SO SUPPLEMENT TO GHR0NIGLE LETTER, One of the Brightest, Brainest Documents" Eyer Presented to the American People. The Moses That WiU Lead the People Out of the Land ol Misery and Want, Into the Bright Valleys of Happiness and Pros perity. CANTON, O., Aug. 27. John M. Thurston and Other Members 'of the Notification Committee of the Republi can National Convention Gentlemen: In pursuance of the promise made to your committee when notified of my nomination as the Republican candi date for President, I beg to submit this formal acceptance of that high honor and to consider in detail the questions at issue In the pending campaign. Perhaps this might be considered un necessary in view of jaay remarks on that occasion and those I have made to delegations that have visited me since the St. Louis Convention, but in view of the momentous Importance of the prop er settlement of the issues presented cn our future prosperity and standing as a nation, and considering only the wel fare and happiness of our people, I could not be content to omit again call ing attention to the questions which, in my opinion, vitally affect our strength and position among the governments of the world, and our morality, Integri ty and patriotism as citlzensof that Re public which, for a century past, has been the best hope of the world and the inspiration of mankind. We must not now prove false to our own high stand ards In government, nor unmindful of the noble example and wise precepts of our fathers, or of the confidence and . trust which our conduct In the past has always Inspired. THE FREE! COINAGE OF SILVER. For the first time since 1868. If ever before, there la presented to the Amer ican people this year a clear and direct Issue as to our monetary system, or vast Importance in its effects, and upon the right settlement of which rests largely the financial honor and pros perity of the country. It is proposed by one wing of the Democratic party and its allies, the People's and Silver par ties, to Inaugurate the free and unlim ited coinage of silver by Independent action on the part of the United States at a ratio of sixteen ounces of silver to one ounce of gold. The mere declara tion of this purpose is a menace to our financial and industrial Interests, and has already created universal alarm. It Involves great peril to the credit and business of the country a peril so grave that conservative men every where are breaking away from their old party associations and uniting with other patriotic citizens in emphatic protest against the platform of the Democratic National Convention as an assault upon the faith and honor of the Government and the welfare of the peo ple. We have had few questions In the lifetime of the Republic more serious than the one which is thus presented. NO BENEFIT TO LABOR. The character of the money which hall measure our values and exchanges and settle our balances with one anoth er and with the nations of the world is of such primary importance and so far reaching in its consequences as to call for the most painstaking investigation, and in the end a sober and unprejudiced Judgment at the polls. We must not be misled by phrases, nor deluded by false theories. Free silver would not mean that silver dollars were to be freely had without cost of labor. It would mean the free use of the mints of the United States for the few who are owners of' silver bullion, but would make silver coin no freer to the many who are en gaged in other enterprises. It would not make labor easier, the hours of la bor shorter or the pay better. It would not make farming less laborious or more profitable. It would hot start a factory nor make a demand for an ad ditional day's labor. It would create no new occupations. It would add nothing to the comfort of the masses, the capi tal of the people or the wealth of the nation. It seeks to Introduce, a new measure of value, but would add no value to the thing measured. It would not conserve values. On the contrary. It would derange all existing values. It would not restore business confidence, but its direct effect would be to destroy the little which yet remains. WHAT IT MEANS. The meaning of the coinage plank adopted at Chicago is that any one may take a quantity of silver bullion now worth 63 cents to the mints of the United States, have it coined at the ex pense of the Government and receive (or it a silver dollar which shall be legal tender for the payment of all debts, public and private. The owner of the bullion would get the silver dollar. It belongs to him and nobody else. Other people would get It only by their labor, the products of their land or something of value. The bullion owner, on the basis of present values, would receive the silver dollar for 63 cents' worth of silver, and other people would be re quired to receive it as a full dollar In the payment -of debts. The Govern ment would get nothing, from the trans action. It would bear the expense of coining the silver, and the community would suffer loaa by 1U use. THE DOLLARS COMPARED. We have coined since 1878 more than 400,000.000 of silver dollars, which are maintained by the Government at par ity with gold and are a full legal tender for the payment of all debts, public and private. Hpw are the silver dollars now in use different from those which would be in use under free coinage? They are to be of the same weight and fineness; they are to bear the same stamp of the Government. . Why would they not be of the same value? I answer: The silver dollars now In use were coined on account of the Government and not for private account or gain, and the Government has solemnly agreed to keep them as good as the best dollars we have. The Government bought the silver bullion at its market value and coined It Hav ing exclusle control of the mintage It only coins what it can hold at a parity with gold. The profit representing the difference between the commercial value of the silver bullion and the face value of the silver dollar goes to the Government for the benefit of the people. The Gov ernment bought the silver bullion con tained in the silver dollar at very much less than Its coinage value. It paid it out to its creditors and put in circula tion among the people at its face value of 100 cents or a full dollar. ' It required the people to accept it as a legal tender and Is thus morally bound to maintain it at a parity with gold, which was then, as now, the recognized standard with us, and the most enlightened nations of the world. The Government having is sued and circulated the silver dollar. It must in honor protect the holder from loss. This obligation it has so far sa credly kept. Not only is there a moral obligation but there is a legal obliga tion expressed In public statute to maintain the parity. THEY COULD NOT BE KEPT AT PAR. These dollars In the particulars I have named are not the same as the dollars which would foe Issued under free coinage. They would be the same In form but different In value. Ths Government would have no part In the transaction except to coin the silver bullion into dollars. It would share in no part cT the profit It would takecan De nB" "T""-ic',.,r,:" upon itself no obligations. It would noU t put tne aoiiars into circulation. could only get them as any citizen would get them by giving something for them. It would deliver them to those who deposited the silver, and Its connection with the transaction would there end. Such are the silver dollars which would be Issued under free coin age of silver at a ratio of 16 to L Who would then maintain the parity? What would keep them at par with gold?- There would be no obligation resting upon the Government to do it and if there were it would be powerless to do It The simple truth is, we would bo driven to a silver basis to silver momometallism. These dollars, there fore, would stand upon their real value. If the free and unlimited coinage of sil ver at a ratio of sixteen ounces of sil ver to one ounce of gold would, as some of Its- advocates assert, make 53 cents' in silver worth 100 cento, and the silver dollar equal to the gold dollar, then we would have no cheaper money than now and it would be no easier to get But that such would be the result la against reason, and is contradicted by experi ence In all times and in all lands It means the debasement of our currency by the amount of the difference between the commercial and coin value of the silver dollar, which is ever changing, and the effect would be to reduce prop erty values, entail untold financial loss, destroy confidence. Impair the obliga tions of existing contracts, further im poverish the laborers and producers of the country, create a panic of unparal leled severity, and Inflict upon trade and commerce a deadly blow. To any such policy I am unalterably opposed. BIMETALLISM. Bimetallism cannot be secured by In dependent action on our part. It can not be obtained by the opening of our mints to the unlimited coinage of the sil ver of the world at a ratio of sixteen ounces of silver to one ounce of gold, when the commercial ratio is more than thirty ounces of silver to one ounce of gold. Mexico and China have tried the experiment Mexico has free coinage of silver and gold at a ratio slightly in excess of sixteen and one-half ounces of silver to one ounce of gold, and while her mints are freely open to both met als at that ratio, not a single dollar in gold bullion is coined and circulated as money. Gold has been driven out of circulation in these countries, and they are on a silver basis alone. Until an in ternational agreement is had it is the plain duty of the United States to main tain the gold standard. It Is the recog nized and sole standard of tho great commercial nations of the world with which we trade more largely than any other. Eighty-four percent of our for eign trade for the fiscal year 1895 was with gold-standard countries, and our trade with other countries was settled on a gold basis. WE NOW HAVE MORE SILVER THAN GOLD. Chiefly by means of legislation during and since 1878 there has been put in clr- culatlon more than 3624,000,000 of sliver - or its representative. This has been done In the honest effort to give silver, if possible, the same bullion and coin age value, and encourage the concur rent use of both gold and silver as mon ey. Prior to that time -there had been less that 9,000,000 silver dollars coined In the entire history of the United States, a period of eighty-nine years. This leg islation secured the largest use of sil ver consistent with financial safety and . the pledge to maintain its parity with gold. We have to-day more silver than gold. This has been accomplished at times with grave peril to the public credit The so-called Sherman law sought to use all the silver production of the United States for money at Its market value. From 1890 to 1898 the Govern ment purchased 4,600,000 ounces of sil ver a month, or 64,000,000 ounces a year. This was one-third of the product of the world and practically all of this coun try's product It was believed by those who then and now favor free coinage that such use of silver would advance its bullion value to Its coinage value, but this expectation was not realised. In a few months, notwithstanding the unprecedented market for the silver produced in the United States, the price of silver went down very rapidly, reaching a point lower than ever before. Then, upon the- recommendation of President Cleveland, both political par ties united in the repeal of the nurch: ta in olauae of tha 8hermauJej..iyecaa- not wlin eaiety engagw m lumur ex periments in this direction. THE DOUBLE STANDARD. On August 23, 1891, In a public address I said: "If we could have an interna tional ratio, which all the leading na tions of the world would adopt, and the true relation be fixed between the two metals, and all agree upon the quantity of silver which should constitute a dol lar, then sliver would be aa free and un limited in Its privileges of coinage as gold is to-day. But that we have not been able to secure, and with the free and unlimited coinage of silver adopted in the United States at the present ra tio, we would be still further removed from any international agreement. We but never be able to secure it if we en ter upon the isoiaiea coinage oi mrver. The double standard Implies equality at a ratio, and that equality can only be established by the conourrent law of na tions. It was the concurrent law of na tions that made the double standard; it will require the concurrent law ot na tions to reinstate and sustain It." IT FAVORS THE USE OF SILVER MONET. The Republican party has not been, and Is not now, opposed to the use of silver money, as its record abundantly shows. It has done all that could be done for its Increased use with safety and honor by the United States, acting apart from other governments. There are those who think It has already gone beyond the limit of financial prudence. Surely we can go no further, and we must not permit false lights to lure us across the danger line. MORE THAN ANT COUNTRY. We have much more silver in use than any country in the world, except India or China 3600,000,000 more than Great Britain, 3150,000,000 more than France, 3400,000,000 more than Germany, 3325,- 000,000 less than inaia, izti,(XHJ,oiK) less than China. The Republican party has declared In favor of an international aeciarea in i&vur ut u international agreement, and, If elected President, it will bo my duty to employ all proper mea&8 to promote it The free coinage of stiver in this country would defer, if xi'A defeat, international bimetallism. , an a -until an imeniauuiuu agreement maintain our present stanaara. Independent free coinage of silver at a ratio ot wxia uuutw ui cuiver to one ounce of gold would Insure the speedy contraction of the volume of our cur rency. It would drive at least 600,000,000 of gold dollars which we now have per- manently from the trade of the oountry and greatly decrease our per capita cir culation. It la not proposed by the Re publican party to take from the circu lating: medium ot the country any of the silver we now have. On the contrary, it is pror sed to keep all of the silver monej iow in circulation on a parity with gold by maintaining the pledge of the Government that aU of It shall be equal to goia. xnis nu Deea tne un broken policy of the Republican party since 1873. It has inaugurated no new policy. It will keep In circulation and as good as gold all of the silver and paper money which are now Included in the currency of the country. It will main tain their parity. It will preserve their equality In the future as it has ulways done in the past It will not consent to put this country on a silver basis, which would Inevitably follow Independent free coinage at a ratio of 16 to 1. It will oppose the expulsion of gold from our circulation. FARMERS AND LABORERS SUF FER MOST. If there Is any one thing which should be free from speculation and fluctua tion, it is the money of the country. It ought never to be the subject of mere partisan contention. When we part with our labor, our products, or our property, we should receive in return money whloh Is as stable and unchanging in value as the ingenuity of honest men can make it Debasement of the cur rency means destruction of values. No one suffers so much from cheap money as the farmers and laborers. They are the first to feel its bad effects and the last to recover from them. This has been the uniform experience of all countries, and here, as elsewhere, the poor and not the rich are the greater sufferers from every attempt te debase our money. It would fall with alarming severity upon investments already made; upon Insurance companies and their policy holders; upon savings banks and their depositors; upon building and loan associations and their members; upon the savings of thrift; upon pen sioners and their families, and upon wage-earners and the purchasing power of their wages. UNLIMITED IRREDEEMABLE PA PER MONET. The silver question is not the only 'Issue affecting our money in the pending con test Not content with urging the free coinage of silver, its strongest cham pions demand that our paper money snail De issued airectiy oy tne uotoh ment of the United States. This is the Chicago Democratic declaration. The St Louis People's party declaration is that "our national money shall be Issu ed by the General Government only, - without the intervention of banks of is sue, be full legal tender for the payment of all debts, private and public, and be distributed direct to the people and through lawful disbursement of the Government" Thus, in addition to the free coinage of gold and silver, we are asked to en ter upon an era of unlimited Irredeem able paper currency. The question which was fought out from 1865 to 1875 Is thus to be reopened, with all its cheap money experiments of every conceiv able form foisted upon us. This indi cates a most startling reactionary pol icy, strangely at variance with every requirement of sound finance; but the declaration shows the spirit and pur pose of those who, by combined action, are contending for the control of the Government Not satisfied with the de basement of our coin, which would In evitably follow the free coinage of sil ver at If to 1, they would still further degrade our currency and threaten the public honor by the unlimited issue of an Irredeemable paper currency. A graver menace to our financial standing and credit could hardly be conceived, and every patriotlo citizen should - be aroused to promptly meet and effectu ally defeat It IN THE HIGHEST DEGREE REPRE -HENSIBLE. It la a cause for painful regret and so licitude that an effort Is being made by those high in the councils of the allied parties to divide the people of the coun try Jnto classes and create distinctions . among us, which. In fact do not exist and are foreign to our form ot Govern ment. These axtoeala to passion and to prejudice are oeneatn tne spirit and in telligence of a free people and should be met with stern rebuks by those Uiey are sought to influence, and I believe they will be. Every attempt to array class against class, "the classes against the masses," section against section, labor aealnat o&DitaL the .poor against the rich, or interest against interest,' in tne United States Is in the highest degree, reprehensible. It is opposed to the na tional Instinct and interest, and should be resisted by every citizen. We are not a nation of classes, but of sturdy, free, independent and honorable people, de spising the demagogue and never capit ulating to dishonor. This everrecurrlng effort endangers popular government, and is a menace to our liberties. It la not a new campaign device or party appeal. It la old as government among men, but was never more un timely and unfortunate than now. Washington warned us against it, and Webster said in the Senate, in words which I feel are singularly appropriate at this time: "I admonish the people against the object of outcries like these. 1 admonish every industrious laborer of this country to be on his guars against such a delusion. I tell him the attempt to place his passion against his interest and to prevail on him, in the name of liberty, to destroy all the fruits of lib erty." PROTECTION OF SUPREME IM PORTANCE. An issue of supreme importanco is that of protection. The peril of free sil ver Is a menace to be feared; we are al ready experiencing the effect of partial free trade. The one must be averted; the other corrected. The Republican party is wedded to the doctrine of protection and was never more earnest In fts sup port and advocacy than now. If argu ment were needed to strengthen its de votion to the American systom, or in crease the hold of that system upon the party and people, it is found in the les son and experience of the past three .. , , . .. years- -Mn real ize In their own daily lives what before was to many of tnem only report, history or tradition. They have had a trial of both systems and know what each has done for them. DEMANDED BT THE PUBLIC EXI GENCIES. Washington, in his farewell address, September 17, 1796, a hundred years ago, said; "As a very Important source of strengtn ana security, enrnsn puonc credit. One method of preserving It is to use it as sparingly as possible: nvlil the accumulation of debt, not only by Running occasions of expense, but bv vigorous exertions in time of peace to discharge the debts which unavoidable wars may have occasioned, not ungen erously throwing upon posterity the burden whloh we ourselves ought to bear." To facilitate the enforcement of the maxims which he announced, he de clared: "It is essential that you should practically bear in mind that toward the payment of debts there must be rev enues; that to have revenue there must be taxes; that no taxes can be devised which are not more or less inconvenient or unpleasant; that the intrinsic em barrassment Inseparable from the selec tion of proper objects (which is always a choice of difficulties) ought to be a de cisive motive for a candid construction of the conduct of the Government in making it and for a spirit of acquies cence in the measures for obtaining rev enue which the public exigencies may at any time dictate." Animated by like sentiments the peo ple of the country must now face the conditions which beset them. "The public exigencies demand prompt pro tective legislation which will avoid the accumulation of further debt by pro viding adequate revenues for the ex penses of the Government This Is man ifestly the requirement of duty. If elect ed President of the United States It will be my aim to vigorously promote this object and give that ample encourage ment to the occupations of the Ameri can people which, above all else, is im peratively demanded at this Juncture of our national affairs. OUR CONDITION. In December, 1892, President Harrison sent his last message to Congress. It was an able and exhaustive review of the condition and resources of the coun try. It stated our situation so accurate ly that I am sure that It will not be amiss to recite his official and valuable testimony. "There never has been-a time In our biatorv." said he. "when work was so aDunaant or wnen wages ware so nign, whetheT measured by the currency in which they are paid or by their power to supply the necessaries and comforts of life. The general average of prices has been such as to give to agriculture a fair participation In the general pros perity. The new Industrial plants estab lished since October 6, 1890, and up to October 22, 1892, number 345, and the ex tension of existing plants 108. The cap ital Invested amounts to 340,446,070, and the number of additional employes 37, 285. During the first six months of the present calendar year 135 new factories were built, of which forty were cotton mills and forty-eight knitting mills, twenty-six woolen mills,- fifteen silk mills, four plush mills and two linen mills. Of the forty cotton mills twenty one have been built in the Southern States." This fairly describes the happy condition of 'the country In December, 1892. What has It been since? And what is it now? OUR CONDITION EIGHT MONTHS LATER. The messages of President Cleveland from the beginning of his second ad ministration to the present time abound with descriptions of the deplorable In dustrial and financial situation of the country. While no resort to history or official statement is required to advise us of the present condition and that which has prevailed during the past three years, I venture to quote from President Cleveland's first message, August 8, 1898, addressed to the Fifty third Congress, which he called togeth er in extraordinary session: "The existence of an alarming and ex traordinary business situation," said he, "involving the welfare and prosperity of all of our people has constrained me to call together in extra session the peo ple's representatives in Congress, to the end that through wise and patriotic ex ercise of legislative duties with which they solely are charged, -the present evils may be mitigated and dangers threatening the future may be averted. Our unfortunate financial plight is not the result of untoward events nor of conoiuons reiatea to our nacureu re sources. Nor Is It traceable to any of the afflictions which frequently check na tional growth and prosperity With nlenlaoua croDS. with abundant .promise of remunerative production ana manu facture, with unusual Invitation to in vestment and with satisfactory assur ances to business enterprises, suddenly financial distrust and fears have sprung up on every side. Numerous moneyed Institutions- have suspended because abundant assets were not immediately available to meet the demands fright ened depositors. Surviving corpora tions and individuals are content to keep In hand the money they are usu ally anxious to loan, and those engaged In legitimate business are surprised to find that the securities they offer for loans, though heretofore satisfactory, are no longer accepted. Values supposed to be fixed are fast becoming conjectur al and loss and failure have invaded every branch of business." THE CAUSE OF THE CHANGE. What a startling and sudden change within the short period of eight months, from December, 1892, to August, 1893. What had occurred? A change of ad ministration. All branches of the Gov ernment had been Intrusted to tho Democratic party, which was commit ted against the protective policy that had prevailed uninterruptedly for more than thirty-twe, years and brought un exampled prosperity to the country, and firmly pledged to its complete over throw and the substitution of a tariff for revenue only. The change having been decreed by the elections of No vember, Its effects were at once antici pated and felt. We cannot close our eyes to these altered conditions, nor would It be wise to exclude from con templation and Investigation the causes which produced them. They are facts which we cannot, as a people, disregard, and we can only hope to improve our present condition by a study of their causes. In December, 1892, we had the same currency and practically the same vol ume of currency that we have now. It aggregated, in 1892, 32,872,699,601; in 1893. a,.o,vw,wv, n o-. ,.,u.u,n.,.uu buu m December, 1895, 32.194.000,030.. The per 32,323,000,000; in 1894. $2,323,443,362 and in capita of money has been practically the same during this whole period. The quality of the money has been identical, all kept equal to gold. There Is nothing connected with our money, therefore, to account for this sudden and aggravat ed industrial change. Whatever is to be deprecated In our finances, It must be everywhere admitted that our money has been absolutely good and has brought neither loss nor Inconvenience to Its holders. A depreciated currency has not existed to further vex the trou bled business situation. GOOD MONET NEVER MADE THE TIMES HARD. It is a pretense to attribute the hard times to the fact that all our currency is on a gold basis. Good money never made times hard. Those who assert that our present Industrial and financial depression is the result of a gold stand ard have not read American hlstory aright or been careful students of the events of recent years. We never had greater proeprity in this oountry in every field of employment and industry than in the busy years from 1880 to 1892, during all of which time this country was on a gold basis and employed more gold In its fiscal and business opera tions than ever before We had, too, a protective tariff, under which ample revenues were collected for the Govern ment and accumulating a -surplus, which was constantly applied to the payment of the public debt Let us hold fast to that which we know is good. It is not more money we want What we want is to put the money we already have at work. When money Is employed men are employed. Both have always been steadily and re muneratively engaged during all the years of protective tariff legislation. When those who have money lank con fidence In the stability of values and investments they will not part with their money. Business is stagnated, the life blood of trade is checked and con gested. We cannot restore public con fidence by an act which would revolu tionize all statutes, or an act which en tails a deficiency in the public revenues. We cannot Inspire confidence by advo cating repudiation or practicing dis honesty. We cannot restore confidence either to the Treasury or to the people without a change In our present tariff legislation. THE TARIFF OF 1891. The only measure of a general nature that affected the Treasury and the em- ployment of our people passed by the Fifty-third Congress was the general tariff act which did not receive the ap proval of the President Whatever vir tues may be claimed for that act there is confessedly one which it does not possess; it lacks the essential virtue of its creation, the raising of revenues suf- flolent to supply the needs of the Gov ernment It has at no time provldea enough revenue for such needs, but It has caused a constant deficiency in the Treasury and a steady depletion in the earnings of labor and lands. It has con tributed to swell our national debt more than $262,000,000, a sum nearly as great as the debt of the Government from Washington to Lincoln, Including all our wars from the Revolution to the Rebellion. Since its passage work at home has been diminished, prices of agricultural productions have fallen, confidence has been arrested and want is seen on every hand. THE TARIFF OF 1890 AND 1894 CON TRASTED. The total receipts under the tariff act of 1894 of the first twenty-two months of its enforcement, from September, 1894, to June, 1896, were 3557,615,328 and the expenditures 3640,418,363, or a deficiency of 382,803,035. The decrease in our ex ports of agricultural products and man ufactures during the first fifteen months of the present tariff, as contrasted with the exports of the first fifteen months of the tariff of 1890, was 3220,353,320. The excess of exports over Imports during the first fifteen months of the tariff of 1890 was 3213,972,968, but only 356.758,423 under the first fifteen months of 1894, a loss under the latter of 3157.214,345. The net loss In the trade balance of the United States has been 3196,983,607 dur ing the first fifteen months' operating of the tariff of 1894 as compared with the first fifteen months of the tariff of 1890. The loss has been large, constant and steady, at the rate of 313,130.000 per month, or 3500,000 for every business day of the year. LOSING IN BOTH DIRECTIONS. ' We have either been sending too much money out of the country or getting too little in, or both. We have lost steadily In both directions. Our foreign trade has been diminished and our domestic has suffered Incalculable loss. Does not this suggest the cause of our present depression and Indicate its remedy? tjonnaence in nome enterprise nu al most wholly disappeared. Our shops are closed or running on half time at re duced wages and small profit, if not ac tual loss. Our men at home are idle, and while they are Idle, men abroad are occupied in supply us with goods. Our unrivaled home market of the farmer has also greatly suffered because they who constitute it, the great army of wage-earners, are without the work and wages they formerly had. If they cannot earn wagea they cannot buy products. They cannot earn If they have no employment and when they dont earn the farmers Jtome market la lesiienea ana impairea, ana in joh im felt by both producer and consumer. The loss of earning power alone In this country in the past three years la suffi cient to have produced our unfortunate business situation. If our labor waa well employed and employed at aa re munerative wagea aa In 1892 in a few months every farmer in the land would feel the glad change In the Increased demand for his products and In the bet ter prices which he would receive. NOT OPEN MINTS, BUT OPEN MILLS. It is not Increase in the volume of money which is the need of the time, but an increase. in the volume of business. Not an Increase of coinage, but an in crease of confidence; not more coinage, but a more active use of the money coined; not open mints for the unlimit ed coinage of the silver of the world, but open mills for the full and unrestrict ed labor of American workmen. The employment of our mints for the coin age of the silver of the world would not bring the necessaries and comforts of life back to our people. Thia will only come with the employment of the mass es, and such employment is certain to follow the re-establishment of a wise protective policy which shall encourage manufacturing at home. Proteotlon has lost none of lta virtue and Importance. The first duty of the Republican party, if restored to power In the coun try, will be the enactment of a tariff law which will raise all the money ne-' cessary toconduct the Government eco nomically and honestly administered, and so adjusted as to give the prefer ence to home manufacturers and ade quate protection to home labor and the home market We are not committed to any special schedules or rates of duty. They are and will be always sub ject to changes to meet new conditions; but the principle upon which rates of duty are imposed remains the same. Our duties should always be high enough to measure the difference be tween the wages paid labor at home and In competing countries, and to ade quately protect American Investments and American enterprises. Our farmers have been hurt by the changes in our tariff legislation as se verely as our laborers and manufactur ers, badly aa they have suffered. Ths Republican platform wisely declares in favor of such encouragement to our su- . gar Interests as will lead to the "pro duction on American aoll of all sugar which the American people use." It promises to our wool and woolen inter est "the most ample protection," a guar antee that ought to commend itself to every patriotlo citizen. Never was a more grevious wrong done the farmers of our country than that so unjustly In flicted during the past three years upon the woolgrowers of America. Although among our most industrious and useful citizens, their Interests have been prac tically destroyed and our woolen man ufacturers involved in similar disaster. At no time in the past thlrtysix years, and perhaps even during any previous period, have so many of our woolen fac tories been suspended as now. The Re publican party can be relied upon to correct these great wrongs if again in trusted with the control of Congress. RECIPROCITT. Another declaration of the Republic an platform that has my most cordial lupport is that whloh favors reciprocity. The splendid results of the reciprocity arrangements that were made under authority of the tariff law of 1890 are striking and suggestive. The brief peri od that they were In force, in most cases only three years, was not long enough to thoroughly test their great value, but sufficient was shown by the trial to con clusively demonstrate the Importance and wisdom of their adoption. In 1892 the export trade of the United States attained the highest point in our his tory. The aggregate of our exports that year reached the Immense sum of 31, 030,278,148, a sum greater by $100,000,000 than the exports or any previous year. In 1893, owing to the threat of unfriend-. ly tariff legislation, the total dropped to $847,665,190. Our exports of domestic merchandise aecreasea i8y,7wi,wo, but reciprocity still secured us a large trade in Central ana uoutn America and a larger trade with the West Indies than we had ever before enjoyed. The In crease of trade with the countries with which we had reciprocity agreements was $3,660,615 over our trade In 1893 and $16,440,721 over our trade in 18U. The only countries to which the Unit ed States showed Increased exports in 1893 were practically those with which we had reciprocity arrangements. The reciprocity treaty between this country and Spain touching the markets of Cu ba and Costa Rica were announced Sep tember 1, 1891. The growth of our trade with Cuba was phenomenal In 1891 we sold that coui.try but 114,441 barrels ot flour, in 1892. 366.175; in 1893, 616,406, and in 1894. 662,248. Here waa a growth of nearly 500 per cent, while our exporta- , tlona of flour to Cuba for the year end. lng June 30, 1895, the year following the repeal of the reciprocity treaty, fell to 879,856 barrels, a loss of nearly half our trade with that country. The valuo of our total exports of merchandise from the United States to Cuba in 18(1, the year prior to the negotiation of the .re ciprocity treaty, was $12,224,083; in 1892. 317,953,679; in 1893, 324,157,606; in 1S94. 320,126,321, but in 1895, after the annul ment of the reciprocity agreement, it fell to only 312,887,661. Many similar examples might be giv en of our Increased trade under recip rocity with other countries, but enough has been shown of the efficacy of the legislation of 1890 to Justify ths speedy restoration of Its reciprocity provisions. In my judgment. Congress ahould im mediately restore the reciprocity section of the old law, with auoh amendments, if any, as time and experience aanctlon aa wise and proper. The underlying principle of this legislation must, how ever, be strictly observed. It la to af ford new markets for our surplus agri cultural and manufactured products without loss to the Amertoan laborer of a single day'a work that he might other, wise procure. Continued on 3d page.