiving greenbacks for custom duties. Will he, then, buy coin ? If so, his policy will have already advanced the value of coin. WHAT JUDGE THURMAN PROPOSES. He proposes to issue more netteitithout any provision for their payment, when our revenues are ample to meet our expendi ture, in a time of protected peAto; tion there is no motive of patriotism, or day, or safety to impel such a course, and this merely to save the interest of 4 per cant. on $322,000,000. But this very act, if adopted, would prevent out selling a thous and million of 4 per cent. bonds, With which to pay an equal amount of six per cent. bonds, and in this work an annual loss to the Government of $20,000,000, er eight millions a year more than ,tile en tire pretended saving by hits propped pol icy. Again, what moral right has the Gov ernment of the United . States. tok,teqwire its citizens to take its notes as money and a standard of value merely for thinlint of saving interest on these heeds r In a time of war we may ooneede.ihisk iL bo!, T in a time of peace there is no legal es wirel foundation for such a claim unless . the notes are maintained at par and redeemed at par. Is not the United States able to' lay • the interest of its notes? DEBTS AND BUSISZSS. That this country hataiiffereiljtoii de pression in many branobes bßiAtiepe sod in many industrial occupations admit, but every civilized and Christian country in the world has suffered to a greater de gree. In comparison with any agtioi of modern times oar condition in evinryrns pect is more prosperous and happy: , If you read the English or French:4.6er man papers you will find that ale Mimes of complaint are nothing to be onuipered with theirs, while in our country thstitare many circumstances which relisrernbsga eral depression. Let me name some* the hopeful signs of the times- .Mbootilsole period since the war, and beforaidattpkblie, was a debt contracting period. Vrosialndy 1, 1863, to July 1, 1873, oneintpot. ex ceeded our exports in the enormous own of $1,047,069,219. Since 1874 our ex ports exceeded our importain•the sum of $507,459,237. Daring the last fiscal Teat Aim szcess 8257,459,250, oar exports reached the sum of $680,683,798, and during tihisfiwal year this excess of exports is iluretaing. This is a debt-paying - proem. _ body of the debts contrasted befogs the panic are now settled, either by tospr t ot or bankruptcy or re adjustmest, OUR BONDS NOW HELD At 41101111. At one time it was estimated *that the amount of United States -boa& held- abroad approached $1,000,000,000.. 'PO , years ago the general estimate was aiiitat' 4600,- 000,000. Now, after the moststwefelles amination, it is estimated soutlftiear $200,000,000 to $250,000,000-110i.elem mon fear expressed for the se,ites,Of say plan of resumption was that ltittlol- us tions could at once, by a rot* Or i otr bonds, exhaust our gold, snit thut;iakst resumption, but this is no loiteit'fired when the surplus exports for ajitigliWyear would pay off every dollar of our natisall debt held beyond the limits of thetTisited States. Last winter; when anti araited fear prevailed in Europe as 'to-. ect of the silver bi11,560,000,000 - of delifiionde were promptly absorbed by our mils ItijOple in sixty days, and, although this stsliped the sale of bonds by the Tr*Witry i .. it strengthened our position by bringfbit#tem home. Another favorable sign of 412•4isfres is the very large increase of 'dsiMetitio pro duction, both of the farm and . orsgh. work shop, which not only fill the place of goods heretofore imported, but enable teat to compete with foreign nations in their own 111 arkets . , WONDERFUL INCREASE IN EXPORTS. I have here a recent table sholing, the increase of leading exports 14,1 p-own production. This e howl, that 4*x-imports of cotton, iron, Steel, copper, .leashis.,,and other manufactures have nOrafitOkit# hi n ten years nearly tw0.414-aiatehat, az ports of our agricultural -itspielbeetaii:sod provisions have itrcreased tiridt gpee fold. The total amount of certail leading commodities exported in 1868 was $141,1 000,000, and in $lB7B 5ta15404.000.000, showing an increase- of 3208;040,006. Another table shawstitss our hispiriation of certain fabrics ',kick lfte:-.43aik; restfily make in thiseettetry-htehiitnieished nearly one-half. Of textile fitbsica, ideliading manufactures of cotton, silk., eio4bing apd dress goods, the amouurt importecki this country in 1873 was $1.55,000 I l . Ltlne amount imported in 1878 was $85,00C;000, making a dirpiputipq cArtft,oropuo, most of which was supplied' 'by our own prOduc tion. FALLING 021' OF IMPORTS: The imports of iron and tied it various forms in 1873 was $59.308462; 1878 it had fallen to $9,057,638, akowing a diminution of $50,260,249:- This fall ing off was supplied by Got oreshhatry. The total leading manlsfa, ed in this table imported in 18731 as '2,- 957,633, and during the fiscal - yeit!ftidlng June 30, 1878, it wfis, 4;124,211N/44i !ba king a falling off of 148,1417:829.; This great decrease was especially notimpOleiin the imports of mandfaoturea of-cotton, silk, wool, iron and steel. GOVERNMENT WILL PROTECT LABOR. Property educates the children, main tains all your charitable inatitntions, main tains your streets, roads and local impidve meuts, and all parts of National, State,aind local government. The very few taxes that attach to those who have no property are on whisky, tobacco, _and beer, which are voluntary taxes. If the Government can do more to protect tabor, •it will. It offers to every citizen a homestead en-the public lands. It offers every:nista atter:el chance. Every office and hone is to equal competition, and it 07/14,0119pan rank. title, or advantage, except - What he himself acquires. This is alt distil Mslov • ernmeat can dd. It tannot • ...take the property of the rich and divide it; ateeng the poor. It cannot,- as-is-proposed, take the public treasure, collestest bring*, and distribute it any other way meet for the limited proper objects provided for, by the Constitution. It danitnnt oOniertilnktriota men maire With each' ,- .othet"exchiit where they are grossly itimetillievilligtersblio policy. Its ogee is le s 4i who itionswires freedom, eqtlalitl i leak eqm.ll.*9! in the race . of 1110 pititpathiqs of the Repnblitit4iihnat the laboring Scan, it taunt •41aatvithe fundamental principles: of frestosent to favor Any elan in the eon Pflife, property and the fruits of their own Inkonr. NO. 35. T 'I I.