Ill It "CLEARFIELD REPIBLICAV Third, thoy demand that tb tioiial baoklng system be removed I a circulating medium provided by tb JSXX Kovornmont for tl,o popl govern moni lor tlio people, without taxing them lor tbo privilege ol oo- that tb Tub lanfcal ClrrulitiHt mt any fcwapapr im V.rih Ontral Prim at, Ivanla. Venus oi Subaonption. fr t.niVf. . t irbn a.ti.....t tHi If MMI1 All' 41 .1 'tlT- m.taiii ,. 4 AO If .aid Hr- (,.- .:pirlWB Ml MUBIB... 4 N ttatea ol Advertising. t T linfixn' ftffrtrttaManftt, pr qiiftrnf UMnpur ' lil.f lr. ,,. ... 4 m. ilt-)innt mwrtlftn. ..... Mj A iiinlatrslur' n-l Kiroolnr inttiwc. f t 1 At-litofV miti .. t ft 0 tatin nl K-lravi. I S6 )alaliia nnllwi t ftn P-nfertiinnat Car. & lint r Uin.1 ir..,. ft OA La' ntti. unr lin- 1 V K4HI.V 1VKHTISRMRNT I iur w t nolamn f 1 1 iiir I (Ml 1 enluian.. TR M lliimrMH.,...H.M (Mi I anlaran. . .. ISAM 1. n. (.OOPLANPRR, Nl'KL B. 1.KK, PitMiitif'f, (Tardt. .1 OH PRINTING OF RVBRY DKOMP TIC KM' ek CIIHBTAIUKrl' KXKW hate printed lerg liabw af tb ee TV? Hil l.. end will ee h receipt ( tweaty -va -to, tall -wt a J .1-ltt.e a H. W. SMITH, .ATTORNRY-.AT-I.AW, t:l:7 t'leattteltf. Pa. J. J. LINGLE, tTTOHNEY-AT-LAW, his Philip burl. Centra lit.. Ps. p,l G. Pt. & W. BARRETT, ATrilKN' 1 AND CoUNHKuOHa AT IjAW, CLEARFIK1.D, PA. Jtnaary SO IS. ISRAEL TEST, I'TUR N IV T H ClearDeld. Pa. 00-otter II tbt Crl Hwh jll It W. C. ARNOLD, LAW & fOLl.Et'TIUJS OKF1CK cuhwenhviLuk, .1(1 Cl.trfltlH CoaDi, Prna'i. Ti. BROCK BANK, ATTOKNKY AT LAW, OLKAKIIIil.il, PA. Olbe la Court IIoum. V 2i.T7 I) ! S. V WILSON. ATTOKNKY AT AW, nfflm- i f il.. r iH fl W.frb liolvl l-Dilling 0H oita i'orl II' in. r.i..'T7 CLKHr'lKI.D. PA. FRANK FIELDING, A T T O nSKY-AT-LA W , I lea rlli-Id. Pa. Wilt af'ftiil to nit duKiDi' nuaiii.l t b prtnu.ti 4ii tailhrullt. Jnl7 fltkNV r 4i.t-ra JUHH W. aiLBT. WALLACE Sc KREBS, A T TOR N K YH-AT-LAW, j .r;7 t ivurOt-ld. Ha. a. bhai. tTHna a.Biha MURRAY k GOUDON, t I'T O It X K Y S AT LA W, L'l.KAHFIKLb, PA JKtt OBoa la Pit a 0rt-ra Huum. Meuo4 luor t:Ml'N OdARLES 0. LEIDY, AlTuh.Vfcl-AT LAW, Oteiula Mill-. ClMrAfU C4 Pa. Lt gai butlncM nf all kinli attanM to Par ticular MiU'DtiuD i4 tl io ttiv iruauriuj( cf buualitu, urn -turn, Ac. N-.r Jl, Id77 ty. lOhBPH t. t'B4Lkr. OAKIBt W. a'Cl ltM. McENALLY & McCDRDY, A rTOUNBYS-A'l-LA W, lardla. Pa. 4rLKal ba.iaa.. altandad lu ruaiptly witaj ijelitjp. Odiaa ua B'aavad atraet, abura ;ba PirM National bank. Ja:l:? wh a. Hcci-LLi.i an, rhrb. o l area Mcl l LLI lGH & III I K. ATTORN EY8-AT-LAW, t le.rOcld. I'a. All l.aal buriara, (irouiui iy aiualcd tv. (.. va Mveuail la tba Ma.ua.e nuildiaf. Jaalu.'JT A. G. KRAMER, ATTORN KY-AT-LAW H.al B.taU and Cullar!.,a Af.al, CI.KARI'IIVI.II, PA., Will nrumntl. atiaod to all l.aal bufina.a aa tnt.t.d to hi. eara. JUrvmcr la Pi.'. 0.ra II ibm. Jaal'7. . JOHN L. CUTTLE, ATTORNEY AT LAW 4 Haal Katata Affeut, Clearfield Pa, Offlflt om Third ilraal, hat.Chtrr A Walnat. tfRaapaetfally offtr bit tiarvlaa (a aalllan aad bujtajt Btla ,B OUarlald aad adjilata oaatua f aad vmb bb aiparitnea arr twanit jrari aa nrrajror, flattar hinitll that he an raaaar lattiraattoB. DR. W. A. MEANS, PHYSICIAN A SUIKiKON LI THKHHIU Kil. PA Will attend prota..loaal eall. b.vaibtlj. aMaltt'7n DR. T. J. BOYER, f H YNII.'IA.N A Nil UK('i)N nana oi, Marin Klraat, Claarlald. Pa Vt-Ulbsa h.iara I I tw It a. . aad I to I ,. JR K M SlIUEl'RER. UtlMiKOPATIIIC I'HYMCIAN ofllr. la n.id.ai. oa t iiM rt. April U, l7J. Claarirld, Pa DR. H.B.VAN VALZAH, I'l.KAMPIKLIt. PI- l A. OKKICK IN MASONIC Hl lLIlN(i PW Ottoa k..r- Praai II ta I P. M. Ma; II, lT5. DR. J. P. BURCH FIELD, Uuar(.oaol IbaMd a.jlai.al. p.aaa;l.aata Valaauara, barlag ratbraaa rrvai Iba liat .ff.r. hi. arafaaatoaal aaralaa. la Uaailiaaaa af Olaartaldaoaata. aariroia.alaaaloall aroaiptlv atuadad la. Oflaa a aaaaad itraat, faraiafljraaaapiad b tr mdi. (apr, M U WILLIAM vt raa Pi.k U UKNKY, JuiTict in aanncaiTamia, LtlMHIH 61Ty. Collaatloaa nadt aad Bmaty praaipil) paid aar. Antela. ut aKraaaiaat aad data, at aoara.aaaa aaatl; taiwiitad ant warrant aar raat at Bo abarira. 1)TT REED A HAGEIITY, ' BALBU R HARDWARE, FARM IMPLEMENTS, . . Ilanar. IkallB, akc, aajlJ! ' .'. . htta, (mat. i1t.il.kl, P. J A M E 8 H. LYTLE, la tratarr'a nulldlar. laaibWId, Pa. Daalar la Uroeatlaa, PrnffUloB., Vtatablaa, Fraiu, Rl-ur, Paad, au., rta. . aprll I. If HARRY SNYDER. VAMBEH AND HAIMlKKSJRR b"p aa Marhal 11.. afpo.ll. Oaurt Hoaal. A eWaa lawal far avar ta.toa.ar, Alio aaabafartaiar af All kliida af Artlclaa la lluaiaa Hair. Uttailala, Pa. aj; II, '7a. JOHN A. RTADLKR, IIAKkH, M.rbat t. ClaaittU, Pa. fraak a Mad, lta.1, (alia, Piaa aad Oaba. aa aaad af Iriad. I atdar . A Raaaral aaaatlaiaat f ranfaotloaarlaa, Praia) aad Mala la ataab. iaa Caaaaf bad Oy.lara la ataaoa. Malaria aaarlj opsaaiia lb Paauaiaa. ptiaaa Bad. rait. ilarab la-TI. GEO. B. GOODLANDER, Proprietor. PRINCIPLES, NOT MEN. TEEMS-$2 par annur. a Advance. -'.- .d . at. .. , , ,-. - , '-, ... i VOL. 52-WHOLE NO. 2,558 ( CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1878. - - NEW SERIES-YOL. 10, NO. fj CREDIT OF THE GOVERNMENT. IXIJ30IX OP ..HON. D. W. VOORHESS, ! OF INDIANA. IN Till Uriitoil Stntes Somite, Jamart 15, 18.8. Concluded rum last iceek 1 from the silver resources if nil oilier countries. In our own country 1 li development ol thin great agency of national prosperity has nil taken place in Ibu lost eighteen years, nil Iml un I itil fy in the laat tun. Till) billowing estimate, made hy the Commissioner lor Mining Nintii-tics, shows the annual production ni silver and ita increase in (he United States: U.'.t I Hfla I an I lillj IKn.1....; nui.-imm ) mj T I IHt f,3 IJ4 II lon.imo I Mi tiru .... s.i in, lion .., 4 ftflu ,10,. .... 8 lull. (ion .... Il.ltti.omi .... M "lib. null .... 28 1100,11 II .... In, nun. unii .... .Ho.Taii.ai o .... .ijt.oiiu mill .... I J. O.O.I. O'l Eniininiiiiir the pruduition nl 187U and 177 ihu ruuiu ua 1875, ami o nnd that Ihu unuru anmunl of adver ieldcd lv thu iiitiurt ol' tbu Uniluil Mutea Bineu lliey Uet;uii to ,uv lnr wiiikini; them ha reailivd hut a trill, over thu coniiiaralivelv rmall Mini ol J50,0UO,Ulin. This ia um limn one ball the anioiint ol our irt m nt vt'liinie ol curntney j yet when ihib-e who are inlurtnlcd in tnukili and kveiin a marcity of money ineirciilulion, noticed an inervaiw of only J 12,O0U,O(0 linin 1870 to 1872, they took the alarm whiib reunited in tho act of 1873, m aerihiii and outlawing it Iroiti the coitiiaiiiotit.hijt of iild an money. It H ill not do to Huy that thu detnund Cir atlver bad lulled, lur aidu Itinn wbut our own ienilu needed at borne, the demand liotii abroad wua an irreat that in Ihu very act of demoiii'liziii it here tinivihi.iii wua tnadu liir the eoinaire ol a dollar that we found neeeHnary fur our loivii;i! trutle. ll vraa a dnllur ol Ihu weii'lil ol 420 grains trov, und the Secretary id' the Treanuiy, in bin recent reiioii, aa a : Thi. i.rovi.ion tntila at a liin whaa fu-h a do'l.r w. wurib Id tb. pjarh.i I0J 12 b to d, and a. dt.i.ncd lor tba u.t of tradt ia i'biii., Bb.ra .ilrar a. ibt only tiaiidard. Tbu ureal demand for thin coin. uaeetally in our trade wilb China, in hhow n by " rviort made by the two leading I'.reli'll bunks ol Clnnu. ibe Oriental Bunk and the lloiiu Knnjr ana Mjuujrhal iiankin tjiirpoi-uiiiiii, dated reapeelively Julnmrv 31 and 30. 1877, and fiiriiinhed hy the I'nitcil Mate Cutiatilute at liunir Konr to the rSccrclary ol (be lrcui.ury. 1 find lhee resirta quoted hy the Director I the Mint, and 1 extruel Iroiu Ihem the tnlloWltitf atHlettlelitri : Tba I aifrd Statta trada-dollar baa ban writ aaira.1 la Cbtna, aart i. taaari aair.-ai.dli, Iboaa paru ol lha eoanlra when lha tnia ralu of tba afe la kaowa. It 1. a Iraal taodor at ilia port, of r..rb' aad t'aetoa, 111 Cbina. and alro at Halcoa and r'i0)fa.ora t and, althoujcli no Itaall eurrrat In thi. aola-. it I. anaiU'l ooabr at'iar bt tb" Oluntw, and in t'.a iai iar H ia aridoai ta ba , ar. haad. lo proo' of .bt trioia l.,a la whlah Ibt Irada dallar la b.t in iba a.uib bin., wa B,ad '..,lv atata ihtl tna "ata oi tbt dlrai-l ai.baaaa ba.ia.'.. bttwaan (..i,g K -na aad Han Pranel.eo, wbiab I. vara aoMlilrralilo. I. doaa ta lai. a..tn, lha a.llra. prat.rrlna it to Iba Mrliaaa dollar La a artier. IrouiHaB Kraiifllatt" rport tkai aa artal a d- la. ad torira.lt dollar. lr hipaitat lo t bira that tbt Caltioraia Mint i. oaeaaal la Ibt ta.k af laraiaa oar lha run la.t aauuitb to tali.lj fquiraiurBia a a a p), opiaioa la tbal ulliiualait It Bill ba earraui al var tbiaa ll ia tba bail aoia tbai tvar ba. btta laHortad, aail, ln.t.,f pr-Niuoad a' lha loa.itain btad ol .tl.ar, taa ba tai l d.,wa mra abt tpl. tbau ant titnar dolUr. a a a t'kioa ra quiraa u.an5 aillliona of dollar, annuallr, ao.1 abila ttiarl.an Mtaie.a dollar Bill l.a ini.oittd .or tha norlb ,ot L'iiii.B, iba ir.dt.d..llar ill ha iar,.on.d lar tha aouth. I oaol r,.ai(hl. rtiim.ta that Ibt rtan PraneitiM, altaiutr. Bill nnna trooj loor to .11 la-. o irada dolla. (Iroia four lo i buad, d lb aa.idira.b lorti.i.bilj trip al iha Jtarr and. The Secretary of the Treuniiry alao iniorina ua tnal ninee the trude tlnllar wua authorized it ban been coined to ibclare amount nl 130,710.00(1, maiiil to meet thin and other loreiirtt demanda for ailrer money. It ia truu, however, that be further niuua that the export Ueinand tor the trade dollar baa now almost if not quite ceased. It ia not Htruiiire that this should he no, when ibis Uuverumeiit has done all in ua mwer to dishonor it at home ; first liiiiilinir it as a lcial tender to the in suiiitii aul sunt ol t5, and husiciiiiij( msjti atlurward to sirii it ol even this small bailee of reHrecluhility . Distant renplc, naturally auspicious ot our in solutions, would necesHunly reject a eoinoit m hicb wenurselves have plucvd such a stigma ot tlisrace, however ureal, as we have seen, may be their demand lor silver money, lu fact, im nitilW, no cunning tluvicu has been siared tn lri lij the silver dnllur into contempt and to drive it out of exist ence, although the American people and the people ol ull lands and ol every liirtn of civihiuiioii plead lor its icinru tiou lo fuvnr and to an ample circtilu tion. If there are some, however, who si ill think that these assaults on silver were inspired h) any other motive than the tear of list much money, allow me to recall an incident in Ktiaucial history full of teaching tin Una point. When thu mvclalinn of irnld tnok place in Calilinnia, and mi the other side of the win Id in Aurtruba ahi.tit the same time, an impulse was irivi-n lo the plotless of mankind greater than has been pm (juced hy any other olio event since Columbus discovered America, ll quickened every eneruy of labor, aroused all the (rnal industries every where into new and startling activity, revived the drtsipin sails of couitueree in every sea anil sent tba loaded eara vans ol railroad transportation fltinir in every direction over the fuca ol tho earth. The wb.ilc world n juiced with one clceplioii. The creditor class in every chine beneath the aim Itsiketl on in sullen distrust and dread. And in 1866, when the production of Hold bad reached its highest point, and when it waa supposed I list it would cnn'.lniiu lo increase, this f lans broke forth in the different countries nl Euniie In lavor of dcnmncliiinii (old, because the sup. ply was making money Iiki plenlilul. lie (juincey, Chevulicr, and other writers, made earnest and eluhurute arguments In show lliut the iucreuse in the flow of gold wua so greut that soon it would be wilhin the easy reuch ut all classes, and then ita Mivrer to purclis" labor and properly In large quantities lor very small sums would he lorever gone, liertnany, and Aus tria, and some other European (roveni nienls, heeded these arguments, and in D&7 actually Jemnneliied gold ill order tn maintain thesrarcity ol money The reason why this question did not seriously agitata the financial circles ol lbs United Hiatus la to be found in the fact that at that time we had nn great creditor class in this oountrjr ; wa had no stupendous Manorial debt bald as an investment for fixed incomes ; so such Huts, manWpal, and corporation debts as bar sines t Ustl all the stock markets with ititert'Sl-bcuring bonds, and which are now a draining tax on all theluhor und production of I he country. Ilud our situation been then us it is now we would have sueit the holders of fiov eminent securities and all oilier bonus wherein Ihu ptiyiiictil ol money Iroiu the miifiy to thu tew wus iiiiminuted. us badly ufl'iighted in this country ul whiil WHscullnl an overproduction of gold as the holin-rstil siiiiilursecurtlies und bonds were in Europe. The luws which govern Ihu human hnurt ill its love of gain are ibu same everywhere. Tin creditor clu-s is nut so much con cerned wbut coiir or other muieriul sbull eonsiitulo money as it is thul there Hlmll be no redundancy- utter its deinunds nro paid. Tho Ivporl of I lie Mnheiury Com tnissioiisii limit led lot bis hm! in Mun-h hist hy the distiue;ui,.hfd Seliuter from Nevada Mr. Junes i-onimetits on this tuci as loilows : to .11 Ihr Ki,np an rll.eo.rli.a, afttr 1816 and prior io it,.' tttra.., ,l in .naiii.ii a of rlivar and n. snDiruurni',... Iht .,.liit In. do Ba. B'it that tilb.r iim'Ihi had rl,.ira,.iai,l ra'alivtl, to tha o'hrr, hot ibrt I'T ra,ai,ii ot txir.or.in.r,r .up pli,.. ot ao'd lr,-in I a'lt.irnia .ii't Ao.tra la. .up i.i.mi.nitl, ahi.ur I sf,4. h, n.'tr auiii.lioa ..f ailrar from N....ta, '.oih mala, had daprroiattd rata- nvil, 10 li or and rooim .liiiR., and tnal tb.a havii.K Hxt l liii'oint. wcra htin nijurtd by a ru in prit,.. So Inna- ..ibt d'.uiilt Rt.iMlard a.i.it'l, a i.tw rup.l ot .tihtriu.t.l Ba. only aa addi tion lo mii.i nl .IT' tlrd ibn talua ot tho aanrrwl m.u i,ruioiia and noi iba rti.ore taiua ot tb. uirl.l.. Th Ml In gold,'' Bbioh rhavatlar lamtniad tn Ir.a7, a., it. tall in rtlatlob to propartj. lit pciniad out bow Ibt dnulilt aian.lard bad pra vanltd anjr ohatiira rotn incurring in it. ralaiion 'o allirr an l bi.w it Woolil ouiitiouo lo do .0 an II iha iii.tr ot douhla-.t.n lar.l aountrit. a.a txb.,uta,l. In ordi-r, lbr.-f,ra, in proitot tba lnt.rt.lt ol Iba li mt t'B..ar ll wta cUnaol lo b, htft-..nrt 10 dtlnnnailit ,.naol tnawatal., and aolu bring lha tonal whiob tbtn proantud tba Bloat al.ovd.ot yild n.a a-'ltct. d lor lb. purpow. It wa. tha il'p'trinliin ia iba v.lua ol tbt pr.lou. uirl.l. anil ,'f uioaty, .uppoatd lo bava alitail. rr.ultt.1 trout tha u w .oppllaa of gold, wlii.b uiadr bno tbt 0.ii.'pi.-i,.na .d.oeata oi Ibt dootai.d Ih.l out ol iha tut al. thoulil ba ,taaioi,a tii.il ib ordir to "tadn t. tba .ituatioe." ll uppeuis. iberehire, I but gold, even gold, thu vcty gotl ot a tierce Itlolatry lu our tntdst ul this tune, has commu ted the moitul ain ol influi ton, ami baa been cursed und ostiacist-d on that uc cuiuil hy tliu iisiiiurs und money chungers us well us lis more tnnilesl eompuiiions, silver und pujr. And il now both the precious metuls Uncut etied lo iucreuse beyriiiti the wishes und interests of this class lliey would bu euiiiustly intpiiriiig and scheming into some pluii b) which lliey could domoue litu gold uud silver ulike, and Hubstiuitu diuiiioiids or some oilier seurcer und nioiti (lillli-ult cominodily toohtuin the busts ol spi cie pn menls and the nniney in uli ch ull duhts due to them should lie paid. ah.ru remains, however, one oilier argument in connection with the ullegeti ovcrpiodiiciiiiii ami ihHution nl silver w hich r. quir. suttentiou. In the nuiiie i f gissl lull ti it bus been urged here lu this nodi uliil elsewheru Ihul, ullliouuli silver Is siiucilied us pluinly as gold in all i ii r tinuticiul Icgisluiion, yul il was produced in such meagre tpiuiililiea ul Ihu lime our xsulionul debt was creulud that the pun hasers ol our Ininiis could lint have reasonably supposed they were ever lo receive it in pit) mi ni ol tlie sume, m.twitliMund ing the luw expressly suid Ihei should. lu other words, il Is an argument to releuse the iioudlioliler Iroui the abso lute, definitely written words of the luw on the ground thul he could mil loreseutbut Ibetiovernmeiil wiuilil ever buve silver cuoiigb to tullill the luw. This is the highest, boldest nolo id re pitdiutilin ever beard in this country ; an open udmissisu of Ihu law and nn open, stpiure detnund tor 1 1 b viohitiou. No lucls or siirioiiiiiling ciniiiii sluiiees ul Ibe lime- the cotitract was mude cuii tor u niomenl jusiily such u H.igruiil ul. ro ul ion ol its mutt explicit terms, hut even il outside Voinliiions. not expressed in lis luce, could be set up now to deleiit it. I n-.sc.rl thul the conililiona ullegeti hy thu iiiIcih iilim of this urguineiit never exisied ut all I assert Ihul wbeti the luw lor the pay ment ol the public debt w us const rued by the luminis act of March, 180, to ineilli pu) luunt in gold uud silver both, the prisjucliiiu of our silver mines lor thul year was 11 025000, and burl annually nveruged thul amount since 1804. ll is cotileiided thai the pur chasers of our bonds overlisiked, when lliey were firr-t issued, Ihu feeble sup pi) ol silver. Did uti uiinuul average production of nearly twelve millions lor Ibe space of Hve years preceding I he act ol Alurcii. 180!). bkew ise cnpe their attention, when lliey wore tram ni'( I Inn at t in their own interest and lo suit Ihumsflvot? But ftL'niti, by the refunding act ol July 14, 1870,aulhoria nig the issue ot new coin bonds lo be suhsiiiuiud lor Ibu fivulwctitv bonds. muking Ibereliy a new conliu' tof thai dale, it wus agreed (but the bonds honied hy virtue of that act should be pay u I ile in silver us well as gold. During 1 1 1 it I very teur, the yeur of the conl in, t which is lo be enloii cd in ull its ileniumls ugitiusi ihu flesh und bloinl nt luhor. - tint generous silver mines of ibe United Slules Yielded. S1UOO0.00II. Was not this sum sufll clem In put the U'Hliiirs of that enacl- menl, the lioiiilhoiders lu huropo and Amerii u, on their guard anainsl muk ing a solemn stipulation in receive stl ver money III puy nn nl ol their bonds unless they inleiided at that lime to tin so? During I lie years 1871 and 1872 many hundred millions nt bonds w ere issued under Ibe ai-l of July 17, 1870 und received in cxi-bunue liir flve-lwen lies. They went ull putublu by ibe express terma of the law eilhur in silver or gold, at lite option ot tbel.overn iiienl ; nnd thu prisluction ol silver, when lliey were thus voliiiiturily re .-rived, umoiihled, accordiiig lo our miiiiiig stulistics. in 171 to 12.1 0 ifl. 000. und in 1872 I" 128 000 000. D is no doubt true that the product ot these two hitter tears ex. lied the fear of a silver in flail. which hussiueedeepeued into tne ansnrn panic now prevailing, but how can it with any fairness be prt icmled that tbu bnmlboldcr is re leased from receiving silver according to his agreement on the ground that wu were, not producing ilmt metal when thu laws governing the contract wcru enacted f 'And. it it was not coined ill amounts as large as il has been since, yet il was well known that the law made its coinage free and un limited, and no one ha a right to com plain ol the cnlnri ement of a law ot which he had full knowledge a the time his rights nnd liuinlith a accrued. I I hu argument is unsound ill law and uiisuatuincd hy the fuels, lu lact, the entire movement dcmnncliging silver is to he cxpluimil solely and alone on Ihe principle ol contraction ) and this brings me, in this connection, to con sider more fully that destructive prill- i pie, ami cstruciuliy to examine the policy and tba effects of the law of January 14, 1875, lor thu resumption of specie payments by an i nton ed con traction of the lion interest bearing legal tender current y ul the roontry. Ihe law ol pchruary, 1B7J, taking away silver money trom the people, and ike taw of January, 1R75, fixing tba day, now lem than a year tn ad vance, wben the grecubick KbaU also perish, are twin monsters of evil, bom of the samu parentage and linked to gether for the destruction of all money save gold. In their discussion, tberu- fore, they are entitled lo a joint reccig. union. Sir, in the entire cutaloguo ofcritn against human society not one cuii bu toiiud so awful in all its consequences, bulb immediate und remote, as a gov eminent ooinmits when il dcliherulely destroys the money ot Us own citiien Wherever in all tho regions ol time such measures have been accomplish I lie horrors ol history Have taken place. Ao shrinkage in thoumnuulot money nn contraction of the currency in the fluids oi tne people was ever eiilurceil ny luw tn any consideruiilu extent, ex. cept amidst broken lives, ruined hopes, despuir, lost honor, and ull the vices springing from the lowest tlcoths nl human misery, The worst, liorre.ll. cuts of war, pesti.ence, and famine all flow trout thu act ul a government vui- leuily tearing from the hands of tbu laboring musses thu moiny they so much need. Murder, then, robbery, prostitution, forgery, emb. tisliiineni, uud Ira ud of every hue and mien curse lite land Ihul Is deprived nl a lull and Hiirfioiuhl circulating medium on which to give employment to Its toiling mull and women. The aoeiul sluliniics of mankind will show ihul wherever the supply of money has been scant and labor p orly paid, or lull entirely idle, there the gallows-tree bus borne most frequently its horrid burden; there the Juila and the pcniteiiliurtca and all the haunts of Infamy have been most crowded, ihu well clothed and well fetl I'burisue mar ostentatiously thank Uud that ho ia butter than such as these, but he is not. When the strong hand id the government ia engaged in abolishing money, anil thus interpos ing between the laboring-man ami the laboring womun and their last chance lor bread by honest work, their sins lor sell-proservation uro less odious to their merciful Ktithcr ihun the prayers oi tne usurers who have driven them lo ruin. It ia said in highly intelligent quar ters tbut at this hour there are three millions ol our own neoplu unemnloy ed, who have no other dependence for tiHid and sbeher than the labor f their hands, and one-half of whom are now trumping Irom place to place torcrumbs of charily. Pitiable and dangerous spectacle! 1 1 never happened before If, Hits land ot bounteous nature, nor would it now hut for the fact thai in these later days a class has arisen in our midst which is benefited by the scarcity of monoy, and the consequent destruction ol all those great industries which afford employment to labor. Nor docs this Irightful spectacle appeal alone to our sympathy with human misery, deep and indescribable as that must be. The loss to tho country in actual wealth arising trom the absolute iillcnosanf three million persons Is very great. It has been estimated that at one dollar wr day as wages it would amnnnt to enough in two years to li quidate our public debt. The United States monetary commission make the lollowmg valuable observations in their recent report: Tha wortt tffttt, bowtrar afioanraliwalla tton.id trtd, of falling Brtsaa ia not upoB all.ling prop. art, sor npB dtbtnra, avtl a. II la. hut npna a'tinn-a. "."B n otprirti ni tmpiosmanl and ma.lrB. ta rstttrtt, and BD'iB aotiaiv. Bbtah it dtpri.t. of that ..at aura of waaltb whiob ra.ldaa poltntlal'v In tba vignron. arra.at tha Idlt work Biaa. A thrinking toloma of bobsv Iran. fan tsl.tiaf property ba slirainatint froia It thtt ha pottanl tit Bitnt of aaloa annfarrad upon It hy tha .kill, tntrgy. and ear of iha dthlora frnra whom It I. wraalad. Bol II dot. ant dt.tr.,y aav sal,t. ing pmptrty, bMI ll riot ahMlutalr annihilate ail IB vela I pndatabla hy lha labor wbtab Ir rsiB'lema. ta idlane... Tha artlaiala ia not aa turaragant naatkat iber are a..w ia iht llaittd sra't. a.noa.ana prraoa. BlUine lo m ,rk, he, wh . are idle bte , eta tbty naaaot aht.la tnp.t taenl Thi. te-l Boterla-etriobea aretv I. iattta.ma and will onntlnno ta Inerteat e. tnnt ot falling ,.r,rtt ,ni ton.iaa asperate a).ny eapl.l, 'ht fund not of whlab were, art n.i I, Irom l.nor .. . nooooraga tia in.e.ioaenl la ntbtr form af prnptrlv. I.t !,not. oe-op.ratlag Bhb tba fortta f Natnta. i. tn et are ni all aealtn, sad 10 rvath tha h h eat degree of trTeolittntst It meat b- el.a.il.d ibrongb tba aid f aapitai and .apparusl hv eapl 11 during th proaaaa of prodoellos and ht aia.. ared and paid ia aaot. a.eb anil of whiob ia a .ignt-qrat. na all 4r lorraa or proptrtt, hear ing a telne in proportion lo the number of auch rirent In order Ibet eny aoaatrt Biay seath the matlmam of atattrial Bro-ntn'v otrt.ln aondi. tl..B. are ladiratnaabla. All lu labor, aatltttd b ibt a.s epprattd .bisrt sad pp-laee. a,a.l "e tBpl.,yH, and ibt frnlla or ln.la-'rr' "H he Ja.tl. dl.lrlha'td. Tht enndlilan. ..Bit p....lhl wbn tapltal I. ahaolalelt pnttttt'l ar.inat vinlanta and free frnra ttgi.ia.a.t Itat-. lativa Interf-reaoo, and whta lha lehorer la pre. leo'sd In hi enteral right ta dlon of hi, l.bnr ia euth atanntr a. he at. prefer. Thee are uitrlr iotpiiMihle when the scntv st.stk I. .brink log and iht Bin,t f.lne of r-mprrte end aartitte ia .tttlini'ig ..waotetroraorf. ttsrarwmoatta. nf a enaatry wi, ba. eowtret wtafsl fr. riM..ra. trit'e it mil, iMutet'ooa. ear.rprt'.aa an! fadarltf ..a.n. tstnbif..ar., t r ,f. fe,i,Va't'.. if tin er nwaart '..Arieaiao nao art'tt. or. -.IK.a it ot tenet, milt a op.rt.ac'ie.B' r' a.iareprra It. terfatfrf.. wi" Bo,a'a..if,aatf r..Urafioa o.d ritrrrt mill ar.ne.1 Tht iB.tlnOl of tttf Inltrt.t la lha raaln.arla of in.lu.tri. I and tommtrtiial aclltltr It it tht aniin.tlni m lire alike of iha eapltalltt and of ilia lahortr. Without it. an labor woiM be ptr formrd. aor wnoM a.pltal have ea oxl.tmoo. If aiontt eapltel I. with Irawn fnia productive tn- erprtRaa, it I. Irom tar apptthrnrioa of to., and Irnm tba .am lntt.net of Ihrln throua-h whiflh it wa. atqairtd It it ntloral tbel th loonee n.pl aii.i .una d tiaet from InNtr all h ean In rt hange for hi. taoa-r. and that tba laborer ahonl.l tiam all Ihe aviate ha o.n In tithing lor hi. tah'.r. What i. known a. tht n.nfllot roewtrp tapital end l.bor ia not to touch a annflltl he. twten other formt nf capital end latovr aa ll it he- warn mnarr and l.ber Indeed the collet ha twttn moaty and o'btr torott of eapilal I. a. oi.,,Diiv m.rke. and qoltt a. latere at the eon. feet htw.n mnntr nd lahnt. and la Ih.l tmnfl.et other final nf aapitai .offer felly e. ma-b a. leiott. ihe nlv difference b-log thai tbte are baner .hie to endure lo.e. 0 ha- formt of e.pi tel mu.t be eoBnantly converted tntn monta IB or.ltr la p iy Ware. BB.I lo meet oth-r itmn.l. in,.tdeot to iBiloitriel anlernrilat. When the lock nf taonr) t. .hrinklng end p-let. art felling, thi. eoat.r.lea e.a naly at aiada at rate. e.,n llaoally groaiog mora Baiavraslt, while el the eiee Ilmt Iba .riHlaea nf tha labor for whole .gtt tacrlfiot hate bran Blade ar e'fo andrr go.ag a tbrinkagt of money value. Tnu. lo. and reariflre are eno iantertd at attrv tarn, and ht nwoer. t,r nlher eapilal thaw montt .brink rota Ibt frlnlea of ttcnanae. viih lrew f.eia prodaotive at.ttrprlae., anl anly eteboafft at mu,-b of -heir ps,prtv for maaey at will .ul!io lo mtal tht ntet..ary elptn'lilaret of II, ing, which are rdu.d l lb Bc.it acoaewleal laeel. at II il priarlpelaad not isoeuM which it being ena.uujad. Mile mart l.bor will ba empl y4 aadr Ibtat elream.teaoea ttaa la luSeieat ta lapport tb ownora f eapilal aa ibll paratmnBinaa be.i., aad at a e-aitaueneo tba labor atarktt will heaver itooaed. ana Ibe e.inipaliliaa Stl w raa laborer! rill tedeo wagaa I a etartatiea level. Bui daring Ihit period, wbea praperly It oting laeri. lead ta m-rt arral atataailiaa, aad labaran are being rtmiuad ta ldleaet aad de.lilatius, mnBey falltnt ua Ibe geserel di.aaiar. When, thereliire. on the 14lh of Jan- nary, IKiS, this Uovernmetit, having alri-ady destroyed silver money, deter- ininesi to destroy wunin tha next lour years its outstanding legal-tender pa per currency until lliero should be no more of it lull than could ha redeem ed in gold coin alone on tha 1st day ot January, 1879, it became responsi hie tor all the appalling consequences that bava followed. An attempt to liirve the resumption of specie pay menls with gold and silver both as our metallic basis would bo cruel failure at this time; but the pnirosiiinn lo con tract, rcduco, and burn our present amount ol currency until it barroom aes wilb the meager margin ot gold which wo can command bus stricken tht aria or labor with paralysis, dried up th fountains tit basinets) pruesrily, and placed bolfow eyed want in fnnre than a million bitberto b tppy bomes, Tb demonetiislion of silvsr waa par. posely accomplished before th nollcv of specie rcsunitlon waa declared in order to maku money as scarce as pos- simo in reaching oy lorced oontrauilnn the single slumlord of gold. We could reach the double standard easier than tbe ainglo one, hut tha purpose of the money power was the diminution of money in circulation, and it belter ac complished that object by first outlaw ing silver and then socking the specie basis cotnposod of but one mutul. It cannot he denied that greut progress nas nuun made in tins work ol destroy. ing moneys, und all Values, except the value of money, which is made greater hy being made scarcer and harder to oiuuin. At the duto of the act of January, 1875, our Volume of currency was al ready reduced in pronoitioti to ponuli tion fur hulow Kurtipeun tiHtions. where lubor rnminaiifla' .siurely eMiMiiet".ni.w wages. We had nearly one-half less jirr capita than (iermany, England, or I'runre. rinunciul distress was even then upon us. liiisiness .-recks were ufloul on every bund. M'e had the warnings of nine prccediiir years dur ing which the money ol the country bad been diminished nearly 1100,000.- 000 by contraction, and ikiring w hich time Ibe liubllilics lor coiimercial lail- ii res and bankruptcies bill risen from an average of about 111,000.000 pur annum lo nearly three bun I red million A pumu bud just swept over tbe coun try with sutlleiutit buvou and ruin to extort the adinission from General Grant in Ilia message of December, loi.i. that our volume ul ctrrency waa loo small for our business, even ut iis lullestsiages. We bad lessthan 17115, 000,000, not counting Iractiotiul cur rency, uud yul against the uuupliculioua of every active business und industry a slill limber reduction wait dictated, and boa been effected to thu extent ol nearly one hundred million. Ill bow- ever, the law liir the enlorccd rusump- Uon ni specie payments is lo stand un repealed nn our statu le-books, then there still remains a work of destruc tion to he done in this country far mora cllcliBive, dangerous und lull of wretch edness than we have yet witnessed. I hut law declur.-s Dial 0 aad after tbt lit dot af l.nuarr. A.D. ID70. tha P, ereiary nf tha Treo.ury aball redeem In eo B the I ailed Hiatal ttgal-ttader aotei Ibeo owtlaod - lag OB Ibelr preaeoutpia for redemptioa at tba .not of Iba eMi.lool Treatorer uf tbe baited Stale, ia 'ba ally si Mew iort, ia tamiaf sot kai th.a i 1 ne term coin hero used means only gold now, and ihe law, in order lo en able ihe Secretary uf the Treasury lo carry out tins plan lor retiring tbe greenback money from circulation, su honaes bun to Bel, inlerust besring noiuis to obtain gold and to use such surplus revenues as ba may have on II U Mil. riio Government has undertaken two things: first, the shrinkage ol tbe amount of currency, and, second, the sssession ot gold in such quantity that Ihe one can be convened into the other. Tbe smaller, therefore, the quantity ot gold Ihul can be obluined thu greater must be tbe reduction ot ptlier money in order lo rest dollar for dollar on sucb a narrow metallic basis, ll becomes mporiBiil in this view to know wbut has been done under the law of Jatiua- 1875, in accumulating gold oa a lasts lor specie payments a year hence. Mailt' efforts have been made lo ascer tain the exact amount of actual gold which thia Government now owns, none of which baa been entirely sue eessl'ul, tiir the reason thai the sum is so small, but it ta wrleolly sale to state, alter deducting tbu amount due as in lerust on bonds, that thereat not ibis day filly mill ot gold in the Uuiled States Treasury and in all the national haiike besides. Jf resumptiou is to Uke place on Ihul basis, the gigantic task of this poor piliunce will he to stand ifissi lor the redemption ol 1350, 007 308 50 of legal-tender notes, coin, uioiily culled greenbacks, and 1291,. 874.230 ol nulloiiul-bulik bole circula lion, making In all the sum of tl41, 881.544.50. Il ia vury plain, even lo those who believe thai 11 ill gold is BulHcieul tor ike circulation and re demption of 13 in paper, that our pre sent condition of 11 in gold to aboul tonrtueii in paper tniisl bu radically re volutionized against tho day fixed for specie rcsiimpiion. hat probability is there of any larger increase of gold in tbe vaulia ol the Treasury t Will spvsriw rtMinplien taw rvnth-tc mltulll the present yuar by leveling up the amount ol the gold in our possession or hy leveling down the amount of cur rency in cin iilution ? No one claims thai loreign bullous will supply our want oi gold. On thu contrary, nearly all the pro duce of our mines goes lo them to pay inlorealnn publicst-cunties held abroad. Buteven ll this Government could turn the entire gold yield nf every Ami r can mine into the Treasury between this and the lsl day of January, 1879, the supply would full far short id' a specie basis tiir one-tenth part ol our present circulation. Ihmiig tho year that has just closed, 1877, the gold coinutfo ot our mints reached only the sum of 144,078.199. The bulk ol this sum went ahroud. a portion of it is hourded by private partios, and a small traction, perhaps, found its way into the coffers of the Government An ex amination of tbe rupart ol the Director if thu Mint lor 1877 shows that tho entire coinage of gold in tha United Slates Irom the establishment of the Mint in 1793 to the present time amounts to but 1983.159 C95. This is ihu slow and comparatively small pro duction ut gold money in tho long space ot eighty four years, nearly tho whole lifetime of the American Republic; leas than 11.000,000.000 ; leas than enough tn nay tor one single crop of agricultural products in the westurn Siuies ol Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, Illi nois, Michigan, Wisconsin, Missouri, Minnesota. Iowa, Kansas, and Ne braska; anil less than one-half enough tn pay the national debt as it exists to day. Is there nn lesson ol wisdom In these figures lor tho statesman of those times? They ar lha experience of almost a century. Do they encourage any reasonable being to hell va that gold enough ran he obtained hy this Government in tho next twelve months to redeem ill currency and lo enable its citiicns lo do business nn a specie basis? Is there anywhere in America or in the whole universe a new fount ain of gold, pouring Inn h increased vol times, trom which our parched ami scanty resources may be replenished T Thu very reverse ia th lact. Old fountains are drying up ; their streams are diminishing ; no wiiard'a rod can smile the earth and indicate where new supplies will break forth. But the requirements of the Government Air gold constitute hut a small portion of the demand. Tb American people at this lime ar enormously tn debt ; mora than any other people beneath tb sun. Their Slate and munii ijisl debt of all kinds, and their private debla lo each other, have been Variously estimate! at from six to ten thousand million dol lar. Every dollar ot this vast tndeht dnM wUl call for guld ooin attr th 1st day of January, 1879. Wbcreare the people In obtain sufficient gold wilb which to pay their debts and transact their business ? The question is one that may well terrify every man who owes his neighbor anything, for there is not now, and never bos been at any one time, enough gold in circulation aa money on the lace, of th whole earlh to meet this demand. If, therefore, specie payment ar in reality to be re sumed in Januury, 1879, th Govern ment has yet to destroy at least two thirds of its present paper circulation. ana toe people on this reuucod basis, and under thu gold standard alone, will be compelled to meet their debts and their tuxes which have undergone no uiiijinuiion. Sir, here the bad faith of this Gov ernment toward tbe great mass of its o..,..,.. ....,m.t..(, To , pe,,,,!, Icbi the destruction oi ti.vi, i. the virtual inoicase of their indebted ness to the extent of the money des troyed If a man makes a contract to pay pne hundred dollars on a given duy, and has just that sum ot money in his possession at Ibe dale of the con tract, he is doing business securely. If, however, titty dollars are taken from him by force, and he is left tn meet his contract on one half the amount need ed, bis bankruptcy necessarily follows. The American people were supplied witn one amount ol currency on w hich to contract debts, both publie and pri vate, and they are now to have another, and fur smuller amount, with which to pay them. They entered into all their existing obligations with comparative ly plenty of money in their bauds. By the laws of this Government now they are first to be deprived of one half their money, and then required to pay every obligation in full. The national dbt was contracted on the basis of inflation, and ia to be paid on the narrowest basis ol the most merciless contraction. A thousand-dollar bin d for which only ttiOU in gold was realixud hy tbe Gov ernment, in its distress, at lha time of its issue, has now to be taken up and paid tor with over a thousand dollars in gold by the tux payers. The farm-, er who bought land wilb deferred pay menls ; the mechanic who purchased a bouse and lot and made a mortgage tor the balance ot the purchase-money ; the business man who uses bis credit as a part of bis capital, have all found the weight ot their obligations largely increased by being deprived of the nieuns of meeting them. They must be met, however, and property itself, in the absence of money, changes hands Irom the debtor to tbe creditor classes in payment of dubu. It changes hands, too, at sucb reduced values that the business man is sold out and closed up, and homes are awept away, otlen for the want of a very small sum of money. Since tbe act demonetizing silver, supplemented as it has been by tbe act lor a forced resumption or specie pay ments, tho property ol the people of tho United tilatua has shrunk not less than 35 ht cent, in vuluo. What could be sold for f 100 five years ago ean be bought now tor 105 on an aver age all over the country. This is a criminal confiscation ot properly amounting to not less in value than f 10.000,000.000 wben the estimate is applied ui every Slate and section alike. In this vast shrinkage of all values, arising from the shrinkage of money in circulation, Is to be found the imme diate cause nf that genera! bankruptcy and ruin which now fill the land wilb ibe sound of fulling business bouses, commercial failures, broken savings banks, and tho lamentations of the jHMir who havu been robbed of their hard earnigs and of the opportunity to earnmore Under tbe influence ol this policy nearly forty thousand business tuilurus havu taken place in this coun try since February, 1873, with liabili ties amounting hi the uggregale tu over 11,000.000.000. The heart sickens in thinking lor a moment of tb sorrows, lb broken hearts, the shattered hopes, tbe suicides which these figures repre sent. II the policy ot this Government has been tu inflict the greatest misery on the greatest number ita success has been complete. It ia in yam to attrib ute such wide spread disasters toother causes. Yi e sometimes hear them as crihed lo wbol is vaguely styled over production. 1 would gladly Know what is meant by this oracular term Overproduction? What is it that w overproduce? Is there too much Imsl. clothing, and other necessities of hie? Has tho soil yielded too niucb wheat, corn, hay, cotton, sugar, rice? I he producer is one wno creates wealth, and overproduction would therefore aignily too great an amount ot wealth. It will ba hard to convince a sane mind that an overflow of wealth is the cans of depression and gloom, of financial calamities and rapidly increasing pov erty, and of the laborers praying, and praying in vain, for tho privilege, once ufliirded to alaves, of working for the bare means of subsislancei The mis sion of wealth produced by toil from the bosom ol tlio carta Is lar different Irom this. Unless deprived of its na tural functions by pernicious laws it brings abundant happiness to a people and establishes smiling content in their midst. But the cause most con monly assign ed hy tbe authors of our financial poli cy lor Its baleful effects on the business and labor of the country ia that the currency has been and is yet in an in flated condition, and that real prosper ity can only be attained hy its reduc tion to the gold basis. The evils of in flation have been painted in the dark est colors nf years past, and on all oc casions. I am not an innationisl in any sense thul would disturb the true interest ot trade and commerce, nor would il over be uocessary lo discuss ihe question at all if th contractionist had only been willing to let th volume of our currency remain at the point where tho country prospered most ana the people were hapiticet. A compari son between the periods when our pa per circulation was greatest and the years of contraction which have follow ed is crushing to tn advocate ot tbo latter policy, miring tu wunie lour years of 1803. 1804. 18U5 and 18C6. when the volume ol our currency aver aged over a thousand millions, the business failures or the entire country reached only twenty on hundred and ixly-aeven ; lues in number than oc curred in any three months ot the year just closed. Is this an argument against a lull and irciicrnus circulation nl money ? During tb period which is now stigmatised aa one of inflation tb windows of business bosses were not darkened, and business men did not go as mourners about tb streets. Th laborer did not go home without bread to bis wile and children, Helpless mill Ions did not cower and tremble at tb approach ol winter lor tbo lack ul lood and abetter. Tbe public peace waa not broken by riots in resistance to starva tion wage. Tb marts were not prin cipally occupied in enforcing rnllrettons, foreclosing mortgage, ordering sheriff sales, or ia punishing lb dvttital and Usoutuaat. lues ar to inings which did not take placo. Others that did ar equally striking. Good wages and good prices stimulated every lu boring man's muscle, every business man s orain, ana evory power of ma chinery into tho highest and most pro- uucuvu aciiviiy. uope anu encour agement wor ia every heart, New (arms were bought and cultivated, new workshop were opened ; new manu factories were established : new towns and cities were founded, and old one expanded and improved ; now railroads were built, giving employment to mill ions and bringing the remotest and most obscure rcirions into immediate contact with trade and civilization ; new mines of iron, coal, and silver were suuk Into tha earth, whose contents in return assisted in tho glad work of a universal, individual, and national pros parity. Am 1 to lie reminded thai this -" t . - .o.i.... i (, , , far and happiness was a delusion, thut it was unreal and could not last f Vt hy was it a delusion ? Were not its com forts and blessings a reality to the American people ? Bui why did it not last ? But one answer ean be given : Tbe money power determined it should not last. 1 be garden of Eden before the fall was not more hulelul in the eyes ot Sutan than was this picture of plenty and prosperity to those whose gains and profits depended on the scarcity ot money in the hands of the people and consequent hard times. i ncy Dcgun int-ir work oi ssnution m lHbG, and they have made the down- full complete. They have haunted these hulls; they have thundered al these doors ; they bava fortified them selves in the high places of this Gov ernment, and, whether by deceitful persuasion, artful speech, or open men ace and assault, they have not ccused to bring blight and ruin to the people. Tbe very madness of avarice has im pelled them from blow to blow, from act to act Tbe picture of general wel- tare thai I have drawn, indued, did not last It has been defaced, torn, slump ed under fool by the repealed acta ot legislation inspired by remorseless greed. The people asked fur no such change. They never sent petitions hers asking for any ol the enactments of the lost twelve years. They would have been glad to be let alone and to allow tbe natural laws of trade and business to work out a safe solution ol every financial problem. Loud com plaint is now made by thoughtless or designing persons thai tho question of our finances is under agitation. Every act of legislation thus lar bos been die luted by invested capital, and not one by the people. Kvery, agitation ot the question in Congress, until the present, has been made in the same interest and to gain additional advantages. The people thus tar have borne their wrongs in the forbearing hope that they would cease, and if now they rise at lost and see to it that their rights are better respected, it is because the lull measure ot their patience is ex hausted. Wben their prostrate and suffering condition, however, is forced on the unwilling recognition of the money power, we are often met with the impatient argument that it is not for the government to make money for the people. I might content myself with answering thai it is certainly not tor tho government to destroy money for the people. Those who deny the right ol the government lo regulate the amount of currency in circulation overlook tho lact that they bava been dictating that very policy to be pur sued for themselves ; only that they have always caused it tn bo regulated downward instead ot upward. , Hut what is the duty of the govern mei.t in this regard ? Is it true that tbe people are not dependent on the policy of their government for money on which to do business? Is it true, as often asserted, that in soma way or other those who are willing to work. or have something to sell, can always obtain money regardless ol all finan cial legislation? No greater fallacy than this was evur put forward in do fens of wrong nnd injustice. Money is tba creature ot government both as to quality and quantity. It exists merely hy the assertion of law, and in no other way. Article 1. section 8. of the Constitution of the United Stutes provides that "The Congress shall have power to coin money, regulate the value thereof, and ol lor eign cuin, and fix tho standard ot weights and measures," and section 10 of ihu some article denies all such powers to the Slules, thus making Congress the exclusive creator nt mon ey tor the American people. Without th action of Congress not one dollar can exist in the I tilled Statos. II Ihe article called money, whether of gold, silver, or paper, is necessary at all in the transactions ot life, here alone is the loutitain from which it emanates How then, shall this high power be exercised I Shall only enough lawiui money be created, in proportion to the labor and oilier commodities which il is designed to pay tiir, lo give ten cents a day to tbe laborer, and tlO tor a burse ; or shall il bo furnished in sufB cient amount to afford a just equiva lent lor labor and liir every other thing of value? On the answer to this question has depended tho prosperity or the adversity of the American peo ple in all the past; on it their present deplorable condition can alone ho ex plained, and their luture tato lon told. A circulating medium being a rccng ntzed necessity of civilized nations, and its existence depending solely on national authority, that government which, lor any reason, tails to maku a supply adequate to the business pros perity ol its citizens, violates thai fun damuntal compact of duly which must prevail in every tree political Com monwealth. Not only, however, has this govern ment failed in this great duly, but tbo manner it has adopted to furnish the people with their limited and Insuffi cient supply of currency was conceiv ed and pertected by the owners of re tired inactiv capital. Th system of national banking now in use ia the most slabornta and complete scheme lor making tb people pay tribute to wealth, iu order to obtain a circulating medium, ever known in tbo financial history of the world. There is not a dollar to day in tbe bands of th peo ple on which Ihcy hav not paid a lax for Ihe privilege of having it put in circulation by the Government The national bank la th middle-roan b iweeu th government and th people, and is enormously paid for doing what th government ought directly to do ilsi'll, According tu tb report of the Comptroller of th Currency there were two thousand and eighty na tional banks October I, 1877. and they owned in even number 1336,000,000 of government bond aa the basis nl a bauknoto circulation of 1291.000 000. Tb interest psid by the people on ibe bonds thu used to secure a cur raney on whiob to transact their basi news amount lo nut less than lib, 000,009 per annum. This is th tax paid lor in bank-now circulation. Tbo bondholder has been made the banker of tbo country, and he is bank ing on tbe interest bearing debt of tin people. For every f 100 of currency mey pay nun nearly tu interest on the bonds which secure that hundred. JJ is advantages, however, only begin with this bonus of sixteen millions. Tho report ot tbe Comptroller shows mat, urionor 1, IM77, the national banks had loans outstanding to the amount ot eight hundred and ninety one millions. No one will pretend mat tnese loans are made on ataavcr age interest of less than 10 ucr cent. This make an interest account ol eighty-nine millions nor annum, and this is an under rather than an over estimate. Ot other bonds, slocks. debts, real estate, specie, currency. clearing house exchanges, United States cenincaies ol deposit, and all other re. banks, at the above date, amounlmn lo something over flvo hundred and fourteen millions, which, al the low rate of 5 per cent., makes an additional interest income of twenty-live millions. Tbo following statement will there fore correctly represent the fuels: October 1, IS77 i National beak.... , t.flsn Httoare l, 711. 000,111111 latereat ea reaoareei paid by tb people per aaaum nti.soo.o o In return for the establishment of this stupendous money power il simply acts as an agent in transmitting the currency ol tbe Lulled States Irom the Treasury to tbe people. Will any one pretend that a cheaper and more equiiuoie mouu oi supplying ine coun try with a circulating medium cannot he framed by our lcgilulivo wisdom ? In lacl can any oi.e lor a moment de fend aucb a system of monopoly and oppression? llu who desires its per manence desires also the perma nence of the National bonded debt Tbe two are inseparable. Ono rests ution tho other. If the national hunks are a blcsing then our public debt is a blessing, lor the debt supports the bunks. Tli is idea is embraced in the act of January, 1875. Provision is made in tbo third auction of that art tor an increased number of ''banking associations" to be based on an in creased number of interest buuring bonds sold liir that purpose. They are armed too by this auction with hostile powers against the legal-tender greenback. W ith the aid ol the See retary of the Treasury thuy are au thorized to exterminuto this favorite money of the people. For every $100 issued slier tbe date of tbe act of Jan uary, 1875, by the national banks then in existence or organized afterward (80 in legal-tender notes are to be withdrawn Irom circulation und de stroyed until thatcurrvney is contract cd to tbo limit of 1300,000,000. Tbo purpose of this legislation is to make the banks completely master ot the financial silualion and to subordinate all tbe wants and interests of tbe American people to their will and pleasure. And in order to facilitate this purpose tbo greenback dollar has been denounced with every epithet of contempt and derision known to tbe English language. I will not pause now to defend this great money in its contest with those who are bent on its destruction. Its reputation in peace and in war is known to all. The sol diers and tbe sailors knew it in tbo great hour of peril; their widows, their orphans, and their maimed and crippled comrade have known it ever since. Tbe people of every class and ol every party, engaged in business and labor, know that in spito of all as saults, in spit of tbo fact that tbe gov ernment dishonors it by refusing to lake it for government dues, and in spilo of the fuct that there is not gold enough in the Treasury to redeem il ut ten cents on the dollar, yet to duy it ranks bat three per cent, below gold in the money market that are most hostile to its existence. All these things are known and treasured up, and I do not dwell upon them now. Sir, thus far I have spoken in point ing out what I conceive to be tbe vi cious legislation of this country on the great and paramount question of its finances. There are two opposing ideas on this subject now thoroughly aroused into vigilance and activity. On the one hand is the vast money Miwer in all it various developments ot bonds, banks, and loaning associa tions, and on the other are the great industries, the active business, and the laboring people. The issue has been years in making up. but it is now Joined. Nobody need Ire deceived. All the wiue-spreud influences ot cupilul are organized and combined. J I holders ot public securities in America ami in r.iimpo work together. J bey think and act in concert. Tho national banks of tbo Unilod Stales have a solid orguinr.ulioii to protect what they have and to gut as much nioru as possible. They are ask ing now to be relieved trom paying luxe on their circulation and deposits, in onler that they may enjoy their enormous profits free from all burdens lor tho support ot tho government. Associations of capitalists, enguged in obtaining mortgages at 12 per cent, inlerust on western larms, on account of the scarcity of money io that see- lion, are not only striving to nmko all such mortgages payable in gold a year henco, Hut they are threatening those in pecuniary distress that they shall havo no further favors al thu same rates unless they agree in advance to my gold in return lor greenback loans. I'lio power ot money in tho midst of times liko these is very great, but I am much deceived in the people if they have not turned at lust in di-nunce and bold warning upon ibuir oppressors. They are not in favor of repudiating a singlu dollar ol their public or private debts. They intend to pay everything they owe, but tbey intend to submit to no more changes of contracts, vio lations of obligations, and breaches of publie faith, in order to increaso their indebtedness or tn take away their means to pay it. They demand, too, that certain specific wrongs shall be redressed. First, those for whom 1 speak do mstid the restoration of the silver dol lar exactly as it stood before It was touched by Ibe act of February, 1873 I hey desire that it shall have unlimit ed coinage, not fearing that it will be oome loo plenty for their wants; and that it be made a lull legal-leader, be lieving that it is aa good now with which to pay all debts, puhlio and pri vate, as it wusduring eighty-one years of American history. Second, they demand the spiical, un. conditionally, of tho act of January 14, 11,73, compelling a resumption ol sne er payments iu January, 1879, buhl, ing that th question of a return lo a specio basis liir our currency should be controlled entirely by the business in terest ot the country. Tbey do not believ that tb country should b f ragged through the depth id ruin. w retchedness, and degradation in or itur to reach a gold standard for tb benefit alone of the income classes attou shall judicioua pro. IraiiHai'tlou lb Uuiled Fourth, bhoy dom'and tbai to cur rency circulated on tba authority of tliu govel'iiiiiunl ahull bu madu a legal lender in payment of all dubu puiilio and private, including all duea to lb govcriimuiil, wull knowing thai il will men bu al pur w ith gold, or more like ly at a premium over it AudtttUli, ttuty ilemuiid. that, here, after thu financial xilioy of tho coun try bu framed permanently in iheir in leresl; thul they ahull not be discrim inating against in future legislation a in the pant, and tbal their prirsperity, and nut tbe mere growth of Income to retired cupilulisu, shall bw th pri mary duty of tbo government lu my judgment, tbesu demand are just and moderate. 1 implore Senator not lo suppose thut they ran be disre garded with aafuiy. If they are reject ed now they will be renewed boreuller with alill greater determination and perhaps with others added. 1 plead for the financial credit, of th govern ment ll rests on th popular will alone, and that will can no longer bo defied or menaced with impunity. Th people are sovereign, and tbey ean hind and they can loosen. If the mon ey power is advised with wisdom it will stop and retrace its steps. It con fronts a imwer now mightier that itself: JYTy i""o-ol,hiTljtel!co a?,Tj o'fc: sion. If, however, it is joined lo its golden idol ; if its heart i hardened and its neck stiffened by iu vast pos sessions ; it tbe burning lusi of avarice has madu il deaf to the voice of reason and blind to all human experience, it will push on in ilscuruer, until il works ita own destruction; for, sooner or later, tbe people, irrespective of party names, will unite in their defence and establish justice. Thuy have been slow lo believe that there was a del i berate purpose lo degradoand impoverish tbo great pniductng classes, but they are being rapidly educated now. 1 be con dition ot the country is a teacher whose awlul lesson is engraven on all their ht'urU They have also recently read ihe proclamation! of the great organ of the money ower, removing all dis guise as to the meaning ot our finan cial legislation and the misery it haa created. In tho columns of one thoy buve read that The Anj-rleao isborrr mutt Bill sp bit mind benoeiortb not la be au much bttler as than tha Koropeao laborer. Meo mult ne content to work tor low wetea a a Ja tbit Bey tba warb lo.man will oo nearer lo that ttstioB la lite ta wbiob il bat pleated liod la eall bin lo the columns of unotber organ of consoliduted capital they have read Ihu following revolting sentiments: Tb-rrrmtlbetatonereiaedy. ItitaBhaag ol to owntrrbip ot ibt i.,ll, and ih orlioo ol a otaet of land owuert oa tbe one head and Iba lea-ant-Urm. rt aa tbe wtber; aoiaeib'ag eimilerta both eaet. to what baa lng estates! aad bow aa ItltiB tbteider aouoirl.twf aerop. And in every form in which tbe English language can be used the American people, and especially lha people uf ibe West, have been notified, not that their consent will be asked, but thul ibey will be compelled to sub mit to tbe Icgisluiion which results in this British system of baronial landed estates, a dependent tenantry and pau per wages lor the workingman. Sir, 1 huve no word ol menace to utter on this floor, but, in behalf of every la borer and every owner of tbe soil whom 1 represent, I warn all such as value their investments that when these doctrines of despotism are sought to be enforced this fair fund will again be convulsed in agony and the fire of liberty will blaze forth again, as thoy did a hundred yrara ngn, in defense of the natural rigbu of man. May the wisdom ol our fathers and tbe benign ity ot our God avert sucb an issue ; but if it shall come, if infatuation bos seiz ed our councils, the result will only add one more InsUnce to the long catalogue of human crime and folly, where avarice, like ambition, over leaps itself and in its unholy attempt to rob others of their possessions loses its own. , A SEW YEARS DIARY.' A largo number of young men of Detroit, Christmas week purchase dia ries lor 1877, and next week they will lake up Iheir pencils with a firm da termination lo keep track of every day in the year. Every young man should keep a diary. When be ia old and gray, his grund-chililren will fish it out of the rug-bag and find it it more val uable than silver and gold. There is no set style of jotting down thonghu and events, but perhaps it may be well to give the record of 1877 a taken from the pocket diary ot an average young man. Juntiury 1 Went to see my girl. Shall Icavo off swearing, drinking, eucher, smoking, chewing, being out at night, betting, going to the Lecture, and shall try to save f 10,000 Ihia year. Januury i Went lo see my girl. Lost a box of segurs somewhere. February 1 Won 125 belling on a dog tight That's the way to scoop 'em iii. Am trying to get along on Hi Uj n sugars per duy. Went lo see my girl and she said 1 shouldn't swear. April 20 -Went to seo my girl. Nothing new July 4 This is the glorious 4th. September I Went to eoo my girl. ' November 11 Glorious weather. Went to seo my girl. December 1 This is tho first of De cember. December 25 This is Christmas. December ill This is tbe last day of the year. I must commence to mor row to savo money and break off bad habits. Went to sou my girl last night, and made bur happy by telling her that I was g )ing to save $10,000 next year. IIattlkhnakks as Rkpormxiu. Tho Cincinnati Enquirer man is responsible lor the loiiuwing : i hero was an as tonishingly wicked Pennsylvania fam ily Beaver was tho family name- composed mostly of outlaws, fearing nciinor una or man. l ncy were all a terror to the pious, against whom they had a special spile. One of thom was bitten by a rattlesnake on day, and they were all scared and sent for a minister to pray for him. Tbe minis ter went and prayed for more rattle gnakiu, onthegiound that nothing but rattlesnakes would cvir bring the Bea ver family to repentance. It ia report ed that Chandler and some other pro posed lo go ' behind tho returns" that determined the lost Presidential elec tion. Tho Republican party may yet ho brought to repentance. Wben we heard tiiis rumor wo just happened to think of the rattlesnake story. A young clergyman seems to have compressed the whole body of his ser mon on "deceit" in the following t "Ob, my brethren, the showiest shirt front may conceal an aching bosom, and tho stitft-st of all rounder encircle a throat that has many a bitter pill to swallow," A thick headed Squire being worsted by Sydney Smith in an argument, took his revenge by exclaiming, "If I bod a son who waa an idot I would mak him a parson. "Very likely," replied Sydeny, "but I see your lather was ol a different opinion. A young mother In Dover explain ing christening to ber five-year old boy, told him Ibst when lie was christened be wou hi be on of God s litll bHnbs.' "And will 1 hav hind leg and go baa?" agerly asked lb uf.