3 I 1 6 THE SCBANTON TRIBTJNE--TUESDAT MORNING, MAY 21, 1895. CARIISLE'SJREAT SPEECH He la Given an Ovation al Coviugton, , Kentucky. THOUSANDS HEAR HIM TALK Central Garden In Covington Is Crowded with a Large Audience-Thousands t'nuhle to Gain Admittance ' to the' Garden. Concluded from Face 1. one class of our citizens or one section of our country against another, or by looso and extravai?ant statements unsupported by facts and reasons. The questions In volved are too serious, the Interests to be affected are too large, and the common enBe of the people Is too strong to Juiit.'fy or even excuse this course of treatment. The allegation, even If It were true, that a great crime was surreptitiously commit ted in 1873, or at any other time, does not prove, or even conduce to prove, that the free coinage of sliver at the ratio of 16 to 1 would bo benellcial to the country under No "Crime" Committed in 1873. the conditions now existing. Hut, gentlemen, It is not true that the act of Feb. 12, 1873, which mado the gold dollar the unit of value and dropped the standard liver dollar from the coinage, was passed by Btealth, or that its purpose or effect wns to deprive the people of the use of any coin then in use or then in existence in this country. That bill was pending in congress for neurly three years and was under consideration during live sessions of that body; it was distinctly recommend ed in two reports of the secretary of tho treasury, and ithe director of the mint, and it was officially printed and laid on the desks of the members of tho house and of the senate thirteen different times be fore the final vote was taken on It. It was read at length In the open senate several times, and In the house at least once, as shown by ,lhe record; It was re ported from committees seven times, and the discussion upon it In the house tills sixty-six columns of the Congressional Olobe, and in the senate seventy-tight columns. As llrst reported to the senate and passed by that body in January, 1871. the bill did not provide for the coinage of any' silver dollar whatever, but expressly limited the coinage of that metal to sub sidiary pieces half dollars, quarters, and dimes. In this form, without any provi sion for the coinage of any kind of silver dollar, the bill was passed In the senate on the llrth day of January. 1S71. upon the call of tho yeas and nays, and the record shows that the two senators from Ken tucky, Hon. Garrett Davis and Hon. Thomas C. McCreery, the distinguished Democratic senator from Ohio, Hon. Allen G. Thurman, the present senator from Ne vada, Hon. William M. Stewart, together with all the other senators from the Pa cific slope, voted In the affirmative, while Senator Sherman, Senator Morrill, and twelve others voted In the negative. The reason given by Mr. Sherman for voting against the bill was that the senate had, In obedience to th demands of the sen ators from, the Pacific coast, so amended the bill, aiter It was reported from the committee, as to abolish the charge of one-fifth of one per cent, for coining gold, thus making the coinage of that metal entirely free. The bill went to the house of representatives, but It was not disposed of during that congress, and at the first session of the next congress Mr. Kelly, of Pennsylvania, Introduced It In the bouse and it was referred to a committee. So far as the coinage of the silver dollar was affected, the bill introduced by him was precisely the same as the one that had passed the senate that Is, it made no provision for such coin. However, when the bill was finally reported back from the committee to tha house it was so amended as to provide for the coinage of a subsidiary piece, to be called a dollar, and to contain 384 wains of standard sil ver, the same as the French 5-franc piece, and it was to be a legal tender to the extent of So, and no more. In this form It passed the house by a very large major f rom the committee to the house it was so weak that the yeas and nays were not even called. Tha. senate struck out tho 6-franc subsidiary dollar and substituted for it another subsidiary coin, oalled the tradt dollar, containing 4JI grains of tstandard silver, and provided that it should be a legal tender to the amount of 15, and no more. A committee of confer ence was appointed, the senate amendment was agreed to, and the bill became a law by the approval of President Grant on the 12th day of Fetruary, 1S73. This brief historical statement of" the proceedings, which is fully sustained by the official record, shows that it was well understood In congress that the old standard sllvir dollar of 412'4 grains was not to be there after coined at our mints and that the only difference of opinion that ever ex isted, even temporarily, between the sen ate and house was whether they would substitute in its place a subsidiary coin containing 384 grains, or a subsidiary coin containing 420 grains of silver. No prop osition was made In either body to con tinue the coinage of the old dollar, or to make any silver coin the unit of value or a full legal tender in the payment of debts. No Silver In Circulation. The truth is that this act of 1873, which has been the subject of so much misap prehension and denunciation, was simply a legal recognition of a monetary condi tion which had existed In fact in this coun try for about thirty-five years, or ever since a short time after the passage of the coinage act of 1834. From about the year 1838 until after the pasage of the Bland Allison act in 1878, no silver dollars were in circulation In this country, and our whole currency consisted of gold coinB and bank notes, except from 1SC2 to 1S78, when our active circulation, outside of California and Its neighboring territory, was all paper. There was during the latter period about 125,000.000 In gold In circula tion on the Pacific coast, and the United States was collecting customs dues In gold and using it In the payment of inter- ' est on the public debt, but there was no silver in circulation anywhere in this coun try, not even the light-weight subsidiary coins. The value of the United States note or greenback was always measured by gold and not by silver, and the com modities had a gold price and a paper - price, but never a silver price, because silver, except the half-dollars, quartern, and dimes, coined under the act of 1853, had been out Of use here for more than twenty years before the commencement of the war, and even these subsidiary coins had not been In use for eleven years prior to 1873. Our own monetnry history bad already furnished two most striking Illustrations of the operation of the nat ural law under which the coins which are ' over-valued by statute always drives out of circulation the coins which are under valued. Our own experience had again demonstrated what the history . of the world already showed that whenever the coinage laws of any country permit the free coinage of both metals with full legal tender qualities at a ratio of value which does not conform substantially to tholr Intrinsic or commercial ratio in the mar kets of the world, both kinds of coin can ' not be kept In circulation at the same time, ' The reason Is that, both being full legal tender, .the least valuable coin will always be used in making payments, and will become the sole measure of value, and the most valuable will be hoarded or sent out of the country Into the markets where Its real value can be obtained. Enrly Coinage Legislation. Our first coinage law was passed In 1792, and It provided for full legal-tender gold and silver coins at the ratio of 15 to. 1; that Is to say, 16 pounds of silver were to be considered as equal In value to 1 pound of gold, and the weights were adjusted to that rule. In deciding upon . this ratio, . neither Mr. Hamilton, who recommended ". It. nor tho congress which adopted It, supposed they were arbitrarily establish ' Ing the relative value of the two. metals, for no legislative authority could do that, but it was supposed that they were simply adopting and utilising in the statute law the existing intrinsic or commercial ratio between them. A brief experience, how ever, showed that a mistake hod been mado, and the Inevitable result followed. It soon became evident that fifteen pounds of silver were not in fact equal In value to one pound of gold, and that no matter what words were printed in the statute book the people In the transaction of their business wholly disregarded the legal ratio and treated the metals accord ing to tholr relative commercial value, and that they would not exchange one pound of gold for llfteen pounds of sliver, either In coin or bullion, nor use gold coins as money when tho amount of bullion In the coin was worth in the market more than tho coin Itself. In short, silver had been over-valued and gold had been under valued In the law, and the consequence was that by the year 1812 gold had disap peared from tho country, and from that time on until tho passago of the act of 1834 the United States had practically silver monometallism. In May. 1805, President Jefferson stopped the coinage of the silver dollar, and durlntf a period of thirty-one years thereafter not a single standard silver dollar was coined at the mints of the United Stntes; but, under the act of 17!i2, the subslduuy coins were of full weight as compared with the dollar and wcio legal tender, and these coins, with Spanish dollars, French crowns or 5 franc pieces, and bank notes constituted our circulating medium. Gold having dis appeared from circulation, congress de termined, in 1834, to bring it back by changing tho ratio. The act of 1834, sup plemented by the uct of 1837. provided that the legal ratio should be hi to 1; that la, that 10 pounds of silver In the coins should be equal to 1 pound of gold In the coins, and tho effect of this was to drive silver out of circulation and substitute gold In Its place, because Bllver was under-valued and Mold was over-valued In the statute. One pound of gold, coined or uncolnod, was not,, '.n fact, worth Intrinsically or commercially IB pounds of silver, coined or uncoined, and, therefore, the coins of tho two metals could not circulate to gether at that ratio. The authors and supporters of this luw well knew what the effect of such a legal ratio would bo In caso It did not conform to the commer cial ratio, but the great object In view was the restoration of gold to the circula tion, and all other considerations were subordinate to that. Doubtless many of them still believed thut the so-called double Btundard could be maintained, and that tho coins of the two metals could be kept In circulation together at the new ratio; but they were mistaken. Silver went out and gold came In. The gold basis was established in 1S34, by the prac tical operation of the ratio, Just as com pletely nnd effectively as If It had been expressly declared in the statute. Herer then, were two experiments In the free coinage of the two metals in this country, covering a period of eighty-one years, at legal ratios very nearly corresponding to the real relative values In the commercial world, and they both failed 'n one case because silver was over-valued, and In the other case because gold was over valued. A very small percentage of differ ence between the legal ratio and the com mercial ratio has always been found suffi cient In modern times to drive the under valued metal entirely out and substitute the other, or paper based upon the other, in its place, and no congress or parliament can repeal or niter the natural law of trade by which this movement of the metals Is governed. In 18R3 congress. In order to maintain the circulation of subsidiary coins half dollars, quarters, and dimes reduced the weight of the metal contained in them and made them legal tender only in the payment of sums not exceeding 15 In amount. Tinder this act the value of the bullion contained In two half dollars, four quarters, or ten dimes was not equal to the value contained In either a gold or silver dollar, and. consequently these Bmall limited legal-tender coins went Into circu lation and remained In use until expelled by the cheaper paper currency Issued dur ing the war; not being full legal tender, they could not drive out the gold coins. Gold Our True Meo-uro of Value. This was the condition of our monetary system at the time the act of 1873 was passed. Our legal position was bimetal lic, but our actual measure of value was gold, and our actual circulating medium was paper, with a purchasing power measured by the gold standard. We had no silver and It had no Influence whatever on our prices, or on our ability to pay debts. The act of 1873, therefore, did not and could not take away from the people of the United States any advantage they then possessed, but It did prevent tha coinage of full legal-tender silver dollars thereafter, and the act of 1874 destroyed the debt-paying power of the old standard dollar coined before 1873, except In sums not exceeding J5. If there had been any such dollars In circulation or In existence here this latter act would have abridged the ability of debtors to discharge their obligations, but as there were none It had no practical effect at that time. Thus we remained until 1878. We had tried to keep the legal-tender coins of the two metals in circulation at the same time under a system of free coinage, but had utterly failed. In 1878 a new policy was adopted nnd It was determined to restore the standard silver dollar to ,the coinage and to circulation with full legal-tender qualities, not by opening the mints to its free and unlimited coinage on individual account, as is now proposed, but by pro viding for the purchase and coinage of not more than 14,000,000 worth nor less than S2,- 000,000 worth of silver bullion each month by the government Itself. Un der this act, and the so-called Sherman act, and the act providing for the recoln age of the trade dollars, there have been coined at the mints of the United States and put into circulation during seventeen years 1307.052,873 In full legal-tender stand ard sliver, as aga'nst $8,030,000 coined dur ing tho whole previous existence of the government a period of eighty-nine years. In other words, there have been coined and put Into circulation among the people. In coin Itself or In certificates issued upon it, nearly fifty times as many full legal tender silver dollars as were produded at the mints of iie United State's from 1792 to 1878. and yet some gentlemen are writ ing books and making speeches to con vince their fellow-citizens that silver Is demonetized in this country. There .was never In our whole history ono-thlrd as much legal-tender silver In use in tha United States at one time as there Is now, and It Is used without depriving us of all our gold, which was never done before. Silver Is not demonetized In this country, but its coinage has been so limited and regulatod by law and the financial affairs of the government have been so conducted that up to the present time Its purchasing power has been preserved and Its circula tion to a large amount has been main tained concurrently with other forms of money, notwithstanding It has been coined at a ratio which does not conform to the real value of the metal contained In It. I repeat that silver Is not demonetized, and the question presented to us by the agita tion now going on Is not whether It shall be demonetized In the future, but whether the mints of the United States shall be thrown open to all the silver In the world that any Individual or corporation may desire to have coined, freo of charge, into legal-tender dollars that Is, legal tender In the United States only at the ratio of 10 to 1. In order to discuss this subject intelligently wo must understand distinct ly what Is proposed by our opponents, and fortunately there Is no difficulty upon this point. . ' What Free Coinage Means. Free nnd unlimited coinage of full legal tender sliver dollars at the ratio of 10 to 1 means that our law shall be so changed that any owner of silver bullion may send It to the mints and 'have It coined, at the public expense, Into dollars each contain ing 412! grains of standard Bllver, the dollars when coined to be delivered to the owner of the bullion, and all the people of the United States to be compelled by law to receive them as dollars In the pay ment of debts, although not Intrinsically worth mora than 60 cents each. The 25 8-10 grains of standard gold contained In a gold dollar Is worth 100 cents, or the equivalent of 100 cents, all over the world, In silver-standard countries as well as In gold-Btandard countries, and It Is worth Just as' much before It Is coined as aftely wards ; but the 412V4 grains of standard sil ver contained in a silver dollar are not worth anywhere In the world more than about 60 cents.' Or, to put the state ment In a different form, 16 pounds of sil ver cannot be exohanged for 1 pound of gold anywhere In the world, but It requires about 32 pounds of sliver to procure 1 pound of gold everywhere. But some one may say that this Is not a fulr statement, because it measures the value of Bllver by gold. The answer to this objection Is that the statement does not attempt to measure the value of either of tho metals, but simply to compare them, one with the other, and that for the purpose of making the comparison the value of gold Is deter mined by its purchasing power In the markets of the world, and the value of sil ver Ib determined In the same way. Six teen pounds of Bllver bullion will purchase only about one-half the quantity of com modities anywhere than 1 pound of gold bullion will purchase, and ths purchasing power Is the true test of their actual and relative values. In the United States 18 pounds of silver, coined Into dollars, will now purchase as much as 1 pound of gold celns, but this would not be the case under a system of freo and unlimited coinage on Individual account. The coinage of sliver dollars here has been limited by law for the purpose of preventing an excessive is sue, and they have been coined by the government on ks own account and paid out for public purposes as dollars of full value, and consequently tho government Is bound by every consideration of good faith, to say nothing of the positive decla rations contained in the statutes, to keep them aa good as gold, or, in other words, to maintuln the parity of the two metals; and this it has done and will continue to do as king as tho present system exists. But, If the present system is to be abol ished and a new one established, so that private Individuals and corporations can have their own bullion coined at the pub lic expense and have the coins delivered to them fur their private use, the govern ment would be under no obligation what ever, legal or equitable, to keep them as good as gold, and, In fact, it would be Im possible for it to do bo, because the coin age would be unlimited and the volume of sliver In circulation would become so great In proportion to the gold the govern ment could procure that the attempt would necessarily fall. The most extreme advocates of free coinage have not yet ventured to suggest that the government would be under any obligation to guaran tee or maintain the value of silver dollars coined without charge for private parties, and without such guarantee It is clear the dollar would be worth no more than the commercial value of the bullion con ta'ned In It, Just as the Mexican dollar Is now. I admit that If the United States could coin wlthout charge to the owners all the sliver In tho world available for coinage purposes, 412'i grains of standard silver. In bullion, would be worth as much In this country as a silver dollar; but the real-question is, what would the sliver dol lar Itself be worth? That It will not be equal to our 'present unit and standard cf value Is not only admitted but openly urged as one of the chief arguments In favor of Its free coinage. Everywhere the people are being told that under free coinage It will require twice as many dol lars to procure any given quantity of com modities as are required now, and this means, of course, that the money will be only one-half as valuable as It is now. When the public judgment Is finally passed upon this subjeot I think It will be found that the people of the United States are determined, not to have a depreciated dollar, whether It be gold, sliver, or paper. They are undoubtedly entitled to have for use in their business just as good money as any other people in the world have, and no political party that attempts to de prive them of it will ever enjoy their con fidence or receive their suffrages. Soys Ho Is Friendly to Silver. Those who oppose the free coinage of silver at the ratio of 16 to 1 are proposing no change In the measure or standard of value now existing, nor are we proposing to discontinue the use of silver as money. I have never been, and am not now, un friendly to sliver In the sense of desiring to see it excluded from the monetary sys tem of the United States, or of any other country, but I know that It cannot be kept in circulation along with gold by means of any ratio the law of any one country may attempt to establish between the two metals, and that the only way to secure the use of both at the same time Is to make one of them the standard of value and so limit the coinage of the other that the government which Issues them and receives them for public dues may be able at all times to maintain their ex changeability, either directly or Indirectly through the operation of Its fiscal system. I am, therefore, In favor of the preserva tion of tho existing standard of 'value with such use of full legal tender silver coins, and paper convertible Into coin on demand, as can be maintained without Impairing or endangering the credit or debt-paying power of the money In the hands of the people. This Is what I mean by the terms "sound money," and, In my opinion. It is what Is meant by an over whelming majority or the opponenta of free coinage at the ratio of 16 to 1. This Is neither gold monometallism nor silver monometallism, but It means that one standard . or measure of value shall he maintained, and that all forms of stand ard coin's in use shall be kept equal to that standard. In the purchase of commodities and In the payment of debts. Any policy which would discontinue the use of silver as money, by direct legal enactment or by under-valuing It relatively to gold in the coinage laws, would certainly result In practical gold monometallism, and, on the other hand. It Is squallx clear that any policy which would discontinue the use of gold as money, by legal enactment or by under-valuing that metal relatively to sil ver In the coinage laws,' would result In practical silver monometallism. Free and unlimited coinage at the ratio of 16 to 1 would at once establish silver monometal lism, pure and simple, for, as already shown, the coins of the over-valued metal will ultimately drive the coins of the other out of circulation and out of the country, even when the legal ratio varies but a small fraction from the commercial ratio, but the ' expulsion of the under valued coin from circulation would be In stantaneous when Its value Is really double the value of the other. How long do you suppose the (626,000,000 of gold In this country could remain here and be used as money under such a policy T The bank ing and other great financial Institutions, which own and .hold In their reserves much the greater part of this gold, would at once sell It at a large premium for silver about two dollars for one dollar or they wouiu exenange it (or silver bullion In the market at the ratio of about 82 pounds of sliver for each 1 pound of gold, have the 22 pounda of silver coined Into dollars at the expense of the people, and with this cheap money pay the demands of their de positors and other orcditors. The masses of the people cannot do this, for they have no gold nor have they any silver bullion to be coined at. the expense of the gov ernment. . ' Would Moan Repudiation. But It Is said that although the masses of the people have no bullion, many of them are in dobt and that the free coinage of silver would Increase prices and give them more money, thus enabling them to discharge their obligations more easily. The merit of this argument will be judged by each Individual aocordlng to. the view which he may take of the nature of his obligations to the people who have loaned money or sold property to him. If a man who has borrowed a thousand dollars In gold, or Its equivalent, and has promised to pay It, or has purchased a thousand dollars' worth of another man's prop erty and promised to pay for It In the standard money. recognised by law at the date of his contract, believes that It would be Just and honest to discharge his obliga tion In a new standard worth .only half as much as the money he borrowed or the property he purchaser, he would appre ciate and Indorse this argument and It would be useless to discuss the question with him. .But if , aa I have already en deavored to show, the Immediate effect of the adoption of a free-coinage policy at the ratio of 16 to 1 would be to contract the currency to the extent of about $G25, 000,000, by the withdrawal of that amount of gold from circulation and from use as the basis of notes and other forms of credit, prices would not even nominally advance. On the contrary, for the time being at least, this contraction would greatly reduce prices because It would alarm tb country, destroy credit, and un doubtedly produce the most serious finan cial disturbance this country has svor wit nessed. Every t depositor In the savings and other banks, fearing that he would ultimately be paid In depreciated sliver, would Immediately demand the return of his money and this would compel the banks to call at once for the payment of all the notes and other securities they nnd discounted for their customers, and the contraction of the currency would cause an Increased demand for ourrency at tho very time when It could not be obtained, and thus the difficulty of the situation would be Increased by both causes. The banks would be compelled te either sus pend payments themselves or drive their customers, who are generally business men the men who give employment to labor In every ' community Into bank ruptcy at once. Who would profit by this condition of affairs? Nobody except the holders of gold and the otyners of sliver mines, (he holders of sllvor bullion and the brokers and speculators In the stocks of silver mining companies. The people who owe debts and are unable to pay them would be the ones .to suffer most, while the people who owe no debts and have money on hand would be the ones to profit most. Every .man In debt would be called upon to pay It promptly when due; thore would be no more extensions of old debts, or any new credits given, 'because no man could foretell what the money would be worth at any time In tho future. In this crash the laborer would be thrown out o( employment by tho failure or suspension of his employer, the farmer would receive less real money for his products, property would be sold at low rates under judicial proceedings all over the country, credit would be destroyed, and all Industrial and commercial enterprises would stand still, awaiting the result of the new experiment with the monetary system. Of course a great country like this, rich in natural re sources, would ultimately recover In some measure from even such a disaster, but how long a time would be required to do so no man can predict. All the mints cf the United States, If devoted entirely to the colnago of silver dollars, could pro duce only about forty million dollars per annum, and, therefore, with free coin age It would require more than fifteen years to put silver dollars In the place of the gold we now have and give back to the country the same amount of metallic money now existing. But. In the mean time, We would have a depreciated stand ard of value with nominally higher prices after the first collapse was over on ac count of tho reduced ptirchastng power of the dollar, and at the same time we would have for a long time fewer dollars to pay with.' Common prudence would dictate that, when any considerable change Is to be made In our monetary system, some provision should be made In advance of the actual change for a gradual transi tion from the old to the new order of things; a transition period should be pro vided for so as to avoid, as far as possible, a sudden disturbance of business and con traction of the currency; but the advo cates of free coinage have no such pur pose. They propose to make a sudden and revolutionary change In the standard upon which all existing contracts of the people are based and by which all values are. measured, and let the consequences take care of themselves. Other Effects of Free Colnago. But, suppose the change Is made, and that the business affairs of the country have been finally adjusted to tho new standard, what will be the effect on our domestic trade? The' prices of all things will be nominally increased that Is to say. It will require a greater number of dol lars to purchase a given amount of any commodity than It required before. There appears to be a singular delusion In the minds of some upon this subject. Many good people appear to think that In some mysterious manner, which no one has yet attempted to explain, the government, by legislation or otherwise, can Increase the prices of the things they have to sell with out Increasing the prices of the things they have to buy. If there Is any finan cial necromancy by which this one-Bided Increase of prices can be accomplished, our free-coinage friends ought to explain It to the people. The plain, cvery-day, common-sense view of this subject is the only correct one. If prices are Increased solely on account of an Increase In the volume of circulation, or on account of a depreciation of the currency, without any change In tho relation between the supply and demand of the commodities to be exchanged, the Increase In prices will nec essarily affect all things alike. Jf, there fore, the farmer or planter receives a greater number of dollars for his crop of cotton or wheat, he will be compelled to pay a correspondingly greater number of dollars for his agricultural Implements, for his groceries, for his clothing, and. In short, for everything he purchases. Con sequently, his profit, If ho has any, will bear about the same relation to his expen ditures that It bears now that is to say, if he now makes a profit of 10 per cent, he will make a profit of no more than 10 per cent. then. Now it Is out of the clear profits of his business that he must pay his debts, and it therefore remains to be Been how much benefit he would ultimate ly derive from a nominal Increase In the prices of commodities. He cannot con trol the prices of the commodities pro duced by him to the same extent that other producers can control the prices of theirs, and It may be that the prices of the things he Is compelled to buy will be In creased in much greater proportion than the prices of the things he has to sell, and If so, he will be a loBor Instead of a gainer by the change. Silver and Prices. It Is contended, however, that prices cf commodities have fallen since 1873, and that this reduction of prices has mado It more difficult to pay debts now than It was then. It Is true that the prices of some things have fallen, but It Is equally true that the prices of some things have Increased. It Is not true, however, that our people owe any debts contracted as far back as 1873, but It may be that some of our great corporations which Issued bonds before that date still owe them, but they have all been refunded at a low rate of Interest, so that our free-coinage friends need not be disturbed on their account. The fundamental proposition of the ad vocates of free coinage Is that all values are measured and all prlqcs are fixed and regulated by the amount of redemption mojney In ' the country, ' and that the amount of paper currency, or credit money, as It Is sometimes called, such as bank notes, government notes, and other circulating media, exert no Influence on the values or prices of commodities. Hav Ing dogmatically asserted this principle, they proceed without, further 'argument to the conclusion that the legal demonet isation of sliver In 1873 and the legal es tablishment of the gold standard of value at that time are- the causes of the alleged decline In the prices of com modities In this country, and then, upon the theory that high prices for the neces saries of life would be a- blessing to the people, they appeal to the consumers of agricultural and manufactured products to unite with them In the effort to secure the free and unlimited coinage of all the silver that the owners of bullion may see proper to present at the mints. Even If we should admit the truth of their first proposition, their conclusion that the de monetization of silver reduced prices is founded upon the assumption of a fact which cannot be established. They have wholly failed to allege, much less to prove, that silver actually constituted any part of the redemption money in use or In ex istence In this country before or at tha tlme of that legislation. If It did not, then It Is clear that Us legal demonetisation did not and could not In fact reduce the amount of such money In this country, and therefore cannot have reduced prices. It Is well known personally to every gen tleman In this audience who was old enough to know what was transpiring in 1878 that there was not a dollar of silver In circulation at that date. The assumption upon which the argument Is based Ib diametrically opposed to the historical and official fact. The only metallic or re demption money in use here at that time was gold, which amounted to only $135, 000,000, Including what the government was using, whereas we now have about 1625, 000,000 In gold, and 3J7.652,873 in full legal tender silver, besides about 877,000,000 In subsidiary silver coin. If, therefore, prices have fallen since 1878, the decline has taken place In spite of the fact that our full lugal-tendor metallic money has been increased until it now amounts to more than seven times as much as it did at that date, and consequently the alleged decline In prlcos must be attributed to some other cause than the demonetization of sllvor. These facts prove not only that the de monetization of silver did not reduce the amount of redumption monoy In this coun try, but they prove alBO that the funda mental proposition of the advocates of free colnugo Is orroneous and that prices are not fixed or regulated by the amount of redemption monoy alone, for, If so, prices should have Increased since 1873. False Assumption of Facts. Substantially, the whole argument for free coinage, so far as It Is addressed to the honest people of the country, Is based upon this flimsy foundation, upon an er roneous principle and a false assumption of facts. That the amount of money in circulation, or available for circulation, has more or less Influence upon the prices of commodities Is not disputed by any body, but It Is not the amount of metallic or redemption money alono that exerts this Influence. If all other conditions re main the same. If the relations between supply and demand are unchanged. If the cost of production, transportation,' and financial exchanges are stable, an In crease or decrease of the currency In cir culation, or available for circulation, will, to a certain extent, increase or decrease prices, as the caso may be; but by the terms "money" and "currency," In this connection, ' I meun every element that enters Into and Is utilized In the compli cated processes of buying and selling In the markets for products in the' mercan tile exchanges, whether It be gold, sliver, bank notes, United States notes, checks, bills, or other forms of credit, written or unwritten. Credit or confidence Is an ele ment of far greater Importance In fixing or upholding prices than the mere amount of actual money In use, or available for use; and, In fact, about 95 per cent, of the entire business of the country Is transacted without .the actual use of metallic money, or Its paper representa tives; and as to metallic money Itself, whether In gold or silver, it Is not used to the extent of more than 1 per cent. In our business transactions. In view of these facts, which are as well established as any other facts relating to our commercial and financial operations, how absurd it la to contend that prices are fixed by the amount of that particular kind of currency which does not constitute more than one hundredth part of thai whole. In the broadest and most comprehensive Benso the business capacity and personal Integ rity of each individual constitute a part of the effectlvo currency of the community In which he lives, because those character istics enable him to become a .purchaser of the commodities it has to sell, although, at the time, he may have neither money nor property. Credit Is a purchasing power, and the man who possesses it com petes In the markets with the men who possess actual money, and contributes as much as they to the maintenance of prices. To assert that prices are fixed by the amount of redemption money alono Is equivalent to the assertion that If all the silver dollars,' subsidiary silver coin, sil ver certificates, United States notes, treas ury notes, national bank notes, and every other form of credit were destroyed, leav ing nothing but the gold, prices would re main the same as they now ar'e a proposi tion so preposterous upon its face that I presume no man with any regard for his reputation would venture to make It ex cept In a disguised form. The Caso of the Wage-Earner. The great majority of our people render service for wages in one form or another and they are compelled to purchase In tho markets everything they eat, drink or wear, and in most cases they are com pelled to pay rent for the use of a home for themselves and their .families. Like the farmers, they have no silver bullion to carry to the mints to be coined at the public expense; they have nothing to dis pose of but their labor and their skill, and as a general rule all, or substantially all, the wages they receive must be used In procuring commodities for the personal use of themselves and those dependent upon them. They cannot eat, drink, or wear the money paid to them for their labor, and it Ib valuable to them only be cause they can exchange It for the neces saries and comforts of life; and there never was a time In the history of the world when the worklngman's dollar would buy as much of the necessaries and comforts of life as It will buy now, and there never was a time in the history of the world when the worklngman received more good dollars for the same amount of labor than he receives now in this country. Any policy which reduces the value of this dollar on the day It Is earned or on the day It Is expended, by diminish ing Its purchasing power in the markets, has precisely the same effect upon the holder as If the amount paid for his labor were reduced. If, therefore, the favorite argument of the advocates of free coinage that the free coinage of silver at tho ratio of 16 to 1 would double the prices of all products is correct, the wages of the laboring man would purchase under that system only one-half what they purchase now. This would undoubtedly be the case unless wages should also be doubled, which, according to the uniform experi ence of the post, Is a most Improbable thing. For more than a quarter of a cen tury tho working people of the United States have struggled earnestly and per sistently, through their labor organiza tions and otherwise, to Increase their wages to a point which would enable them to live decently and comfortably by ex pending their earnings for commodities at their present prices, and how long do you think they would have to struggle In the future to raise their wages to a point which would enable them to purchase the same articles when tholr prices have been doubled? No man In this audience will live to see such a result accomplished, and the laboring man who supports the free coinage of depreciated Bllver dollars must be content to live and support hlB family upon what depreciated sliver dollars will buy. My position upon this subject Is that when the laborer receives a dollar on account of bis wages he has a right to be assured that It will purchase as much In the market as any other man's dollar, or If he desires to lay It up for use in a time of need he has a right to be assured that It will be worth as much when ha wants to spend It as It was worth on the day he earned It. Tho Poller Would Ho Debased. But, gentlemen, the free and unlimited coinage of sliver would not secure for the use of the people at any time any addition to their stock of actual money, but would simply give them less valuable money than they have now. To call a 10-cent piece a dollar and declare It to be the standard of value would add nothing whatever to Its purchasing power; It would still require ten of them to purchase what a real dollar will purchase now, ahd prices of commodities expressed In dol lars would appear to have been Increased ten-fold, when, In fact, nothing would have happened except the debasement of the dollar. An actual Increase In prices resulting from an increase In the volume of sound money In circulation Is quite a different thing from a nominal Increase of prices resulting from the ubs of a de preciated currency, and no argument upon the subject of prices can be found that does not recognize the distinction between them. The proposition of our free-coinage friends Is to double prices nominally, but at the same time to have thorn paid in money Intrinsically worth only one-half as much as It was before the prices were doubled, and I confess my Inability to see how this would help anybody. You have been detained too long al- ' ' f ' ready, but In view of the determination exhibited In some quarters to criticise my personal record upon this question rather than answer my arguments, I think my old friends here at my home have a right to expect at least a brief reference to that subject. It Is proper. In the first place, to say that my opposition to free coinage Is not dictated by any prejudice against the use ' of silver as the standard of value merely because it is silver, nor by any preference for the use of gold as the stand ard merely because It Is gold, for. If the conditions now existing were reversed. If silver was our standard of value and gold was depreciated In value as Bllver now Is, I would be as much opposed to a change from silver to gold as I am now to a ohango from gold to sliver. The preser vation of the existing monetary unit and measure of value upon which the con tracts of the people have been made and the wnes of labor have been adjusted Is the vital thing Involved In this contro versy, for If the standard Is preserved ev erybody Is wil'li.g to uso and will use eve; y available form of currency that - can bo kept equal to it in value. As long us there appeared lo be reasonablo ground for the hope that silver could be raised to a parity of value with gold at the ratio of 16 to 1 by the separate action of the United States, I was willing to make the experi ment, but I was never willing to make it by legislation providing for tho free and unlimited coinage of silver at that or any other ratio. The only speech I ever made In congress on this Bubject was delivered In tho house of representatives more than seventeen years ago, at a time when the value of the bullion contained In a silver dollar was only about 7 cents less than the value of the bullion contained In a golJ dollar, and I, together with many other op ponents of free coinage, believing that a restoration of silver to our mints would bring it to a parity with gold, supported a measure providing for the limited coinage of silver dollars on government account, not on account of private individuals and corporations as Is now proposed. Tho Lesson of Experience. Fifteen years' experience, however, dem onstrated that those of us who believed In 1878 that a lnrger uso of Bllver by the United States would enhunce Its price or valuo were mistaken. Instead of Increas ing the price of silver, it continued to fall with greater rapidity than before, not withstanding oil the efforts made by our government to uphold It, until now the bullion contained In a silver dollar Ib worth only about half as much as the bullion contained in a gold dollar. The conditions have entirely changed since 1878, and I do not understand that even our free-coinage friends in Kentucky place sliver on a parity with gold at the ratio of 18 to 1. On tho contrary, they Insist that the free and unlimited colnnge of r.ll ver at that ratio would give the people cheap money, and I agree with them that It would have that effect, but It would not be cheep money If It were equal In value to gold. The speech made by me on the occasion referred to has been garbled and twisted and perverted In and out of con gress during the past two years with a malicious ingenuity which has scarcely ever been equalled In the discussion of a public question, and yet no one has even ventured to make the direct assertion that it contained a single word In favor of the free coinage of silver. It wns, In fact, made In opposition to free colnago and In support of the senate substitute for a freo coinage bill, as can be seen by any one who will take the trouble to read It. Cer tain sentences, in which I denounced In strong language the attempt to-"destroy" silver as a money metal, have been sep arated from their context and quoted again and again In congress, on the stump, and In the newspapers by men who never read the speech and who appear wholly Incapable of understanding the difference between the total disuse of that metal ns money and Its free and unlimited coinage at the public expense for the benefit of pri vate individuals and corporations. Some of the opinions then expressed have been modified and some of them have been changed altogether by subsequent events and by a more thorough Investigation of the subjects to which they related; but on the question of free coinage my convic tions have never been shaken for a moment. THE DEBTS OF EUROPE. Every Child Born In France Is 922 1-2 Francs Worso Off Than Nothing Other Great Burdens. From the New York World. It will probably be news to most people that, according to the latest statistics, ev ery baby born In France Is, from the very hour of its birth, 922 francs 60 centimes in debt. The national debt of France Is greater than that of any other country In the world, amounting In round numbers to 35,425,000,000 francs, of which about 4.000,000,000 are departmental or communal dobts, while the rest, strictly speaking. Is owed by the state itself, of which each of the 38,250,000 Inhabitants Is a part. After France the gay nation of Portugal has the largest per capita debt, each little Portuguese being 009 francs worse off than nothing when It comes into the world, while every subject of King Humbert, of Italy, Is burdened with 405 francs of na tional obligations. It may be thought that, as France carries a heavier financial bur den than any other country. It Is nearer the verge of ruin. But figures, which are said not to lie, are sometimes deceiving. Italy and Portugal, though their national debts are much less, are more nearly In solvent, for they are almost entirely in debted to other countries, while the peo ple of France are tho creditors of the nation. The German debt is only 2,131,000,000 francs, many times less than that of France. Tho French pay an average of 88 francs 20 centimes per capita In taxes for the Bupport of the government, while the German contribution Is but 44 francs for each Individual. This Is accounted for by the fact that It costs the French people 377,000 francs per hour to be gov erned, while the monarchlal machinery of Germany Is much less expensive. An other reason Is the constant and rapid In crease of population in Germany, despite the steady and enormous emigration. Statistics show that the Germans are the most and the French tho least prolific peo ples of Europe. The French are a nation of stay-at-homes, and do not adapt them selves in foreign lands so easily as the QermanB, yet their population, Instead of Increasing, Is slowly diminishing. When Dr. Roux's discovery of antitoxin as an antidote for diphtheria was made public he was hailed as the greatest benefactor of hlB age, as 3.0 per cent, of the popula tion of France fall each year victims to that disease, and the saving of bo many lives means that the population will begin to Increase, or at least hold Its own. Morton's Steady Job. From the St, Louis Globe-Democrat. It Is about time for Secretary Morton to take an hour off and solve the currency problem again. Qilmore's Aromatic Wino A tonic for ladies. If yon are suffering from weakness; and feel exhausted and ner vous; are getting thin and all run down: Gilmore's Aro matic Wine will bring roses to your cheeks and restore you to flesh and plumpness. Mothers, use it , for your daughters. It is the best emilator and corrector far ailments peculiar to woman- hood. ' It promotes digestion, enriches the blood and gives lasting strength. ' Sold by Matthews Bros., Scranton. Wftv srsilssssssss mm UNEQUALLED AND UNRIVALLED PREPARATIONS FOR THE HARAND SCALP. hSUS!il01 from thB 8nih American palm tree. Free from mineral i ehemlcsl com ! ?' ...An ,nf"IWs cure for Haldness, alr-K.UIng, Dandruff, Thin or Delicate 5 if' K1"""' Tetter, and all dlwanmof tho Hair and Scalp. PiLS-CsntSTi Shampoo for beautifying the Hair) a delightful, eoel and refreshing Shampoo exquliilte odor. . All purchasers of tbo Paln-Crribti I'ref. ra tios are entitled to free treatment of the Scalp, Shampooing and Halr-Orossing.ataoy of our lialr-bresBlng Parlors. ' PAL M-CH Rl ST 1 CO . , PniXA. I'AHLOHfli 04 CHESTNUT ST. P. 8. Onr parlors are In charge of special lits on atrectlnns of the Hair and Scalu. All advice free. 5r Write for circular. our Hair DruMixrs call upn them ca make sppolatmetits by addressing MATTHEWS BROS., Sole Agents for Soranton. Moosic Powder Go Rooms 1 and 2 Commoiealth Bld'f, SCRANTON, PA. MINING and BLASTING POWDER MADE AT MOOSIC AND RUSH DALE WORKS. Lafflln & Rand Powder Co.'s, Orange Gun Powder Eloctrlo flatteries, Fuses for explod ing blasts, Safety Fuse and Repanno Chemical Co.'s HighExplosim SOFT SHELL CRABS Frog Legs, Lobsters, Large, Medium and Little Neck Clams and Oysters, PIERCE'S MARKET, PENN AVE. J (Action TO OUR PATRONS : Wushhurn-Croshy to. wish to assure their marry pat rons that they will, this yutr hold to their usual custom of milling STRICTLY OLD WHEAT until the new crop is fully cured. Newwhent is now upon the market, ana owing to the excessively dry weather many millers aro of the opinion that it Of already cured, and in proper condition for milling. "Washburn-Crosby Co. will tako no risks, and will allow the now wheat fully threw months to mature before grinding. This careful attentiou to every detail of milling has placed Wnshburn-Crosby Co.'s flour far above other brands. 1GARGEL Wholesale Agents. IRON A NO STEEL Bolts, Nuts, Bolt Bads, Turnbuckles, Washers, Riv. ets, Horse Nails, Files, Taps, Dies, Tools and Sup plies. Sail Duck for mine use in stock. SOFT - STEEL. - HORSE - SHOES, And a full stock of W agon Makers' Supplies, Wheels, Hubs, Rirns, Spakes, Shafts, Poles, Bows, etc, TTE1I ENDER SCRANTOIN, PA. - .:e' . : HE PROPS m TIES OAK BILL STUFF. IHE COF.IMOHW&ALTH LUF.1BER CO TELEPHONE 432. ' EVERY WOMAN BoatHSMsnssds s nllsblt, mthly, isgnlaUai bmsIcIm. Only kiralsss OS? Ito pnrsstdrup ssmiU ks BssdTlI 7a sst tn Ims, (! Dr. PcaFc Pennyroyal Pills Thar s sronpt, ssis sal esrtsss In malt Tk. rtonlne (Dr. Mtypsw ilssp. For SslsbyJOHN H. PHELPS, Sprue. Strsst, Soranton. Pa,- DR. E. GREWER, The Philadelphia Specialist, and his asso ciated staff of English and German physicians, are now permanently located at Old Postofflce Building, Corner Penn Avenue and Spruce Street, The doctor Is a graduae of the Univer sity of Pennsylvania, formerly domon strator of physiology and surgery at the Medico-Chlrurgical college of Philadel phia. His specialties are Chronio, Ner vous, Skin, Heart, Womb and Blood dls eases. DISEASES OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM The symptoms of which aro dlszlnesa.lack of confidence, sexual weakness In men and women, ball rising In throat, spots floating before the eyes, loss of memory, unable to concentrate the moid cn one subject, easily startled when suddenly spoken to, and dull distressed mind, which unfits them for performing tho actual du ties of life, making happiness impossible, distressing the action of the heart, caus ing flush of heat, depression of splrlts.ovll forebodings, cowardice, fear, dreams, mel ancholy, tire easy of company, feeling aa tired in the morning as when rotUHng, lack of energy, nervousnoss, trembMog, confusion of thought,depresslon, constipa tion, weakness of the limbs, etc. Those so affected should consult us Immediately ard be restored to perfect health. ' Lost Manhood Restored. Weakness of Young Men Cured. If you have been given up by your phy sician call upon the doctor and be exam d. He cures the worst cases of Ner vous Debility, Scrofula, Old Bores, Ca tarrh, Piles, Female Weakness, Affec tions of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, Asthma, Deafness, Tumors, Cancers andl Cripples of every description. Consultations free and strictly sacred! and confidents... Office hours daily frem t a.m. to 9 p.m. Bunday, to S. Enclose five 2-cent stamps for symtpom blanks and my book called "New Life." I will pay one thousand dollars In gold to anyone whom I cannot cure of EPI LEPTIC CONVULSIONS or FITS. ... . DR. E. GREWER, Old Post Office Building, corner Pen venue and Spruce street. SCRANTON. PA. ROOF THWWG AND MLDEHM6 All done away with by the use of HART MAN'S PATENT PAINT, which consist, of Ingredients well-known to all. It can be applied to tin, galvanized tin, sheet Iron roofs, also to brick dwellng, which will prevent absolutely any crumbling, crack ing or breaking of the brick. It will out last tinning or any kind by many years, and it's cost does not exceed one-fifth that of tho cost of tinning. Is sold by the Jos or pound. Contracts taken by ANTONIO HARTMATN. U7 Birch St 22 Ctmmonwealtu M Bld'g, Scranton, Pa. Pfcsrmsolst, Cor. Wyoming Avonus ana ;v GONNELL I (ML if- i: