TUK " CLEARFIELD REPGBLICAM," BITABIIIHED IN letl. Th larjpiat Circulation af ujr Neerepaper In North Central Petinoylvenla. Termi of Subscriptjoy' If paid la edvanee, or within I monthe.... (Ml If paid after I ud bror 0 month. I SO U paid aflar tbt expiration of 0 monthi... I (Ml Rates ol Advertising, Trenalenl advertloeinonta, par aquara of 10 llnaaor leaa, I tiinoi or leaa.. tl 0 Koreaeh aubaequent inaartion ao A-lrainiatraloro' and Exooutora'aotloee, I &0 Auditora' notioee , HH , t 60 Geuttona and Eatraya . (0 Diaaoluttoa notiaaa S 00 Profaaaional Garda, e linee or leaa, yoar..... I 00 Lecal notioee, par lina 10 YEARLY ADVBRTIUBMRNTB. I auuara In 00 1 oolatnn 10 00 1 aqaaraa IS 00 I t eolomn.. TO 00 laquaraa.. 10 00 I I aoiama .U0 00 fl. B. OOODLANDER, NOEL I). LKK, Publlehorl. (Cards. g T. HROCKBANK, ATTORKEV AT LAW, CLEARFIELD, PA, Ofioe In Court Houae. ap 20,77-lv H. W. SMITH, ATTORNEY-AT-liA W, tl:l :T8 t'leartleld, fa. J. J. LINGLE, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, 1:10 Plillipabura;. Outre Co., Pa y:pd ISRAEL TEST, ATTOHNRY AT LAW. Clearfield, Pa. jearOSioe la tha Court Bonao. (jjll,'7 W. G. ARNOLD, LAW V COLLECTION OFFICE, Cl'RWENSVILLE, o20 Clearlleld County, Penn'a. T5y WALTER BARRETT, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Clearfield, Pa. jgnV-Omee to Old Weatern Hotel building, oornar ef second and Market Hta. inorll,ee. g J WILSON, ATTORN KV AT LAW, Office one donr eaat of Werteni Hotel building, uppoaite loart II ohm. ept.VTT. CLEAKFIKM), PA. FRANK FIELDING, ATTOKNEY-AT-LAW, Clearfield, Pa. Will it. end to all tioilneM en t rutted lo hi) prouiptly end faithfully. janl'T WILLUN A. WALtaACB. I A RUT 9. WALLACB. DAVID L. BMBBa. J OHM W. WRIOLBT WALLACE Sl KREBS, (Suioeiore to Wallace A Fielding.) ATTORN KYS-AT -LAW, jenl'77 Clearlleld, Pa. ruoa. u. Hi'aaAr. otbdb aoauua, MURRAY & GORDON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, CLEARFIELD, FA. JtAV-Gfiioe In l'ia'a Opera Uouae, vecond Boor. :J0'74 CHARLES 0. LEIDY, ATTORNEY-AT LAW, Oeerola Mill,, Cleerleld Co ., Fa, Legal Itoaloaaa of all kind etteaded to. Par- tiaular attcntioa pa'd to tha procuring if bountiea, tianaiooa, ao. - Alee III. 177 ly. toaara a. ar aaatLr. oabibi, ar. M'cuaar, McENALLY & McCUBDY, ATTORN BYS-AT-LAW, Clearfield, Pa. j" Legal bnalneaa attended to promptly wlthj adclity. Office on tteoond it reel, above tb Pint iNtUonel JJank. Jan: 1:76 wm. MociTLMiran, f RRn. O'L. BtTK. MeClLLOIGH & BICK. ATTORN EYS-AT-LA W , Clearlleld. Pa. All legal bueinee promptly atteaded lo. Offlca oa Second etreet, to the alajonic building. Jenlu,'77 G. R. BARRETT, AlTDttNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW, CLKARFIRLD, PA. Having resignM hlf Judgealilp, haa refluined .he practice r the law lo hit old office e.t Clear cf, Fa. Will attend the ooarta of Jf ff-rion and Kilt co nn when pwially retained in connection un re I dent coumc). jam ( A. G. KRAMER, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Raal RaUta aod Collaatloa Afaot, CLBAHKIGM), PA., Will promptly attaed to all lagal buainaaa aa, trnitad to bla oara. dr-OHloa ia Pla'a Opera lloaae. Jaal'10. JOHN L. CUTTLE, ATTORNEY AT LAVY. nd Real Ktate Affcnt, ClearOeld, Pa, Ofllet on Third ttraat, bat. Cbarrj A Walnot. fjT-RaipHtfulljr offari hit erv.cai la lllaf and buying landi la Claarflald and Adjoining eonntiat and wits aa aiparunotoi oTtrtwantv juri aa a arraror, flatUrt blmaalf that ba can rinau aatlMaauon. . iraa. io;r:u, DR. W. A. MEANS, PHYSICIAN 4 8CRGEON, LUTHKKHDURO, PA. Will attand profaaaloaal oalla proatptlr. auajl70 DR. T. J. BOYER, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Offioa aa Market Street, Clearfield. Pa. .tefOfllce bourat I to 1 a. m , aad 1 to 0 p. m. D U R. M. SCIIEURER, IIIMCKOPATHIO P1IYBIOIAN, OKoe La rraidvooa oa Flrat at. April M, 18TI. Clearlald, Fa. DR. H. B. VAN VALZAH, CI.P.ARPIRM), PKNN'A. OFFICE IN MASONIC BUILDING f- OBee h oara Fro o II to I P. U. Mar II, 1871. DR. J. P. BURC H FIEL D, Uu Sari aoa of tha HM RelDaat,PeanatlaaDla Volaoteera, kavlaR retaroed froaj tha Army, ofera hla profaaaloaal eereleea to tbeeltleeaa er Ulearfleld eoanty. ej-Pror.iatooal ealla promptly alUadad la. OBee aa geeoad etreet, foraiarlyeeeapled by br.Woeda. apr4,'0-U WILLIAU M. HENRY, Jubtioi F or Tea FaACl ear, Hcaieaaaa, LUantan CITY. ColloeUone aaade and aeoaey areaiplly Paid over. Artlaleeof OKraemant and deeda of aoaaayanee aaatly aould aaa ajarraniea ear root or bo eharaa. Wjy'TO U F.K.I) ft IIAGEKTV, naataaa l HARDWARE, FARM IMPLEMENTS, Tinware, laana, sr., aarl,'?7 ed Street, CleatOald, Pa. JAME8 H. LYTLE, In Kratier'a Bulldliip;, t leal Held, Pa. Kaalar In flroeatlaa, Prorlllooa, V.j.taklia, Frail,, P4,mr, Faed, ele., ete. aprU'fttf HAKRY SNYDKR. HARHKH AND HAIRDRESSER. Skcp aa Market 81., oppoalle Court lluaeo. A alaaa towel for every eaatoeaer. Alee BBtaafaetarer of All Khida of Artirln lu lluraaa Hair. ClearOald, Fa, eiay It, '70. IOIIN A. STADLER, tl LAKER, Market 8l Clearlald, Pa. Freak Ureed, Ruek, llella, Piee ead Oakea oa bend ar aaede la erder. A (eaoral eaaortaieal at I'oalaeUnaarlee, Fralta aad Mute la eteoh. re Intel aad Oyatara I aeeaoa. Sahxel aeerly fo Wl opaoalie the PoaloOlre. I'rleee a Mrb 10 '7, GEO. B. G00DLANDEE, Proprietor. VOL. 51-WII0LE NO. Cards. JOHN D. THOMPSON, ! Jaatlea of tha Paaoa and SorlTantr, Cur.wenavlllei Paa VfA.Colltotloni tnaIa and money promptly palduvar. ( , fabtl'Tltr RICHARD HUGHES, JUSTICE OF THE PEACE -ran Itrcolur Totruthlp, Oaoeola Mllla P. O. i offleial baaineri entreated to blra will be promptly attended to. B)oh29, '70. THOMAS H. FORCEE, OBALBB IB GENERAL MERCHANDISE. CRAIIAMTMN, Pa. Alao, aatenalTe nanufacturer and dealer la 8quara Timber and Sawed Lamber of all kindl. ay-Ordara aaliatted and all bille promptly ailed. Jyl0'71 REUBEN HACKMAN, House and Sign Painter and Paper Hanger, Clearfield, Peuu'a. tot-Will execute joba in hla line promptly and in a workmanlike manner. afr4,07 Q. H. HALL, PRACTICAL PUMP MAKER, NRAR CLEARFIELD, PKNN'A. -Ptimpt alwaya on band and made to ordar n abort nolle. Hipei bored on reaaoiubla Urma. All work warranted to render tatiifaption, and dalivared Ifdeaired. njTJ6:lypd E. A. BIGLER oV CO,, DRALRna in SQUARE TIMBER, aad maaulaetnrera of AH, KINDS OP SAWED l.l'KIIII.R, 1-771 CLEARFIELD, PENN'A. JAS. B. GRAHAM, dealer in Beal Estate, Square Timber, Boards, 8HINOI.ES, LATH, A PICKETS, 0:10'7S Cl.artald. Pa, WARREN THORN, BOOT AND SIIOE MAKER, Market "I., Clearlleld, Pa, In tbe ahnp lately occupied by Frank Short, one door weat bf Alleghany Houae. ASHLEY THORN, ARCHITECT, CONTRACTOR and BUILDER. Plana aad SpaciBoatiooa furniahed for all klnda ef buildinxa. All work firat-claaa. Stair build in a epecielty. P. O. addraaa, Clearlleld, Pa. jaa.l7-77tf. R. M. NEIMAN, SADDLE and HARNESS MAKER, Bumbargcr, Clearlleld Co., Pa. Keepi an bnnd all kind of Haraeti, Raddlea, Bridled, and llorte Pnrntihing Uooda. Repairing pronptijr attended to. Runbargcr, J ma. 10, 187 J-tf. JAMES MITCHELL, DBALBB IB Squure Timber & Timber LrikIh, Joll'Tl CLEARFIELD, PA. J. R. M'MURRAY WILL SUPrLY YOU WITH ANY ARTICLE OP MERCHANDISE AT THE VERY LOWKST PRICE. COME AND SEE. (Ittitly:) NEW WASHINGTON, J. BLAKE WALTERS, REAL ESTATE BROKER, AMD BBALBB IB .Saw Log and Xaumbor, CLEARFIELD, PA. Offlca ia Qrahaaa'a Row. 1:36:71 S. I. SNYDER, PRACTICAL WATCHMAEER ABO PBA.LBB IB Watches, Clocks and Jewelry oVoAom'a Bern, MmrM Sir I, CI.EARFIKI.D, PA. All kinda of repeirinf la my line oromptly at- anded to. April za, leia NEW BOOT AND SHOE SHOP. The Bbdaraiatned woo Id In form lha nubile tbat be baa renoTrd hit Boot and Hhoe Hbop lo tha room lattlj Meatie4 br Jon. Dearing, In Shaw't Row, Market atreet, whera b la prepared to at tend to ttia wauti of all wbo need anything la bia line. All work dona by bia will be of tha beat material, and guaranteed to be flrit elatr In every rrtpect. Repairing promptly attendod to. All kiada or Lent her and Shoe Finding for aale. JOHN HCHlKt'KK. Clearufld, Pa., July 18, IH77 rim. Clearfield Nursery. EaNTOURAGR 1IOMK INDUSTRY THR under Hinied. hiTlna aauhliibad a Nuf- J. aery on the 'Pike, about half way bet w era Clearfield and Corwemrille, In prepared to far nlab all kindi of FRUIT TKKES, (ttaadard and dwarf,) Evergreen i, Bhrubtrery, Hrape Vinei, Uooeberry, Lawton fllarklwrry, tSlrawberry, aad Kainbarr Vine. A 'to, tiibrrlaa Crab Treea. Qnlnea, end early warltt Rhnbarb, Ae. Ordara prumpUj attended lo. AdMrew, r J. I. WKIOHT, aep3l 08- Carweairille, Pa, ANDREW HARWICK, Market Ptreet, Clearfield. Pa., MABuracrrtiBaB Ann DBAI.BB IB BARKERS, SADDLES, IlItlDLES, COLLARS, aad all klnda of nouns rviiKisiiita eoous. A full atock of Saddlera' Hardware, Rroahe, Caaba, lllankata. Robca. ete.. alwaya on head and tor aale at the loweit eaah prleee. All kinda of rrnairiBK promptly attended to. All klnda of bidea takea ia aicbanee foe bar. naae aad reiielrlna;. All klada ef barneaa leather kept oa bead, aad for aale at a email prott. ClearOald, Jan. 10, 1070. E. WARING'S LAW BLANKS For aale at lha Clearlleld Ran blicib offleo. The inokI Comptrtf SerUi f 1-alF Blank publUhtd. . .... .i.i. jaere itiaoa. mr w,, rH,.,,u. are ef aniform eiae, end furniahed at very low ageree for eeah. Call a. tha Kkc. .lic:ab oftce aad eaamia tkraa. Ordere by ai.il promptly Oiled. ddreaa, OOODLANDER A LEE, J.I, Xe, IblT-U. tlearaeia ra. JOHN TROUTMAN," DEALER 1H FURNITURE, 51 ATTEE, AND Improved Spring Beds, MARKET STREET, REAR P. O fa a aaderetBned here leaee ta laform tbe elll- eeae ef UleerBeld, and laa paatie ir...rair, mm I 1 ... , fl, ,iM ha bae each aa Wcmat, Cheatnat aad Palatal Chamber Saltea, Parlor Huttee, HerllnlnK aad Kaienaion Cb.lra, Meier aan uen.a neay v.r Dialae aad Parlor Cbeire, Oaae SeaU aad - ..k-i . Cl.iLu U ... Ul.n a. .1 KalM. irated iadane Oloa Laddare. Hal Raeka, ScrabMng Braebee, Aa M0ULD1NQ AMD PlCTt'SI FRAMES, uk... llluH. Charaaia. Aa.. wkleh weald ..lub,. for Holiday ,r.t.. ,. EI taM.a. illJTFniT 2,552. ORANDFATHER't CHRIST MAI EVE. A OLD VAX! BIYIRT. I am littlog alone by my flreiide to-aigat Aa I often have done before: And I Hit to tbe roleet, o clear and ao bright. "i me onuuren ouuiae me door. MCbriitinaa baa ooroe I" they tell ma la glee ; Hut their glad worda only bring pain, '-Chrlitmaa haa come," Ab tna! Ah mo! The toug haa a ud refrain. For thought aoma crowding o thick and fast, ina ombre entwining tbe gay, Like childhood' friendi from tha far-otTpBat, Tbe friend tbat art gone for eye, The little ouea w atob ma nod whiiper low 1 "Poor tirandpa ia lad to-night ' I umlle, for bow aheuld tha darlinga know My frit n da wbo are out of eight r They ihow me a boy brimming over with fun, I nit end of a (1 rand father ; In my ehildi'h plouure I try to run Have my Ihubi grown atifl'with age? I look in the mirror, ob wbo would kuow The aged form I are, The wrinkled face, and tke beard of enow, Can that ftMOge old man be ma ' t laugh at th picture; the rolue I hear Has a ahrill and hollow Bound. Aloe ! that, too, hat grown cricked and rjuter. . I glance at my ftieudi nround j They, too, have gone, and I, all alone, ' 'Mid the little children aUnd, A at ranger aad In my once loved home. Ah I lilcndi from the fur-off land. Ye beckon me on ; and I fain would go, For the hour la growing late. And I long for the time wbea full well I know T lie crooked iball all be made atrnight. 1 be face which earth haa marked with cam In It net of tin and pain, Like an iniant'a brow ahall be calm and fair, And the dim cyea bright again. The froat of age ahall melt away, Tbe voice long bathed iball ling, Aa It iweelly iung ia childhood'! dya, Tbe praiiei of Christ Ita King. Tbe wvried ioula grown old In tin. With gannenia loog defiled ( A mntoLued aoul aball enter in The kingdom aa a child. GOVERNMENT HOSDS. A Debate lit the United Watea Hetiate aa tha llond Uueetlou and tha Hllver IIIIL Tho diricussion in tho United States Si'nnto, on Wcdncedtiy, December 12, upon tbe mil ihmuo of tbe day, should be rcud by all men. Tho speeches oi tho Senators being short and to tbe point ut issue, we give Ibo proceedings in lull, anil request our readers to giro tbe subject an attentive perusal. Tbe proceedings aro aa follows : The Viee President. Thoro comes over as unfinished business of yestor day a resolution, which will be read. Mr. Kerunn. I understand that tbe unfinished business, is tbe resolution offered by the Senator from Ohio, Mr. Matthews The Vice President. It is about to bo laid before tbe Senate. It will be read by tbe Secretary. Mr. Kernan. 1 was going to ask tbe Clerk to report tho resolution. The Chief Clerk read tbe resolution submitted by Mr. Matthews on tbe Gth inst., as follows : Wneniia, By the Ael entitled "Aa Act to etronRtheo the publio eredit," epproved Mareh IS, IfiliV, it wee provided and declared tbet the faiib of the United Stetea waa thereby eolemnly plrdeed to the payment ia eoia or ita equivaloet of alt the iotaraat-beering obllifatiooaof the I'ni I. tataU., .mI , ....I whwr. tb.tew aulhoe iaing the iaaue of aacb obllgntiona bad eaprea.ly provided that the aame might.be paid la lawful moocy or other eurrenoy than gold or advert and YYuKBBAe, All the bonda of the United Statee aulboriaed to be iaaaed by the Act entitled M Aa Act to autboriae tbe refunding of the national debt," approved July 14, 10,0, by thelermaef aaiu Act, were oeet.rea lo oe reaeeraeoia ia eoia of the tb.a preaeot atandard value, bearing latar cal payable aemi-annaally ia auch coin ; and WttBBBAa, All boada of tbe United Statea authorlacd to be leaned onder the Act eatitled " An Aot to provide lor the reauroptiun ol apeoie uavmcntp," approved Jaoaary 14, lS7a, are re- ouired to bo of the deacriptlon ef bonda of the Inlted HUtea deeoribeMl In tbe aald Aet er Con greta approved July 14, 1870, entitled " An Aet to autboriae the relendiag of the national dtbt " and W HKBBAt, At tbe dete of tbe paiaage of eaid Act of Congreaa last aforeaaid, to wit, tbe 14th day of July, 1070. the eoio of the United Statee of atandard value of tbat date included eilver dol lara of the weight of 41., gralna each, declared by tbe Act approved January 10, 1037, eatitled "An Act aupplcmcntery to the Aet entitled ' An kit eatebli.bine a Mint and regulating the eoioe ufthe United titatea" to be a legal teader ef p.ymeat, according to tbalr nominal ralue, for any euma whatever i Therefore, Hi it rtntMd h tkt Stunt; (rAa r7o.ee nf Krjirt. HNlorirra coaearr,' Merei.), That all the booda oftb. lioiled Statee Iaaaed or eutboriaed to be iaaued under tbe aaid Acta ot Coegreee hereiabe. fura recited are payable, priacipal aad iatereat, at the optioa of the Ooveroment of tbe Uaited Statea, ia ailver dollara, of the aeiaaga tX ifco Uaited Statea, eootaialog 4114 graiaa aeoh uf atandard ailver and that to re atorv lo ita eoinage auch ailver eoiaa aa a legal tendir ia payment of aald bjnda, priacipal and laiere.l, ia not ia vlolalioa of tbe publie faith nor la derugoifoo of the rigbta of the pablie creditor. The Vico President Tbe pending question is on the motion to refer tho resolution with tho amendment offered by the Senator from New York Mr. Conkling to the Committee on the Judiciary. ; . Mr. Kernan addressed the Senate at great length in opposition to the reso lution, ilis speech is withheld for re vision M r. Wallace .Mr. President, I shall not attempt to-day to cntor into an eluhoritto argument ol this question Mr. Heck. J he Senator irom renn- sylvania yields to mo for a moment, and I thank him for allowing me to make an explanation ol a question J nut to the Senator from New York. 1 do not propose to make a speech on this subject. I am too new a man here to hone either 10 convince ine Sonato of the correctness ol my viows or to chango or Influence a single vote. Hut I asked the Senator Irom xnow Vork a question which ho socmod to think bad notbinir in it, aa to the amount of silver coinage of the United Stalog. 1 1 o slated the fact to bo that thero had been only 18,045,0(10 coined, hen I suggested to Dim Mr. Koinan. Silver dollar, 1 said. Mr. Hock. I meant silver dollars ; hen 1 auirifcsted to him that there bad been coined since 1874, from 1874 to 1877. sixteen and one half millions of what were known as trado dollars, which I thought it was fair to suggost was part of the silver coinage. Mr. Kornan. No, they are not legal tenders, but mere tokens. Mr. Heck. 1 nndorstaiitl ; anu inero- foro tho suggestion was regarded as being worth nothing. iow, I assert that it is evidence of the fa t that but for tho cireumstanco that silvor waa demonetised in 1873, wo should Dot only have issued ovor twenty-four and a half millions of silver dollara as we have done, but tho chances are tbat we hould havo doublod that amount oi silver coinage but fur tho demonetizing aet. Why do 1 say so ? llecause Congress made the trade dollar con tain 420 irrain, and the legal tender dollar only contained 4121 grains and il with 420 grains required to make the trade dollar we still coined sixteen and a half millions since 1873, it i fair to assume that if we had boon allowed to coin the old dollar at 4121 grains, wo should have coined a great deal more. That, together with tbe Im mense coinage of half dollars, which un in 1873 reached one hundred and oighleen millions, and tba half dollara, wero till 1863 full legal tendora, showi tbat thoro waa something in tha sng- wlion 1 mado which the Sonator rrom aw York aoetnod to rcirard aa being of no value, which wao that but for tbe demnnetixRtlnn of ailver the rolnarre rvt .Til. J T Mire. CLEARFIELD, PA., silvor would have boon greatly in creased. While I am on the floor I want to say one thing, and 1 say it with all rospoct to tho Senator from New York, that it ia tbe first time that I ever hoard a Democrat on this floor, or on the floor of the other Homo, rise and defend all the acta tbat have been done by the Republican majority relative to coinago ana relative to money, and clamor tbat the faith of the nation waa involved in the maintenance of every act they have done. There have been many acta done tbat I deny that the people of the country are obliged to maintain lonirer than till thov havo the power to reverse them ; and many of those acta tbat nave been done have been done against tbe protest ol tho whole Democratic party. Mr. Allison. Will the Senator yield to me for a moment? Mr. Beck. Yes, sir. Mr. Allison, Do 1 understand the Senator to intimate tbat the Democrat ic party opposed, as a political organi zation, .the demonetization of silver in 18737 Was tbat a party quostion ? Mr. Hock. 1 have no doubt they did, so far aa they understood it Air. Allison, f have not the slight est knowlodgo that the Democrat op posed it. Mr. Hock. When the silver bill is taken np lor discussion 1 hope to be heard upon this question aa to how it was demonetized ; but I say this now in answer to the question and the records of Congress show that when tbe bill demonetizing silver waa pond ing in the Uouae of Representatives, on tho 28th of May, 1872, and tbe gen tleman wbo then had rhargo of it brought it up within two days of the final adjournment as a substitute lor a Ercvioue) bill which had been partly ut never fully read, that bill having been up on the 9lb day of April, 1872, when tne question was put to him by divers gentlemen, (and the record will bear me out,) be said that it made no chango in tbeeoinago,and relyingon his statement that bill was never read, but was passed in tbe House ot Represent atives without any man not privately advised knowing what it contained. Mr. Allison. Yea; but, Mr. Presi dent, tbat bill was debated in this body, and there was no partisan division with reference to tbat bill in this body. Mr. Hock. Lot me say, in answer to that, that the bill was debated at the third session of the Forty-second Congress in this body, brought up by the prosent Secretary of tbe Treasury. Tbe debate will be tound at the close of tbe first part and the beginning of the second part OI tne uongroasional (ilobe for tho third session of the Forty-second Congress, and the whole de bate was upon tbe coinago charge Not one word was said in tbat dobato aa to the demonetization of silver. Senators will 1 hopo read it for them selves, and tbey will find the fact to be as I state it Mr. Casaerly, of Cal ifornia, insisted that we were to have an immense ailver coinage ; he atated what Nevada was then producing 120,000,000 annaally aod tha preeweit Secretary of tho Treasury insisted on having "In God we trust Inserted on the face of tho coins instead of tbe ea gle, which was there bclore and wbicb he said foreigners did not understand, lie thought such a dollar would float as lar as the silver coin of tbe foroign nation known aa tba Latin anion would ; that waa, all over the world. Waa there a word said aa to demone tizing silver in that dobato? Not one, unless I hae overlooked it, and I have read it with aorae care. Mr. Allison. Tbat ia not the point 1 make. That bill was pending in the Senate for a considerable time. It was printed in tho Senate. If it bad boon . objected to by Demo cratic Senators, a lull and com plete opportunity was given to Demo era tio Senators to objeut to it There tore It waa passed withont partisan di vision and without partisan debate. Mr. Heck. I say that debate shows that no man claimed that that bill sought the demonetization oi silver, and the record will sbow the fact that the present Secretary of tho Treasury avowed that tba object waa to make a silver dollar tbat would float, to use his own expression, all over the world, co extensive with the ailver dollar of France, of Switzerland, and of the na tions composing tbe Latin Union. Therefore 1 insist that it waa not do monetized by tbe intelligent action of tbe representatives of the people. M r. Kernan. It was distinctly charg ed by tho Senator tbat I acted in somo way improperly Mr. Heck. Oh, no I Mr. Kernan. In referring to tbe de monetization of silver. Now allow me to say a word in justice. I was not discussing the silver coinago ques tion. I was discussing a resolution which declares that it is right to pay those bonds In the dollarof 412J grains of silver, and 1 called attention to all of them that had evor been coined. . One other thing. I havo not aaid one word which oould make my friend think one way or the other aa to wbothor I approve these laws or not 1 argued on the acta of our Govern ment, tha authorized t.ovcrttmetit ; whethor ft was done by both partiea or by eithor party makes no difference lo the outsider. 1 aaid the Govern ment had mado certain laws and the honor and the necessity of that Gov ernment and this American peoplo, whether their Government waa in charge ot the aame party or any other, waa bound, as against the men that truated to our agent and our Govern ment, to keep faith with them. J aaid nothing about what was wise or not wise. I aaid that the Government havina taken certain action by its laws and aaid to tbe world so and ao, we cannot now declare that we will undo that, even if It wore wrong, and thus wronir the creditors 6 or 3 or 10 per cent of the face of tbeir bonds. Mr, Deck. I do not propose to de prive the Sonator from Now York of the benefit ol his statement, for what ever it ia worth, and therefore do not propose to roply to It H Knows what he said, and lot It stand. . Hut I say that all the legislation of this coun try Tor the lust twelve years naa oecn absolutely in favor of tha rich against tho poor, in lavor of doad capital airainst active industry, and that the effort now made to prevent aa from restoring what waa tho legal coin oi the country at the timo the irreat bulk of tho debt was contracted ia anti-Dora-uc ratio. To go back litllo, 1 aay that when the 6.20 bonds were vanned in 1862 they were made payable upon tbeir faco in lb legahlenaer notee oi the country. . livery legal-tender note had written across iU back tha state ment that "this note is receivable at ita face-value for ill debts, public and prl- vato, except interest upon tha publio debt and custom dues;'1 and when the Bepttblican party in 18tTO, whirli the gentleman eays tba fallb of the United State ia pledged to mainUin--l think 1 quote his exact language there un PRINCIPLES, NOT MEN. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1877. dertook to aay that tbe principal of these bonus waa payablo in gold, tbey undertook to do what no legislative body had a ritht to do. It waa tho duty of the courts and in tho power of tbe courts alone to construe what tho meaning of the existing laws on this subject was. Chancellor Kent, J ml go Cooloy, evory writer on constitutional law, so holds. When tbat act waa passod it converted a domestic, dobt into a foreign dobt added ' over 1500,000,000 to the burden of the taxpayers of this oountry ; and when silvor Is now 8 per cent, as it is said to bo, bolow gold, tho act of de monetizing it not only added 8 per cent, to the bonded debt of the coun try, but it added 8 per cont. to all debts of the oountry; Fedoral, State, corporate, municipal, and private The Government ot the United States to. day owes over $2,000,000,000. Poore's Railroad Manual, issued nut Ions aso, shows tbat the railroad bonds out standing are over 12,000,000,000. The dents ot Htatca and ol tno cities within the States are over 11,000,000,000. Tbe debta of the other corporations and individual debts amount to over 2,OIHI,000,000 more, to aay nothing of the dobta ol national banks, making over 17,000,000,000, half of which is held in foreign countries. Eight per cent, on our lndebted neea ia 1500,000,000; and when tbe bonds of the United States (to go' back a little further) were bought as they were with tho legal-tender notes of the country at par and bonds bearing 6 per cent, interest in gold were given to the men who bought them, and they wero authorized aa national bank ers to issue 90 per cent, of what pass ed as money in their own names, which depreciated tho legal tender notes of tbe country as much as tbat many more logal-tendor notes would, it entailed a burden of at least 122, 000,000 a year more on the taxpayers of tho country, making in the last ten years (220,000,000. 1 repeat $500, 000,000 were wrongfully imposed niton the country by tho aot of 1800. 1- ive hundred and sixty millions, being 8 per cent difference between silver and gold by the demonetizing act, and 220,0110,000 in tho last ton years, by the amount of taxation added by al lowing the national bankers to use the credit of tho Government in issuing thoir notes instead of tho Government doing it itself, mako 11,280,000,000, a aum many millions largor than was required to pay all the expenditures of the Government from tho day Washington waa inaugurated up to and inclading the year 1850, embrac ing the expenditures tor the wars with Great Britain and Mexico and all the pensions tbat were paid in consequence of both of them. And now we are told that the faith of the country is pledged to stand by overy one of these and similar things. I deny it Tbe moagre minority on this aide of the Chamber has swelled to its present proportions and the power in the other IIouho has passed to the Democratic side because tbey have pledged theiuaolvejej in taair plat forms and everywhere elso, whenever they aball have power, to legislate no longer in tha interest of bond bil Jors and capitalist, but to arrango tbo tax ation of the country so that its woalth shall bear its proper proportion of burdens, instead ot the poverty and labor being aa now, taxed almost ex clusively. I am of those who believe this reso lution ia right, because it ia true. I bolieve that it is a step in the right di rection, I fool assured that to force resumption in January, 1879, without making preparation for it by relieving burdens and restoring commerce is calculated and intended to still further depress the industries of the country for the benefit ot the men who hold the bonds and other obligations of the people, that the present system of tar iff taxation is now so adjusted as to put the money derived from taxation into the pockets of the few and to keep it out of tbe Treasury. 1 am convinc ed that there must be a re adjustment of all these things and that legal ten der notes must bo received for all pur poses before resumption is possiblo. I asktheSenateifthosilvcrdollarhad not been demonetired, with over sovon thousand millions of debt hangingupon this country, with oil it industries de pressed, with the property of tho peo ple reduced bocanseof contraction and the approach to specie resumption, from 25 to 33 per cent, if there is. a man in this Senate who would to-day, becanao ailver wad lower than gold, vote lo demonetize silver? I answer, not one. No mas would dare to go before the people who bad ao voted and ask re-election in the faco of tho laws recited in tins resolution, which show that oven by tho act of 18G9 gold and silver coin ol tho then standard value were put upon an equality ; that by the act of 1870 it was declared that the bonds then issued might bo paid in the then ailver coin of its then stand ard value ; and tho act ol 1875 recited tbo same fact upon Hit face In viow of these laws, who, I ask, would now propose that tho people of this country should bo deprived ot tho right of pay ing their debta in either tho gold or silver coin ot the standard value ex isting at this time ? I assort, no Sen ator would dare to go before his peo ple to-day and ask ro-cloction after ho bad voted to demonetize silvor under oxisting circumstances; and as ho would not and as that was tho coin on which the great portion of these bonds were issued, in which all tno railroad debta were contracted, in bich tho debts of corporations were contracted, in wbicb ninc-tontha of the dobts now outstanding all over the country, State, Federal, municipal, corporate, and private wore contract ed, there ia no injustice in declaring that we have the right to pay in tbat same atandard silver coin. But I beg portion of my friend from Pennsylvania. 1 rose to make an ex- f donation and have boon drawn off a ittlfl ftirther than I expoctod. I will reserve what I may aay till the silvor bill oomes un. bad no Idea when i rone that I would occupy more than a minute or two, and I have not pro tended to speak to the merits of tbo question furthor than lo deny that wo are in any manner bound, oithor by good faith or othorwioo, to annport past legislation in the Interest of bond holders against tbo interest of tho groat maaa of the people. air. nauace. m r. r roaiuem Mr. Dawes. Will tho Senator per mit me to aav a few words In refer ence lo the manner In which the bill of 1873 was passed? Mr. Wallace. 1 ahall occupy tno floor but vory fow minute, if the Senator from Maasacbuaetla will par don me. Mr. Dawes. I ahould like now to re ply to what baa fallen from tbe Sena tor Irom Kentucky, if it will not diso blige the Senator from Pennsylvania. Mr. Wallace, the senator may proceed. &JBJ,,p.im.or. an Mr. Dawe. Tbo Sonator from Ken tucky Mr. Bock bos takan up a chargo which boa frequently been made in the country, and 1 havo no doubt is bolioved by somo, tbat thoro was something wrong about the pas saire of tho bill which demonotizod sil vor in 1873, that by somo improper action ot tho gentleman having chargo of that bill, without the law-making power eithor in tbe ltouso or in the Sonato understanding ita real mean ing, and without any intent on thoir part, ho had effected tho demonetiza tion of tho silver dollar without thoir being aware of it. and that that fact was not discovered until recently. I havo hoard it said that a foreigner, whoso name waa given, enme over bore with somo 1500,000 of monoy to use (as the phrase goes) whero it would do the most good and in tho in. terest of tbo demonetization of silver. Tbo name of this foreigner, who was hero at that timo and bus been here since, was givon for tbe purpose ot ad ding strength to tho chargo that this law as it now stands upon tho statute book was put there by some improper means. Aa the member in tho House of Representatives to whoso door this charge is laid, waa a Representative from my own State, and is now dead and cannot defend his own memory, perhaps the Senator from Pennsylva nia will bear with mo while 1 say a few words upon that point. Thoro never was a charge so void of foundation and so exhibit ing tho want of examination on the part of those who make it aa tho chargo that, without knowing what was in that bHI and with tbo purpose and with tho idea tbat tho bill still continued the silver dollar of 412) grains aa the dollar of the currency of the country, it waa passed by Con gress, unless it bo tho charge, equally groundless, that that man came over hero with money to imluco Congress to pass that bill. Tho man whose name ia used in that connection is a man who waa then and has ever beon in favor of tho ailver dollar and of tho bimotallic system, and boa been deliv ering lectures in this country in favor of the very object that this bill when it bocame a law controverted; and yot 1 say within throo days the name of this man who in Knglond and in this country is spending his timo try ing to convince tho business public that the silvor dollar ought to bo ro stored, and never ought to havo been extinguished as a part of our currency, used in connection with a statement that bo came ovor hero and with mon oy in his pocket exorcised undue influ ence ovor tho legislation of Congress in ordor to effect the vory opposite of that for wbicb be is rpw and was then striving. The bill that demonetised tho silvor dollar was drawn in tho Treasury De partment in 1870. it did not become a law till 1873. It was reported in this branch in the winter of 1870 from the Finance Committee,and in the very first report and in tho very first print ot the bill tho old silvor dollar was do monetized and reduced to a subsidiary coin containing only 3H4 grains, ft was in pursuanco of a report from tho Comptroller of tho Currency in which he recommended procisoly that samo thing in print. It went through vari ous stages in that Congress, and in overy stage it was reprinted, and in overy reprint of it was contained tho ftrovision demonetizing the ailver dol or. It did not become a law during that Congress. It was reported in the noxt Congress, containing that vory same provision demonetizing or re ducing to a subsidiary coin the old sil ver dollar of 412) grains; andwhonil passed this branch and went to the othor ltouso it was reprinted again. In all it waa reprinted twelve times, and I submit to the Senator from Ken tucky that in every ono of those twelve reprints of that bill the old dol lar that bad been tberutoloro coined waa demonetized and extinguished. The Comptroller of the Currency in his second report upon tbo subject call ed attention to I he fact and gave tbe rea son. When the bill was reported in the othor branch for consideration there it was first introduced by a dis tinguished mcmbortrom Pennsylvania. Upon that occasion that member coll od tho attention of tho House fothe fact that it domonotized the silvor dollar, it went to the proper committoe in tho llouso and was in duo timo re ported and reprinted, and in that re print was contained tho provision Hint extinguished this dollar. Mr. Hereford. Will tho Senator from Massachusetts allow mo to inter rupt him ? Is ho not aware of tbo fact that in the iiouso ol Itcprescnta lives, of which we wore both mcmbors at tbe time when tho committco hav ing chargo of that bill reported it, they reported a substitute, and that although it waa demanded that tho substitute should bo read, the Speakor announced that the previous question having been demanded it could not be read ; and although Mr. llolman, of Indiana, and Mr. Itrooks, of .Now l oik, demanded tbat the substitute ahould be read, tbo Speaker of tho llouso announced that it could not bo read ; and it novcr waa road, and waa passed without any member of tho House knowing a lino or it word in it, without its ever hoing read or printed 7 Mr. Dawos. There ia nothing so commendable in this world aa palicnco ; it relieves usol a great deal ot troublo; and when I get to tbo last day of tho consideration of tho hill, if 1 omit to atalo what was done then, the Senator from West Virginia shall havo an op portunity to cull my attention to it. Mr. Hereford. Will the Senator al low mo to interrupt him for about three minutes to read Irom the Congression al Globo what did take placo? Mr. Dawes. I prnposo lo rend from tbe Congressional Globo mysvll. If the Senator prefers now lo address the Senate Mr. Hereford. No, air. Mr. Dawea. My purpose ia to stulo tho tact that every man who nnti auo siro to know what was in that bill had mora than tho usual opportunity to know what waa in it; and it is more than can be aaid of almost any bill that has become a law that had, aa 1 have said, twelve reprints, and in every one of them tho old silver dollar of the cur rency and of tho legal tender was ex tinguished and reduced to a subsidiary coin of .184 grains. Upon the day that tba bill was considered in tho ilouae my tben collonguo, Mr. Hooper, in discussing section by section tho I ro visions oi the bill, Used this language: Thee far tke eeetioa la a re eaaetmeat af eilat lag mwe I read his words la addlllee.lt deelarea tke gold dollar af li t gvaine of atandard gold to be tha aalt ef value, eold nraelicallr having baea la tbieeoaatry for many yeera the euaderd Of meaeeee af valae, aa Ilia legally ia Ureal Rritaia aad matt of the Eu vnpeoa eoealrtee. Tba Oliver dntler. which by doea not bear a correct relative proaortioa to tbe Bold dollar. Belai worth lalrlaaieelly a heel SI .01 in gold it eaaaot eirearaia eoaearraetly with ibe goto eetna, - - - in reaniiir., nur nin, nil eonalderatlon, eoaelujed tbat Sft.B graioa of atandard gold oonalituling tbe gold dollar ahould be declared tbe aoaey Bait or metallic repreaea -tatlre of tbe dollar of account, Again, ho said ; Section 10 re-enecta tbe nrovi.iona ofexiallng lawa deflnlng tbe ailver eolna and their waigbta, reaneolively, .Boept In relation lo tne euvor doi. lar, which la reduced la weight from 4134 to IS4 gralna tnua tnaaiag ll I am giving you the lnnguago ad dressed to tho House of Representa tives by the man who is charged with having obtained legislation extinguish ing the dollar ot 412) grains without tho knowledge ot tbo House Tbua making it a aabaidlary eoia in harmony wlin tne ailver eolna or leaa denomination, lo ae- cure ita concurrent circulation with them. The ailver dollar of 4l!f gralna, by reeaoo of ita but- Hob er Intrinato value being greater than Ita no minal value, long ainoe eeeaed lo be a coin of cir culation, and la malted by maoufatturer. of ailver- were. It doea not alrculate bow la ermmerclal tranaactloaa with any oountry. Hero, sir, he discussed tho silver dol lar whli tho bill before him ; told the llouso just exactly whero it had been placed in all the twelve prints of that bill ; and tho gentleman from Pennsyl vania upon tho committco who report ed tho bill in tho first place, and turn ed it over to my then colleaguo te be flotiso I mean a Hep no of tho Philadelphia managed in tho II roscntulivo of ono districts, the oldost member of the present llouso, Mr. Kollcy called attention to tho mime fact, and said that ho wanted to go further than tbat bill ; said that bo wanted to follow tho oxnmplo of Knglond and mako tho gold dollar, as in England, tho absolute and only unit. I will read what that gen tleman said ; Thte bill la a mare codification. There are one or two thioga In thia bill, I will any to the gen tleman rrotn new York, with hi pormioeloo, which paraonally would like to modily i tbet la to aay. I would Ilka to follow lha example of England, aad make a wide UlftVroneo between our ailver and gold coinage. But aa I waa charged with a bill that looked only lo tbe oodincatlon or Ibe mint lawa, ar mainly thai, I did aot feel it well to loterjeot into that bill any of my own peculiar ideaa. 1 would have liked lo have made the gold dollar uuiform with tbe Prcnob ayatem ofWaighu, taaing tne gramme aa tna unit. 1 n.v. exnreaa- ed mveelf eery earneatly oa that anbjeet, bat I did dot reel tbat 1 could Impreae my perauoal riewa on a general law.and, therefor, I preferred, aa I introduced yeaterd.y a reaolutioa touching the ailver coin, to have Ihia quealion come np aa an Independent neatioa. Mr. Hock. V ill tbo Senator from MuBsachtisulto allow mo to say a word 'I Ihohciiutor irom -llussucbusetl will recollect that 1 havo not Buid a word about tho history of tho demonetizing bill, except in rosponso to questions from tho Senator from Iowa. Whon ho asked mo certain questions, I answered thorn according to my recollection of tho record ; but when tho silvor bill comes up I hope to bo able to show by tbo record that tbo bill as passed never was road in tho llouso and that the gentleman havingchargeof it distinctly avowod that it mado no chango in the law. Now, will tbe Senator from Massachusetts answer mo who that distinguished gentleman wns that ho referred to as somo Englishman who hall taken part in this bill and who was opposed to this thing ? Mr. Dawos. Tbe distinguished l'.ng- lishman to whom I referred, who was charged with having como over hero to do precisely the opposite ol what lie did, was Krncst Boyd. Mr. Hock. 1 observe, it tho gentle man will allow me, that on tho 9th day of April, 1872, when tho bill was read up to its sixth section and laid aside and never taken tip ugain, the gentleman from Massachusetts Mr. nooperj remarked : Tbe bill waa prerared two yeera ago, and haa bean aubroltled to oaratul aod deliberate .lamina tion. It haa the approval of nearly all tbe Mint exp.rta of tbe country, aad the aaaotion af tbe Secretary of the Treaaury. Mr. Erneet Seyd, of London, , a dlatlngulabad writer, who baa given great attention to Ibe aubjeet of Minteaad coinage, efter examing tbe Brat draught of the bill, fur lab.d m.ny valuable euv.e.'tiona wbicb have beea incorporated ia thia bill. I aupposo ho is the samo person. M r. Dawos. There is no doubt about that lact ; but tbat does not quite go to tho point.thnt ho approved of tho de monetization of tho silver dollar in face of tho fact that be was at the same timo earnestly, openly, publicly pro testing and urging ttgainot it Mr. President, my desiro was to sbow to tho Senate that this bill in the beginning and throughout all its singes wns intended to demonetize tho silver lollar; that the discussion of tho ques tion of tho silver dollar in tho bill and what the bill provided in respect to tho silver dollar was open, free. Another member of the same committoe, from M icliigan, Whoso name baa now escaped mo, called attention moro explicitly than either of theso mcmbors lo tbo actual condition of tho silvor dollar in that bill. Mr. Heck. Mr. Stoughton. Mr. Dawes. Mr. Stoughton. Now it is truo, Mr. 1 resident, that alter this discussion to which 1 have alluded, upon tho noxt day a auhstilnto with the sanction of tho committco was offered by my then colleaguo and that passed without being read. Mr. Hock. aoi the next duy ; six weeks altorward. Mr. Dawos. Tho next day that tho bill wns under discussion the bill won recommitted to the committco ; and it was brought back from tbo committco ; and on tbo vory day on which it was brought back, ittst at tho close ol tho session, it was brought back as a sub stitnto for tho original bill, and tbo ditl'eroneo between the substitute and original bill was just this : Tho sub- tdtarv dollar ol HX1 irraina waa left nut of tbo bill which finally passed. Tho old dollarof 412) grains was novor in tho bill, nnloss I havo been misin formed and have examined the records to no purpose. Tho reasons for the design of tho bill to extinguish that old dollar wore given ; wholhcr Bound or not 1 am nut going to trespass furthor on tho indulgence of tho Senator from Pennsylvania to discuss lor a moment ; but tho reasons wore given. Hvory body that oared lo listen to the bill knew tbnt il tho bill passed in that shape the old dollar of 412) grains would censo lo exist, w lion thu in camo back the committee thought thnt a subsidiary dollar reduced in valuo to 184 grains was ol no use, anil they loll it out. Tho chargo thnt tho old dollar thus passed out of tbo currency of the country by any artifice or without the knowledge ol those who passed the bill, io a mistake, and does great in juslico to those, living and dead, who managed tho bill and presented it to both branches ol Congress anil ny whoso cfnirta it became a law. I am very much obliged lo tho Sena tor from Pcnnsvlvania. Mr. Wallace. Mr. President, 1 ahall not trespass upon tbo timo of tbo Sen ate to-night ro fur aa to go into tho ircnornl argument that hears upon the silver bill, but shall confine myself aa directly as 1 may to the real nuosiion at issue in this resolution, which ia whether the bonds of the Government are, legally and morally, payablo in the ativer dollar r Wo aro to remember, when we at Uimpl lo enter upon the consideration of this question, that tho Government bad a douhlo atanf lira of coinago from 1792 to 1873. There can be no qnea tinn Rbnnt that. There wore both ail- TEBMS-S2 per annun in Admoe. NEW SERIES-VOL. 18, NO. 51.' ver and gold coins. Tba ailvor dollar was by law the unit of value and tbe monoy ot account Tbe law bases all Treasury accounts upon this. As late as 1819 tho gold dollar was givon place an a coin of tho Government. With thia legal and practical situation, we como to tho poriod of tho war during which tbo Uovornmont Issued a largo numbor of the bonda npon which tbia issuo arisos and fur which tbo fuith ot tho Government waa plcdgod to pay thnt Indebtedness in coin. Tbat pledge waa to pay in coin of tbe Govornment of tbe United States. That coin was both gold and ailver coin. There ran be no question about these propositions. Tbo Government bold lor itself in evory atatuto the option to pay in either coin. From 1853 to 1073 silvor was practically driven out of tbe country by tho fact that it was under valuod in the coinage laws aa compared un gold. It stood here at a Higher rate than gold ; and in tbo market of tho world, in London, it stood at a hiL'hor rato than cold : that ia. durinv alfthoso yoars ono hundred cents in gold would not buy ono hundred cents in silver, llns lact Is tound by refer ence to tho table, llenco whon silver ia named or implied from tho word coin in the bonds and in tbe lawa authorizing thorn from 18G1 forward it was a moro valuablo molal than the gold coin, which was in fact the money used, so fur as any metalio coin waa used, in governmental transactions. lhat silver was not in use in all those yoars was not by reason of ita cheap ness, but becauso that It waa more valuablo than gold both hero and in hngland, and it continuod so until lHi 3. Wo thus bad " coin " named in the law and tho bonds. We bad the practical lact that gold, a chcapor motnl, bad driven out silver, tbe dearer motal, and tbat wben tbo word coin was used it meant both gold and silvor coin. Aow, we como to tbe etreet ot this upon tbo bonds issued. It seems to me both a legal and a logical result tbat tho bonda thus issued by the Federal Government, payablo in coin, were payablo at our option either in gold or silver coin, and that if silver bad ap preciated and gold depreciated we might havo exercised and could still oxcrciso our option to pay in gold. If thia bo truo, whore ia the immorality of exercising our option now to pay those bonds in Oliver. Aa to those bonds, thoro was no net of demonetiza tion to bono an argument upon. vo come now lo the relunding act of July 14, 1870. What were its pro visions ? They aro expressed in terms as distinct and emphatic as anything can be II provides : That the Secretary of tbe Treeaary la hereby autborited te laaue, ia a earn er euma aet exceed ing ia tha aggregate $2011,01)0,000, eoupoaa ar rcgiatered beada af tbe Uaited Stetea, ia auch form aa be may preecribe, aad of denominetiona of fbO, or aoma multiple of tbat aum, redeemable la eoia of the preaeat eteadard value, at tbe pleaaure of tbe Uaited Statea, after lea yeera from ibe date af their leaee, and bearing iatereat, paya ble aemi-annually ia aaek eoia, at the rale of & per ecat. par aanam. Also (300,000,000 of four and a half per cent and a thousand million of 4 per cents, all of which were to bo payable in coin ot tho tben present standard value. Then we find that tho law at that lime fixed tho standard value of the gold dollar at 25 8 graina and the atandard value oi the oilver dollar at 412) grains and that the sil vor dollar was thon tbe undisputed unit of value, and upon this basis of law and lact tbo liovornmonl took tho option in tho act of 1870 that then ex isted in every bond which was then out standing bearing tbe seal of tho United States upon it, in our own country or in Europe, to pay cither in silver dol lars of 412 grains or in gold dollars ol 25.8 grains. It is inevitable that this conclusion must be reached from a consideration of this statute and of the then existing facta. .Now wo find what else 7 In that very BCction this : Aad tbe aaid boada ahall have eat forth and ex. preeaed upon tbeir fece the above epeciSed eondl tiooa. What conditions? Tbo conditions that they are payable in coin of tho standard value of 1870, both principal and interest. Those words and condi tions aro set forth and expressed npon tho faco ol tho bond itsell. I have one hero, t read from it. It ia dated July 18, 1877, and is a 4 per cent bond and reads : The Uaited Statea of America are Indebted ta Ibe beerer ia Ibe ram of 140. Thia bond ia tarued ia accordance with tha provieiona of aa Act ef Coagreeo entitled " An Act to authoriee the rofuodiag af IbeaatliiBal debt," approved July 14, 1870, aa amaadedbyaa Aot approved Jaeuary 10, left, and ia redeema ble at lha pleaeure of tbe fated btalea, aher Ibe lat day of Joly, 1V07, .'a core o lea tlamtard eelea e lie Cited SlaM ea ea.'d Jilf 14, 1S70, w,rA tnlcreal ia .... eo,a from tbe aay af the data bcreol el the rale or 4 per oenl. per aanam, paya ble quarterly oa tbe lat dey of October, January, April, end July la each year. The priacipal aad iatereat are exempt from the peymeat of all taxee or dutiea af the I'aited Htoloe, aa well aa from lexetion in eey form by or under Stale, municipal, or local authority. W A.UIROTOB, July 1, 1877. Hero is the contract written in the law and printed in tho bond. Inevory oneof tho bonds that my friend IromM. I. re ferred to of the !!92,000,000 issued ainco rebruary 12, IS. J, is lound tho express provision that tho contract is that we may pay those bonds in silvor dollars ol 412) grains, or in gold dollars of 25.8 grains, and not only those but all others issued under the act of 1870, and, yet, in the face of tho law, and of tbo express contract lual luoee men made with tho Government mon wbo are not simple, mon who know what tbey aro about, men wbo nnmiio mill ions of money in the face of this,thoir pluin contract, those gentlemen who owe tho debt say to those who aro to pay il, you are repudiators; you are attempting to cheat ; you will destroy tho morality ot the Kepublic. Tho public press teems with assaults on all who, in thoir representative ca pacity, dtller with them and dare lo say "Here is tho letter of the law ; here is your contract ; the rights ol our peo ple nro involved in this question, and wo demand that you shall stana by tho letter of tho contract." We who say wo abide by tho contract are term ed repudiators, cheat, and Immoral people, who pay in cheap money. Upon whose shoulders ought to fall tboso opithola ? We simply say, ' Sir, you mado a contract with tho Govern ment ol the United slates wben ailver waa abova one hundred cent on tho dollar, and when legal-tender notes were lar bolow tbe gold dollar in value, and you paid for J our bond under that contract In those legal-lender notes, and now we propose to pay you in tbe coin tbat by that contract you gave us tho option lo pay in, in sliver coin oi Ibo standard value tbat tbe contract providod we might pay." Is thoro anything wrong in this? Is there a want of publie morality in this ? I there a want ol common honesty in it? W hy, air. it soema to me that auch statements ar utter perversions of terms and an unwarranted attack upon Ihoso who seek only totakocare of the right of the Government and of the people under a contract nnambiguons on ita race. Hut, aaya the Senator from New York, In 1873 ntmo tUlutc which obanvod tbt Virmi of tbfl contnwt, which providod that tha unit of la (hould honcoforth Do ft gcM tlollar, and that tho Uovornmoat having cbavfeed its atandard and made a gold dollar tko unit of ralue, tbat notwiibotaadin j tho fact that w bad eootrart out- landing which girt the tiorwinnant 112) grains, yett jMoneol uymMZ to tbe contract could and bad ebsngad that contract Not ao, air. On ilia contrary, there ia no now contract ; there ia the letter ot tbe law and there aro tbe words of tbe contract and tba , bond, and wamuatbida by thorn. Hut in 1873 tha Govornment of taet'nited State, a sovereign with power to coin money and regulate) tha value) thereof. ' with gold and ailvor aa the only legal tondor coin of the country, as I believe and always havo believed, the aovor. . eign, poceeoaeexl of undoubted sovereign ty in this regard, undertakes to change ita measure of value. Assume tbat the law waa proper, tbat thoro waa no wrong or impropriety in it paamre, tbe atandard of value was changed by that law. Now, how dons tbat affect tboao gen tlemen wbo held their bond prior thereto or subsequently? I turn again lo the statute of 1870, and I find that the first of these bonda. the Ave nor. cent, mature in ton year aftor their dato; tho next, the fonr-and a-balf per cent, in fifteen yean, and tbe next tho four percent, in thirty year, and yet tbe gontlomen who bold these bonds, wbo have tbia contract by the law and the bond payable ten, fifteen. or thirty yean after date, aay tbat we shall cross the bridge before we get to the river. Tbey aay tbey have the right to oay to a that it i a want st nublie moralit v to aav von will not trar your bonds duo in 1907 in the coin named therein. How absurd is auch a proposition. W hat standing has a creditor of a solvent debtor to make such an attack ? Let us take care that our sovereignty is not impaired in thia matter. We have the right to change the atandard of value and make the unit ot value gold or ailver alternately two or three time between tbis and that lime. It io our right and our pow er, and it doea not lie in tbe mouths of those wbo bold these bond to oay a word on the aubjeet until their day of payment como. It is for as, the sov ereign, to declare what ahall be the measure of values, and if we do It to day, flvo years before tbeir first bond matures, it is not for them to charge ua with lax morality. If they get their money wben thoir bond mature in the kind of coin or in the standard of value that it wao in 1870 tbey must bo content ; that ia their right, no more and no loss. But, sir, is all tbis cry about repudi. ation worth any thing? Within a year eilver has stood in tbo markota in London' at 991. In December last the Director of the Mint in bis report shows you that it stood there at 991 ; in January at 98). It has tended downwards a part of thia year and up ward tbe other part of the year and is now appreciating; and yet because to day it is below llie rate that these gen tlemen oay it ought to be at when tbey are to get tbeir money, twenty years after tbis, if yon please, therefore the peopio or the united statea inrougn thoir representatives cannot aay, "We can and we will chango our standard of value and we may and we ought to doclare that the silver dollar of 412) graina is justly, morally, and legally payable upon thia indebtedness I Mr. President, I had not intended to go into tbe general aubjoct 1 have said all 1 propose to aay on tbia ques tion, juy only purpose was to assert tbo proposition tbat the contract was, and is written in tbe bond, that the holders thereof are to take coin of the standard value of 1870 ; therefore tbat the law and tbe bond themselves both apeak directly and emphatically tbia legal result. They agreed to it and they cannot now evade tbat contract It io not for them to aay tbat it ia a want of public morality to declare that the metal which in 1870, wben their contract waa made, was worth more than one hundred cents in gold, ahall not be paid to them when their bond matureo. I can say to the Senator from Ohio, however, in regard to thia resolution, that it seems to me it ought not to be passed until a full discussion is had of this qneetion by every one wbo may seek or desire to discuss it It seems to me that our attitude npon this whole question ia capable of lull, perfect, and complete vindication, and tbat we ought to give to the country from our place hero all the light we can bclore making the declaration, which 1 think is the logical result of the law and ol the contract and of the rigbta and the want of thia people. Mr. Allison. Mr. President, on last Thursday the Senate by a very large vote assigned this day tar tho consider ation of tbe silver bill. I trust now that the Senator from Ohio Mr. Matthews and other gentlemen who are interest ed in tbis resolution will allow it to bo laid asido In order tbat we may take up tbe regular business of the day. I think that tbo whole question can as well be debated npon the bill reported by tho Committee on Finance as upon tha resolution proposed by the Senator from Ohio. Tbe V ico-Preoident Is there objec tion to the proposition of the Senator from lowa r M r. MalthowB. I trust that will not bo done. I think it is bettor to proceed with the discussion on thia resolution and dispose of it, and tben take up the silver bill. Mr. Allison. If it is necessary, I will make the motion to lay aaide tbis resolution until the Uland ailvor bill. so called, ot tbe House of Representa tives, Is disposed Ol. Tho Vice I'rostdcnt J bo senator from Iowa moves tbat the pending resolution bo nostponod until the lilantl silver bill, so called, ia disposed of. Mr. Matthews. On tbat 1 ask lor the yea and nay. The yoas and naya wero ordered, and the Secretary proceeded to call tbe roll. Mr. Oglesby, (when hia name was culled ) 1 take it there ia no great difference between the resolution and the bill, and I vote "nay." Tho roll-call waa concluded. Mr. Wallace, (after having votod in tbo affirmative.) Since ( have voted Senators inform me tbat they desire to speak to the resolution, and 1 change my vote to "nay. The result was announcou yeaa in, nay 43, a fullowa : Yaaa-Allteoa, Rlelee, Booth, larsaMe,Caaraa, Cbrialiaaey, ('oakling, Dawea, Dereey, llamlia, Eelloee. Vilrhwood, MirekcH, Merrill, PeMaak, Palleraua, Ralliaa, S.aadera la, . , Neva Bailey, Bera.m, Bayard, neea, nvwea, Cameree, of Peae'a, Oameraa, ef WhK. Ceete.ll, Coke, Daela, af 111, Davie, of W. Va., Katba, BaMla,Uarlaad.Qoedea,Urevar, narria, Hereford, . Hill. Howe, l.ealla, Jekaataoj, Jasea, af Florida, Joaee, of Nevada, kar.ee, Lamar, MeCreery, McUeaaia, alcMlllaa, Meraeeeoa, mel.eewe, Mexey, Meerimea, Mergee, Ogleeby, Plumb, Sealabary, Speaeee, Tharaaaa, Voorbeoe, Wbyte, Wadloigk, Wallace 41. Aaaa.r Aaiboay, Armetroag, tatler, Conov.r, Deaaie, Kdmande, verry, Hear, Randolph, Raa aom, Sargeat, Sbanal, Teller, Windom, Wilkere -14. So the motion waa not agreed to. Mr. Whyte. Inasmuch aa thia aub jeet ia of such importance to the coun try and ought to be luiiy aiecaaseq De fore any vole ia taken, other gentlemen being desirous of speaking upon the measure, 1 mote tbat tbe Senate do now adjourn. Mr. Hamlin. 1 ask the Senator to withdraw thfl and allow me to make a motion to proceed to the considera tion of executive business. Mr. Wbyte. With pleasure. Mr. Hamlin, 1 move that the Sen ate proceed to the consideration of executive business. Tbe quealion being put, there were on a division ayes 33, nor 20. aaeie T. i. " 15