THE LETTER OF A PATRIOT. SEI1TOR WOLCOTT TO COLORADO REPUBLICAN. He Tells Why He Canoot Support tbe Chicago Platform, Eveo to Secure Free Coinage la America. . Under date of July 81, 1896, Senator Ed ward O. Wdcott, of Colorado, issued an address to the voters of that state, giving his reasons for supporting McKauiey ana - not following his colleague. Senator 'leiier, . out ot the republican party. It is a-manly, patriotic, strong and convincing letter, and has rallied to his support a large ma jority of the republicans of that state. The reasons he gives are just as good In this state as they are in Colorado, and ail voters, of whatever party, who are tempt . ed by their desire for lt coinage to ig nore the grave dangers to wnlc h,ea,Y,f? attention, should give them thoughtful consideration. The address is aa follows. To the Voters of the State ot Colorado.: The people of Colorado are entitled to know at such a juncture as this the views of their representatives at Washington. Among the great privileges we enjoy un der republican institutions are freedom of conscience and freedom of speech, and if 1 should hesitate on this or on any other proper occasion to declare my belief and Iny convictions on any public question, 1 should despise myselt even more than I despise those incendiary newspapers and hysterical Individuals who assume that tnreats and vituperation can choke the utterances of any self-respecting citizen ot Colorado, who has an opinion to ex press or a principle to declare. "The silver question is most vital. In ternational bimetaUsm at the former ratio woulu, ol course, be the most desirable method of restoring silver as a money metal, because the disturbance of values, which might follow the Inauguration of tree coinage by the United States alone, would be avoided, and the question as to tne exportation or hoarding of gold would be eliminated. In my opinion, however, the United States alone could, under wise and conservative guidance such guidance, as should deserve and receive the conti nence of all classes ot our people open its mints to the unlimited coinage of silver and successfully maintain that metal at a parity with gold at the ratio of lb to 1, in dependently of other nations of the world, uuring the seven years of my public serv ice in the senate, 1 have always held this view. My vote on all questions affecting tbe currency has been identical with that of other senators usually known as silver senators, and, while my utterances on the sliver question may not have been as fre quent or as long as those of others whose views 1 share, nevertheless my record on this subject is clear and consistent, and the views I hold I expect always to maln- ta,'the financial plank of the national re publican platform is, in. my opinion, far trom satisfactory, and those members of the party who believe as 1 believe, will struggle earnestly and hopefully for the full and complete recognition and adop tion by the republican party of the hu mane principle of bimetaUsm, animated by the belief that the party which on every other great question Involving hu man freedom and the welfare of mankind has stood for all that was uplifting and ennobling, will yet realize that a contin uance ot the gold standard means only further impoverishment and suffering. "The platform contains, however, a most important statement, pledging the party to the furtherance ot bimetaUsm by in ternational agreement. To the good faith of this pledge, the history of the parly on other questions requires the fullest credence; the overshadowing Importance of the silver question makes it certain to my mind that every effort will be earnest ly made by the republican party to secure to this country the blessings of bimetal ism, and it is my sincere conviction that silver will again be restored to its place as a money metal at the old ratio, and that when this restoration comes, it will be accomplished through the action and efforts of the republican party. Except on the money question, no man in Colorado who believes in the protection of American labor and American products and American industries, and who loves his country, can read the platform without hearty ap proval; and no man doubts that Major McKinley will bring to his high office every quality needed by a president of this great people. "Mr. .Bryan has been nominated for the presidency on three separate platforms; by the democratic party, the populist party and by the silver party. The last named party the silver party does not deserve serious consideration. Most of its members were present at its recent con vention In St. Louis, and the newspapers report the convention hall as being less than half full. The democratic party nominated Mr. Bryan upon a platform the financial portion of which was everything that could be desired, and the rest of It everything that is, in my opinion, un desirable and hostile to the Interests of our country. I decline to stand upon this platform and vote for this candidate, even with the alluring free-coinage plank. I cannot do it. I am a believer in protec tion, and shall not abandon that belief. .The supreme court of the United States is a pure and able tribunal; the highest ju dicial tribunal in the world. I will not help to smirch it. This government must be enabled to pay Its running expenses, and whenever my vote is need for that purpose, and I fall to vote it supplies to keep it alive,"! shall consider that I vio late my oath as senator. The recent re publican congress has been neither waste ful nor extravagant, and I must decline to certify to a statement I know to be un - true. When, some months ago, the rail way strike at Chicago grew beyond con trol, and innocent lives were being sacri- -heed and millions of dollars' worth of prop erty was being destroyed by lawless men; when the sheriff was powerless, and the governor failed to perform bis duty, the president of the United States, with fed eral troops, under sanction of law, saved further bloodshed and destruction, and thereby deserves the thanks oT every man who values our liberties and believes that the rights guaranteed us by the constitu tion ought to be sacredly guarded against lawlessness of every form. "The recent travesty at St. Louis, the populist convention, has but illustrated the elements which naturally gravitate toward -the candidacy of Mr. Bryan. Every cranky quirk, every incongruous and ludicrous and misshapen idea which the wheels In the brains of men could evolve, buzzed and whirled through days of talk, but the net result was Bryan. Government ownership of railroads, tele graph and telephone lines. Initiative and referendum, eilvermoney and more money, had their advocates, and at the end, on assurances that all who voted for Bryan would be equally recognized, Mr. Bryan was the almost unanimous choice of the convention. "Because, therefore, I believe that free coinage will come through the efforts of the republican party, and because the democratic and populist platforms, ex cept on the money question, are odious and hostile to the welfare of our country, I shall not cast my vote for Mr. Bryan. - "I hold my commission from the reniih- llcan party. Many of Its members, lnclud- clal policy, which It Is our natural and proper desire to see overthrown as speedily as possible. We are one of 46 states in the Union, each free and sovereign. Within our borders live about one one hundred and fiftieth of the people of the United States. We live in a republic where the majority rules. The vast majority of the people of the United States are honest and of a high average of intelligence, and de voted to the perpetuity of free institu tions. Our great desire is to Induce a ma jority of the people of the United States to believe as we believe. The way to the accomplishment "of this result is not by vituperation and abuse. The press of the country, East as well as West, is largely responsible for the bitter sectional feeling now sought to be invoked. It Is for us who do not own or control newspapers and who are not in the business of throw ing mud, to remember that of the millions of people who will cast their ballots this fall, nearly all are as patriotic as we are, and with us equally desirous that this re public shall live, and not die. The people of the East are our brothers; we sprung from the same loins, we have a common country, a common death and the same dear nag. This gospel of hate which is now being preached ahould And no follow ing among sane men, no welcome among good citizens. "We who believe in the tree coinage of both gold and silver at our mints at the ratio heretofore existing will secure the adoption of our views when we are able to induce the majority of our fellow-cltl-ens to share our belief; when people who do not agree with us now shall be led to agree with us, not alone because of our arguments on finance, but because our views on other great questions entitle us to public confidence and respect. - Free coinage will never come, in my opinion, out ol the jumble and folly of the Chicago platform, nor will it be heralded by the cap and bells of populism. "EDWARD O. WOLCOTT." McKINLErS LETTER Con. from 1st page. Wages la Mexico. Chicago Tribune. A. J. Warner, the popocrat, discourses thus: "It is now generally admitted that, while the United States, on a gold basis, is suf fering from prolonged business stagnation, Mexico, on a silver basis, was never so prosperous as now. The explanation of this difference in tbe business and industrial conditions of the two countries seems to puzzle a good many people, and especially those who hold to the belief that the gold standard is the condition under which a country ought to thrive best." The best way to ascertain whether a country Is prosperous is to find out what the reward of labor is there and also the prices of those commodities which are in common use. That country is the most prosperous where a day's labor exchanges for the greatest quantity of the necessaries of life. Tried by that test, what does the Mexi can prosperity Warner extols amount to? The following tables will throw some light on the subject. The first one gives the wages paid In the City of Mexico, which has about 350,000 people. The first column gives the actual wages paid, the second column gives their gold value, and the third gives American wages paid In gold or Its equivalent: OCCUPATION. Carpenters Bricklayers ......... Blacksmiths Painrs Masons '., Printers Clerks In stores Unskilled labor House servants Hotel help Cooks Factory hands Farm hands Car drivers Conductors Policemen Miners Railroad engineers Firemen Conductors ... Brakemen Mexico 2 " 9 Value In "2 2.5. "a cr tg ! K ; i til 2 00 SI 00 S2 00 1 50 75 3 00 2 00 1 00 2 50 2 50 1 25 2 00 1 70 87 4 00 1 25 87 4 00 2 50 1 25 2 b0 40 20 1 25 S3 17 60 50 26 1 00 2 50 1 25 3 00 50 25 2 00 50 25 60 75 37 1 25 1 00 60 1 25 1 00 60 2 25 60 25 1 00 6 00 ' 3 00 6 00 4 0U - 2 00 3 00 6 00 2 60 4 60 1 60 75 2 00 It will be Been that In a few instances the Mexican working man gets as many Mexican dollars at the American working man gets 100-cent United States dollars. Generally the wage-worker who is paid In Mexican dollars gets fewer of them than the American gets of full value dollars. According to Warner this is prosperity. The second table deals with prices. The first column shows what the Mexican pays for the necessaries of life in Mexican dol lars. Tbe second column shows what he would be asked were he to pay in gold value American money. The third column shows the prices paid in this country: Mexico. U. S. Gold or Value In silver equal silver. Tea, per pound.. 12 00 Flour, per pound 08 Bacon, per pound Lard, per pound. Beef, per pound.. Mutton, per lb.. Coffee per lb.... Sugar, per lb.... Beans, per lb.... Potatoes per lb.. Corn meal, lb... Rice, per lb From which It 60 SO 20 20 40 10 10 06 20 appears KOld. i uu . 04 26 15 10 10 20 05 06 02V4 10 04 that the In value. 60 04 08 08 10 15 25 06 02 01 2 Mexi can gets less for his labor and pays more for all he consumes. The day's labor of a car conductor there will buy 12 pounds of flour and 6 pounds of beef. Here the day's labor of a car conductor will buy al most 28 pounds of flour and 12 pounds ot meat. Nevertheless, Warner declares that labor prospers in Mexico, and he proposes that the American working-man cast his vote for a candidate who will give him Mexican prosperity. Undoubtedly Mexico is more prosperous that she was 20 years ego. She has pro gressed In spite of her having a sliver standard. She has had a more stable form of government. American capital has built railroads, which have opened up tbe coun try and given value to products which were valueless previously for lack of transporta tion facilities. But with all the progress that has been made, that -which counts for prosperity In Mexico would count for wretchedness In the United States. . American workingmen who feel Inclined to vote for Bryan should study the above tables of wages and prices before they cast their ballots to Mexicantxe the labor of this country. Brooklyn Eagle. William McKinley made a brief speech Wednesday to the surviving members of the regiment In which he served during the war, and In the course of it he said he believed "It was a great deal better to open' the mills of the United States to the labor of America than to open the mints nf ttiA United RtAtftn tA thA RilvpF nf th ing some of Its leaders, in the exercise or world." William J. Bryan made a long the r Judgment, have announced their In- HnpM,h . the Mudlann-Sonare mrrten hut in the whole course of It he did not say a thing which will stick In the minds of the voters like this epigram which his rival for the presidency coined in Canton. tentlon of leaving the party. I shall stay. My loyalty to the party which has hon ored me Is entirely consistent with my loyalty to the highest and best Interests of the state I represent in the senate of the United States, and I know no reason why I should abandon my party or desert Its colors. There Is In my mind no reason why it was not as much our duty to vote for Weaver four years ago as for Bryan today. The Omaha platform declared for. with uumuge, uiu was uu uiute uujeuiiun- ' able than the Chicago platform; and Bryan Is vouched for by leading populists as being 'as good a populist as lives.' The populists have not changed in the past four years. It Is we who are expected to join their organization. Others may find It a, wise experiment, but I won't do it. Whenever the course of events could make It possible that I should speak from the same platform as Tillman or Walte or Ig- natlus Donnelly, In advocacy of the same & residential candidate, I know there must e something wrong with me. "What we need. in. Colorado is less hysterics and more common sense. We have glorious resources, yet In the infan- M , - . - 1 .. " cy of their development. We are suffering- bixteen men were cut off of the Kan front the imposition ot a mistaken finan-; aaa City police force Monday. If we coin a silver dollar of full legal tender below the current value of the gold dollar, we are simply opening our doors and Inviting England to take our gold. i our arold fiowinr out from us we snail De rorced to the single silver stand ard, and our- relations with the leading commercial countries of the world would be not only embarrassed, but crippled. What gain should we ' make, - therefore, for the circulating medium If on opening the' gate for silver to flow In, we open a . still wider gate for gold to flow out? James G. Blaine. . Mark Hanna, chairman of the repub lican national committee, predicts a gain of 10,000 for the party in Vermont FOREIGN IMMIGRATION. 7 The declaration of the platform touch ing foreign Immigration Is one of pecu liar importance at this time, when our own laboring' people are In such great distress. I am in hearty sympathy with the present legislation restraining foreign immigration, and favor such ex tension of the laws as will secure the United States from Invasion by the de barred and criminal classes of the Old World While we adhere to the public policy under which our country has raised great bodies of honest. Industri ous citizens who have added to the wealth, progress and power of the coun try, ami While we welcome to our shores the well disposed and industrious im migrant who contributes by his energy and Intelligence to the cause of free government we want no Immigrant who do not seek our Bhores to become citizens. We should permit none to par ticipate in the advantages of our civil ization who do not sympathize with ot r acta and form of government. "W e should receive none who come to make war upon our Institutions and profit by. pubMo disquiet and turmoil. Against all such our gates must be tightly closed. OUR SOLDIERS AND SAILORS. - The soldiers and Bailors of the United States should neither be neglected, nor forgotten. The Government which they served so well must not make their lives or condition harder by treating: them as suppuants tor reuei in oia age or uib tresa, nor regard with disdain or con tempt the earnest Interest one comrade naturally manifests in the welfare of another. - Doubtless . there have been pension abuses and frauds in the num erous claims allowed by the Govern ment, but the policy governing the ad ministration of the Pension Bureau must always be fair and liberal. No de serving applicant should ever suffer be cause of a wrong perpetrated by or for another. Our soldiers and sailors gave the Government the best they had. They freely offered health, strength, limb and life to save the country in the time of Its greatest peril. And the Government must honor them in their need as in their service with the respect and grati tude due to brave, noble and self-sacrificing men, who are Justly entitled to generous aid in their increasing neces-' adties. OUR MERCHANT MARINE ' AND NAVY. The declaration of the Republican platform in favor of the upbuilding of our merchant marine has my hearty approval. The policy of discriminating duties in favor of our shipping which prevailed in the early years of our his tory should be again promptly adopted by Congress and vigorously supported until our prestige and supremacy on the seas is fully attained. We should no longer contribute directly or indirectly to the maintenance of the colossal ma rines of foreign countries, but provide an efficient and complete marine of our own. Now that the American Navy is assuming the position commensurate with our Importance as a nation, a pol icy I am glad to observe the Republic an platform strongly indorses, we must supplement it with a merchant marine that will give us tbe advantages In both our coastwise and foreign trade that we ought naturally and properly to enjoy. It should be at once a matter of public policy and national pride to repossess this immense and prosperous trade. CIVIL SERVICE REFORM. The pledge of the Republican Conven tion that our civil service laws "shall be sustained and thoroughly and honestly enforced and extended wherever prac ticable" Is in keeping with the position of the party for the past twenty-four years, and will be faithfully observed. Our opponents decry those reforms. They appear willing to abandon all the advantages gained after so many years of agitation and effort. They encour age a return to methods of party favor itism Which both parties have often de nounced, that experience haa condemn ed and that the people have repeatedly disapproved. - The Republican party earnestly opposes this reactionary and entirely unjustifiable policy. It will take no backward step upon this ques tion It will seek to improve, but never degrade the public service. IT DEMANDS SPECIAL ATTENTION. . There are other Important and timely declarations in the platform which I cannot here discuss. I must content myself with saying that they have my approval. If, as Republicans, we have lately addressed our attention with with what may seem great stress and earn estness to the new and unexpected as sault upon the financial Integrity of the Government, we have done It because the menace Is so grave as to demand especial consideration, and because we are convinced that if the people are aroused to the true understanding and meaning of this silver ami Inflation movement they will avert the dangor. In oing this we feel that we render the. best service possible to the country, and we appeal to the intelligent conscience and patriotism of the people, irrespec tive of party or section, for their earnest support. . WILL MAINTAIN LAW AND ORDER We avoid no issue. We meet the sud den, dangerous and revolutionary as sault upon law and order and upon those to whom is confided by the legis- . lation and the laws, the authority to up hold and maintain them which our op ponents have made, with the same oour- -age that we have faced every emer gency since our organization as a party more than forty years ago. Govern ment by law must first be assured, ev erything etee can wait. The spirit of , lawlessness must be extinguished by the fires of an unselfish and lofty patri otism. Every attack upon the public faith and every suggestion of the re pudiation of debts, public or private, must be rebuked by all men who believe that honesty ia the best policy, or who love their country and would preserve unsullied our national honor. SECTIONALISM ALMOST OBLITER ATED. The country is to be congratulated upon the almost total obliteration of sectionalism which '. for many years marked the division of the United States in slave and free territory and finally threatened its partition Into two separate governments by the dread or deal of civil war. The era of reconcili ation, so long and earnestly desired by General Grant and many other great leaders, North and South, has happily come, and tlie feeling of distrust and hostility between the sections is every where vanishing, let us hope never to return. Nothing Is better calculated to give strength to the national wealth, Increase our power and Influence abroad and add to the permanency and secu rity of our free institutions than the restoration of cordial relations between the people of all sections and parts of our beloved country. , If called by the suffrages of the peo ple to assume the duties of the high office of President of the United States I shall count it a privilege, even in the slightest degree, to increase the spirit of fraternal regard which should ani mate and govern the citizens of every' section. State or part of the Republic. After the lapse of a century since its utterance, let us, at length and forever hereafter, - heed the admonition of Washington: "There should be no North, no South, no East, no West, but a common country." It shall be my constant aim to improve every oppor tunity to advance the cause of good sentiat to our prosperity ana Happiness, by joining most heartily In all proper efforts to restore the relations of broth erly respect and affection which in our ' early history characterized all the peo ple and all the States. I would be glad, to contribute toward binding In indivis ible union the different divisions of the Country, which. Indeed, "Have every inductment of sympathy and interest" to weld them together more strongly than ever. I would rejoice to see dem onstrated to the world that the North and. South and the East and West are not separated or in danger of becoming separated because of sectional or party differences. The war Is long since over; we are not enemies, but friends, and as friends we will faihtfully and cordially co-operate under the approving smile of Him who has thus far so signally sus tained and guided us to preserve Invio late our country's name and honor, ltj peace and good order and its continued ascendency among the greatest govern ments on earth. WILLIAM M"KTNLEY. A MONEY CATECHISM. the sh.ver.te catechism. SOME PLAIN ANSWERS TO IMPORTANT QUESTIONS CONCERNING MONEY. A PLAIN TALK TO JOHN SMITH. In Which Be Is Shown How Free Coinage Will Injure Him. This means you, John Smith. It makes no difference what your calling may be, if you are a workingman the the very greatest importance to yourself, ."TO Why Gold Is Preferable to SUvm . Bulky, and Business of Civilised World Is Adjusted to It Laws Cannot Blake It lVeas Acceptable Money Senator Stewart - and Silver States Prefer Gold, ' - Question. What is money ? Answer, any common medium of exchange which is accepted as payment in itself. Q. What is representative money? A. any common medium of exchange which promises to pay money. Q. What is meant by primary money? A, This is a new phrase introduced to oonf use people by suggesting that there is also secondary money. Q. What is money of final redemp tion? A. This is another late addition to the American language implying that there- are several different, kinds of money. There is only one kind of money In this country. There are several dif- your family and your friends. This question is: Will you, John Smith, vote for the candidates who favor the free and unlimited coinage of silver at a ratio of 16 to 1? You are asked to do so on the ground that free silver will make you more prosperous. You know that you would like to get higher wages, have a better house to live in, wear bet ter clothes and be able to provide more oomforta and luxuires for your wife and children, and, being a hardworking man who has not had much time to study financial questions, perhaps you are inclined to believe that there's some thing in this talk of cheap money for the workers. If so, here are some points for you to think over: . This free silver agitation did not start with you, John Smith. It began with the owners of the silver mines, who wanted to get a higher price for their product. They were cunning enough to see that the people would not listen to a barefaced scheme of special favors to one small class, so they went to work to convince the farmers that prices of farm products are too low. To them they said, "If prices were measured in cheap silver dollars, you would get twice as much money for what you selL" They did not tell the whole truth, that the farmer would also pay twice as much for everything he buys, and so they soon found themsleves with a con siderable number of followers. Then they tried the workers. To them they said: "Free silver will give the country more money. More money will give the workingmen better wages. . If yon want more wages, vote for free silver. " In the first place, John Smith, you will notice that when the silver mine owners and their agents are talking to the farmers they don't say anything about increasing wages. This is because the farmer wants to get his labor as cheaply as possible. Then, when they talk to you, they keep mighty quiet about raising prices. This is because they know you don't want to pay high prices for what you buy. Yet it is as certain as that two and two make four that if goods are measured in 60 cent silver dollars your bread, meat, flah, vegetables and everything you eat, your clothes, your furniture and everything for which you spend your wages, will be just twice as dear as they are now. This is not gold bug lies. It is what the silverites say when they are talking cheap money to the farmers. Now, John Smith, do yon see what free silver means? And do you want a system under which the price of every thing you buy will be at once doubled? Are you willing to vote for a certainty of being paid in cheap dollars which have only half of the purchasing power of those you now get? The 16 to 1 shouters will tell you that your wages will be doubled and that if your em ployer does not at once give you twice as many dollars per month or week you will simply have to ask for more pay. Do you think you will get it, John Smith? You know how hard it is for the workers to get even a slight advance In wages. You know that there are many Idle men who would be glad to take your place If you' went on strike. Can you afford to take chances with a scheme which is certain to double your living expenses for the sake of the bare possibility of higher wages? Think it over, John Smith, between now and November. Talk it over with your fellow-workmen and vote according to your own best interests. Inevitable Consequences, The experiences of all lands and of all ages utterly exclude the possibility that any one should profit by a depreci ated currency except an exceedingly small minority of money dealers and successful speculators in publio dis tress. In the spirit of gambling that is thus engendered in an epoch of depreci ated currency very few of these persons are permitted to enjoy their innings in the long run. When the prices of prod ucts nominally rise, the balance is re dressed by a rise also in the cost of pro duction and In the wants of the pro ducers. Every rise in prices under an inflated currency, as well as under a sound -system of money, is followed by increased production and by a depression of prices through increased competi tion. But a violent disturbance of busi ness through a sudden change of the monetary standard to a silver dollar containing only 63 cents of bullion could not be made without causing widespread distress. The only adequate explanation of the course of the advo cates of free silver coinage is that they are but dimly oonscious of the conse quences that would follow the adoption of their policy. Philadelphia Record.. A Sixteen to One. Xown. "Is this a 16 to 1 town?" asked the drummer. . "It air on Sunday," answered the native. . .- "On Sunday? Q. Give examples of each. A. Gold coin is money. Everything else that circulates, whether of metal or of paper, is representative money. Q. Is silver coin representative money. A. It is. Q. In what way does the government promise to redeem its silver coins? A. By the act of congress of June 9, 1879, it promises to redeem all coins smaller than. 1 when presented in sums not less than f 20. By the act of Feb. 28, 1878, the government promises to . receive silver dollars at par in all pay ments to itself. By the act of July 19, 1890, it declares it to be the policy of the government to keep the two metals at a parity with each other. By two different acts the secretary of the treas ury is authorized to purchase coin and to issue the obligations of the United States therefor. Q. What is the indispensable quality and first requisite of money? A. That it should be universally acceptable. . Q. Is there any kind of money uni versally acceptable but gold? A. There is not Q. Would not silver be equally ac ceptable if it were equally legal tender? A. Silver dollars are legal tender. Give any man the option of taking 100 of these pieces or 10 goldpieoes of $10 each and he will choose the latter. Therefore they are not equally accepta ble. Q. Is the difference In weight tne only reason why gold is more acceptable than silver? A. That is not the only reason now, but it was the main if not the only, reason when civilized nations made their choice between the two. Q. What reasons exist now that did not exist then? A. A variation of 60 per cent has taken place in the value of the two metals. In addition to being 16 times as heavy, silver has lost one-half of its value during the interval Q. Are there any other reasons why silver is . not equally acceptable with gold? A. Yes; although a limited amount of silver (and also of nickel and copper) is used as a medium of ex change, it is now a commodity in the markets of the world subject to the same fluctuations as other commodities. Peo ple do not like to use a fluctuating com modity as money, and will not if they can get anything better. Q. Have you mentioned all the rea sons why gold is acceptable as money and silver is not? A. The most decisive reason is that the civilized world has adjusted itself to the gold standard dur ing a long period of tima All business is bottomed on it It is an accomplished fact coextensive with the commercial world. To change to another standard would be literally turning the commer cial world upside down. Q. Can such a change be produced? A. Absolutely impossible. In a conceiv able oase one country may turn itself upside down, but that feat would not make gold less acceptable or silver more so, even in that country. Acoeptableness is a state of the human mind which laws cannot change. Q. Is the preference for gold uni versal? A. It is universal among civi lized men. Even the silver advocates in the United States prefer gold in their business affairs, that is everywhere ex cept on the stump. Senator Stewart of Nevada makes his mortgages payable in gold. When he was reproved for this bad example, he said that he merely followed the universal custom on the Pacific coast, where he lives. So we have his authority for the statement that in the section of the Union where the demand for silver is most vociferous everybody prefers gold in his private business. Q. Can you give any other examples? A. The territory of Arizona brought a bill before congress two or three years ago, asking authority to issue bonds payable specifically in gold, on the ground that the money would be bor rowed at a considerable lower rate of interest than if they were payable in dollars without specifying the kind of dollars. The state of Utah is negotiating a specifio gold loan now for the same reason. Yet both Arizona and Utah are politically for silver. Q. What do these acts signify? A. Two things: First, that gold is prefer able to silver in the general estimation of mankind; second, that payment in , gold is an advantage to borrowers. New York Evening Post Za Which Free Coinage Theories Are Plainly Stated. What is money? Something made out of nothing by government - Is there any limit to the amount of money which government can make? Only the capacity of the printing presses of the country. What kind of money is the best? That which has the least value. ' What does "cheap money" mean? Money that will buy very little wealth. Why are some people poor? Because the money they get in exchange for their products or their labor will buy a large amount of goods. How can the poor all be made rich? By stamping 60 cents' worth of silver "one dollar" and thus decreasing the nurchasincr cower of monev. . What is a capitalist? A wicked sinner who has worked hard and saved np a little property. What is a patriot? A man who covets his neighbor's property and wants to get hold of it by law. What does "repudiation" mean? It is a simple scheme for readjusting the in equalities between the men who worked and the men who have not - " What is the golden rule of the silver ites? Do others as they would not do ' you. What are we to understand by "hon esty" and "good faith between men?" That creditors are to be cheated out of -one-half of their property whenever the debtors control congress. Why not benefit debtors still more by repudiating all the claims of creditors? That will oome later. The publio must be educated into silverism by degrees. What is a creditor? A fiend in human shflriA Who lnATlftri 100 mnf. rlnllava nnrl doesn't want to be paid in dollars worth 60 cents. How will free silver help the farm ers? By causing the withdrawal of all loons, paralysis of industry, stagnation of commerce and idleness of millions of workers who now buy farm products. How will the 16 to 1 scheme benefit the working classes? By making them pay twice as much for everything they buy, while giving them little or no in crease in wagea It will also confiscate half of their savings bank deposits. What is a silver mine owner? A good, kind, unselfish citizen, who doesn't want higher prices of silver so that he will ffefc rinh. hnfc simrtlv IwnnnM Iia loves his fellow man. Does his love for ' the workers lead him to pay more than market rates for his labor? Not much. Business and sentiment are two different things. Be sides he doesn't have to. What is a sound currency? Dollars with 60 nenta' worth of Hi Ivor ntiil SO cents' worth of fiat or paper dollars all fiat What is the chief duty of a good citi zen? To hate everybody who is indus trious and thrifty, and to meekly swal low all the nostrums of the cheap money office seekers. How can the people be made prosper ous? By setting class against class; dis couraging the investment of capital; contracting the currency by ruining em ployers, driving out gold and over throwing our sound financial system. Whidden Graham. The Grand Army of Creditors, Tho gentlemen who think that they have made an attractive bid for votes by proposing a 60 cent dollar for debtors to pay their debts with are reckoning without thoir host Every state of the Union is full of creditors, and they will never consent to defraud and cheat themselves. Among these creditors are: All persons who work for wages, sal ary or by the piece. All members of building and loan associations. All depositors in savings, national, state or private banks. All holders of life, fire and accident insurance policies. . - All members of benevolent and fra ternal insurance orders. All holders of industrial insurance. All widows, orphans or wards de pendent wholly or partially upon the income from investments. All educational and charitable insti tutions dependent wholly or in part up- . on the income of their endowments. In fact, the 60 cent silver dollar would be of advantage to few persons in the long run save the speculators, who would gamble on the inevitable fluctuations in its purchasing power and in the price of commodities. Exchange. Some Things Monody Can Do. It is idle to "hurl defiance" and boast of what this great nation can da It never has been able to maintain bimetal lism under free ooinage of both gold ' and silver, even when the conditions were far more favorable, than now. This nation is unquestionably "broad enough to legislate for its own people without waiting for the aid or consent of any other nation on earth, ", but this nation tried for over 80 years to secure bimetallism under a legal double stand- ' ard and completely failed. And as this nation, "broad" as it is, is not able to work miracles, it can no more perform such a feat now than it could in the past Louisville Courier-Journal. government by promoting that spirit of i xas o"en goes nsnm to one go- in to i forbearance and iustlce which is so ea-" i church. " Cincinnati Enquirer. Sllvente Vampaicn uim. The platform adopted by the silverite wing which controlled the Democratic national convention contains abundant material for stirring campaign mottoes. "Free Silver Inflation," "Debt Repudi ation," "Property Confiscation" and "Commercial Stagnation" are brief and truthful statements of the aims of the cheap money Democrats and the certain results which would follow their success in November. Shouting these cheerful strains, the silverites can march to the . certain defeat which awaits all move ments based on sectionalism, greed, ap peals to prejudice and hatred of property rights. ... ... . The Freaent Standard Beat For All. The present currency standard should be maintained because it guarantees an honest dollar to rich and poor alike. . The farmer is sure of full value for his products. The laborer knows that his services are paid for with honest money; If the currency maintained on the pres ent gold standard is the "money of the wealthy, ". as the free silver advocates assert to awaken the prejudices of the -common people, by the same token it is acceptable to the poor. The wisdom of -the present basis is seen in the fact that individuals prefer a gold standard dollar every time, and what is best for individuals is best for the nation. De troit Free Press. The ratio of summer girls to summer men at the seashore resorts is 16 to L McKinley is the choice of the people.