UPPLEMB1TT. 1 CAMPAIGN TnOUGnTS.-STSi. IDEAS THE CANT ASS SUGGESTS. Brief Pleading for Honesty In Politic at Well as la Business, and Some or the treasons Therefor. Tlie cipber dispatches have forever put at rest the allegation that the Democratic party ha entered npon the stage of decay. It leader never demonstrated their proficiency In trick and fraud more satisfactorily, not even wben Tammany cued to colonize Connecticut just prior to the April election. If any man can read the cipher dispatches and still say that the Democracy Is not as lively and vicorous a party as ever, be Is a.lost soul. Oil, Mr. Dewepg! was it necessary to puiv llsh and send abroad such a whopper as that about Vermont? Is the N. G. L. case so despe- rate that It was necessary to proclaim that that party elected a Congressman Id Vermont? If orb. a man was elected, what Is his nam Perhaps the flat money men have gone out the business of making Oat money and taken np the business of making flat Congressmen, It pays In the long run to tell the truth, Mr. Dewees. The recent elections in tlie west show coir clnslvely that the supposed popularity of In deeraable money In that quarter was wholly a manufactured sentiment produced by political manipulation, and sustained by that alone for partisan ends. No sooner was the course of the Republican party placed before the people In unmistakable terms In favor of bonet money than the reaction became decisive. Substan Mai citizens should now bear In mind to whom they are indebted for this revolution. Wha', in the name of common sense, does Mr. 8 peer mean by scolding the Democratic rank and file for running after strange gods? He is the bell-wether of the flock, and it was be who first lumped Into the greenback pasture. And now be is after the lambs with a sharp stick. "Ton should worship at your own altar," says Mr. Speer. It Is a pity be did not set them a better example. It Is easy enough to lead a flock of sheep to new pastures, but it Is not easy to drive them back, Mr. Speer. Immediate prosperity cannot be ex expected to follow resumption. The change must be gradual, because the opposition to re sumption bss been too formidable to past away easily. But after resumption the subsequent struggles of the Inflationists will be less difficult to deal with. Sentiment will crystallize In favor of a sound national currency and of a pro tective tariff: The 4th of March, 1879, will end the conflict. To have Internal progress and com merclal advancement we must get rid of the Democratic dominance In Congress. The National-Labor-Greenback-Fiat party, linked arm In arm with the absolute fiat party, and attended by the prohibitory, are descending from the heights they trod and disappearing, They presented themselves, with many claims nd much'oonQdenoe.ln the west, and found that they were friendless and forlorn, and despised in half a dozen States when they prophesied gain lor themselves. They find that this proof of their inability has dampened the ardor of Penn sylvania disciples, and that those who wandered from the Republican fold are returning to it. In 1801 Mr. A. H. Dill asserted at Lewis bnrg that "this Union can never be maintained by force of arms." But It was so maintained, and that maintenance discredits Mr. Dill's Judg- meet. A man convicted of Intellectual inca pacity Is not flt for a high and Influential posi tion In Pennsylvania. He might repeat bis er rors, and compel the State to pay for ihem. We ay nothing of the patriotism of the declaration. That can be Judged by everyone. Tbeproofthe declaration makes of Mr. Dili's unfitness and incompetency is a sufficient inference from the speech. Those who favor the maintenance of the national banking system in preference to a re turn to the old localized and unsecured currency and wild-cat 8 late banks, have only the Be' publican party to look to in the present emer gency. Both the others are hostile to the excel' lent system now established, and both agree In the avowed purpose of destroying IL A thous and million of dollars of commercial credits depend npon that question. Business men should think of that before they vote any other ticket than the Republican. Two years ago the Deniociacy were de feated when they made the repeal aud falsifica tion or the nation's solemn promise to redsehi its legal-lender notes on the first day or 159 an Issue In the canvass. That promise, m'aip by the country through a Republican adminls tration still holds, and cannot be honorably re tracted. It is plighted fHb, aud were the greenback advocate as strong in Uieir argu ment of expediency as they are weak, it would remain plighted and demand fulfilment. All that Is said on the theory of national paper is worthless under this one consideration, since were the Instant profits of increased paper is sues and do resumption a thousand times what tbey are, still the faith of the nation would for bid resort to it. There are some who will up- B.-rh a promise simply becanse II has been FIAT MONEY. Its Worth to Workingmen. The Record of the Past Reviewed at Some Length. The Fate of our Continental Currency The Experiment by Franoe.and the Result-Shall History be Repeated? Though one might Imagine after reading the arguments of the advocates of "flat money" tiat It Involved a new discovery in the realm of fl.iance, the idea originated many hundred y ars ago, bad Its complete elaboration in the Issue of irredeemable paper, and worked wide spread and irretrievable ruin to the expert mentors. The best authenticated of the earlv experiments with flat money was made In this country exactly 150 years ago. The colonies of Massachusetts. Rhode Island and Connecticut tried the experiment in 1728. It was an era of bard times. The people or the demagogues for them demanded the creation of loan banks which should lend money to men short of funds, Such banks were created, and issued notes to borrowers payablo In sixteen yeais, with use at four and six per cent. These notes were msde a legt.1 tender, and the colonial governments took mortgages on the real estate of the borrowers. Of course these borrowers borrowed on longer or shorter time, depending upon the date when the loan was effected. Those who came in five, six, and eight years after the period of the crea tion of the flat money, bad so many years fewer in which to use and repay the loans. These com plained that they did not get their share of the favors of fiat money, and demanded larger loans to make good the reduction in time. Thus more and more of the Sat money was turned into the channels of the circulation. and every new Issue depreciated all that had been Issued previously. This depreciation en abled the first borrowers to pay their loans more cheaply than tbey otherwise could have done, and of course such debtors Joiued in the cry for more money. But the historian of those times remarks that the borrowers in a multitude of cases did not try to repay their borrowings, but ran away, and left the banks to make out as best they might with the mortgages and other securities. The "best" was bad enough: for It was found as a rule that the pledged lands were not worth the debt, or in such condition that nothing could be realized. Here Is what Hutch inson, the historian, writes of those times: COLONIAL, PAPER MONEY. "The legislature, composed largely of men who had borrowed, would allow no extreme measures against the delinquent debtors, as that would affect themselves as well as their debtor constituents. Foreclosures were dis countenanced, and did not generally pay the excitement and trouble they caused. Com pelling men to repay their loans was looked upon as a species of political persecution. The repayment of the loans became a political Issue. Politicians were no longer arrayed against each other, as Whig or Tory, but as creditor or debtor, aud the latter swept the elections. " "This legal-tender money continued to depre ciate, and this bad the effect of making a scar city of currency, for It now took several dollars to do one dollar's worth of work measured by colu values. There was a great cry for moie bills, to make money plenty, business brisk and get up enterprises. " "The more paper was Issued the less it was worth, and the only class that benefited thereby was those wbo paid off their creditors in de- based money; but the more lenders were thus cheated, the harder times became for the work lng classes, and there was great distress in the colonies." "Salaried men and laborers suffered greatly from the debasement of the currency." Says the historian Hutchinson: "The Influence which a bad currency has on the morals of the people Is greater than Is generally imagined. It would be Just as rational when the blood in the human body is In a putrid and corrupt state to increase the quantitr by luxurious living in order to restore health. ' ' "At last the British Parliament interfered, and passed an act forbidding the issue of any more irredeemable legal-tender paper in New England colonies, and allowing no issues ex cept in the form of exchequer bills redeemable by taxes iu a year, and bearing Interest. The colonies now set earnestly, though with only partial success, to fund and retire the old notes. This produced contraction, and the debtors raised loud outer lei against it The colonial governments sustained heavy losses in the rork of calling in and getting rid of Ihe super abundant notes. A Spanish silver dollar was worth 4s. ed. sterling, while of the note Issues it took 64s. to equal one silver dollar. In the meantime all the coin left the country; not a dollar of hard money was seen in circulation. " LEGAL-TENDER IN 1776. This experience In fiat money was very bitter, and was not repeated for the next fifty years. Then came Ihe revolt of the colonics, aud a des perate struggle or a poor people with a rich and powerful nation. Between June, 1775, aud Feb ruary, 1776, 10,000, 000 of paper mouey was Is sued and made a legal-lender by Congress, aud the separate colonies as well. In addition, the enilre Issr.p w;is n 1rnM lo colonics nc.-o, . McCl'LLOCII. A BOUND rrNANCIFR'S VIKWS. Some Democratic Campaign Facts Refuted by Statements from a Tarty Acquainted With the Subject Read and KeHect. To the Editor of the Tribune. Sir: There exists to some extent misapprehen slon in regard to the character and purposes ol lhe7 3-10lh notes Issued by the government In 1861 and 1865. It has been stated by the inflation Journal, and Iterated aud reiterated by Inflation speakers, that these notes were Issued as money. This statement has been In a measure confirmed by remarks attributed to General Spinner, but the statement is only partially true, and as to a comparatively small part of the first Issue. The exigencies of the Treasury in 1861 and the early part of 1805 were so great that the Secre tary was compelled to avail lilmseir of all means under his control to meet tlio enormous requirements of tlio War and Navy Depart ments, aud, authorized as ho was to sell these notes, or to use them In paymeut of debts due by the government, he did direct that some of them should by sent to the army paymasters and to the Assistant Treasurer in San Fran Cisco, with Instructions, however, that they should be paid only to such soldiers and other creditors as might be willing to receive them, They were not used nor Intended lo be used a money, but as securities, which the creditors might receive or decline to receive at their own good pleasure. According to my present rccol lection, all of the notes which which were used for the payment or soldiers were so used while Mr. Chase was at the bead of the Treasury De partment; and I sneak advisedly (for I was iu dally communication with hi in) when I say that 11 was not bis intention or expectation that they should be even temporarily a circulating medium. He was bard pressed for mouey, and he was also anxious that the soldiers should save as much as was possible of their bard-earned wages; and he thought, as these notes bore a high rate of interest, and were convertible at maturity into 5-30 six percent, gold bonds, that they would be gladly received and held as an In vestment. The experiment was not a success, and It was soon discontinued. Of the $830,000, 000 7 3-Iotb notes outstanding In October, 1865, at least S700, ooo.OOO bad been offered and sold by popular subscription, as were the first issues of 5-20 bonds. The bonds antl other sortiritics is sueci during me war were issued to provide means lo prosecute the war, when, as the result was by many regarded doubtful, subscriptions to the loans were considered patriotic; those issued after the close of the war were issued to provide means for paying ofl" the soldiers and closing np the expenses of the war. And 11 Is worthy of remark that it was not until long after the war had been brought to successful conclusion, and ihe solvency of the government had been assured, that tlio holders of securities, which had been freely offered to every man in the United States, became the ob jects of denunciation; and it is also worthy of remark that the denunciation of the bondholders almost invariably comes from those whose prn leuce to use no stronger term prevented Ihem not only from subscribing lo the loans when the Union was in peril, but also to the subsequent ones, upon the success of which depended the ability of the government to pay the gallant men by whose valor it had been preserved. The reason for raising money by a sale of 7 3-10lhs, Instead of bonds having a longer lime to run, and bearing a lower rate of lulerest, was given by the Secretary, in his reiort of 1868, in t)C following language: NO TIME TO TRY EXPERIMENTS. me greatness or the emergency gave the Secretary no time to try experiments for bor. rowing on a new security of long time and lower interest, and removed from his mind all doubts and hesitation in regard to Ihe course tci be pursued. It wasestiinated that at least S700. 000,000 should be raised, In addition to the reve nue receipts, for the payments of thorequisi tionsj already drawn, and those that must sooi't follow preparatory to the disband men I of th great Union army and of other demands upon the Treasury. The anxious Inquiries then wen?, by what means cn tnis large amount or monej be raised, and not wat will be the cost of rais'. lng It. How can the soldiers be paid and th army disbanded so that the extraordinary exi penses of the War Department may be slopped, and not what rale of interest shall be paid fo money. These were the inquiries pressed npoip the Secretary. He answered them by calling to bis aid the well-tnid agent wbo had been em. ployed by bis immediate predecessors, and by ottering the 7 3-10tb notes the most popular loan ever offered to the people in every city and village, and by securing the advocacy or the press throughout the leuglh and breadth of the land." The 7 3-10ths were made payable, interest ami principal, in lawful money (legal-tender notes). but they were not themselves a legal-tender, a some have asserted; and nobody so considered them until ten years after they had been re tired. In October, 18C5, the following short- time obligations the payment or retirement of which is denounced as a contraction of the currency were outstanding, viz. : Compound interest notes, due 18GT and 18G8, - - - 5 percent. Treasury notes, due De cember 1, 1865, - 7 3-10 Treasury notes, due in IM.n and 1868, - 8.;o,oiio,ovo T o,i.iiti..n tn flios,. tlwra were dl'litn rlim i,hl 3J,536,!''fj n inn II b fl DEMOCRACY. Is the Party to be Trusted? Corrupt, Unprincipled, and a Foe to American Industries. Guilty of Treason Dishonesty and Repu dlatlon A Friend to Rebel Claims and Foreign Pauper Labor and Speculators, Tnerels nothing nobler or grander within the ranee of human capabilities than forgiveness and forgotlulness of Injuries. There Is no surer mark of goodness and even greatness than this indicates in Individuals.and In almost all cases what is wise and noble in Individual action Is the same with parties or governments. Uoncvery citizen of this Commonwealth, however, rests a responsibility; every voter has a duty to per form. He owes it to himself, to those who have gone before, but much more to those who will come after and luherlt the good or evil which he transmits. Therefore, forgiveness and forget ful ness of Injuries which purely concern our' selves must not be confounded with those In which wo have only a passing and transitory Interest. If the Democratic party is ever permitted to return to power, it will bo eflected by the combination of two things. The people will forgive and forget the wickedness and the evils Democracy has wrouglitand remember only the reproach which a few prominent Republican traitors lo thelrparly have brought upon the country. It seems al most superfluous to go over the long list ot crimes against law and order, against human rights and liberty, against the true interests of America, which the Democratic party has been guilty of. On every hand are evidences of their recklessness, of their treason, of their treachery and betrayal of American Industry. Almost wflhln the memory ol the youngest voter wbo will go to the polls on the 5lh of No vein ber Is the treason and perfidy of the last Demo cratic national administration, the remem brance of the weak and cowardly subterfuges of tbe Chior Executive, ami the active and bold con nivance and aid of bis subordinates In arming rebels and plunging me nation Into a causeless war, which billowed the south all over with graves, desolating a million bappy homes and buidcning unborn generations with debt. He will remember how during those bitter and terrible years of struggle, of doubt and despon dency, when the only refuge on earth for the oppressed aud suffering of all nations bung on the very verge of destruction, this party cast Its influence with traitors; how those who placed their all upon the altar of their country were reviled and scoffed at, and how the memories of the slain have becu heaped with obloquy and the brave survivors traduced and slandered There is not, even in that party, a degree of Impudence daring enough to deuy or defend these charges. They are too infamous for even the most unscrupulous and intense partisans to Justify. When the blessed angel of peace came once more to our distracted land, and the rebel armies were allowed to surreuder on terms so liberal as to melt the south to tears, and were invited once more to resume their places In the great family, we all remember how this party opposed every step of reconciliation that should secure to the colored man the rights guaranteed by the Constitution and laws, and every princi ple upon which our Republic 13 founded how, from banging these inoffensive people to lamp posts and burning their school-houses in New York to ku-kluxism in the south, their never- ceasing diabolism of thirty years continued, re kindling the bitter fires of sectional hate, canto and treason in the breasts of the bad and dan gerous element of the country, and dispelling in a great measure the auspicious signs of peace and unity that followed the homeward-march of our armies. OAS THE PARTY CHANGED? But Uiey tell us this Is the "bloody shirt" that these Issues arc past; tbey plead gullty.and ask that these things be buried in forgetfulness. They declare that new questions have arisen. and new leaders stepped to the front; and In tills tbey declared truly. From cringing before the slave power of the south, rankly persecuting and defaming the sacred cause of liberty and its defenders, they prostrated themselves before the heroes of Uie struggle wben success was assured; adopting Republican principles and taking for their standard-bearer the most invet erate enemy and implacable foe to Democratic doctrine, demonstrating the same feeling for their own dignity and sense of honor that tbey bad for the welfare of the country. But the people are seldom wrong in their opinions; In their sentiments they are never mistaken when correctly informed. The graves were too new; the wounds too fresh; the empty sleeves too nu merous; the walls and sufferings of the widows aud orphans too distinct; the burdens of taxa tion too heavy; and never was, there such an emphasis placed upon a fact as the popular ver dict of 1872 stamped upon Democratic treason and hypocrisy. If generosity and charity could lead us to for- getourdutyas American citizens and defend ers of tbe rights and privileges bequeathed to us so rar as to trust Democracy again with power on their professions, their acts would dispel the Inclination so long as we retained one spark of honor, or there remained one particle of jutls- t In Tlio mHnls ..r Ihn i t T,,, . , ,i , IIOYT. A CANDIDATE WITH PRINCIPLES. The Next Governor Reviews the Situation Labor, flonesty and Coin His Speech at Horticultural Hall, Philadelphia. I represent tbe organized agencies which the great Republican parly have set up and propose to sustain In this Slate Iu the interest of good government. Eighteen years ago a million and a half of men armed aud went down to battle that the nation might live. The enemy In front resisted to the death, and thousands in our midst declared and resolved in convention that a war for that pur pose must fail. You vindicated yourselves as men who possessed the brain and purpose of the Inheritors of an interest in a great ancestral rlulit and an Inherited Intelligence, and pluck to maintain that right. That flght.fellow-cittzens, you won. Your flag still bears all lis blazing stars, and floats over every parapet and fort of the Republic (The applause which greeted Colonel Hoy t here warmed him up and he went on with vigor. TIIK NATION MUST LIVE HONEHTI.V. To-day you are marshalled that the nation may live, honestly. As you one held the peo ple to the great lessons of fortitude, self-denial, and suffering, so now you, and you alone, are to organize that heroism which shall compel honesty in public matters, honesty in private affairs. You are to maintain the public in. tegrity, that governmental dishonesty may not debauch the sentiment of Individual Integrity. A great debate Is now going forward between the American people. The only organized body of men who embody and proclaim the truths In government and finance is the Republican party. For twenty-five years the Democratic party has bad no vital and efficient contact with the actual Ideas organized In our Insti tutions. Democratic men went shoulder to shoulder with Republicans to the trenches to be torn and mangled, and to the battle front to die. Tbe Democratic party, as a party, never put Itself honestly and sincerely In actual sympathy with the people. It did not keep abreast or the ripe sentiment of nationality. In 1868 It lost the election because it did not Intend honestly to pay tbe war debt. Iu 1872 It lost tbe election because, while it took as its candidate a great champion of human rights, it took him because be had abandoned patriotism for sentimental Ism. In 1876 it undertook a campaign for "re form," but its record was too unsavory and Us disguises were too thin to deceive the aver age American voter. To-day that party has positively no attitude on any public question going to the real living interests of the people. Its leaders are distracted and Inconsistent, Its declarations weak and worthless. It presents no definite schema for tbe conduct of affairs. As It has produced no results In tbe past, so It offers no hope for tbe future. To-day Its leader ship Is Iu the hands of a few able and ingenious goutlcmen. Republican at heart, but inspired by a sense of mischief toward the Republican party and hearty enjoyment of their mlschiev oub intervention. Applause. REPUBLICANISM MUST KR BOLD AND IN TREPID. Fellow-citizens, as in the years gone by the Republican party fostered and dcveloed the endurance and persistence of our peeple, so now you are to organize, uphold and support the na tional faith In Itself. We arc cou Iron ted with the problem of bow to pay an Immense private and public Indebtedness. The Jobber and the charlatan are filling our ears with delusive and dishonest proposals. The sense of public Integ rity never needed concerted anil organized sup port more than now. Tbe mlsslou of the Re publican party Is not done. Your utterances should never be bolder and more Intrepid than now. The people are willing to be recalled to sense of the sanctity of a public promise. They must be implored to shut their ears to cheap de vices lu government and finance. We must re cognize that divine law which ordains that homes and happiness and wealth are the awards of Industry, skill, and economy. No human scheme can reverse the rules ol the divine econ omy and confer upon Idleness and profligacy the rewards of life. The laws which compel an Individual able to pay his debts to be willing to pay bis debts must be met by some corresponding sentiment some principle of pride and honor which sliall.demand that a government able to pay its debts shall rise to that high duty. For this there Is no re liance but the high spirit and proud determina tion which should pervade a people with the tradl tlons and destiny of our own. THE NATIONALS AS CREDIT WRECKERS. When tbe National party propose to pay tbe bonds of this government with the greenback, and talk about the greenback in Illimitable vol ume being made good and floated npon tbe credit of tbe nation, they wreck that credit of the nation at tbe outset. Tbe Constitution and tbe law aside, their first act is a cheat and a fraud, and no plain, practical business man will trust the individual, firm or nation which pays a solemn promise with a cbeapjpromlse, aud which never purposes a day of actual per formance of either. LAI10R, MUSCLE AND COIN. Fellow-citizens, some maxims of political economy and finance may be considered as set tled. Nothing which men deal in as articles of commerce and exchange has any(valuo except the value which human labor and muscle and energy have put Into It. The value of that labor and muscle Is for tlio people lo iueasure,and not FUN ALIVE. The Humors of the Canvass The Battie Fought by the Democracy In Maine. A Famous Victory for Somebody, as Seen Through a Piece of Smoked Glass The History In Verse. 1 1 was an aged Democrat, Whose locks were thin aud gray, To him bis little grandson spoke And said, "Now, gran 'pa, say, Tell of tbe flglil ill Maine to me, And how you won the victory. " The grandslre raised his feeble arm, "Oil, 'twasa glorious day, And tierce and strung, and all day long, j Raged loud the dreadful fray, And when night closed on us, why we Had won a famous victory. ' ' "Rut tell me what tbe victory meant, And what you fought about; And tell me how tbe Democrats That were with you, came out?" "Why that I cannot do," said he; "But 'twas a lamous victory. " 'In hope and strength we wailed In, But when the day was done Of ail our numerous candidates We hadn't elected one We hadn't a point, that I could see, But 'twas a famous victory. " "By noon, our party strength was gone, And we kept right on the wane; And the chill, cold hand of death lay on Tbe Democrats of Maine, But still tbey said I can't Just see That 'twas a famous victory. "We never elected a candidate, We were kicked clear out In the cold, And I felt, wben I read the black returns, A thousand centuries old. Hut the New York World said, 'Hope-pee? Another glorious victory. ' "And since we won that bloody fray Just why, I can't explain, They never have found a Democrat Alive In tbe State of Maine. They hate that .State it's queer to me, Since winning that famous victory. " Ills grandson cried, "But I can't see how, IT tbey licked you out of your eyes, And scooped you the grandslre said, "That's Just where the trouble lies; It's the Dutch test Rind of Greek to me, But I know it's a famous victory. " liurlimjloii llankryc NASBY. HEARS TIIK NEWS FROM MA INF. The Em-Postmaster Itecomes a Ktjformer and a Financier Result of an Issue of Flat Money at the Corners, From the Toledo Rliwle. Con pkdekit X Roads, WIch Is in the Slate uv Kentucky, Sept. 15, 1878. The nooze from Maine bez reached the Corners and lthez en couraged us, both ez Nashnelsaud Dimocrats. It doesn't make a straw's difference to me whether we the Dimocrats bev swallercd the Nashnels, or whether the Nashnels hev swat lered us. There hez bin swallerin, and the Re- publikin party hez lost Its grip. We are bappy. Ez Nashnels we bev things eggsackly to soot us at tbe Corners, and throughout thlsseckshun. We bev succeeded in inslltootln strikes in all the manufacturln villages in this seckshun,and hev all tbe workmen out nv work and in conse keut distress. At Factryvllle ther ain't any morefactryat all, for we burned it in the holy croosade nv labor agin capital. In Plainville we bev got all the mechanics and laborers on a strike, wlch bed thedeliteful aud cheerio effeck uv tbrowin every workinman out uv work. Halleeloogy! They hev notbln to do now but to walk about the streets day-times, and llssen lo our speeches nites. And we are makln it lively for the bloated employers, you bet. When men are distrest they want a remedy, and they'll take most any kind uv medicine. To support em, we hev inslltootld a pro visbnal bank, wlch will do till the flat money is isbood. It's the same thing ez "fiat" money. I am President of it and Issaker Gavitt is Casbeer. Our money is simply a slip uv paper onto wlch is prlntid the sole-insplrln words: THIS IS A DOLLAR. Attest: Petroleum V. Nasby, President. Issaker Gavitt, Casbeer. The only secoorlty that we felt wuz necessary wuz to pledge tbe sacred faith nv the Corners that it wuz a dollar. "Wat Is it to be redeemed In?" queried a shoemaker to whom I offered it for a pair uv boots, the first I hev hed for yeers. 'In nolhln. Itdon't want to be redeemed. To redeem it would be to destroy its life-giving principle. Anybody Kin Isboo money with gold behind It to redeem it; yoor iroo tlnanseer Is he wlch kin make money wlch don't want re- decrolu. All yoo hev to do with Mils monev is to 1:"'l It tumvim. V.n. Iumi;, T',1s MP i.iif.. y,,m KELXEY. JUS VIKWS ON WOOD'S TARIFF. An Appeal in Common Sense The Centen nial the Crowning Glory of Our First Century General Considerations. jjnl If It eould be shown that It favors free trade, It wouiu simply prove that It is an at tempt to resist tbe tendency and drift of the age. tnguiuu u;incu urging to realize the sad mistake she mano wncn she failed to confine freedom of Irado with her ports to raw mate rials and food. On the 3d of last month Mr. Ernest Seyd, berore the British Society of Arts in London, reiterated bis belief in the abstract doctrine of free trade, and said: "I will admit that the increased imports are due partly to foreigners forcing goods here; but there Is this year already a falling off in the im ports. I will further admit that our habits are, perhaps, too luxurious. Although 1 am a thor ough free-trader, I am aware that such luxuri ous habits cannot be checked by mere moral suasion, and I am or tlie opinion that unless there Is soon a belter balance between our im ports and exports, there is really no other method of effecting this than by a partial return to protection. " Hero is a pamphlet with which tbe British Islands have been flooded within the last few mouths. It is Lord Bateman's plea for limited protection or for reciprocity in free trade. Let me read the closing paragraph: "I appeal to tbe common Mnae and to the patriotism of my countrymen, and if tbey are convinced how great has beeu the fallacy of our free-trade policy without reciprocity, it is for them to say, as 1 believe sincerely Uiey will say, whether a return to a policy of limited pro tection Is not the true and simple solution of our present difficulties, and will tend to re trieve our losses, increase our revenue, lighten our burdens, bring peace, contentment and em ployment to oitir working classes, and teach them aud us to fbless the day which restored the old policy and tjie old watchword of 'protection to native British industry.' " The cotton lords of England are demanding the protection of tiieir investments against tbe terri ble conipctltioil from India. Let me read yon some extracts urom the London Times, premis ing that UuV British Indian government, In order to ' raise an adequate annual revenue, has 1 been compelled to impose a duty of five per cent, on cotton goods Imported into Indian ports, and the British manufac turers are demanding the repeal of that duly. "There was .scarcely a town In our manufac turing districts which was not represented. . . Their wish t preserve a foreign market for their goods is natural enough, and, within de cent limits, praiseworthy enough. We can scarcely say much for them when they ask not only that Indian finance -jball be regulated for their own convenience, but that tbe export trade of India shall be kept within the bound tbey wish to assign to It, and shall be crushed out or existence when it Intrudes itself as their rival. It is a strange thing, we cannot help remarking, to observe tbe new quarters from which proceed, in the case berore us, tlie attack on free trade. ' ' I have here a slip from the London Saturday Review on tlie French Exposition: "The first exhibition was held at London, and was avowedly intended to be a sort of consecra tion of free-trade. The new exhibition Is to be held at Paris, and Is a consecration of protec tion. Conquered France has at last conquered its proud captor. Trince Bismarck has just is sued a manifesto through one of his organs, in which be explains his new financial policy. It seems that lie has been meditating over the financial system of France; and is lost in ad miration at what he finds to be Its basts and its Method. It Is through protection that France pays the luterest on the milliards which he car ried otr. He thought that be had crushed Trance pecuniarily, and he discovers that apparently she is not crushed at alL Her rational and local taxation now amounts to abont l50,ono,oo0 a year, and the Chamber is giily embarking on new and vast schemes for nil ways, canals, and Improved military organization. How this is done Is the question which Prince Bismarck has seriously asked himself, and the only answer he can discover Is that it is done through a system of wise and hold nrobciinn. He therefore invites bis countrymen not to be above imitating France. THE CROWNING (il.OKY OV OCR FIRST CENTURY. In characterizing the last quarter of the first ceutury of our existence the chairman o the committee said: "It marked tbe most extraordinary epoch in our history distinguished for its extinction of slavery the greatest civil war of any time, and Its consequent demoralization and stimulating effects upon values, and the vicious legislation which of necessity followed. Our great civil war and the extinguishment or slavery were memorable events, but they do not RhArnf.tfrf in tlie period alluded to. The crownine nlory of that century of American history centered In the display of machinery, the mosi wonderful that man had ever beheld; in the products of genius, taste, skill and Industry Hu8 in tue habits, manners and apparel of our people, who gathered there by millions, and who, thanks to Ihe general principles of the protectivo system, presented to foreign crs an undistiiigulKhahle mass, so that they asked. "Where are Hie people, the artisans, INTEGRITY. Able Argument for Honesty. Secretary Schurz's Views on the Finan cial and Political Situations. An Exhaustive Resume of the Causes Which Led to the Panlo of 1873 -The Way to Avoid a Repetition. Extracts from a speech delivered In Cincin nati September 28, 1878: WHAT ARE THE FACTS? There was, indeed, a contraction of our raper currency from 163 to 1868. But tbe business collapse did not occur after 1868. It came five years later, aud those five years, between 1868 and 1873, are generally regarded as years of un common prosperity. Now what happened with the currency between 1868 and 1873? In 1868 con traction was stopped. In 1869 the amount of paper currency outstanding was 9693,916,056 61. In 1870H was700,875,899 48. In 1871 itwasS717, 875,751 06. In 1ST '2 it was 738,570.903 52. In 1873 It was 750, OSi, 368 94. This statement Includes not only the greenbacks, the national bank notes and tbe fractional currency, but also the State bank's circulation, the demand notes, tbe one and two years' notes of 1863, and tbe com pound Interest notes. Thus it appears tbat dur ing several years preceding the crash of 1873, tbe currency was not only not contracted, but very materially increased, so that in 1873 Itamounted to over .", 000,000 more than in 1869. The fact then stands thus: The currency was contracted between 18C5 and 1868, and several years of pros perity followed. The currency was expanded from 1869 to 1873, aud the collapse of business occurred. I might even add that between 1873 and 1871 tbe currency was expanded from $730, 063,368 94 to 781,490, 916 01, tbat is to say over thirty-one millions, aud yet tbe depression was not only not relieved, but grew in distressing severity. Our Inflation friends may not relish that kind of reasoning, but what have yon to answer? THE REMEDY. The best thing one can do after the collapse Is quietly to gather np our five senses and go to work like men to repair our shattered fortunes. And bow can those shattered fortunes be re paired? First, by recognizing the errors of our ways and discarding self-deceptions and illu sions; by remembering tbat our wealth must consist in what we produce and have, and not in what we dream of; by abstaining conse quently from all windy scbemes to make our selves rich by printing the word dollar npon a piece of paper; by acting upon the principle that the only honest way to get rid of our debts is by paying them, and that we can become prosperous only by producing things that are useful, and by spending less than we earn, to furnish that Hound foundation, without which business can have no healthy development, and without which the prosperity of the people will always stand upon a volcano ready to explode at any time, three things are of the first neces sity: A good national and Individual crrdit, based npon national and individual honesty. Second, a sound currency of real and stable value; aud third, a safe and reliable banking system, as the depository of business funds and the machinery of business exchanges. FIRST AS TO CREDIT. It has become the fashion for many politi cians and public agitators to cry out against the bondholders, and thus to excite a prejudice against tbe bond, which is an embodiment of the national faith. The bondholders are repre sented as aset of "bloated" individuals residing down east or in foreign countries, who bought their bonds at thirty-five or forty cents on the dollar and now demand 100 cents and high inter est in Bold. Thus the bondholder is; pictured as a sort of criminal blood-sucker, woo, wim cold-blooded cruelty, fattens upon tbe sufferings of a down-trodden people. Now, supposing our national bonds were still In tbe bands or those who originally bought them, can yon fail to re member that when bonds were sold at forty cents on the dollar, and tbe quantity so sol was not very large, the life of the nation was threatened by a monstrous rebellion? That the Rennblic seemed to be in the agonies of death? That it appeared uncertain whether the bond boueht at forty cents on Monday would be worth ten cents or one cent on Saturday? And that the purchaser of the bond risked his money for the country just as much as the soldier risked bis blood? Did not the American government ask him to take that bond at almost any price, when the Republic was in extremities? And now when he has helped us by taking it ana giv ing up his money at the risk or losing It all, are we, now tbat everything has gone well against tbe predictions and expectations of many are we, as a high-minded people, to turn arounu nnon him who has helped ns in our nour or su preme distress, and tell him "You are a blood sucker and a scoundrel." I have known indi viduals who, when you had helped tbem with a loan, would feel and act as If they owed you. not the monev. but a grudge. You would des pise such persons as mean and contemptible fel- lows. A SOUND CURRENCY. What was it that made you regret the disap pen ranee of col n money and IhesnhstltnMotiorir It will become profitable to Issue more, and It will be Issued. When less Is needed, the excess flows back to the banks, and withdraws. It la a self-adjusting process. The volume of gov ernment paper circulating is fixed by law, and that law is made by poll ticlans. Whatever the changing needs of the business may be, that volume of the government paper currency re mains fixed until through the slow and cumber some machinery of legislation tbe law Is changed again by politicians. And of all human agencies to determine the volume or currency needed ty business, business itself la the most reliable and best, and a set of politicians is the nnsafest and worst. The government is sad banker. but ir well administered it may be a good bank controller, as it proved in this Instance. In very Important respect then, national bank currency being equally safe as to valne, is vastly superior to greenbacks, and every think ing business man knows that it is so. And now, my fellow-citizens. I ask von in all candor and soberness, would It not be an act of wicaeu lolly, lor reasons so flimsy, without the least prospect of any solid advantage, not only to destroy a banking system which, as every man In the country knows, Is not only Ihe best we ever bad. but better tban any other we are iiHeiy io nave: out 10 aesiroy 11 at a moment when with it the resumption of soecie navmentn is easy, and without It impossible; so that it would nave to be invented if it were not in ex istence ; destroy it while the Industrial energies of the nation, after a long and painful period of paralysis ana aistretw, are at last slowly ana timidly venturing forth again; and wben, above all, thorough confidence Is needed to quicken the circulation or tbe blood in tbe social and commercial body: and then Just at such a mo ment to destroy toe only great institution that has successfully passed the crucial test ora ter rible crisis, ami therefore quietly does command universal confidence, and tbat institution the banking system, the most Indispensable finan cial agency of all business transactions? Ay, to start on a revival of business with a general breaking np of a good, reliable banking system to inspire confidence with an earthquake- Why, gentlemen, the Idea Is so utterly childish and preposterous tbat every sane man wbo ever thought of It must blush with shame at his own folly wben be calmly Inquires into the full meaning and consequences of the propo sitions. Certainly no man of common sense need be told that under such circumstances It Is the only wise policy to keep the good things we have and let well enoueb alonet DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES. TIIEIR RECORD AS Fl BLIC MEN. The Coarse ot Dill and Fertig on the Free Pipe and Anti-Discrimination Bills The Legislative Proof. From tbe Bradford Daily Era. Titusville, Oct. 1. To the Editor of the Dally Era: In a recent letter published in the Pittsburg Post as coming from Bradford, and republished in the Era by "request," appears the following extract; "On the other band, from the same cause, attention is diawn to tbe fact that the Demo cratic candidates for Governor and Lieutenant Governor Dill and Fertig devoted themselves in tbe Senate last winter to the passage of the Free-Plre and Antl-Dlscriminatlon bills. Both bills were championed by Mr. Dill with great power, while Hr. Fertig drew up and presented the Anti-Discrimination bill, and, in fact, passed it through the Senate. Tbe House killed It, for doing which the Cameron Bepublicans must be held responsible. " The rreqnent reiteration of such statements by various Democratic papers, in letters and editorials, necessitates a statement of the real facts. About the time the Free Pipe bill was intro duced, special care was taken by Senator Dill's Democratic friends to herald throughout the oil region the statement tbat be would champion tbe bill. How did be do it? When it passed first reading neither Dill nor Fertig were in tbe Senate, nor in Harrisburg. Wben It came npon tbe calendar for second reading, and its enemies bad their forces on hand determined to kill it then. Dill was still absent, and the bill was saved for the time being only by the skilful, parliamentary tactics of Senator Stone. (See Legislative Record, pages 261, 2, 3, 4). By In dustrious telegraphing the attendance and vote of Fertig bad been secured. Tbe bill went back mto the keeping of tbe Committee on Judiciary General, of which Sen ator Stone is chairman, and on January 29, 1878, he again reported the bill to the Senate, and on the same day, on motion or Senator Cor- bett, who had introduced the bill, it was made the special order for January 30. In the debate on that day Senator Dill made a speech which reads well, but was delivered with so little earn estness or show of Interest as lo excite no spe cial attention from Senators or audience. The brunt of the fleht was borne by Senator Stone, supported by Senators Corbett and Greer. Mr. Fertig contented himseir with presenting the producers' memorial and voting. Tbe bill was beaten to the Senate, but one with the same general purpose was afterwards passed by the House and sent to the Senate. It was held back several days, in part to secure tbe attendance of Mr. Dill, who was absent, and when it was presented to tbe Senate a point or order was raised that it could not be consid ered, as a similar bill bad already been de feated In tbe Senate at tbat session. It was well known long beforehand that this point would be raised, and on Its decision depended the rate of tbe bill; yet on this vital question tbe man who is claimed to have "championed" Ihe bill could only say, "I have not examined 1 tbe question; I have not examined the author ities as to the ruling of the Chair, and I am not prepared to say what my judgment would be in regard to that ruling. "See Record page 2221. I I I