have ,us beliCie was cause! by contraction. Here; is the 'record. t There wits expansion and no centres:aline ; and if there was no COIL traction, th ! contraNient cannot have calse;ll the col aps . e i businese.. That is so-simpie t. eil drmorstratio 'that I think Gov.! Allen shenie tralcrstend id And yet I shall not be sur e frised to meto-morrow an inflationist come before me wb ! in. the face of Oct° filets and figures will affirm thet it was the centr setieh of the curren ; y - which did all the mischief. TILE seem AUEIE !!! OF TUE CRISIS OP lan. ' What was the cause of the crisis of 1871 the cassequerices"of which are still upon us ? 1 wonder why politicsl economist.; of he in- Betion ! school will never remember that similer disturbances occurred in the business life Of. other countries. But two years ago a collapse of spec9lation occurred in Austria, and a sue cession cf -failures in England, and similai things in all European countries, France being a notable exception. It so :happens ' that in countries thu "afflicted, especially Germany, not only sto r e r ntraction of currency had . taken place, but rather an increase of its volttme. partly by inilex of coin through the war in demnities, partly by an increase of bank cur rency, while, in Franc* business appears pros perous, although not only heavy drafts were made on the national resources for the pay ment of the German war indemnity, bat steady contraction of paper currency has been going on all the time, for the last three years, for the purpose of returning to specie pay ments, which had been suspendel during the German war. 1 And wuea, you study the, con dition of things preceding colleptee in Betio pean countriee, and in ours, you will find that the agencies Of kindred nature were at trot* there and here. No contraction of curreac whatever, rather an expansion of it; bat in dustrial enterprise overleaping itself, an ex tensive production of things for which thetit was no immediate demand ; the sinking of capital in. great undertakin es which could yield no immCdiate return; win ly; scherite4, stock gambling, wild speculation in all possi ble directions,) and the creating of iinegiaery values, wasteful ext-avegence in private ex penditures, and high living, a morbid desire _ to get rich without labor, f an excessive strain ing of the oreit system, until finally the hub- • ; ble burst.? Tie people then found that they were by no means as rich tt.e they had believed themselves. oit was there, and so it was here. _ • France, on he other band. has gone through a disastrous and destructive war. . She had to pay heavy sutns of money, 5,000,000.000 francs tie a war indemnity, and largely increase I her dile. She ;Yds apparently prostrated. What was to be donl'lssue more paper currency to. restore pr ?petite!, our inflationists would 1 / :. have said; b t no, a financial policy deters mined ! othersitise. Not believing that the country could recuperate by deceiving itself, they issuedmemore irredeemable paper money. They redusedithe volume of that which was in circulation. Tiny worked sturdily and steal- By towards' resumption, so that a franc not only pretends ! I to be, bat is a franc), and :ie villa has one knows what• he has. The people set to work again in a frugal and laborious way, their industries producing things for which there was a demand in the market. No capital wits sunk in Useless enterprises, no wild sped ulation, no self-deception by creating timitiou Values; andthus you find France to-dey, i spite of her disasters, economically in a nor Satisfactopt :condition than the countrie, - around her. lTnere is a.striking lesson before , TIE No wise man will study it without profit; It UT EXPANSION WILL NOT rernisten RELIEF.' .. 1 .•OW, it be ng conclusively .setiwn that the depression of WAS not brought on by thenontraction of the currency, but by causes -which always l produce such results, toe ques, tion recurs vthether an infleion of currttaoy will furnish !the relief we need. You say that though t e banks in business centers are full of motley lying idle for want of employ; i i meat, we w t more currency. I tell, you,' business can ave as much tie it likes without any furtheract of the G tvernmriat. Accord!. ing to law, eery one of you, or any assecitl tion you ma' form, having the necessary t capital, can s art a bank of issue ; A general • license to the fact through the Frae Benking act was give by Congress last Winter. We heard so muchof the West and South wanting more *el cit/puletion, and starving for greeter banking facilities. Now you can make your; selves comfortable. All legal impedim cats are removed. Yoti can issue any amount of cm. 2., rency e but behold, the currency will not :::t.l, flaw one ce nt's worth. And .yo-s, worthy: patriots, ivh I clamor for more - currency, do. not lift asfinger to create more. Why ?• II -re. is a reason given by The Cinciiniti Engl;rer There is not Currency enough in (tirc t: ition to bay the bony to deposit with the • Sa•ional: Government, 'and obtain Nationel surree‘e• '. :,' exchange. his is-genius. It ranks wits tie; met bridle t financial utterenese of Gov ! Allen hituselt. But I appe tl to yon—lmsiness men, labore, farmers—rho honestly desired to do right, nd look up to your piety leaders , for instructie . If you want an instance of ' 1 . ,1 impudent, insulting assaran ie. with - which! these men depend on your being too ignorant! and stupid to-tell an obvious fact frotri an ohj vicus falseletied, look at 'this. " ilere -is the; great representative organ of intl.; tioa Betreeed racy, the tabitrroacle of its brains the fee i lini pipe of its seesdom, And now steti.ii elitlioas and millions 'of money are lying unomplase I in the hilliness centres of the c entry, Else_ aril West, IdeLing for inreom est siitli,:iiently safe e elide everybody knows the. in every large; city in )the latel there are 'krona of cap italists with abundant eneens weich they might , devote to the! creation of lenek-piper issues i it were prof table ; while everyhaly knows thst there it sceresly a towu of respectable ; size without inen of means fay abia to form a combination for tied eureose—ti it of gen, 1 fighting the fru.ll as it,, pers-nal enemy, coolly wilts yen to 11 . eleeve thet there is not currency enough in th country .o or: telt the burehase of betide as al basis for flirt ate Xati:mal beak issues _ When I read such •thiegj! I ton not khow mist to admire most —Ca- titPlacity "if tho' in ventors, or die piti weaknecß of ths inven tior. But the ab-urcity of that stritemen: appears in its full glory when ; -ive look i,t all the circtitustane It of the ease. Sit only did the business r,f the conntry no; show that it needed more) when it reittsed to; i•tszie tnore, in spite of itti cipporttin:tie.t, but it proved that it had more I'.`inn it needed by surrendering a large portionlof the bank currenoi in circalts tion. On'the, first of July of tuts year, new Currency hall been issued to new end Itl bank.; amounting to: $7,780,000, Ica' according to a letter addresied to me by the Controller of the Currency, $2:1.579,134 of legal tender noes have been d'epositA with the Treasurer, for the purpose Pf retiring Nelional bank notes. tinder the nc(ofJuns 211, 1 . F47 1; while, candor the redemptihn sys'em, created by the same act, over $4,1)00 000 National banknotes have been retired, illy far the largest part of this re duction taking place in :the West and South, which, we are told, weto starving for more circulation, By the 15th of September that figure bad risen. to, n eanly ; s2s,oiy,i, How is this I The business of the country is, they tell us, suffering most terribly for the want of currency, and the same bushiest' of the countrygot only not accommodating itself by issuing mere when it hag an opportnalty but voluntarily surrendering many millions of what it - bas. I Let The En pirer explain. Per. baps that* exponent of intlation lom wil say now that 11'0 have not currency enough to , Beep us from giring up thas wines wo f. 3.• pt. But there ore facts. There is contra ., ion, not contraction by the Gowerumeat, reo 1 iontruction by the Republican party,. no• cotancti6n fo ed upon the business of the t;ountry,, but a ontruction 6f currency .velon serily set on foe by the bueiners of the country, 4hen that busi ess was at perfect liberty I, 'hose expansio as well. Is it not aea :pectacle, ind ,to tr.!‘s not only public men feckless enoug thus cruelly to mock the credulity of the oor and needy, but multitudes patiently listeni , g to such raving absurdities, mgcad of . repel ng the insult tuns wantonly ood sense. OPLUATES—TIIE lIICII 9 IIOf offered to their HOW INFLATION 11Elt UNDER IT An irredeemOle paper money, chesp Money, the people's moley, inflation the relief of the poor I I entrea you, lati,ring men, poor ;men, give me your candid attention one moment. lupinse we issue more currency, is the Ohio platform euphoniously calls it, "to make and keep the vole e of currency equal to the wants of trade." In other words, we embark in the cause of inflation. I will not argue tional point whether Cangress increase the volume of green . 00,000,000, and whether the as I expect it would, might ctvoid and of no force. Sup t_without any legal impedi •operate ? list, a merchant of extensive by speculator. In the morn . his paper and reads thlt here the oonstit has the power t. backs beyond $ Supreme Court,l declare such an , pose it can be do: ment. How wil l Here is a cups means, or a weal log he takes u ssed an act to issue another hundred millions, with. a . Ile khows, as a matter of (longress has p hundred or tw prospect of rnor eeurse, that the eupon the premium on gold will rise, the pu chasing power of a greenback dollar will decrease. Tne next piece of new, he gets in from Wall street is, gold is going up and likely to risa steadily. What does he do 7 lie begins At once to trim his sail to the wind. Ile seeks a way ri io take advantage of ft actua ,i Liens going on o still in prospect.! Or, being a man of meas, commanding hundreds of thousands, he ca roily finds that way, lf he is a cautious man, he has of course lent out money or•given in only on short time, and he at once cAlls in money due him with rigorous severity to save himself from the effects of de lireciation. Thai debtor way groan, but he Will have to pay Or go into bankruplay, for a rich man saves himself before the swim, and puts his money,into investments not apt to be unfavorably Idle Led by - fluctuationa 'of cur rency. , . . ' If he he a met hant, he will •at once put up prices to provide against depreciation of cur rency, sell only . t large profits, and for cash; for he is not a r'xious to bells and, being a Wealthy man, noI oblgel to sell, knowing, as he does, that his -goods will rise in current money value on his hands, while his crelits would depreciat . So, by tilting- advantage of fluctuations oing on, which , as a man- of means, he is alai to do, he not only saves him eelf, but makes handsome profit, by shrewd oulculation; or, If he be a speculator and some what ventureset te mai, ho will speculate on [. the rise in the p ice of stocks or goods in true gambling style, and perhaps contrive to run into large liabi aims, expecting to pay them j off in money of ens value than that in. which he contracted th m. Happily, the latter ape airs; of operate T s will sometimes be caught; &tune' unfrequimtly they succeed, and so on through the wh4le chapter. i Thus the ric i man, havine, the Mans to play fast and I os.e, standing upon that emi nence in the buspres world where he can fee! the drift of every breeze and watch the ap pearance of every cloud on the horizon, enjoys the fullest opportunity and all facilities waich wealth furnishes, amid the. flactuitions of the currency and of prices, to lend out or to draw in money. to give up one investment to e rnake another, to buy or to sell, to speculate on a rise Or a fail—in one. word, to take advantage of ,i every chance, n:'t only fur his safety but for his profit, as hi,r good judgment may suggest; 'cud in the end e will, if he is a shrewd c il culator, have grown richer then ever before by these very fluctuations. And if you had your eyes open, you could not fail to observe that time when n irredeemable currency, with its ever fluctuts ing, changing of values pre vailed in the co ntry, was just the time when the rich men ew rapidly richer, anti enor- Mous accumulat one of wealth fcU into single hands. Ten FATE OVTII POOR MiN MIER INFLUTON. but now look on the other side of the pic ture. Here is ri i laboring man who works for wages. He is hbuestly toiling to support him tee'll' and his family, and may be he hae sue ce«ied in saving a few hundred dollars, and r, deposited them aa savings bunk. Now Coe grt is resolves t issue: More money in abun d tees, and in l tion comes in good earnest. ' he laboring nian w 4 has listened to Gov. _Alen or Gen. ary th:nks the milicanium is coining. The p ople's money will be plenty, the gold premiu rises, and prices of ca meal ities also. The wortay laborer does not, like the rich man, ad the financial articles and Market reports in the- metropolitan journals. The rise of gall premium troubles his mind very little, for the people's money is to. be cheep rind plentr; but some day he goes down to the store to buy things for his hoeselt.e.:l and his family, ' and to his surprise he•tiuds that the prieesf of 'groceries and shoes, nal Oohing, and so' on, have become muoh higher than before. How is this? he asks. Well, Fay:. the dealer, gold has gone tip and I have , i to psy much mere for the goods I buy, there fore I am oblige,d to charge more. To buy a iinnli house, helapplies to a money lender far a couple of hundred dollars at low interest, oa two is three ysar, time, to be securel by a intetgage on the house teed. lot. " Lew in terest and three years' time," exclaims the ro , n , y lender, '• my dear man, you do not uns derstteel the ijerial; since more and more greenbacks aro issued, the valuation of the 4.10:1.ir increases rapidly, and if I lend you money now, on three, ,y ears' time, how do 1 kto..v what that money rimy be !worth at the rad of three ye r_., perhaps ten cents in gold or 'naming, an l you cannot pay me interest , eh.lugh to cover that risk." But thcre ar store for more curious experienceS. iu The policy of •• rtilking . kceting the vo'. want:- of trade and hirger qua. for the . wttuts bed demand in. Pfices of the ne. higher. As th 1:own, the spe ~ o untry do a dere:cp4 to sue ecsts $:.:0 and a ba,ckr. The a-A.ings bank, . mouse, will no and rice alwa3 a ru wages, he, has b had than layin • inevitable eras. rich man has a line of currency equal to the " requires tae issue of larger titles of the peoples' money, i trade instead of being antis re. With every new issue the es=iaties of life rise higher and value of paper money 'goes ulators and gatriliersof the roaringbusiness. Prospeiity a point that a bushel of coal i .jsek-knle its weight in gren rorthy laborer's depsit in the nee sufficient to build a little longer buy a decent p tit. ;ot le rise of prices of the nezetsi a f.r ahead of the riso in lii. ,een rather consuming what he :k up new.savings. Finally the approaches. The prudent y ticipated its coming, nut taken his precaution. Ho can do so, for he had knowledge and 1 a victim to his n ions is not petit along by the tidh over the busintli worthy i i orthy laborer 1 &oat (-• lam sniffs the Inccs mttrket and a dt obliged to take irueans; but the poor men is a lecessities. To take preoau kale f..r him. He is swept b. A feeling of distrust creep , - !se community. Ono day our goes.to his place of work f th orry," sive hiseruployer, who "there is -an over-stooked iwnward tendency, anti I am in sail; I have but little work for you at I figures, or no work at all last." The fhipwreck Is complete. The rich man is in the life-boat and the poor man in the breakers with nothing to Boat him. About that time I hope Gov. Allen and Gen. Cary will cpme along and repeat their speeches' about ," The people's money." What will then the poor laborers respond ? " Talk to me about your people's money! It is *gamblers' money, the bloodsucker's money, the sharper's, money; the devil's money." And it msy then perhaps be wise for Gov. Allen and Gen. Cary and the other apostles of "the people's money' : to stay away from the streets where their robbedand outraged victims congregate. I apprehend the vengeance of the poor, which Mr. Kelley of Pennsylvania in this campaign so loudly threatened against advocates of swept*, might turn the other way. 'TEE vvOII,IINO PEOPLE • CREDITOR CLASS.' We are told that an expansion of currency and itii consequent depreciation -will benefi'.' the poor, inasmuch as it will benefit the debtor as against the creditor, by enabling the for ager tolpay off his debts in less value than-that in which they were contracted. The morality, of thatlargument I will . not discuss. I prefer to leave it to the conscience of the people, But lei us look at. the p l etended facts upon : which it is based.' Is it true that the poor men are the debtors of th country? To bon tract debt requires credit,land credit is based upon the means with which to pay. Men of very small means are selmu in debt, because they hive no opportunity or being so. If we ti r had better statistics of private indebtedness in the United States before us, they would un questionably show that more than 75 per cent. of itll owing by men commanding compira tively large means. and that the laborers for wages are the least indebted class of so defy, even in propottion th theivearnings and savingd, and next to them the farmers anti small business men. But laboring people are to a v i ery heavy 'amount creditors of the country. I venture to say that there is nei ther aL manufacturer, nor a merchant, nor a professional man of means in this assemhly .rho is not a debtor, and among his creditors ire, in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, his workmen or his servants, to whom he owes wages for part - of a week or a month. It has been calculated by good authority that the wages thus constantly owing for an avenge of a half a month's service or work amount in the whole country to $120,000000. And WO IS is that, owns the deposits in the s tvinin hanks,l amounting to about $700,000 0007 Not the rich, but the laboring people and persons of small means who put their sorplui earnings there for safe keeping. It is esti. mated that the same class has in national and private banks and in trust companiei another 'sf..'oo 000 NO, and that nearly $130,- 4,00,000 is owing them in other kinds of debts. There is then the sum otab7,ut $1.200,000,000 owing to the laboring people and men of small meats, constituting their savings to that amount. That class are crelitors, and you pretend that for their benefit yau will expand t, , e currency. Gold being at 15 per cent. pre mium, those savings have a value of $1,02.0. 000,000 in gold. Expand the currency until gold is 20 per cent premium, and you have robbed those people of $180,000,000. Ex , pand it until the gold premium is 50 per cent, and you , have stripped them of F;;450,04/0,000 of hard earned money. _s N • GE 0 . N hen the legal tenders were first is'-ue I our people had to gain their'first experiences with an irredeemable Government currency since the Revolutionary War. The greenback ap peared net as a trick qfischeming financiers, hut as a creature of FAN° necessity. The people ,had full confide ace in the int-grity and good faith of the Government as to the fulfill. tuent of its promises. When the events of the war went dis istrously ag.tinst us, doubtS arose as to the ability of the Government to ri deem its pledges, but not as to the honesty of its Intentions. These doubts affected the value 'of the paper money, but when the chances of war turns! in our favor, an I at last the arms of the Union triumphed,. then') was scarcely a man in the land who did not belicie that what the Government had promise] Would, as a sacred obligation, be faithfully perfdtmel, and the confidence which the legit Jetting commanded at home was commaudel by our bonds 'abroad. • • .But„ if .t you inflate the currency tinder the present circumstances, whist will be the condi tion of things? Then the additional green bucks will not appear, as creatures of an am periaive public necessity, to save the . life of the Republic in the extremity of its peril. They will appear as a pro•luct of a scheme. the purposes of which are dark. The world • will begin to suspeot'that when a Government, in the 'face of disastrous experiences of ,mart kind, resort to so extraordinary and dang'eraus a measure without necessity, its integrity can not longer be depended upon. Doubts will arise, and very serious doubts, not as to abilz but as to, the honest intentions of the Government to'redeem its promises, and .thesti doubts will fall upon our business life like a t deadening weight. The last remnant of com Hence will be paralyzed. The world will see the spectre of - EL Republic looming behind so reckless a financial policy. The faith of mankind in the integrity of our ,of ourl Government giving way, our credit will be , halt n to its vl ry foundations. And, its you -omet•ines see depositors of a bunk eatgited Eby a runiOr that the cashier is in iking aw aq with the cash, and instinctively. •unite iu a foVerish run upon the counter, so you must not bs sur prisedl if in a general alarm about threatening •11-hone•tty, you see the seyrdies not only of the Government, but of our private corpora rims flung by huntin dal of millions int', the market, producing a crash most. fearful. Ind destructive, and a paralysis, more deadly :o all iur economic interests, than ail people on earth can remember for generations nisi. THE TEACEIINGS OF orm OWt.i lIISTORY , But I ask you with all candor and sobernes. t it burins s men, farmers, laborers, honest and patrio is citizens of all classes. is it not tim to -top F ch wanton schemes of mischief? Tier.. betug an abundance of money in the banks t a it lit s', unemployed, it is evidently not mar , money a e need. What do we need then' C rt fidtice, confidtnce, whinh will induce timi 1 capital to 'mitt-re into enterprise,. Anti what '.i.t the firet rt quirement to re tore confidence i It is stability- above all things. Stitbility.of current values, ts:aich renders possib'e busi nees calculations of reasonable certainty. When the capitalist is assured that the dollar ,f to-Morrow will have the s.me value as the dollar bf to-Jay, and this stability -,f value lin Pi full tecurity in a ratioual and fix -.1 m trtttary systeni, then and no sooner will ho liberally trust his money to those who want actilvely to employ it, and promise a fair return. Let us iintleritand the teachings of our own history. There are many among us wlo remember •he great crises of 1837 and 1857. in the Milted Stalest In both ca-es the country was flooded tetih an ill secured; unsafe bank currency, and fenriih speculation prevailed Then a crash came. t Speculation collapsed. The bubble of 'fictitious values burst. The rotten hanks, broke. and their currency Was Swept away. Business was paralyzed. People were in ditir Tees, as they are now. What retzwly was ;T -idied? The natural. the only efficient items ly, -.lid if, applied itself No fresh infhd in of ire kin tafe money. .No, just the . reverie. When the self-acting contraction ofcurrency .114, credit had done its work , busine'si enter prise began once more to feel firm ground under- l ite feet. lius,nuss men-liad!less of which called itself money. But l they wet, sure that every dollar (hey did hive, not o.it called itself a dollar, but was a dollar, an would remain a dollar. Examine the crisis which broke out tie years ago, iu September, 1873; That crasl lid net contract our currency. On the co./ I , fay, what there was remained, and shot tl ; ter the volume of greenbacks was incre tae l $25,000,000 by successive issno from the so celled reserve. Money did not disappear us did in 1837 and 1857. There was more or it . .han before, and yet the genera;; stagnation :tad suffering continue, and the fat Ore appears to us dark and gloomy,. without any sign of im provement. rO3, we Lave more money than to fore, but who of you can tell me what the , money will be worth twenty days after tho opening of the next session of Congress ": tIlx) of you can tell me what wild antics the money may play with the fortunes of all of u. if those who clamor inflation now, shall obtain (mitred of the national Government a year hence? SPECIE PAYMENTS THE ONLY POLICY. My fellow-citizens, all sane men agree that, of the great problem which oppresses us, there is but one ultimate solution. It is the return to a epecie basis Whatever other sehemes may be devised, they do not even pretend to have a permanent, final settlement of theiquestion in view. The resumption of specie payments is the one rational one, for no other system will remove the current 'values from the reach of the arbitrary power of the Government. No °lliet can give to current values thit stability. without which no safeibusiness calculation can be made. No other can restore that confidence which is the first prerequisite of a* new period of Trusperity. but - the; resumption of specie payments is also the only possible solution. it must at last come. Even the inflationists. while wildly seeking to throw diffisulties is its way, still admit that finally it tutit., come. It is as inevitable as fate. Is it not:the part eat prudent men, then, to move resolutele and with unflogging firmness in the threctien of an end so desirable and also an inevitable? I shall certainly net attempt to deceive you by denying that when a country is once cursed with an irredeemable paper money, the re sumption of specie payments is not an easy process. Like the cutting out of 'a cancer, it is an unpleasant and difficult operation; but if health is to be restored, the cancer must be cat. It is ohe of those evils which cannot be cured without pain, and cannot be permitted to lin ger without peril. Delay will only prolong the suffering and increase the danger. An at tempt is made to (deceive with a well-sounding catch-word. They call gold the bondholders' money, and- tur irredeemable papt;c: money the people's money. Cali that be the people's money whose' value in the people's', hands is as apt to vanish into ncthing, and is sure to van ish into nothing if much more of it is issued? 'I, top, am in favor of a people's Money, but it is of:another kind. No, it is not right that the people should have a maney of less value than the bontiho:der. It squid be equalized. But. how,? You cannot 'take front the, bondholder his gold, unless you repn - diate oar national olo l'gations, which as honest and patriotic Amer icans who have the honor of the country at heart, you will not do. Neither can you bring the bondholders' gold downto the level of your paper money As long as that paper money re unties what it now is, or is made even worse. But wt at you can do is to lift your paper money up to the level of the bondhelders' g Ad, so that you can get gold in excannge' for it. That can only be done by a return to specie payments; then it will indeed he the people's money, and the bondholders hail° no better. It will be true people's money, for then your dollar will be, and remain, a real dollar—no longer a lying plea," of paper, whole value de pends upon the tricks of demagogues, and about which you have to inquire every mern log what it is worth. A WORD co ' LIONS:ST DEMOCI i g \TS. A wont now to tnose D.,mocrtits who, in their hearts, still adhere tot heir old good creed s and would spurn ,the false doctrinea of their present leaders, did they not consider them selves, by party interests, hound tq submit, I deal fairly with you, gentlemen. 1 I do not -peak to you as a partisan. for I fiat not one. I am in earnest when I say that '4l I desire for this country and myself is constitutional, honest, just and wise government; and; little does it matter to me at the hands of what party the country receives it, provided it b. , in truth constitutional, honest; just, and wise Neither do I conceal from you my opinion tha the old parties as now constituted a,re to solve that problem, and that an active union IX the beat elements of the beat two would better serve the purpose. But.,if the two old - , parties aro to continue to divide the/field, then., for the sake of the ptiblic interest, I want. each of them as good, not as bad, as possible; . but. since you seem to believe the interests of the Republic are to be served by your party alone. I rp ak to you as partisans who desire to pro mote the efficiency of ° their organization for good ends. Have you considered what consequences the success of the inflation Democracy of Ohio will bring on? Imagine that its candidates be elected, and its policy be eadortted by the peo. nle of this State. Imagine the movement spreading and imposing its doctrines - upon the Democratic National Convention, what then? All of you Lard-money Democrats will be re morselessly sent to the rear. Your; influence beaUterly crushed out, for the men who will then rule your party want none of you INly do I say this ? Not to appeal to a stiTinh •mpulne, btit because it is true, and i sincerely regret it. for I by he happy . „to see eac... party guided by its best men. But more than this. - Suppose the inflalon Deraceracy, having taken 1)0880+s:on of the-, ational organization of your party, do sue-1 teed in their rush for the National power, vet : ;laving one of their own iu tho Cteoidenritij !hair, and is majority in Congress, prow,' t mrry out their programme, what tbell? Theu unlimited inflation and, as an iueritable con sequence, universal bankruptcv and ru n more' destructive than ev,mr. And then, re member chi attitude of your party on the slavery ieuue and questiors cminede I with the ,rivil war has , cost. you 16 years exile from le.,wer. Let your party become responaiht for the disasters which ital i ttion will iring along with it, and it will be loOkeol upor a the common , enemy, atid any organizatioi. that in Aur years may rise up against: it will he able to wipe it out of existence, however torten in morals that organization may b. tFelf. INDEPENDENT ACTION URGED UPON OHIO DEM OCRATS. What is then the true dictate of your part il;egiance in its nobler senso? To preserv• to your party the power of doing good s• rv.oe by defeating those who seek to make is oui~ to engine of mischief and Puicide. And ho :'re you to defeat them ? I retnera"ter the ti ter when I received a high compliment at you:. hands, for having shown independent spirit enough to oppose my own party, by votiny. ogalnst it when I consideied it in the wrong This is a great emergency in which a sipao, service is to he done for the best. interests the country, and you liartl:money Democr 6t of Ohio can find no better oppoinulity to enable rue to return your compliments fq the ',unto ic spirit of independent' act. Indeed, itl, great emergency. I solemnly appell to evory good cititon of this Stale to be mindful o r his responsibility. Upon your acion on the 12 1, of October hangs a great decision . I r the • ; people of Ohio strike down the inflation tuare uteri in their midst that will ibe its final or r thiriw. .1t may Unger on, but the potier of its ot.set win be broker.• 1( this fill, and the Ovoentee or barbarism -•• ruin tusk, victoriously into= the field of next; yegr'e greater contest, then who knows but future generationsmay htve t, loo' back upon the one fundredth anniversary of Aai at can 'lndepetidence (the limp 'which, befo:v. ul others, shmild fill the natiotal heart with the noblest aspirations) as one I of the black st yents in the h.story of the Republic. To meet the danger' here is therefore_ the first thiag needfuL yptin the hottesit men of all part ail call ko unite in a common effort. Let no OLIP fear; that the defeat of an opposition p trry, whiah uses Ithe advantages of its position to promote such nefarious schemes, will be in terpreted tie en approval'of, wrongs -on the other .side; for; I assure you when this great danger which threatens to engulf us all in a whirlpool of corruption, ruin' and dishonor is successfully averted, you will find the men aho combeted the wrongs of either side as trues as ever to ;their principles.. Cairn:is of Qhio, you 'are charged with .a great offize Yooave to - give the world an assu-ance that the people Of the great Amerirtui Republic ere an ;honest-;; and . enlightened- people; th their integrity and intelligence may be_trtuted alike, and that mankind may count upon them in the forward march of civilization. I en 'real, you not to fail in so glorious a duty. fERSIONG IN POTTSVILLE. lbe Estimate 1 1 / a ced Upon Et* Clutraeter I,as ftetwalklll County. The foil wing series of articles are Liken froui the Philadelphia. .Journal,. tne ablest pa.•er u, rth of • Philadelphia. Published at: Potts ville!, the present home of Jtidge : Pershini, it. Silo Ws whereof it' speaks. - They are worth a c4reful perusal, and exhibit the .uprigb• Jig* in hiS, famous characterbf " The L. , .tle Joliet" 114 ire-a home audience:. PERSIIISG'S Three sors ago, Judge Ityau's term of offpe heir* about to expire, there was an energetic movement, made by the people of .Schuyiki.l without regard to pamy, ,to ex!lude and partisanship from the henar by lecting a !man who was above both. • Latior Rely:tilers ntminated Hon. Cyrds L. of Cambria coun yl'and toe Republi can Convetition also took him up,'for the rea sons: P4atedlin the following : ' "Whertus, The Hon. Gyros L. Persfairig - tlechfred, in a recently 'published 14 . .eri• that ti l e lltice of Judge is not a political one, .* •l • arid having the utmost contileuee iu his Integrity and ability ; th4refore,- ":Resolreld, That the said. Cyrus L. Pershing be declared the nominee of this Convention.* The nomination was concurred in by a lavg nuMber oflindepemdent Democrats, so that. i' could be truly said that honest men of all-per treslooked!upon Mr. Pershing's election as th sakuard of a pure jqdiciary in this co iuty. It Was so Understood by the candidate, for tn . his let ;er of acceptance he slid "lThe manner of' conterritig the nomination is rtalifyipg to me, and I accept i.Trin the-spirit in whir , ' it was made." The 3finPrs' Journal, COMm.lntlnzson this nothitation, in its issue of s.pr. 2z", , itsw. thus expressed 'the feeling of the people still mare clearly: I • "is a private citizen he (Judge Pershing) is riltilled to pits opinions, and be has a right to •xci:ress or eketcise them; as ,a public ofti! , .-r, by accepting the nomination of all parties (for he has!been nominated by a number of memaers of the Dethocratic party, although he is n the re&ular nominee, which is sa much the be. , .ter) he has cal loose from all parties and partisan ship. • 7- • We cantendt,hat in voting for Mr 4 Pershing, in the position he now st7n - us he fore the penple; you are no.: votive fora .Dern ow St, a Republican or a Lsbor Reform:T i but a judge to administer justicv to ali alike., lad. , pendent ofltuy political or partisan bias." 11r. Pershing, therefore, in aeceping th, nothitatioe for President udge of rho Twenty firs'v' district, knew what was expected of him, an agreed to perform. it. He knew that, f. reaiotsasLwell known to bin t ist.dfas to them. the'peopleof this district desired a pure ani upright min for this tespinsible posi - ion, and. believing liirn to be that min, were wiling t' sacrifice party prejudkies In order to secure his services. Ije was elected on this platform—wl whit ie the result? Scarcely yet warm in his seat. scarcelryet become familiar with the nature of • Le :busine.ss cGmine before him, this min woo baAydrtually, if not in words, unsierr.AlC.ri give his cotittituents at least ten yeara of honest Jurisprudence, flee from all pants urtiip, tunes troth them and places himself at al- he of a patty as the ctdef exp ment l of , its pti.tcipl s. BiOccupancy of ttie position he. nrw h g;.vii him !the rpportunity . 1:0 place hitn , e;t preininentiy before the p.opn and to 'grisp tip` pri%e cf nqinination for msething-het•er.; H • z ofpit, use the Judicial bench as a :ate? to the Go vernor'S chair. I:hir id, hr we'contena, DO has no moral rigtr : to do. Having promised his services here-fir a ter* of years, he has no right to wit:edraT 'Lein at pleasure, because another party holds unqtbe proSpect, of higher and greater aealtbiu another posaion. rif• he is so 1,4 be yieldg.to the first i;is ; gobs! itnents dermid on ing.sttekithz t.) toe priticiples4}n 'which they elct him Y ''he r•- (I.l;fernents of honor and honesty demand th he iihnuld withdraw from tie cA - intest iu whist: he bas entered, and shall forst; fifth one c u r oeft,re eneaging in. anotber.l He can s..a. keel) his seat' during the crmpaign and fri:;id flee from partisan bias ; and if re . 474: his,:at on re leaves the b4uch expovd ai he; dat go`rs from .whida path. i11(4. lld sertircti •tud opens the way for and corruptiwi. lie inns not be ailouidve i iffit to're, if a surprisedaud ,n• nuke rbjeet lops to: this course and sh is al of it very strikingly a the nail I NUS REPUBLICAN REMIT , . 41.9 T P Ell 41t3;(1 N.ttle of the Dett.iierat lit lead , f.t . 0- ilotivorivz to prove that inbli it! coutry ho vot drin 1S for Cy• L. tilshin'g for Judge.sre incolisistent in op osfr hief,tiow when he comes f.iriv.inl as for the utli,in pfGo l i vernor. . They 111 rtjt us_ that weII:01/01! ban a lova' may and Notithy of Our support during the citupihiti of 11 , 71.?,•atid they'piote froul the ,To , trnal -th .t Tis with i n ity. way be won ilia t 3e ope of riii i osivirgnia should nutter:it ruei position of the Republicans of S,"iii) 7 lkl .tmiltly in regard to 'ln ir support of Cyrus . L. Pi.lilifog and their present oppootion t.! hiin the fnrn of t, candidate fordhe Guberna'orial . -hair. Personal difference's and nort.lities tuning lead lug political men of this ciuttity and in inieni.e at tagonistu. whiCh personal. 'ar;t: feat ilillhhitties and mutest-1 hid area aI. o- trd it exceedingly desirable to bet's • that we should iri t 12eitch m• n who, had never •liki;ri pair. in any political bailie in the coitus ry,iand .iiliirwculd be understood as repro setting 'political Party or p 1 'dorm. err d-- nt a judiciary indepirident polii,,c„. 'iVripropcsiid to haye our judges free frinn otilidutons to any party or party tea i i•ds.l In IS'II we had an ludepentle•A rr.4 " Op% ention and nommat-d a Rep:Mh o:A:li 1 11.,mry Souther, ar oar e...mtrdite. JudiAr Soother had comp froth a estaut, put rlie: , ..State.aftt r appomttheut ;as . Jtilte of th - x , dktiict, and ae hop , d el-c' l ilt rt•- gr,tra to party. We ware unsuck..ts.fol in Orii ..IT4ta and the rogoltr Danoe:arisr wrxoth!.; Wad elected. in the following year the •iimie pendent juoiciaq" men concluded to select as their candida , e a Deinot;ry. as they had pie viously Seletted a Republican. roe. Lab a' Reform Convention , ii..mina•ed Hon. Cyrus 1.. Pershing. His friends among the Democr• prep•ented his name to the Detnoaratic Convention, and he taus repeted by PI re than -a Lai -thi,ds vote. The " ludepend indk•iaiy " men nad sufficient influence in the It publ can Convention to secure his ,fintnint- Lion by that: body. 'lt was undurs'ocid'ittor. many Democra's would openly him. He had never resided in this county; and our people were very ,tightly acquduted - wib his havory, except that he was I...men:lb...red as,,s defeat.- d De inoiTaTic coliail3th fOri:;Suprende Judge in PiC9, and we supposed that his politi-, cal aspirations having then been buried eight fhousand seven hundred maigity deep, would not raise to trouble its d'aringcbis ten years' fettle as Judge iu Schuylkill county. We hid mad ingoiry as to his qualifications fur the bench of oar lounty,;and having been assured of his honesty and legal le4riiing we did not ser,utinize very careful:y his' ontitical record. We were electing him for an office from which politics alradd be hat, sh-d. and we trusted his honesty that his Po'itical principles or prejudices whatever they tu;ght be oidd never be brought forward by hsv im on the bench. We Republicans then believed him to have been a War Democ. at aid Union man, but we did nut search mretull: through his re curd on those points any inure than we wonld have done if we had been ch.ssing him as s member . of au Arbirra - ton Boa d in a dispute nut connected with pulitics. In the isaue of the Jeurnal .lf st pzember 23d, 15.72, was to be found a tnng and consyfvous eaEorial on the subject of TLe Judgeship," arguing as 1011 ,, W8 ".• °But we 'contend that in vot.ing for Mr. Pershing, in the inhyitipn It' sf , tndslt fore the pop/s, 3nu are MA voting for a I.) , oes_ttat, .1 R. publican, nr a Labor Reformer, a .1.04 e o'adtuitia , ttr justice ,o. indu pod- nt, of any pit: Wu' or partisan bias." Toe words gutted explained %Lou tliy were or . o.;in the position, so fits as pot it lot. tat Ls In volvitd. not only 4'f rtur paper but of the syf. this cow:- y 'also supported Hod. I;yrus L. Perstotig at it o time. ::Our entire itesumx.rtir g him as thr:. tand:date of men of ail parties for :be Jud - 4ealtip independ,nt of pylitts aid in opposing him' as_ a partisan bUillitiee - for the political - , of Governor is pe.ifectly consiSLent. jtakiNE I •EitSillM4'S coNslsiENtly, • In yesterday's Journal we demonstrated 'he col.ststeney of the Republicans of Sehuylk II (oun'y iu their course relative to Eltm..Cyrus L. Pershing. It may tn,v: be well to Call the attention rtf the peopie to the fact that Judge Per slitng's_coase, has always been un:form to referent* to the ooe controlling prinfiple of hls. political career. Judge Pershing's line of con duct es er since he appeared in publit life has been painfully tousistent—consis - ent not with [toe - interests of the Country, tir of those who have elecWed him to positions of prominence-,- hut invariably -consistent with a se:tislinesS, high has. guided him forward e,vttr in a line leading to :advancement oft'self arld sett' only. The. Fort Douelson resolution to winch the Derniacratic papers attach so mile:l , i rniortance was offered by Judge Pershing in the Le.;isla ture of Pennsylvania in 186 . 2, That resolu tion was warlike and padrtutic when victory had perched upon our Irtlion batic-trs and th 3 armies of the ..Sottn bad sustained repulses which augured that treason nansttperish. The resonation thanks the i..a'lativotlicers and men of the irmy and navy the capture of. Fort Donets/at and for other achievements. It was vrianimously adopted., It was popular td be a. 11'ar Democrat then, and Cyrus L. Pershing Cot ed on the popular bide. But when , die dark days Of ltt'.3 had come and " the Unitinetreta , hied in the itatince," when traitors N,rth and South held their heads!aloft and clawed over the trews of Confeittlrare victories, woen it set med that rebels might •succ-.ed and men sate! the " tsar tot,s afrula tee," then • C:rus L. - Pershing thought he saw a turn in the popular tide, ls be thinks he rieei one now, and he • trimmed his sails accordingly. The great wiz measure, the Emaneipatitin Proclamation, which weakened treason and strengthened Government, he must:then repudisas, and - 48 have seen publitled his other vote's of those gloomy days, when true men listen td with in tense anxiety as the news of the bat 1.9 cone over the wires, and patriots heard , With Ftat-yd breath the telegraph's annooncement. To- lair it is popular to have been a War Democrat, and of course Cyrus L. Pershing . claims-Anat the was one. The : Independent Judiciary men' of this county, irrespective of: party and of tpolitio,• ft and bun alitleally i.shausted, sunk. down mle: a majority against, him whien would appal any future' 1./tuocratic couverition. I tisy lifted him up • mid placid -him in the pos,tion that has sinceigiven h in the stremith and plc minence he di placed •at k..trie. Ttiey had a right to expect, : tiu.rer the circ im4'anc3 wiaer tcbich he was nominated, he ;at least remain upon the teach during his term, nod thus pr-veii renewed contests over 'lie place:to which he bad been -eleviie..l. Erie, looms up, ai.d. be- tures' his back up-tn the- :of Schuylkill c iunty Vito had supported _him,,. and without' whose support ID 1572 thi3 Ere Conveu th) woulW not have: f him in ' 1673 and' b e them ttot.ke4 f ! tt4i. his a leare,_ and they must tight their .1 riltirlary ti_.l,t oyez again, if he earl be t4ectvii tine to the ,3111tt ILICL elit h p Ales din to his own inti-ri etc alot.e, he aim) blat,hy in films his Dereocriitic Erie friends that, he Will ett: rerign, aid otir etas are mercei with the 9,4 or ; ills:l4,one ruin' Ad howl. of ancer V v.:Ai:li they now _sea: to di ice him fr i it his siaic shelier bench out ii.td rue wild slur m u?..tberilig over theirdttvcted he ids. boy • :y w all arid bowl udiibittim is val-f—for he is too old awl shiewii a politician to snare the losses which he fears the aelier will siol -in. Mr. Ilighrs's with cai l)e,no cratic majdrey Goes, not, tempt Min io ritdc his sure •sition on the h.-, cm Nf..A.tot: ,dt,or of rjae We,t Chaster g 4 VeS flt iN , Te radir3wn to ere Co ttie Democritii2 paix-rs that Hartral,ft , t,ever vo•ed. tin! 11-ipubl, - - e"rt lick, t until be was a eaudidale for the I't is tiharre is f,lse. (3. , vvernort IT tr:ranft con d for Deti;:la.s mid iii 1,;-)1...ntereLl the atiny, vile le he nin tine ! tikititel tJi battles. or his coulitty to.fd l ti.jt I In 1564, when peTtniz , sinit , had neen iZiv a tile s ddi in the lierd from Pee.tts , ,lV.lllia . L 0 VOL the vrtriter f tots aTele :At-tided the R d-, iu caul p,ny with G....vertinr Itirtrauf'.. in front -it I'vtl.:sburg. The polls - Wtre opec-d tiveniy yards of the fiont line of hat thi. and in tut] sin iv of tit retel eni-my. the It' p+tbhcah tioket, as did every one else wno dat these polls. It was rather an Mt hualfliy plane for Demecrits." Win tloctuA the .indee, if Pershing is so sure of hist •iiit te.-s of tlee• i as Mateo' prt-tend to be, why does he hi id on t t his jf.(l:2.c.ship? In IS-11 aid Demo era'tit v•:td a raw:mien son;.7, whicti they slion'tti to , v: ftir the jufIL.V.I. liCto•lit. Alia ail/a; tLe jtn2le of it .• For if, as yon loudly say, • Fits 11.4 kc stars qa, Wt y 01 . , T , 11 , .7 , 7+iest r• -'en . my friends, 7 Wily don't the Ridge resign?" Cleartl• Id vt , r,,iTt 4ecounted for. Sim y s.aii I rislun in 3 itd - MoZra . ; Parksiti an American and a Republican. That. settled the whole matter with a Clearfield j.iry.l Of course, witll - 1-uch a jury, Siney was inn:vent. arc! larks fzui , tv. Sine) , boasted nJf .re the trial 'bat he would not be convicted, H- said the trial era: , too h , ar the election. Ho see= to have gauged bis Clearfield friends correCtly.