THE BdtANTON TBITJTJNE- TTUDKESD AT MOHHTSTG, ATflGrUST 12, 1896. HOW FREE SILVER ; WORKS IN MEXICO Testiaoay of aa Anerlcaa Who Has ' lived There and Knows. HIGH PRICES IN LAND OP SILVER Free Coinage Below the Rio Graade Make the Cost of Living a Burden. Some Sample Quotations. City of Mexico.Aug. 11. To the editor of the Chicago Times-Herald: After reading various papers published In the eastern, middle and western parts of the United States I am lost in amaze ment at'the Ignorance and false state ments made In each and all of them In regard to Mexico and its so-called pros perity under the free silver standard. If some of these writers and free silver politicians who indulge in such flights of eloquence and oratory could live In this state of prosperity (?) and attempt to provide for the necessities and a very few comforts of life with these silver dollars they would soon long for a dol lar that would buy a dollars' worth of supplies. In the first place, we will say, for the Bake of comparison, that the salary re ceived here for a given class ot work Is the same as in the United States, and we wlil suppose it $73.. Out of this a man with a wife must live, dress, pay a possible physician's or dentist's bill, and provide for some other absolutely ne cessary expenses. We will not even consider pleasures. His house rent Is perhaps the most important Item, and for this $20 or $23 Is cheap, and that for a house that Is not a house at all, but only a succession of three or four con necting rooms, built around nn open court or "pntlo," which Is common lawn, playground and back yard for six or eight other families living under the same roof. - Then he liiist' furnish his house somewhat at least, he thinks so when he first arrives in this land with a sil ver lining. The average Mexican knows better. He does'not attempt to furnish. He has a bed, to be sure, a table and two chairs, and sometimes a wardrobe. An ordinary three-quarters Iron bed, painted blue, with here and there a high light of gold paint, with a woven wire mattress permanently clamped be tween, the head and foot boards, has cost him $18, and on this he has a mat tress fend pillows stuffed with wool or cotton which have cost him $1S more. He sleeps between blankets for which he has paid $6, or perhaps on one sheet that has cost him at the rate of 62 cents a "vara," with the blanket over him. SHOUT COMFORTS. The American does not consider this comfort, 'but still he buys the same, with the addition of extra sheets, and then feels that he has spent more than he can afford. The chairs, table and wardrobe he will buy of Mexican manufacture, the four pieces for pos sibly $33. or, if second hand, a little cheaper, but the cabinet-making will bo most Indifferent, and the material pine wood that has only been stained. He will also buy a skeleton washstand, that consists of a ring above for the bowl to sink In, a bracket for soap dish and a diminutive platform below for the pitcher, and a toilet set of white enameled Ironware, the whole The very cheapest ocstlng $71. All of the better grade furniture is imported and prices sky-high.' In ev ery one of your Sunday editions Is ad vertised very pretty- three-piece oak bedroom suits at from $15 to $30. That same furniture Sells here for $150 to $200, and, of course, Is considered very choice. " A carpet Is out of the question. Amer ican Ingrain sells for $1.25 to $2, Brus sels for $2.50 to $3, and this Is not a yard, but a "vara," which is but thirty three inches. Mexico, too manufactures carpets of an Inferior grade, the cheap est made being a kind of Ingrain for $1 a "vara." Can the average wage earner afford this? And now, the other side of the ques tion. Does this depreciation of silver protect the manufacturer, who can make carpet that sells for $1 a "vara". To be gin with, he imports all his looms and machinery in order to start business, paying nearly two of his silver dol lars for every dollar on the cost mark of the article purchased, and in addition to this, a heavy freight bill and custom duties, making a tremendous first cost. Wool for his looms is raised here, but Instead of being cheap, because Mexico has plenty of cheap money, the price Is- regulated by the price the "ran chero" can get for It in gold-using coun tries, and so the manufacturer pays two for one, also for his raw material. FOOD PRICES HIGH. But carpets, and even wardrobes, are luxuries we can do without with smil ing countenances, provided we have enough to eat and something to wear. So we put aside ambn- t the same time we put on our huui and go out to supply our larder. We choose a small "tlenda" on a side street, and with a Mexican friend as lntenpreter, ask for coffee but the price staggers us 60 cents a pound! Why the man Is crazy, he is Imposing on us this is the land of coffee and one of the chief products of the country! We remonstrate, ask htm "Why it is?" and he blandly tells us the foreign market fixes the price. So we take one pound with the reflection that weak coffee Is certainly less harmful for the nerves, and It will without doubt last twice as long. We next price but ter. -"The best?" "Yes, certainly." Seventy-five cents, and the price never varies. We decide the best is far too expensive for our silver dollars, and in quire for something good, but without the superlative degree, In "centavos," and are finally provided with a pound of unsalted butter for 66 cents, the cheapest article in the market, with the price ranging between CO and 60 cents the year round. Ham and bacon. We learn,' are for the rich only, selling for 36 cents a pound, and lard at 24 cents a pound. We ac cordingly drop them from our bill of fare. Bread costs 12 cents a loaf, and the ordinary French roll 2 cents apiece. The loaf is small and proves by future experience to be insufficient for two peo ple three times a. day, so that to keep the bread limit at 12 cents we develop a fondness for rolls. Milk is more rea sonable and sells for 10 cents a quart, or 16 cents a quart. The 10-cent quality Is water-and milk, that for 16 cents a quart is milk and water the distinction Is not made, ot course, but there Is milk and milk here, Just as there is in all other countries. . We are discouraged, but are reminded a we leave the store that night Is com ing; on, and Mexico, with all its pros perity, has not reached the point of gas or electric light, except for the main ..business portions of the city and our lamp must be filled. We go back, and after much discussion, purchase a quart glass bottle for 6 cents and have It filled with etrollo1' for It cents,, and we later discover this, to be quit the usual war of buying coal oil. On passing the meatshops we stop to Inquire prices, and find rib beef and mutton worth 18 cents a pound; pork, 20 cents, and scrap meat for soup, 10 to 12 cents. We will certainly cultivate a soup diet. ' TWO PRICES FOR CLOTHNG. With the conviction forced upon as that In time we would surely be com pelled to buy clothes, we went shop ping one day, to find how much a sil ver dollar would buy in that line. Of course, all the imported materials, ana by far the greater part of these stocks are Imported, were a little more than double the foreign price, with the duty and transportation added; but even the domestic manufactured goods were out of all proportion to what the man earns who must buy them. The least expen sive cotton goods, that we could or would wear, cost 27 cents a "vara," and from that on up to 40 cents. Mus lin, for underwear, 18 cents a "vara" if of narrow width, to 35 cents when wider, and of better quality, such as the ordinary Lonsdale muslin with us, which Avould brlnff the simplest gar ments up to a very respectable figure for a $75 salary. One could not help but wonder how the very poor are even partly clad In the rags we find them In. On going to the "plaza," or market, where nil the "Deans" do their buying, and where the cheapest of all things are sold, the bottom price on cotton goods was 9 cents a "vara" for an un bleached muslin, so poor as o be scarce ly worth making ui. The next grades were 12 and 13 cents, which would be much more economical In the end. The cheapest calicoes were 13 cents a "vara" and of the coarsest quality im aginable. And again we wondered, how does the day laborer, on 37 cents a day, keep himself, wife and children covered with either muslin or calico at these prices? Of the vast army of household ser vants the women receive $4 a month and the men about $3. The street car driver makes 75 cents a day, the con ductor $1, and the average Mexlcun clerk. In store or office, $35 to $55 a month. A man on $100 salary has a bonanza that he clings to for a lifetime. If salaries and prices wore on any thing like equal ratio, free coined sil ver dollars would doubtless be as ac ceptable as any other kind of exchange, but after twelve months' experience with them, on the most economical basis, one finds there is very little left for a rainy day. A. C. THIEF SAYS HE WAS HYPNOTIZED. Strange Defense Made by n Itobbcr iu Court nt Kenosha. Wis. Kenosha, Wis., Aug. 11 Josheph Schinoaha, who was before Justice J. C. Slater to-day on a charge of steal ing the horse of Nick Thomas last Monday, told the justice a strange story about how he came to commit the crime. It reads like a chapter In hypnotism. Last Monday, he Fays, a young man, a total stranger, ordered him to go to a stable belonging to Nicholas Thomas, four miles from Kenosha, and get a horse and buggy. Althoush conscious that he was com mitting a crime, he pay he could not resist the suggestion of the stranger, and accordingly took from the stable the best horse, harness and carriage! ho could find. He and the stranger then took the road to Fond du Lac, the stranger committing thefts along the way. In the town of Ashford, Fond du Lac county, Schlnoaha's companion entered the house of Orson Hull and fitole a watch ami several other arti cles and then decamped. Schinoaha describes his partner ai a man not much over 20 years of age, about 5 feet 8 Inches tall, with sandy hair and mustache. Schinoaha waived preliminary examination and was bound over to the circuit court. Ills bonds were fixed at $700. HAS FOURTEEN WIVES LIVINQ. New York Man Taken to the Tombs to Cogitate on His Condition. New York, Aug., 11 George Meyers, alias Miller, alias Muffler, alias Auer, lias Schwartz, was released from the penitentiary this morning and taken to the Tombs, where he ,wlll await trial on numerous charges of bigamy, which have been brought against him. Here is a list of his living and undlvorced wives, all of this city: Minnie Papke, Lizzie Auer,' Anna Flcken, tinra Huber. Kate Huber, Mrs. Kamlttes, Frieda Kelffer, Josephine Krauss, 1'auline I'ollach, Marie flehlller, Mrs. Suhipperle, iWllhelmlna Behaef fer, Lena Schmidt, Carrie Schwartz. Meyer, who is about 60 years of age, made a practice of marrying women who had a little money. After robbing them he would look for new victims. TRAMPS MAY HAVE KILLED HER. Wife of nn Illinois Editor Lost in a Mysterious Manner. Aurora, 111., Aug. 11. Frank Marley, editor and proprietor of the Batavia, 111., Herald, Is completely prostrated by the mysterious disapeparance of his wife, who left her home Thursday morn ing, and has not been seen since. Until yesterday Mr. Marley supposed that she was with her parents In Piano, as she had Intended attending the harvest pic nic in that city Thursday. It has since been discovered that she started toward Aurora on her wheel Thursday morning, probably to take the Piano train at Aurora. Her friends fear she was overcome by the heat and wandered off, or was foully dealt with. An Art Connoisseur. Madame goes with her maid to purchase a still-life picture of her dining-room. She selects at the picture-dealer's a painting representing a bouquet of flowers, with a pie cut Into, and a half-penny roll. She paid G00 francs for the lot. "Madame," whispered the bonne, "you have made a bad bargain, let me tell you, I saw a picture like that sold for 400 francs." "And was It as good as this one?" "Of course, it was; there was a lot more pie!" Moniteur Oriental. A Question of Environment "Do you mean to assert," said the man who gets excited over polities, "that your candidate la a better man than mine?" "It all depends on circumstances,' was the cautious reply. "I'm willing to give every man credit for some superiority. If you get 'em side by side In an experience meeting during a revival I guess mebbe you'd have the best of it. But when It comes to a primary caucus my man 'ud 'have you snowed under in no time," Washington Star. The Other Side of It. Father "To write on paper with a real crest on it. to parade at S'te dinners where sycophants are fed, to give money to a man- whom you secretly loathe, but have married because he Is a so-called no bleman bah I Do you call that happi ness?" Daughter "But think how unhappy 1 would be if I didn't get him." New York Herald. After the Battle. He 'Well, I know one girl that is willing to marry me." She "Why. you'd make a good detec tive." Uf A' cold dollar weighs 25.8 grains, of which nine-tenths or 23.22 grains are pure gold, the remainder alloy. A silver dollar weighs 412.5 grains, of which nine-tenths or 371.25 grains) are pure silver, the remainder alloy. The division ot the figure of weight of pure silver in a sliver dollar by those of pure gold in a gold dollar gives 15.D8 practically 16 hence the ratio between the two metals for oo4ruage purposes; that is, the weight of the silver exceeds the weight of thie gold in the respective dollar coins by 16. The proposition for free and unlimited coinage com prehends the right of any owner -of silver bullion to take the same to the mint, receiving therefor, free of mintage cost, $1 for each 371.25 grains of sliver, wlikh dollar would be a lega.1 tender for all debts publio and private. On a basis of commodity price, measured In the terms of commercial value of the great cIvlBzed nations of the earth, 371.25 grains of silver bullion are worth today some 54 cents; 23.22 grain of gold have a bul lion or commercial value of 100 cents, or $1. The present silver dollar passes at par with gold today because the whole credit of the govern ment is pledged to maintain each and every dollar as good aa any and all Issued under its authority. The difficulty of such maintenance is one of the main reasons for the heavy increase of bonded debt of the country, gold! having to be obtained from abroad In order to uphold the millions of silver coined since the so-called "crime of 1873" at a parity with gold. While the government maintains such a parity, it Is not a question of intrinsic value of the coin. The free and unlimited coinage of silver proposes to abolish the existing gold Standard of measurement of values, substituting therefor a new standard consist ing of the 371.25 grains silver dollar, to be coined from any and all sil ver mined in this or any country. In effect the- United States is called upon to impart a monetary value to silver nearly twice as great as Us commodity, commercial or bullion value. Apart from Its use as money the silver dollar has no greater value than that of the bullion contained in it, and the same Is true of the gold dollar, but the gold coin is counted at par, or 100 cents, in every commercial center of the world, save those of countries on a silver basis, where it commands a premium. The silver dollar on its in trinsic, or bullion, merits, commands but a few cents over 50. It la proposed that legislation shall give by Hat an. almost double value, meanwhile making It Circulate on equal terms with the go'.d dollar in performing monetary use. Reliance is placed on the supposed effect which the adoption of the silver standard will have on ths bullion value of silver the world over. It Is assumed that as soon as the United Slates government announces its readiness to piay a dollar for 371.25 grains of silver, the value of the latter must become a dollar In epite of other nation It Is argued that alone and unaided this government by flat can in crease the actual value of the commodity known as sliver. As this country will stand ready to coin all silver presented, no matter whare it was mined, the contention Is that the monetary value thereby Im ported will become the commodity value, and the world will have to follow. A new value or standard of moirey will be made, Just as If it were possible by fiat of one government to change the pound to twelve ounces, or the yard measure to thirty Inches ngrainst all others, who insist on the accepted standards in general use. Of course, If a man had bought goods at sixteen ounces to the pound or thirty-six inches to the yard, he might benefit by selling them at the new standards for the same money. In effect this Is Just what the free coinage of silver would accomplish the complete aggrandizement of a favored class against the great body of the people, to say nothing of the Inevitable confusion and disruption of trade. The main contention of the advocates of the free and unlimited coinage of silver at the 16 to 1 ratio, 13 that silver is defined as a money metal by the constitution, and thait It enjoyed freo coinage prior to 1S73, when they claimed It was demonetized. Now, e a fact, the value of the metal silver before the eo-cnlled "crime of 1873" was greater than the coinage value; that Is, the 371.25 grains specified as the pure bul lion In the silver dollar was worth more as merchandise or as a com modity than $1. As the silver was worth a few cents above $1, the coins went abroad. Their number was few. No silver-onvner cared to sell BRYAN AS A RINGMASTER, From the Times-Herald. Lincoln, Neb., July 26. The enthusi astic glee with which Mr. Bryan has exploited his nomination is a good deal like the noisy vociferation of the small boy with a new tor. The manner in which the youngest man who was ever nominated for president has conduct ed himself since his return home has Impressed upon his neighbors certain characteristics which were not so con spicuous before the melodramatic feat In Chicago. For six or seven years the people who have known Mr. Bryan have recognized in him a consummate actor. His star engagement of one day unsettled him, and now for a couple of weeks he haB been exposed to view in his true light. In all the hubbub and hurry since the singular gathering in Chicago Mr. Bryan has not thought of rehearsing. Ho has been too excited' to think of hiding himself under the cloak of art. He has appeared as he is. Mr. Bryan in his new role, realism itself, Is Interesting and to a certain ex tent attractive. Youthful enthusiasm and vigor when exhibited in any whole some form are always attractive. It is a pleasure to witness the small boy toot for the first time his new horn, or hold at arm's length In admiring contempla tion his new top, gaudy with color. One of the first things the boy does when he gets a new horn or a new top Is to call In his friends or go out and find them and tell them all about how he got tne bauble and what a fine thing it Is and what he is going to do with it, and this Is pleasant to witness also, for there is youthfullness and ingeniousness in tho spectacle. But Mr. Bryan In showing his youth has shown his bald Immatur icy. His immaturity as exhibited in the iaut two weeks is deep and expansive. If he is the youngest man ever nominat ed for president he Is also the most Im pulsive, restless, freakish, uncertain, undignified man ever named for the high of lice -of president by a great po litical party. All of the boyish traits and fidgety instincts of youth unformed are retained in this candidate, who in law, reached man's estate fifteen years ago. There is one element which great men possess In common that of re pose. Mr. Bryan is singularly lacking in this quality. He does not Impress people with the Idea that there Is re serve force back of his nervous energy. He seems to be a man of little self-restraint. He decides, but does not de liberate. The fleeting thought o' the moment Is his rule of action. His brain is active and the product is released at once for gratuitous distribution. Mr Bryan has been praised without stint, but it has never been said that he is cautious or conservative. Not many months ago some society people In Omaha gave an amateur cir cus performance in the great Coliseum In that city. Mr. Bryan was asked to take the showy part of ringmaster, and he consented. For two nights he ap peared before the wealth and beauty of Omaha in the traditional top boots and high hat of the master of the ring, and he cracked his whip In a way that made teamsters on the back seats salute him. He was an excellent ringmaster. Be sides standing on a platform and crack ing his whip hq, made Jokes, and he cracked his Jokes with the same facility that ho cracked his whip.. People said Mr. Bryan alone was worth the price of admission. Ho wns happy then, and all smiles, and when the people ap plauded his sallies he wns almost as pleased as he is now when the crowds cheer him. He entered into the circus project in the same headlong manner that he hns started In the race for the presidency. He cared nothing for dig nity or the fitness of things then. He cares nothing for these now. His ob ject was to create an effect then. Thnt is his object now. Close observers can not see that there is much dlferenee Iri the way he conducted- the circus and 1 lice li i By E.S. Crandon, Editor the way In which he is conducting his campoJgn. It may be that his circus experience in. Omaha is what caused him to request that the ceremony of notification be held in Madison Square Garden, New York, instead of at his home in this city. Mr. Bryan is honest, and his friends admire him for that and for his great gifts, but they have been surprised at the light manner with which he Is play ing with what seems. In his hnnds, a mere bauble, a nomination for the presidency of the United States. His picturesque trip from Salem to Lincoln, his repeated speeches, and continued publicity In advance of the official noti fication of the nomination, his boyish and Ill-considered phrases, nil mark him as an excited youth rather than an earnest man in training for the highest office in the gift of a great nation. There are other little things, not Important In themselves, that detract from the dignity and poise which should distin guish a man in Mr. Bryan's position. He is feverish In his haste. He is nerv ous and excitable. He is unable to stay In one place any length of time or con tinue at one task. He wants to be up and going to and fro. He wants to have a hand In all that Is doing. When he came home he was first man to appear on the platform of the car, and on the way from Salem to Lincoln he was gen erally out on the platform, hat In hand, and ready to speak at the little towns before the wheels had stopped turning. The next day after his arrival In this city he divested himself of his coat and vest and spent most of the time. In his negligee attire, in front of his house or around the neighborhood. When vis itors arrive from out of the city, Instead of receiving them quietly at bis resi dence, he makes a hurried trip down town, carrylnpr his wife with him, and holds a reception In a hotel. All of these things are, perhaps. In significant, and In no way affect the purity of his character, but Mr. Bryan's bearing Is not what we have learned to expect in the presidential candidates of great parties. The people here like Mr. Bryan, but he fails to command serious respect. Observing the traits which have been markedly prominent since he was made the nominee In Chicago, one seems to be forced to the conclusion that his personal qualities, admirable though they may be, are not such as to specially fit him for the discharge of the duties of chief executive of a nation of 70,000,000 of people. Youth is a fine thing, and it Is pood that youth hns so large a share in the government of this country. But In this nation, where po sitions of . Importance are given to young men, It is expected that they will exhibit a sobriety of thought and con duct. The late William K. Kursell was a young man, a. very young man when he was first elected governor of Massa chusetts, but he was always looked upen as a safe man. The public had confidence In his Judgment. There was no fear Of rash steps. Mr. Bryan In his private life is Just as exemplary ns was Mr. Russell. He has never- been ac cused of a dishonest act No taint or stain of reproach has ever attached to his reputation as a man. But In tem perament the boy orator Is exact!" the opposite of the boy governor. He Is lacking in those, qualities that made Russell a leader in the Democratic par ty while he was a boy In years. Itus sell was brave and daring and he had enthusiasm, hut he wns not Fnasmomc or fidgety. He had slf-polse, dignity and a certain amount of mental and physical reserve. He won -his laurels by the possession of many qualities of strength. Mr. Bryan wns nominated for president as the result of a few minutes of impassioned nnd reckless eloquence. Nebraskam flenntoriatl Courtesies. First Senator "I am always strongest In opposition." Second Senator "Yes, your" greatest speeches have teen against time.' Tratn. i fin ii of thd Boston Transcript. to the government for $1 what ho could get more for elsewhere. Con sequently the so-called demonetization was but the legal dropping ot a privilege which for years had possessed no value, and which at that ' time appeared as unnecessary and likely so to continue. Up to 1873 only 83,000.000 sliver dollars were coined. Since the "crime of 1873" the total of coinage of silver dollars under the Sherman act has reached $423. 000,000, beside 35,000,000 trade dollars. With the enormous increase in the production of silver In the- lost score of years, and particularly in the last half-dozen years, the value of the commodity has shrunk, reading nations were compelled to cla-e their mints to its coinage, and this country, in self-protection, had to repeal the Sherman law. The strain of maintaining a parity between gold and the immensely in creased product of silver on the old-time ratio was too great, and has brought the country to its' present unsatisfactory evils of depressed buslnesa Tho free coinage of the metal was a dead letter long before 1S73. The demand for its revival comes from the debtor class, which, by paying debts in a depreciated currency, would reap the reward from the creditors. As well provide by flat of government that contracts to sell wheat at sixty pounds to the bushel be fulfilled by payment of thlrty-pouid bushels. In each of the last three years tho total product of silver has been three times greater than the 1S73 product. Silver has depreciated, ottvlng to increased supply. Three hundred and seventy one and twenty-five one-hundredths grains of it are worth, say, 64 cents today, Instead of $1.03 in 1873, and yet the proposition la made to force the same amount of the metal to do a dollar's duty to bo the standard of value. This Is not bimetallism la the least degree; It Is silver monometallism, pure and simple, and that is Just what free and unllmiitd coinage of silver at 16 to 1 literally means, It Is admitted, even by the most ardent of the silver advocates, that free coinage would send gold to a premium. Our gold would' leave iw, and In settlement of International bulnnoea the more precious metal would have to be purchased at whatever premium the times demanded. The mere proposition has resulted in this state of things, that, while we exported In the fiscal year ended June 30, 1896, $102,800,000 more mer chandise than we "imported, yet we exported also $80,500,000 more gold than we Imported. The heavy liquidation by foreign holders of Amer ican securities by reason of our currency disorders and the threat of our going on a silver Imsis was responsible In great measure for. this anomaly. To ray no more of the effects of disturbing the vast, fabric of foreign trade, amounting in tho fiscal year Just ended to no less than $1,602,000,000, the total of values of our exports and imports, let . it be considered what the effect of the silver basis will be on the great est creditor class in the country the savings-bank depositors." Tho hundreds of millions of dollars In the savings bajiks of the country represent 100-cent dollars, deposited in good faith as such by the very bono and sinew of the country those who labor. These are the creditors who must suffer from a dishonest dollar the men and women whose thrift has enabled them to put by their savings in order to cam a small Interest, which savings are loaned to borrowers on mortgages, in many cases making creditors of the depositors. It is the savings-bank depositor, the government pensioner, the great army of tho Insured, the very people, who really constitute the creditor class, and who must suffer most of all from a policy of dishonest finance, of repudiation, of inflation and assured panic. To a large extent the rail way securities of the country are held by small Investors of compara tively small means, whose few thousand dollars . invested in bonds or stocks represents their all. As to the effort on wages, It Is quite plain that the adoption of the flat value standard would bring inflation In prices of commodities. The farmer might got $1 for his wheat, and other products, of course, would rise, as would prices of the necessaries of life generally. But exper ience has proved, nnd this Is a fundamental principle in political econo my, that wages rise Inst and decline first. The Idea that because he will get more wages he can afford to pay more may appeal to some worklngmen, but It requires little reflection to show that the unsettle nient Inseparable from tho process of readjustnwnt would be sure to affect him most of all. And in the Inevitable panlo which would follow such a period of Inflation the laboring man would be ground between the upper and the nether millstone. THE DAY OF SILVER HAS GONE FAR BY So Says One of the Most Careful ol American Economists. THE REASONS FOR SILVER'S DISUSE Hcnd of the Political Science Depart mcnt in Columbia College Says That Gold Must Be the Standard of All Money. New York, Aug. 11. ProfesTW r John W. Burgess, dean of the school of po litical science at Columbia college, now at his summer residence at Montpeller, Vt., has written nn able and concise statement of the silver question to Solo mon M. Strouk, of 62 and 64 William street. In reply to a letter arklng for light. The statement Is the result of careful and studious consideration of the subject, and will be read with Inter est. It Is as follows: "Bimetallism, In the sense of tho full and equal legal tender power of two metals. Is Impossible, nnd only the "federation ot the world" upon that subject can ninko It possible. In the present condition of the world, you must choose between tho gold or the silver standard. You cannot have both. We have been a gold standard nation for more than half n century. The act of 1873 only records In tho statue book what has existed ns a fact for nearly fqrty years. "The change from a gold to a silver standard now would. In my opinion, be one of the greatest disasters that has ever befallen this country. I think the first effect of It, nt the ratio proposed, would be a prompt and tremendous con traction of the currency. The whoio $600,000,000 of gold would disappear, and It would be a physical Impossibility to replace It, even nominally, with silver in ten years. rKR.IL FOR THE NATION. "t the Democrats or Populists win the control of the government nej:t No vember they can pass no law until a year later, unless summoned to extra session of congress, nnd that cannot be done for five months. That is, our for eign creditors will have from five months' to n year's notice to collect their debts In gold. Before the end of that period there would not be a gold dollar left In the country; and when the sllveritts should take up the reins they would find themselves confronted by this enormous contraction ot the circu lating medium, and would, without doubt, try to meet It by printing green backs, pure flat money. "Such a change would make tho mid dle nnd lower classes suffer for the benefit of the rich. The rich man holds property: Is, on the whole, a seiler and a debtor. The poor man holds little or no property: Is, on the whole, a buyer and a creditor. With flat money, in part or in full, propeity rises, products become dearer, and the debtor pays in cheaper money. The mistake usually made in reasoning on this subject is in considering the poor to be debtors, e cause the poor man holds little or no property he i -rded as a debtor. This is a great . ' in "I also object to the phrase 'free sil ver,' or the 'free coinage. of silver.' This word 'free' hypnotizes the American mind and leads it anywhere. The state ment of the present proposition should be 'the unlimited coinage of 53 cents' worth of silver into $1, on private ac count SILVER'S DAY HAS PASSED. "Neither am I of the opinion that bi metallism is the coming plan. I think the day of silver as full legal tender money has passed. Thirty thousand dollars worth of silver, 16 to 1, weighs about a ton. At Its real value It weighs nearly two tons. It is Impossible to use such a metal in the present volume and activity of the world's commerce, even by International agreement, without great loss. When commerce was unde veloped and every family produced, in kind, very nearly everything it con sumed, shells, tobacco, beaver skins, etc., would answer for currency. When It increased to a considerable degree then these things had to be laid aside, nnd copper, and then silver, put In their places. When It assumed its mammoth proportions of today a much more valu able metal became necessary. "No, my young friend, the future of sliver as money Is as a subsidiary coin. Gold must be the statldard of all money, and gold must be the money of the world's commerce. To my mind there Is but one way for the patriot and the wise man at the next election, and that is to vote the Republican ticket, both for president and members of congress." BIMETALLISM EXPLAINED. Ths Ileal Thing An Distinguished from the liogus. "At tho very outset, I want you to un derstand precisely what is propof-cd. You will hear a neat deal of talk about bi metallism. Tho system which is proposed by the Chicago convention is not bimetal lism. Bimetallism is an entirely different nffair. What Is the objnet of bimetallism? The object of It is to give to the currency greater stability by spreading it over more surface. "A very common Illustration of It Is this: If you have a lake anywhere and it is subject to all the peculiar Incidents of the res Ion In which it is the rainfall may lift it, droucht may lower it. Now, If you want a perfectly stable surface you have i;ot to get It by some appliance outside of the lake, "Suppose you can Join It to another lake In a different climate which Is dif ferently affected. If you Join them per fectly together then there will be the fame level In both lakes and the disturb ances In one hike will bo counterbalanced by the disturbances In the other lake and the tendency will be to have a steadier level. That will all be perfectly true pro vHed your two lakes do balance, and you get a more stable currency. "Now there Is some reason and sense in the Idea that the whole world. If they ook cold ond silver at a proper ratio. could preserve a greater level of prices. n firmer rnd more stable level of prices. This no single country could do." Tom Heed at Portland. WOUKIKti ANoITTdoDKE. 'An old mnn that I tif?d to know used to toll his shirt front constantly In tho cotirso of five or six wef k (laughter) and then he wore, in old-fashioned days, a dickey, nrd when the old man put that on you knew that the shirt below was not clean, Our democratic friends have soiled In four years the fronts of their shirts with frw trade, with Ihe repeal of the tloiirlne of reciprocity, end now they are trying to cover it up with a free silver dickey." Congressman W. E. Mason. HE HAD ENOUGH OF FREE SILVER .... . . The Sad Experience of a Bostoa Mai ii GaatefliaU. CAUGHT BY A Bid WAQES BAIT Seeking Home ia a Sick aaa Desti tute ConditionFailed to Fiaa Land of Milk aaa Honey ' Washington. Aug. 11. An emaciated, tallow-looking man. with straggling beard and wearing a ragged Spanish costume, including red leather boots, laced up In front, tottered into tho of fice of the sanitary officer at polio headquarters yesterday. He said he was a white man, although the fierce -sun of Central America had browned him to the color of a mullatto. He pro duced his passport from a port In Gua temala, Which showed that he was Wil liam Russell, twenty- six years of age. pal thought he appeared to be forty, and xnat ne was a native of Boston. He told a story of terrible suffering whllo in Guatemala, and was trying to reach his Boston home, and received assistance from the sanitary officer. Russell was sick and destitnte. and he attributed his sad plight to a life of one year In the free silver country of Guatemalla, saying his experience should sound a warning note, to the IS to 1 advocates In this country. ATTRACTED BY TUB WAGES. Russell said he wns a carpenter. On May 10, 1X95, he was working at his trade in New Orleans. At that time tho agents of the Panzos railroad, then being constructed In Guatemala, wero In New Orleans, engaging mechanics nnd laborers to work on the road. They offered $ per day for the services of mechanics, and stated that the cost of living In Guatemala was much lower than in the United States, and that Guatemala was a free sliver country, with plenty of money In circulation. Attracted by the wagea of $7 per day nnd the statements about the low cost of living and the plentttude of money, Russell shipped as a carpenter orf May 10, 1895. He was under the Impression that he was going to a land of milk and honey. After one year's experience In the land of free silver he found that hla dream had been rudely and sadly dis pelled. "I will tell you tho sort of cheap liv ing we found In that free silver country of Central America," said Russell. "Tho mechanical squad of which I was member was compelled to pay $1.25 for each scant meal of which It partook. This amount had to be forked over in advance at the gate of the dinner tent. The shibboleth was 'no money, no food,' and those who were unfortunate enough to be without cash went hungry. Th dinner consisted of fat pork or barreled corned beef, bread, Mexican beans and coffee. Such a meal aa could be pro cured here for 5 or 10 cents. Canned goods were extra. PAPER AND SILVER MONEY. "Now," continued Russell, "take three meals a day, at $1.23 each, front our daily pay of seven Guatemalan dol lars, and you can realise what the com mencement was In that land of milk and honey. Guatemala has for many years' been a glaring example of what free sil ver would do for a country. Paper money was put In circulation, with a sliver reserve and on a sliver basis, but it Is a well known fact that there are seven paper dollars to every silver one In reserve. The paper dollars there are not worth the paper they are printed on. You cannot purchase food from the Guatemalan natives with the paper cur rency. They would rather give you something to eat than accept the stuff backed by the alleged silver reserve. "In order to prevent the Americana employed on railroads and In other in dustries from bringing the Guatemalan silver dollars to this country the gov ernment stamps a mataeo (6-cent piece) across their faces. Thus stamped they would be regarded by American bankers as mutilated coin. This la done to force the Americans to ex change with Guatemalan money brok ers, who charge 10 per cent, in good money for the exchange. "That brings the Guatemalan silver dollar down to 35 cents in value. Then the redemption Is In American silver, which they rate as gold." A r?ONORAULE TRADE. Borrowing nnd Lending Both All Right If Honestly Done. Don't let U9 confuse this business of borrowing and lending by our little pri vate prejudices. I like to have the grocer furnish me with suitable food because I want to keep my present weight and fine ness. (Aplause.) Hut I don't have any feeling or personal satisfaction when I pay the bill. I like to have my tailor clothe me, and yet I hesitate a little bit, not Termanently, but I hesitate a little bit, about paying. Nevertheless I shall go on, and you will, buying food and clothing, and really It is just as much for my ad vantage as K Is for the advantage of the grocer and tailor. Hence we keep up pleasant relations, but the bills are really never pleasant. "Now, If I want money, nobody comes to take me by the throat and forces It on me. You have noticed that. (Ap plnuse.) They never do. You have to atrree to terms that ore suitable to them It you want their money. Thnt Is perfect ly natural, because money is pretty valu able. "If you have a thousand dollars that thousand dollars has the potentlnllty of a house, the potentiality of so many bush els nf wheat, the potentiality of so many pounds of beef, tho potentiality of every thing in the world. 1'Njr, m Carlisle says: 'When a man has sixpence, the world is his slnvc to the extent of six-pne.' "Rut when you have used your 11,000 and bought a house with it, the potential ity Is gone. You have got to wait until a mnn comes round thnt wants, not only a house, but Just thnt houso at your price, else you can't have the $1,000 hack again. "Hem-e a mnn Is not gorn to let you have money, unless he thinks ho is going to get it back." Tom Reed at Portland. IIEN-IIEADED VOTERS. "I remember to hove spoken here four years aso and I remember the difference between that meeting and thW. Everybody was nro'perou an-1 everybody was will ing to stay at home nnd let somebody else do the political work. The result was you know it without my telling you. Our Democratic frleflds came up here nnd told the farmers that you were poor, down trodden. God-forsaken people, nnd thai you sold your wheat too cheap. Then they came down Into this town and into Chica go and told us we were awfully unfor tunate, that we were down-trodden, and that we paid too much for things you sold too cheap. (Lauehter and applause.) And we believed It. We were Just hen-headed enough to believe It. (Laughter.) I say a mnn Is hen-headed when you can fool him twice with the same trick." Con gressman W. B. Mason. An American Hostler "Senator Erlce is a great society man and l!on hunter. Isn't he?" "I should sny so. If we were to go to war, he would have all the enemy's gen erals to dinner the first day that fcoslllt ties brake out." Truth.