TIIE SCBANTON TRIBUNE SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST 22, 1896. 11 SCIENCE'S LATEST VALUABLE VICTORY The Problem ol Getting Nearly Full Power from Coal. IT HAS BEEN SOLVED AT LAST Dr. Jacques's New Process Likely to Reduce the First Cost of Electric Light Plants to a Quarter of What It If What the Invention Will Ac complish. From the Buffalo Express. No announcement In practical science of recent years has been calculated to excite so much Interest as that made the other day that the problem of the direct conversion of coal into electricity had been solved. The announcement came almost simultaneously In this country and in Germany In Germany from an eminent chemist that the thing could be done, and characteristically, in this country from an electrician of hiKh standing that it had been done. Dr. Coehn, a German chemist of note, has been experimenting at the problem for some time, and as a result of his re searches announced a short time ago his belief that It would be possible to transform coal Into electricity directly. The same month Dr. William W. Jac ques, an electrician of the Hell Tele phone company, tiled letters of patent upon a process accomplishing exactly this result. Just what all this means was best put in a lecture by Professor Ostwnlel two years aso, when ho said: "Had we a cell In which electrical energy was pro duced by the direct oxidation of carbon, with an output approaching the tneo retical, we should be on the brink of an industrial revolution compared with which the Invention of the steam engine sinks into Insignificance." This is putting the ense strongly, but it Is nevertheless In a large measure true. As almost everyone at all ac quainted with the subject knows, thn amount of actual work that we get out of a pound of coal, burned In an ordin ary steam engine. Is absurdly small, as compared with the total amount of power resident In the coal. The finest triple expansion engine on one of our great ocean liners, which probably real izes the highest clllclency known at the present time, only secures about 14 per cent, of the the theoretical efficiency of burning coal. An ordinary steam en gine does not realize over 6 or 7 per cent. The remaining 90 or more per cent. Is absolutely lost wasted. Furthermore, In order to get the po tential energy of coal Into a form where It Is easily utilized commercially, In volves still further loes and waste. . All the power that Is consumed In running the dynamo is so much energy thrown away. A table recently prepared, shott ing the workings of several hundred electric light plunts In the United States, disclosed the fact that the lnrgo plants of the very tincst equipment only se cured about 6 per cent. In actual work, or electricity, of the ootential of the coal, and that the smaller plants only secured around 2 per cent. All told It Is probable that the average for the whole country is less than C per cent. THIS PROBLEM STATED. Now If a way coud be found to ap proximately reverse these proportions it is easy to sea what an industrial revo lution would result. And Dr. Jucques, of lloston, believes that he has done about this. He has devised a process of singular simplicity, generating an electric current direct trom coal or rather from coke, and In a series of tests was able to secure In one Instance as high as 87 per cent, of a theoretical efficiency of the coal used. This, of course, was exceptional, but Dr. Jac ques believes that he will be very short ly able to produce electricity commer cially for somewhere between one fifth and one tenth lis present cost. Put In the very simpllest way, Dr. Jacques' process is this: Taking a quantity of coke he reduces this to a powder, odds a little water, jams it Into a cylinder and makes a big round stick of carbon that looks a good deal like a giant firecracker or a stick of carbon for an electric arc light very much en larged. This stick of carbon he sus pends In a cylindrical Iron pot contain ing an electrolyte of melted caustic soda. And when a current of air, in troduced by a smal tube, Is driven through this solution, electrical action is set up, producing a current of extra ordinary volume. To gain the necessary voltage or elec trical pressure, a hundred or more of these Iron pots are put together, their rims connected by a wire. The wholi plant It can hardly be called a battery Is enclosed in nn oven In order to keep the solution nit a uniform temperature of about 400 degrees centigrade. Practically, that Is all there is of this epoch-making invention. With the ex ception of a pump to drive the air through the solution of sodn there Is no "machinery" at all. Compared with this marvelously simple affair, a steam engine and dynamo are, as Prof. .lac quos observes, "hopelessly complex." There aire no boilers, no engine, no dy namo, no ashes to be removed, no water to be paid for, no endless quantity of supplies to be provided. Roughly speaking. Dr. Jacques esti mates that the first cost of an electric light plant, per horse power, will be something like a fourth or a fifth of the present cost. The expense of maintenance, or, rather, of attendance. is reduced almost to a minimum. The carbon cylinders last for loO hours or more, the enclosing oven has a self feeding attachment. Practically this Renerator requires little more attention than an ordinary small steam heating House plant. From a series of tests extending over many months Dr. Jacques estimates that already he is able to generate electricity for a fifth or a sixth that of the best plant in the United States and for one tenth that of the smaller plants. In otheiwords, a pound of coal is made to produce five or 10 times as much power as at the present time. THE INVENTION'S VALUE. Perhaps this "does not bring to your lnd any very clear or vivid idea of the immense value of thla Invention. Take it another way. The other day Dr. Jacques and Edward Atkinson, the statistician, sat down and undertook a little speculation in figures. Supposing that by Dr. Jacques's process all the engine and power plants in the United States could be reproduced for, say one fourth of their present value, and next that they could be run for one-fifth their present cost. In the United States there are upwards of $1,100,000,000 in vested in steam engines alone. This, of course, Includes locomotives and the like. In the matter of first cost Doc tor Jacques's invention would there fore represent a saving of upwards of three quarters of a billion of dollars. Again, steam power in thla country ftpraMou n annual expenditure of about $450,000,000 a year. That is prac tically the annual cost of running the national government, Including all the improvements and expenditures on public work which the government un dertakes. Were Dr. Jacques's process to be introduced, even with its present efficiency, this bill for power would be reduced to less than n hundred mil Ions. It would save the peoole of this coun try annually more than two and a half times the amount that is collected from our everlasting tariff fees, it would save five or elx times ns much as all the silver that would be offereJ for coinage if Mr. liryan and hi Popu list brethren get the reins of govern ment and enact a free-colnago meas ure. Nwv consider all the steam engines and all the coal used In all the rest of the world beside, and it will begin to dawn upon you what a wonderful thing this modest and reticent lloston electrician has succeeded In doing. I say' succeeded, for two of the foremost physicists of this country, Professor Chniles K. Cross Thayer, professor of physics In the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, nml Professor Henry A. Rowland occupying the chair of physics In Johns Hopkins University, Unltlmore, have made reports on ir. Jacques's process and have not hesita ted to declare their btlief In Its practi cal value or to give Dr. Jacques sole credit fir his great Invention. You will better understand the full measure of this Hoston electrician s experiment when you recull that he has won the prize which the foremost Inventive and snlentillc minds of the last quarter of the century have sought In vain. Edison tried for It, tilxl for years, and curiously enough along something of the Fame line taken by Dr. Jacques, lint he failed flatiy. Junt as all the others have done-. Indeed, so general Is the belief that the direct conversion of coal into electricity Is imeisslble that when the news of tr. Jacques's discovery was reported In England, the Electrician of London printed a lung anil laborous demon stration of why It could not he done. Inreientlally It labeled the news ns a humbug. Dr. Jacques smiles ns no tells you that he literally read 'the article in the Electrician by the light of a lamp whos" current was generated by the new process directly from the ceike. THE INVENTOR HIMSELF. The Hoston Inventor Is a little rast 10, a brisk, wide-a,vake, handsome man, who lias very nuie en tne air of typical Inventive genius. You would take him for an active, go-ahead business man sooner than for any thing else. For all that he Is a man of science, as well as a practical elec trical worker, a chemist as well as an electrician. Originally a Johns Hop kins man, he pursued his studies in Germany, and then entereel the em ploy of the Hell Telephone company as Its electrician. He nas, Indeed, bean with them fiom the beginning. His elinscovery represents the labor and rese .tire'hes of years. It Is two years or more, even, since Dr. Jacques became certain that he had solved the problem, although his patents were not taken out until this spring. Just how he worked It out would be a lemg story. The conditions were that he should find a way by which carbon could be oxidized and consumed, not by combustion as In fire, but at a low tem perature, converting the energy of the carbon into electricity Instead of heat. It was necessary that this oxidation should be easily regulated and that the lluld In which the carbon was Im mersed, the electrolyte, should not Buf fer deterioration In the proe'ess. Dr. Jacques conceived the Idea, and this Is the very kerne-l of his grent discovery that the oxygen of the air might be made to combine with car bon, not directly, but through the aid of an Intervening electrolyte, which would carry the nir and present It to the carbon. In order to do this ho tried forcing air through the electrolyte, be lieving the latter would take up a part of the air and present It to the carbein, and that he latter would Immediately accept it, nml by combining with the oxygen which forms a part of the air, Insure true and perfect oxidation. He succeeded, and, further, ho found that when this stick of carbon and the rim of the Iron pot containing the ele-ct-rolyte were connected by wire, a cur rent of phenomennl volume flows through It. All that remained there after was patiently to work out and overcome all the minor dlllleultlos that lay between the laboratory experiment and successful commercial application. You need not think that It was easy. It took months of patient investigation and experiment. Things which could be done on n smnll scale would yield nothing like the same results when done on a large scale?. Put one after an other the dllllcultles gave way, results multiplied results, and the problem was solved so plainly and definitely that eve'n a capitalist could see that it was done. It may bo two years before the new Invention will be put Into practical use on a large scale and begin to make Its Inlluence felt. Hut when this time arrives It Is not easy to calculate what a shifting of the line and seats of man ufacturing It Is likely to produce. If only a part of the expectations of Dr. Jacques are realized the Invention is still likely to equal In value that of any other discoverer of the century. IIALLAI) OF HUSTON TOWN. Miss Jane Penelope llrewster, of lineage running back To ancient Plymouth's founelers, with never a fluw nor crack, Supposedly daft on Growning, Emerson anil Thcireau, Very select, correctly cold and all that stuff, you know; Never appearing In public without a cha peron. Loaded with B. C. wisdom, but to modem larks unknown. Suddenly caused the Hoston mind to tot ter and uuake and reel By riding out through the Buck Bay r" mounted uon a wheel! Gay society snickered, cultured society wept, Still on her awful downward course Miss J. 1. Brewster keipt; Her Ions skirls soon gave way to short; bloomers sueceejded those. What did they say on Helicon street? That's too much, to suppose. Pleadings and eolid argument, ridicule, cuts and scoff Fell to her lot, but still she went reeling "centuries" off; ' 8oon she was winning prizes; her Inti mates, full of pain. Finally let her pedal; snd she had "wheel on the brain." But after a while what happened? Jenny shook off her shell, Got acquainted with real folks, grew to be plump and well; Found out something about the world that's whirling along today. Read an occasional novel, didn't despise the play; When the season was over the girls of her onelent set Found she'd married the very man they all had hoped to get; Instead of wheel on the brain, the facts In the case reveal That when Miss Brewster rode there was a massive brain on the wheel 1 " " -Puck.. . THE RELATION OF " PRICES TO WAGES Convincing Reply to the Recent Speech of CacdidatJ Bryan. FREE SILVER CRAZE CUT TO PIECES Text of nu Address" Last Tuesday Evening nt Dolgcviilc, '. V., by Professor ;corje Gunton of New York, Editor of Uuutou's Magazine nntl Recognized Master of lo uomicsl)ou't Tail to Head It. Some of oil.- Democratic friends have made themselves believe that the fito coinage ef silver Is the wnnd of their emancipation from the oppression of the rich. And the inure clearly they ran nuike it appear that the free coin age of silver nt 16 to 1 will enable debt ors to il i'luiui their creditors uiul f 'lve the United Hates to cancel its e.blii tinns at tliiy-tiiree cents oa the dollar, the mo.v successful their bciKine ap pears. To "spoil the Egyptians" seeiiM to them the acme ef siue-LSi. They ap pear to have worked themselves Into the belief that every Injury tnllictod up on capital is a benefit to labor, and u lenlly eli'fiaml creditors is tiie emanci pation of debtors. Ill their shortsight ed eagerness for economic spoliation they forgot that to (b. spuii creditors le ads upon di litiirs by preventing future borrowing, and that the prorlratlnn of capital reacts most severely upon labor by closing the avenues for employment. In support of this policy of helping the poor by Injuring the rich through the debasement of our money, they preent certain specific arguments which l.a.ve a very convincing effect upon those who have not taken pains to inform them selves upon the subject, and It is no re Ili'Ctlon upon the general intelligence of the community to say that these rep resent u very largo number. In the first place the money questie n is a dif ficult and complex one to limb lv.tar.d, ami second, tin re hnfi w en little public Interest and discussion of the subject except from the free silver point of view. ' In Justification of their policy they allirm: First, that the act of 1873 demonetiz ing silver "struck down half our pri mary money, and conseiiucntly cut prices In fvo" to the great impover ishment of the. farmers and other pro ducers. Second, that this was a departure from the principle of bimetallism, which Is the money of the constitution, anil that the only remedy for these evils is an immediate return to bimetallism, which they Insist necessitates the free coinage of silver at IS to 1. Third, that restoring the free coln of silver would re-establish the mone tary and Industrial conditions of 1S73. Fourth, that this would double prices and create general prosperity. If these claims are true we ought all to be In favor of the free coinage of silver; but are they true Let us see. SILVEIt NOT DEMONETIZED. The first proposition assumes to be a statement of fnct about which there should be no real difference of opinion ninoncr honest students. To demonet ize silver means to deprive It of use us full legal teneler money, nnd this Is what they mean when they say it "struck down half our primary money." Now, Mr. Ilryan knows, every silver speaker one! writer knows und every person In his audience knows that Bil ver was not driven out of use us money. You all know that you can pay Just as many debts nnd buy Just as many gooels with ten silver dollars us you can with ton gold dollars. In fact, more than half the money, vcy fre quently three-quarters of It, which you receive ns wages and use In the ordin ary retnil payments Ih sllve-r or silver certificates. In fact, the net of 1H73 did not demonetize nor In the slightest degree Impair a single dollar of stand ard money. On the contrary, nearly all the silver money we havo has come Into existence since the so-called crime If the twenty years from 1S73 to 1S93 we coined forty times as many silver dollars ns we did during the whole per iod of free coinage from the foundation of the government tti 1S73. Nor was this peculiar to this country. From IinTI to 1S7C thirteen of the leading com mercial nations stopped the free coin age of silver, and since tS73 fifty-seven per cent, more Bilvei' has been added to the world's monetary circulation than wns milled during the whole pre ceding seventy-two years of the century- . ... They also tell us that the demone'tl zatlem of silver stimulated the demand for gold in a corresponding pijniieirtlun, which has caused the appreciation of gold and the corresponding; decline In the value of silver. Here again their facts nre nt fault. Hlnee 1S7.1 the amount of gold milled to the world's monetary circulation is fifty-five per cent, less than the amount coined during the previous seventy-two years of the cen tury. In other words, ns compared with the seventy-two years from 1S09 to 1S73, the world's coinage of gold has dimin ished Utty-five per cent., while the coinage of silver during the same period has increased fifty-seven per cent.. In view of these facts what are we to think of the statement that "hnlf our primarv money was struck down by the crime of 1S73?" Yet this statement was the very foundation upon which the whole free silver superstructure rests. Take away this and their whole fabric falls. DID NOT AFFECT TP.ICF.S. Nor Is It true that prices have been reduced fifty per rent., as Coin, P.rynn and other free silverites unqualifiedly ntlirm. Of course, there are some cenn moelltles whose price has fallen fifty per cent, during the !nt twvnty yens, but there are others v.h' -- price liaa not fallen ut all. and a larjr" number I. thnt hnve risen from ten to forty per Cent. JI Hie lull in pi lees were uut? en tirely to the change in the value of money It would be the same with nil commodities. Simpose some mo should affii in thnt there were two Hag poles in a certain field nml the shadrw of one lengthened while that of the other shortened. Every school boy would laugh, knowing that be shadow, being the result of the sun's rays, must both shorten nml lentjthen with the rising and setting of the nun. The same Is true of prices, so far as Ihey nre affected by money. If an nTiprepl-itlinv In 'the value of money caused a decline of the price In one thing, it must for the ramp reason cause a decline in the rrlce ef everything, because It necessarily af fects everything alike. lint If we wl-di to be entirely honest In discussing the rise anil fall of prices we must not com pare 1S7.1 with the present, because 1S7.1 was In the midst of the Inflation tirlcil. The finance committee of the United Ptates rcnate has published the most complete report on piicps In this coun try and Europe from 1S2 to 1SD1 that has ever been Issued. According to the facts collected by that committee, the general average prices In 1S91 were only eight per cent, lers than In 1860 and ISG1. Eighteen hundred and sixty one was the last year before 1S79 that prices were on a sr"ll basis. During the war, as you all know, gold was at a high premium. In 1SG4, for Instance, ft took 211 dollars In greenbneks to buy the equivalent of a gold dollar. When specie payments were resumed In 1S79 this 87,,4 cents of Inilntion disappeared, so that ov dollar In greenbacks would buy the same as a dollar In gold, nnd prices fell ,"7'i per cent. Put this was simply the disappearance of greenback Inflation. Allowing for this Inflation therefore, the average fall In prices from 1S73 to 1891 was only flbiut eight per cent, and no evidence at all thnt the fall which did occur was due to sil ver. - Let us now consider the second pro position, that thn demonetisation of silver was a departure from the prin ciple of bimetallism. It Is entirely true to say that the I'nited States is tradi tionally a bimetallic country. Bimet allism Is truly the money of the fath ers and the mone-y of the ronstitulion. Mr. liryan and his party lay great stress on their claim as HmetlllstB. We too are bimetallu'ts. But if free "lin age of tilver would defeat bimetallism we have a right to demand that they abandon their claim for free coinage of silver or else frankly admit that they are false to bimetallism. They seem to use the phrase bimetallism as if it were only another name for free silver. It Is nothing of the kind. Bimetallism hns but one nit lining, the use of two motnls ns money. No monetary sys tem can be bimetallic which doesn't adequately secure the circulation of both metals. Now this Is exactly what we demand. We Insist that no system of coinage rhall be permitted in this country which will drive either metal out of circulation. It is bemuse free coinage at Pi to 1. with the present low value of silver, would drive Kulel out of circulation nnd give us silver mono inetalllMii that we nre opposed to free cniniige. Mr. Hryan and hln fullinvera are bniuiil in ili.nv that, with the free crin:igv r pfiy-th.v nt filver tl'd liii.. iuM will .-,tuy In i l"''.iiit ion. T.i nrceiir.plifh thnt would reejiiiv a finan cial miracle, it lias been t.!-J a great many times, but tin re never was power enough i:i any government to make it work. Not even such nn absolute mon arch as Henry VIII. could prevent lis delmseil shillings from driving the un dei nsed money out of circulation. They m.iUe no attempt to prove that gold would stay In circulation under free ci.innire. Indeed, it is becoming more evleltih.t every day that they ib not ivn desire that it should. All their talk about floiilillng mires ami paying their debts with half t:io wealth that would now be required, and their fie ouont reference to the proswilly of Mtxie-o. .Innan ind other sl'.ver ntnml nrd countries, tiions that what they refill y want Is not gold end silv.r but silver monnnielnlllom. They want us t get to a silver basis in the- mistaken be lief that a elcpreclated dollar Is ndvan tr.rceor.s to a debtor clas. In reality therefore we lire the true hlmctnllists nnel they are the monoinetnllists mas querading in the garb of bimetallism and not cheap dollars were the rial ob ject they would consent t the- fro? coin-H5i- of silver oj its nuirkot value tro same as gold, but any such proposition which would give genuine bimetallism and with it the free cninafre of both metals, they vigorously rejec t, nnd de mand five coinage at 18 to 1. Why do they insist upon I'i to 1? Manifestly because IB to 1 would Insure eighty-seven per cent, profit to the producers of silver bullion and forty-seven per cent, discount in the payment of debts with fifty-three cent. silver dollars. TUB TRUTH ABOUT RATIO. So much hns been said about 16 to 1 that there seems almost to have been created a feeling that there Is some oc cult influence associated with that par ticular ratio. 1 have received a great many letters within the Inst two months asking what it meant by 16 to 1, and why that particular ratio Is pre ferred. Of course", IB tj 1 simply means thnt congress passed a law that a silver dollar should weigh sixteen times as much as a gold dollar. The ratio of 1(5 to 1 is not very eild. It was only estab lished in 1S34. At the beginning of our government the ratio was tlxod at IS to 1 nnd so It remained from 17!)2 to 1834. The' reason it was fixed at 15 to 1 was that in I7K2 fifteen ounces of silver had had the same mnrket value ns one ounce of gold. The value of silver subse quently fell so that the silver In a silver dollar at 15 to 1 was not worth as much ns the gold In a gold dollar. In order to make ihe gold dollar of the same mar ket value ns well ns coinnpre value, and to prevent gold from belnpr driven out of circulation, the ratio was changi'd In 1S34 from 15 to 1 to 16 to t. If a ninety-four cert dollar In 1F34 would drive gold out of circulation and mnke real bimetallism impossible, on what ground can It be exported that In 1SDG gold will remain In circulation with a freely coined llfty-three cent dollar The snme reason that made 16 to 1 necessary to maintain bimetallism with free silver In ls;;4 would make 31 to I necessary to maintain bimetallism with, free silver In 1S96. shoe on the OTirnn foot. The assumption that the 'restoration of free coinage of silver would re-establish the monetary and industrial conditions of 1S73 Is equally misleading nnd delusive. They have erroneously assumed that all the chanrces In the value of silver and commodities since l!7:i were the result of demonetizing silver, and consequently falsely reason that to re-c:;tnbllsh free coinage would re-establish all the other conditions of that period. The policy tboy are now advocating was never "approved by the experience of history," nor wns It ever supported by a single prominent statesman In this country. No coun try In the world was ever foolish enough to try to keep two metals in circulation with free coinage at a ratio which gave one metal forty-seven per cent, the advantage of the other. It Is true "that prominent statesmen from the first president down to 1S7;"' favored the free coinage of silver, but always and onlv nt a legal ratio substantially equivalent to the market ratio of the two mctnls Mr. Hryon's statement that "we nre simply asking thnt the same mint privileges be accorded to silver that are now ncoorelerl to geild" pi not true. The nrlvilege that Is ac corded to gold Is that it shall have free coinage at Its market value, and they are asking that silver shall have free coinage nt fifty-three per cent, of its market value. To put sliver on the same condition for coinage ns gold would be to give It free coinage at its bullion value', which wemlel not be 16 to 1 but 31 to 1. Hence free rolnnge nt 16 to 1 todav Is a totally different propo sition from 16 to I In 1S7:J and would produce entirely different consequenc es In 1S73 the free coinage of silver did not teid In the least to drive gold freim circulation, l ocalise at thnt time the silver in a sliver dollar was worth ticaiiv $1.03. sii thnt every person who took silver to the mint would lose near ly three cents by the transaction. Con sequently no silver dollars were coined. Silver was then worth a little more than Ji.32 an ounce. Today it is worth a little less than sixty-nine cents nn ounce In 1SP8 he would make a profit of sixty-three cents an ounce, or eipht sven P'-r cent, more by having It coined than by sd'ing it in the open market. It is this eighty-sewn per cent t.rnfit instead of a three per cnt. loss that makes nil the difference be tween free coincse in 173 and In 1SU3. AND HOW ABOUT WAOES. We now come to the ln"t claim, that free coina-e of silver will create pros perity. Prosperity Is what we all want. To make clear tho truth of that propo sitle.n Is to make Mr. P.ryaJi s calling and election sure. Who is tti have this pros'ieiity? How is it to be brought about? Where will it start and how will it work? The gnat test of In-crc-aredprosperltyinanatiimU that the masses of the people are able to obtain moretif the comforts of life for a day's work. Nothing can give lncrrn3ed pros perity which doea not give that result. This can only come In one or two ways. Kithcrbytherheapeningof the commod ities the people consume, or by increas ing the wages with which to purchase those commodities. Unless one or both of . these processes take place, there can be no Improvement In the condition of the people. Any pretense that the in dustrial condition of a people can be Improved without giving them more of the necessaries and comforts of life for a day's work Is a delusion, and and pretence that the people can obtain more wealth for aday's work without either the wealth bring cheapened or the wajres Increased necessarily rr-sts either on ignorance or humbug. Will the free coinage of Bilvtr do cither of these things? No. they do not even pretend that It will. On the contrary, their great claim la that It will double prices. How will doubling prices Increase prcsperlty? Who will get more wealth lor a day's work through prices being doubled? Oh, replied Mr. Kryan. the farmers will be able to pay their debts with half the number of bushels of wher.t and the shoe manufacturer with half the num ber of shoes, if this were all then it would simply mean that producers, that is farmeis, manufacturers, etc., through a change In the money, would be able to pay their debts with fifty cents on the dollar. But If it stopped here even that would not give us prosoerity. We nre assured, however, that it would continue, nnd after debts are thus palel off with fifty cents on the dolhir the prosperity really begins, because the doubling i f prices would menu udi'.lng about forty to fifty per cent, to the pro fits of producers. Out of whom would this profit come? Of course, this could take place only by the selling priees of geiexis being in creased without any increase in tho e-e-t of their production. If the cost of their production were lrcrcn'icd In the same proportion then the rU'e in the price would be of no advantage to any body, because if the farmer sold wlc-at for u dollar and It eost him a dollar to raise It, he would be no better off than if he siild It t ili'-tv cents. If the fifty cents covered the cost. It Is only on the at sumption that this artificial incrensn In prices e.m come without any increase In the cum of Production. This means ef course, that he wages of labor must remain the same, since If wages rive In the same proportion as the prices mere would lie tso more profits thnn be fore. The first ar.il definite effect there fore of this selume for creating pros perity is to reduce the purchasing power of wages from forty to fifty per cent. In other wonis it boldly proposes to pay the debts nnd double the profits of fur mers, manufacturers and other pro ducers by reducing the wages of labor. To say nothing of the violent lnust!ce and outrage upon the laberers. who nm. stitute seven-tenths of our population. It would bo Impossible to Invent a scheme w hich would be more disastrous to our national prosperity. MUST HAVE A MARKET. Thanks to our protective policy, thla Is a homo market country, which means that our capitalists, whether they be farmers, manufacturers or merchants, cannot sell unless our peo ple buy. Employers cannot mnke pro fits unless the worklngmen consume their products. The great market bas is of ull our Industries is not the little that is consumed by the rich, but the dally consumption of the laboring classes. There are not half a dozen Industries in this country where ma chinery Is employed thnt could suc ceed If nobody but the rich consumed their products. In fact, the success of all modern industries finally dependa upon the ability of the laboring classes to consume their products. A reduc tion of forty per cent. In wages would mean the destruction of forty per cent, of the consuming capacity of the American people. No rise In prices, however high, could give prosperity with such a destruction of the market. Happily for mankind, It Is Impossible In a homo market country permanent ly to secure the prosperity of nny one class nt the expense of the other. To ignore the importance of wages anil the welfare of laborers to national pros perity Is to Ignore the very corner stone of statesmanship and national progress. Mr. liryan and his friends need to take n few elementary lessons In econo mics before they are entrusted to revo lutionize our Industrial condition back ward. They should be taught first of all that farmers and manufacturers, merchants and all other producers nre prosperous only when they can till their products, and they can sell their preidueis In large quantities only when laborers can be generous purchaser?, and laborers can be purchasers only when they are permanently assured of constant employment anel liberal wag es. A blow at wages Is not only a blow at worklngmen, but It Is at the same time a blow at the security and pros perity of every form of business. A blow at the purchasing power of wages Is the most deadly kind of a blow thnt can ever be directed at national pros perity, and yet this Is what Mr. liryan nnd bis party propose as the means of creating prosperity. There Is no pow er on earth by which the condition of farmers or manufacturers or capital ists of any productive class in a home market country can be Improved by re ducing the purchasing power of labor. They think they escape this evil by saying free coinage would stimulate foreign trade by enabling our pro ducers to produce at a silver cost end sell abroad (t gold prices, but this In nowise alters the case. If they coulel produce a bushel of wheat fur a fifty cent silver dollnr nnd sell It nhrond for a 100-ccnt gold dollar. It would only be because they paid their laborers In fifty cent dollars. Their profit by the trans action would be illrectly taken out of the lalxirers Just the same. CONFISCATION OF WAGES. The more closely we examine the de mands for the free coinage of silver nt 16 to 1, the dearer It becomes that It Is an uneconomic heresy, founded nn mls satemrnt of fact, erroneous reasoning and financial fanaticism, and thnt Its adopt ion would bring no benefit to those most zealously demanding it, but It would involve a confiscation of the wages of labor, destroy the basis of business prosperity nnd public welfare forever nnd tarnish the honor and in timity of the republic. That there are real monetary and In dustrial .questions which demand im mediate and comprehensive treatment the last four years of experience amply proves, but these questions cannot be solved by any destructive coin debas ing, debt repudiating and wage reduc ing policy. For true revenue reform we must look to such n rntionnl revision of the tariff ns Fhall afford nele-oimte protection to our domestic Industries and secure am ple revenues for the needs of tho gov ernment, and for genuine industrial re forms we must look to n more direct application of the principle of Protec tion to the prol-h-ms of labor, especial ly those which affect the individual and s n int life of the wagp class. But in or der thnt the'se national reform may be accomplished nnd the prosperity and progress of the country re-estaliilshed, the threatening avainnch of free silver must first he prevented. To accomplish this the friends of tho republic every where, regardless of party ofilfliutlons, must unite to secure the defeat of Bry an nnd the triumphant election of Mc Kinley and Hobart. N'ot content with Introducing Lillian P.iiFsell on a horso the authors of "An American Beauty" now contemplate plac ing the diva astride of an elephant. Vtrnt-.m-'tA ;ry, r g n it , iiv ftirQTnnrc uithiitv ,.,-, 'imuili Made a Man W of I Me. TKE OPEAT 30(h tlnT. jcxiecis rtxjuiEirsr proilnrrnthanboTe mollis In 311 iluv It- pnKrrfiillyand'intt-ltly. Cures when all other fail Yii!itifrroiuMvlllri.uam their Inst raaniniotl.aiidottl men will recover their juntliliil viicr by usliis ItfcVI VO. It quieliiy and miri'ly restores N.tvuuh ni'M. Ixii-t Vitality, Imimieiicy. 'i(it!tiy LmlMlonr. bout Power, Fulling Memory, Wanting Pliieawn. auit U effect ot Belf aliunn or exrem and imliwretion. nhieh nnfitH one for ai uiy. imxinnm or marriage. It ji t only cure by n'wrtina nt the rtmt ol d.ae, but inaereat nrrcn tonic and hlociil Imlliler. brine ie liae the pink glow to pnln cheek aid re i in tho flro of youth. It warda off Jnnauitt inj Connimption. Insist en haying UKVIVO, no 'tlier. It ran be carried in rent rocket. l)y mr.ll ;1.00 per wirkmrc. or fix lor 13.00, with it ponl 've wrl'len guarantee) to enre or refund money. Circnlnv frrj. Addrei-a ... ,. ompjijn Fw Mle bt juAHiiEws BROS.. Dmggl bcrantMt Ba ill Cured in a Manner that will Inter est any Person who is Nervous. Another Case, a Cpurt Stenographer in Cleveland, Run Down from Overwork, Helped by the Same Means. From Vie World, Cleveland, Ohio, "Mrs. Adeline Ilcntel, of Hudson, Ohio, orriviHl here yesterday on a visit to her daughter, Mrs. o. ". Clmiuiiiin. She iu tends tn remain for mime wceien." When the nhove little item of news was pulilisliiHl a few days ai;o, it emmed no little surprise n well ns Home incredulity ainiini; the people of Muriettu, Ohio, where Mrs. lintel lives when site is nt home. Not but wlmt flic hilly in question hns n perfect riijht to travel and to ru to see her children when ever she nniy lmp'n to feel so inclined. Hut her neighbors, who fur several years have known her lis o beil-riddcn cripple, were nt a loss to iimlcMtniiel Imw she liuel miinnireel tn do it. She was jrc neriilly supposed to be so entirely helpless I lint motion of uny kind on her part was simply iniHisiilili, tvimo of the inlinliitiiiits of Hudson, led by a nat ural desire to letirn the i'nets of the matter, netunlly went'iio fur as to cull nt the lady's home to investigate tliu subject for them selves. Mr. Henry Unite!, lier son, when asked about the mutter was not nt tir.it inclined to give Anybody any satisfaction lieyond the mere stiitement thnt Ms mother was not nt home. Finally, however, ufter considerable ursini; he consented to talk. "You know." said lie, "thnt my mother, liko ninny sick people, is sensitive on the subject of lier hmlily ailments. She nhmys disliked to talk about them nnd nlwnys In sisted that she would lie well in a little while. Fur nil of thnt, her left side was pu. ndvzcd for acvcrnl veurs nml mir fnmilv nliv. ticiun assured us thnt the trouble would presently extend itself to oilier parts of the l: li tody. KotliiiiL' could be done lor lier nml ma hud nil nhnut mmle up our niiiiela that she would not live very much longer. "Filially her eye lichted on nn ndvertisp- mentof lr. Williams' Pink Pills. Forth with she insisted on having a box of them. I opposed the ielea pretty strenuously hut pave in for the snko of peace. Well, one bight I brought them home tn her. She be Rim tiikinir tliem nt once. Tho effect wns fierfectly wonderful. Tho stillness lirgnn to eave her left side almost immediately. In a few days flic was able to sit lip. Of course when I saw tlie result I took care she should have ull thn Pink Pills she wanted. The cure was not mrticiilnrly rnpid after tho Inilinl stuges. She roniiiined a practical in valid for n considerable time, but (die is now entirely well with the exception of a slight lameness in her left Icr. I fully expect Unit that, too, will disappear by nnd by." Mrs. Ilentii iMiilinncd in all its essential features tlio finis piven by lier son. "Tho whole fa ni i iy believes ns I iln," said she, 'ilint the pills were inslrnmentiil in siivinr; my life. I came nwny from homo without nny nt them anil wns nt lir.4 nfrnid flint I might find my self laid up nguiu, but I do not really seem to hnve any furllier use for them. I nm not strong'yet luit am rapidly improving. Even the lameness in my leg is disappearing and I will soon be us well as ever 1 was." From the W'orfef, Cleveland, Ohio Officials nml employees at tho Old Court House wero considerably surprised yester day nt receiving a call from Mrs. II. L. Stan ton, whose attractive face nml sunny t-niile had not brightened their rather dismul quar ters for many a long, long dny. The lady's presence in tho office naturally created quite a sensation among her former co-luhorcr who had never expected to see her ngain un til called upon to follow her reuiuius to their THIRD NATIONAL BANK OF SCR ANTON. Capital, - - $200,000 Surplus, - - 300,000 Undivided Profits, 64,000 Special attention given to Business and Personal Accounts. 3 Interest Paid on Interest Deposits. D Bolts, Nuts, Bolt Ends, Turnbuckles, Washers, "Ri ets, Horse Nails, Files, Taps, Dies, Tools and Suf plies. Sail Duck for mine use in stock. SOFT STEEL HORSE SHOES ' and a full stock of Wagon Makers' Supplies, Wheel Hubs, Rims, Spokes, Shafts, Poles, Bows, etc TIE BENDER 1 SCRAN fenr9 t THt Hientrr MtBicii Airmoump SiOLlKhTUIR f&r? Hi . lvnAt.En wtll euro too. a 1.V rrl r frnmt'olil.. Snp.l'hm.1 InOnenra, R rouchltla, . . TO ' . . . m i. trt pnevet, iwsiIt to o on flrt inrtieatlcn of colo. I'entlnaed ti J ireelc lVrmnnent Cure. CntlsfRcUoninicrante'edoririinerrciuniieil. Prlrr, B't rim. lrlal fren nt flrnuims. Kcglstnred nail, 30 ocnu. I D. CliHMU, Mir., lira Lm i, Uiit, D. S. i. crtrcss-TsiAW's EF N T Hf!l T,m nt ftfest mneifr fmr i'ih.l I HUb all skin dloa. Keiems. !tcn.S! pheitni. nM Sores. Hums. I'm.. WondorfVil rem ti. lnrPIfl'H. Price. etc. nt Praa n a I C" irtsurhrmailprs;aul. AdilrcmasaboTi). tRl f For ealo by MATTHEWS BROS, and JOHN II. PHELPS. Scranton. Pa. riileke.lFp'a Knill.li nianal Uiul ENflYRQYAL PILLS 4r!r1J mm Onlj taurine, arc, alwaj-1 nilaltle. lad its mk I'riiKglit for Cki'kfterm Kn'ia fiia , unfit. Brand to Ud u4 U4d tnf tMo lUmn. Matted with Mow ribbon. Take nam ana imruitiu. uruftnn, or araa m In rtwntnt foe part tenltrt. iMtimonlilt 9n4 RUr fr tawHM," Oi tour. br rtra Wall. in.OnO 1H mM !. Nnm IVnar. fcatajuA 'lira last resting, place. Purlng the half hour of lier stay she held a regular levee,' shaking hands with and receiving the congratulatioua of everybody from the janitor to the judge. Mrs. Stanton is well known to the whole legal fraternity of Cleveland. During th two and a half years that she occupied tht position of court stenographer her cheerfu. disposition, the unquestionable skill with w hich her work was done, the general pub lia knowledge of tho circumstances of her life, innelo her a favorite with every person with whom the was brought into contuct. When her chair first became vacant and it was lenrneil that the condition of her health had rendered a rest necessary, expressions of concern were heard on nil sides, hut it waa men expected that within a tew weeks she would bo back nt her jilnco ns well as ever, (irndiinlly it heeiune known that ber con. ilition whs much more serious thnn was at first supposed. The weeks lengthened into months until at last it came to he understood that tho place thnt once knew her would know her no more, thnt in fnct the severe labor flie lnul so willingly undergone for the sake of those who were ileur to her hod re sulted in completely shuttering a once vig orous constitution und driving her to the very verge of the grave. For the pnst few months her friends had heard little of her, so ono may judge of the magnitude of tho surprise when she floated in upon them resplendent in the glories of pcrfevt health and strength. Many enquir ies were innelo as to w liut had worked the as tonishing change. Klie wns easily induced to gratify the curiosity of those around her. "You know," said Mrs. hiunlon, "when I left hero 1 was a complete physicul wreck. The long hours of sedenlary occupation were too much for mn and my nervous sys tern was completely shattered. My digestion too, wns ruined and altogether, I wns in such a condition that I wns scarcely nblo to keep out of bed. It wns nt this juncture thnt my eye was attracted by an advertisement" fche intended to tny something further bnt the party around her laughed so heartily that she stopped suddenly. 'Are you going to recommend some patent meelieine? " asked the oflice boy. "No, I'm not," she retorted, "I'm going home." Mrs. Ptanton, evidently fomewhnt piqued nt the occurrence, started for the doeir, Imt her friends fearing tlu.t she might nut really bo quite ns strong ns she looked, culled a car riage fur her and sent her to her home at 908 Woodbind Avenue. " Well," mid Mrs. Plnnton nftorwnnls, "they needn't have Iniighrd; 1 only thought it my duty to let their wives and sisters and sweethearts know thnt I wns cured by Dr. Williams' Tink Pills for Palo People. I took two boxes and now I nm all right. I think they are a boon to suffering woman, hood." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain, in aeon densrd form, nil the elements necessary to givo new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They nro nn unf'niling spc eilie for such diseases as locomotor ntnxiu, par tial paralysis, St. Vitus' dnncc, gciuticn, neu. rnlgiu, rliciimntism, nervous hendnehe, the nrtcr effect of la pnppc, pnlpitiition of the heart, imlc and sallow complexions, all formg of wcukness either in mule oi fcinale.t Pink Pills are wild by nil dealers, or will lie sent post, pmd on receipt of price, fiO cents a box or six boxes for y.'.fti (they nre never sold in bulk or by the 1(H)), by nelilressing Dr Willianu' Medicine Company, ticlieucctady, li.Y, STEEL 01 TON. PA. E. ROBINSON'S Lager Beer Brewery Manufacturers of th Celebrated flu ii tei CAPACITY! 100,000 Barrels per Annum