Supplement THE DALLES CHRONICLE WEDXESDAV. .SEPTEMBER SO. 1800, PERKINS OK SILVER The Only Eli Tells the Hollow Tale of Free Silver. flE SIZES UP THE SITUATION Good Reasons Advanced for Being on the Side of Gold. "Are you in favor of both silver and Bold?" asked a Populist of Eli Perkins. "Certainly," said Eli, "every civilized . nation uses the two metals gold and ilver but the United Mates is the only nation that has coined as much silvv as gold. We have been rank bimetal- lists. We have stood by silver too lone, We have coined JtUiL'iUWO.OOO worth of liver and stilMi.COO.OOO worth ot cold. "What have the other great nations coined';" nsked the Populist. "Why. they have coined less than half as much us we have. ivnglana (un united Kingdom) has coined nnd has on band fll2.000.000 worth of silver nnd S550.OOO.00O in gold: France has $49:$.- 200.000 in silver and !;825.O00.0OO in Koldr Germany has only $215,000,000 in silver and $02"i.0K).O(H) in gold; Russia has only $4X.00O.OOO in silver and $4.J, 00.000 in gold." "Then we have coined about as much silver as nil of tbem together.' "Not quite. These four great nations, with a population of 240,000,000 people, have on hand S87C.(M (0.000 in silver, while we. with UO.000,000 people, have 4XE25.OtlO.000 in silver." "Where is our silver now?" asked the ronulist. "Why. $50S.OOO.00O lies piled up in the treasury. It is rusting in the vaults, paying no interest, and dropping in value. Carlisle is begging the people to take it. freight free, but he can only get S5fl.O0O.00O in circulation'. The people won't have it. They sling it back to the hnnks, and then the free silver men jump np and cry, 'We want more silver! They say, 'The poor people are dying ' lor silver, (join more: "And how much of our gold is in cir culation ; "Why. every solitary dollar SG2I5.000. OOO worth of it. The banks only hold 5128.000.000." "You don't say the nation has no gold at all?" "No gold of our own. We borrowed f 200.000.000 from a few Americans at per cent, nnd spent that running the government ana we ve got to pay it - hark. Then Cleveland borrowed SCO. 000.000 more from the Rothschilds and the English at' 4 per cent., while our own people were crying for it at 3 per cent., and that we've got to return in gold. To tell you the honest truth, this nation has got just $90,000,000. worth of bor rowed gold in the treasury. It isn't ours. It is borrowed to prevent a run on tne treasury, with $100,000,000 in (told due the people besides. Oh. if we had nought gold when we coined that $508,000,000 worth of silver now lying Idle in the treasury, as England, France, Germany and Russia did, we would be on top today. We wouldn't be the .laughing stock of Europe then. "Did England and the other nations -stop coining silver?" asked the Popu list. "Of course they did. They rang the bell and put out tbe red light against silver years ago. Since 1800 England nan coined $140,000,000 in gold and only fl4.000.000 in silver; France has coined ( 13,000.000 in gold and not a cent of sil er, and Germany has coined $49,000. 000 in gold and only $4,500,000 in silver. They have been hugging the shore, while our miners and I'opulists have piloted us Into deep water." "How much silver Is there for each person in the big nations? "We have $9 in silver for each nerson fn this country, but the people only take 70 cents. They kick $S back into the treasury. England has $2.88 per nerson Jermany has $4.35 and France $12, but $9 of it lies idle and 4all silver coinage is stopped, and their red lantern hangs out. "Some nations have free coinage," Bug--tested the Populist. "Certainly and look at thein condi tion! They are bankrupt. Our silver dollar is still worth 100 cents in gold anywhere on eartu. But in the free coin- ace nations, like Mexico. .Tanan. China and India, where free coinage has bank rupted tnose nations their dollars are worth 00 cents. They have no gold Gold fled with free coinage. It will do so again. "China has no gold at all you sav?" "None at all. China has $750,000,000 worth of 50-eent silver, but no gold; India has $150,000,000 in silver, and no cold: Spain, wrecked by too free coin age of silver, has $100,000,000 in silver and $ 0.000,000 in gold, and Mexico has ou,miu,uuu in silver and $5,000,000 in cold." "How much money to the person cir culates in tnose rree coinage countries? asked the Populist. "China has $3.26, while the United States hns $25: Mexico has $5: Tnrlin $X33. and Japan $4. This is poverty for Tnn . "Who suffers from free there?' coinage "Everyone. Every man has lost half his wealth. A man in Japan, Mexico, China or India who was worth $1000 Tniny years ago is worth $000 today. The pay of the laborer has not been changed, but a: man who gets 10 cents a Aww : -il.:-.- T , ,, vmuu, jupuu ur xnuia reauy Sets 5. "When I went to China," continued Mr. Perkins, "my letter of credit called for SoOvi) in American dollars. When I pot there I found $10,300 to my credit jn Mexican or Japanese dollars. Now who has ever lost anything by the Amer ican dollar? Not a man. It is as good as gold. Our good government has put jtold nnder it. But free coinage would break the camel's back. It would bring us to the level of Mexico and India " "What would be the first result of iree coinage?" "AH gold would hide away. Then we are now exporting annually $10,000,000 worth of commercial silver and selling enough to make a dollar for 50 cents. That is 32 to 1. The free silverites want their silver coined like our coined ilver, 16 to 1. and handed back to them. "With the government paying a double value for silver exportation would cease, and the government would pay the min ers $80,000,000 for what they are now gelling for $40,000,000. Then the output would increase. We mined $82,000,000 worth of silver 9a 1892. In 1896 we would mine $300,000,000, with the price dou Xled. .We would have to take it and AND LABOR WILj AGREE "I believe it is a good deal better up the mints of the United States to guarantee it legal tender with gold un der it. It would" take $400,000,000 to do. this 16 to 1. Can we do it?" How about Mexican and India sil ver?" asked the Populist. "Ah, that would come to us like a deluge! We have no tariff against sil ver. It would Dour in upon us: 1.200,- 000,000 people would unload on 70.000. 000. There has been mined during the last 400 veara $10,000,000,000 worth of silver. The world mined $20!Ut5.000 worth of 50-cent silver Inst year. This would come rushing in upon us. We would be the dumping ground of the world. We could not coin it. and w;hen we stopped our guarantee all our coined silver would fall back from 10 to 1 to 32 to 1. We would have the 50-cent dollars of China and Japan, with no gold in our treasury, nnd be the laughing stock of the world." Well, who would be benefited by free coinage?" asked the Populist. Well, no one but the mine owners. There are 8000 of them. Their work men are paid in silver, paper or gold dollars worth 100 cents in gold. The mine owner is working for silver worth 53 cents. The farmer is getting money as good as gold for his wheat and cotton now. With free silver he eould get no moro for his produce nor no . better money than he is getting. And, by and by, if we went on coining silver ad libitum, silver would go down like the old greenbacks in lob.. 1 hat went down to 35 cents on a dollar. while gold stood still. You could buy wheat then for S2.50 in greenbacks or 85 cents in gold. You could buy a farm in 18i3 for $00 an acre in greenbacks or $20 in gold. Do you want that to occur again?" The Populist was silent. I "Poop Man's Money." Among the transparencies carried by the shunters for Bryan atv Des Moines Friday evening were some bearing the words, "Silver is the poor man's money," V ote for the poor man s money and A 200-cent dollar is a dishonest dollar." Such sentences show the drift of the public mind and reveal only too plainly that with many people the silver ques tion is one of prejudice rather than one of reason. What is the meaning of the phrase, "Silver is the poor man s mon ey; We doubt very much it tne man who carried - that transparency could have given an intelligent unswer. Under present conditions u silver dollar of the United States will buy just as much nt home or abroad as a gold dollar. It makes no difference to the workingman hether he receives his weekly wages in gold or silver coin. The amount of goods he -can purchase is the same. Un til the agitation of the silverites drove the gold of the country into hiding places workmen were often paid in gold and when this silver craze is squelched they will again receive gold as a part of their wages. 1 here is one way, however, in which silver can be said to be the poor man's money. In those countries where the coinage of silver is unrestricted the wage earners are emphatically poor. A list of those countries is printed in another column this morning and the wages paid to skilled and unskilled laborers given. As was shown by the well-authenticated let ters from Mexico published in the Re pultliean on Friday and Saturday the price of the necessaries of life in these ountnes is double the price paid in the United States. Is this "the poor man's money" that the wage-earners of the United States are to vote for.' Are thev willing to sink to the level of the Mexi-i can peou or the coolie of India? If so the way to do it is to vote for the free and unlimited coinage of silver. If a free coinage law such as is contemplated by the silverites be passed, one of two things must happen. Either the silver of the entire world must be lifted to a parity with gold or the silver dollar of the United States must sink to the level of Mexico and other silver countries. n that case the wages of the workinir- man will be cut in two and he will in-' deed have cause to talk of "poor man's money." Why should not the laborer continue to be paid in good money? Cedar Rap- lds itepuDiican. Who Control Silver Mines? "Does Wall street own or control anv of all the silver mines ot this country? If so. what is her object In being go still about It?" H. J., Dresden, Kan. You seem to think Wall street is a woman. We doubt it tne majority of the Populists who talk so glibly about' Wall street know what it is. The United States , subtreasury in New York is on Wall street; so are a number of banks and brokers' offices. When prop erly used "Wall street" is simply a gen eral name for the dealers in New York in stocks, bonds and other securities. , The silver mines are owned by cor porations, and their stock is dealt in by New York brokers, the same as other stocks. "Wall street" is not keeping still about it: The fellows who are keening still are the great silver barons. who are pushing free coinage, and spend ing money like water to make it win.. They don t want the voters to know that free coinage at 16 to 1 would, by putting tne country on a silver basis, make the value of the dollar denend on the market price of silver bullion, which they, by speculation, could run np or down, and really put the entire money or the country at tneir mercy. Toledo Blade to open up the mills of the United States the silver of the world." Wm. McKinlty. . BRYAN CHEAP DOLLAR His Sole Aim is to fieduce the Value of the. Monetary Standard. BASES HIS ARGUMENTS ON IT Claptrap by Which the Orator Seeks to Capture Foolish Voters. Mr. Bryan's "informal" speech accept ing the nomination for the presidency was carefully written beforehand, and it took about two hours' time to deliver it. It can hardly be necessary, therefore, to wait for his "formal letter" in order to learn his views im the issues of the cam paign. The most of his long and prosy speech is devoted to .what he calls "the para mount question of the campaign the money question." Ami as this is in fact the real issue other parts of his speech may be disregarded, or at least comment on them may he isistiMinod. In discussing the money question Mr. Bryan assumes at every step that the standard dollar we now have is too valu able. That assumption lies at the bot tom of the whole argument. He com plains that the dollar is too dear, and that it is growing dearer; ami to this he attributes nil our economic woes, real or imaginary. As a remedy he proposes something which he calls bimetallism, but which, so far from that, is silver monometal lism. He has much to say about bimetallism, declaring that no party opposes it, but what he really proposes is. in his own words, "'the immediate lestoration of the free and unlimited coinage of silver and gold at the present legal ratio of It! to 1 without waiting for the aid or con sent of any other nation." Thas is to say, he proposes to permit anyone who has sixteen ounces of sil ver to take it to the mint and have it made into as many dollars as are made from one ounce of gold, or $20.67. He proposes this when he knows, or may know "by referring to the published quotations, that sixteen ounces of sil ver are worth only $11 in gold. He must know that an ounce of . gold is worth in the market nearly twice six teen ounces of silver. What he really proposes, therefore, is to substitute the silver dollar for the gold dollar as our standard, and to make the substitution because the silver dol lar is cheaper. Indeed, he virtually admits this at- al most ever' step in his labored argument. All his arguments addressed to farmers, to men who work for wages, to holders, of insurance policies and so on virtu. illy admit that he proposes to substitute a cheaper dollar as the standard. He tries to conceal the admission by talking about a "rising standard." and talking about "influences which are now operating to destroy silver in the United States." But while the attempt is a droit it will not succeed. We have no "rising standard." We have the same standard that we have had in all coin payments for sixty-two years. An ounce of gold may exchange for more of commodities in general than it would twenty or thirty years ago. It may, and probably does, go farther in paying the necessary cost of living. But it will not go further in paying for lalor. Its value measured by the labor stand ard is less than it was years ago. A man can earn more of it by working the same number of hours. If, then, he can buy more with the ounce of gold he is better off in two ways: He gets more gold for his labor and he gets more of the necessaries and comforts of life for his gold. There are no "influences operatiug to destroy silver in the United States." We now have at least ten times us much silver serving as money, including uctunl coin, its representative certificates and Sherman notes, as we ever had when the coinage of silver was free, v There are no influences operating to destroy one dollar of this mass of silver, amounting to about $550,000,000, or about $50,000,000 more than gold, esti mated td be in circulation. The simple truth is, and there is no use in trying to disguise or hide it, that Bryan and the men behind him are en gaged in a desperate attempt to lowex the value of the dollar. If that is not what they are after there is not a gleam of sense in Mr. Bryan's speech. It is true that he says, "We helieve that a silver dollar will be worth as much as a gold dollar." It is true that he says, "I am firmly convinced that by opening our mints to free and unlimited coinage at the present ratio we can create a demand for silver that will keep t ti .1 nrino nf fiilvai liiillinn at M 'XI nnH ounce measured by gold." But if Mr. Bryan is firmly convinced of thnt, what is he making all this ado about? The dollar would still , be as dear as it is now, and it is the dear WITH HIM. to the labor of America than to open Chicago Inter-Ocean. dollar, he says, that has brought down all this alleged calamity upon us. Nobody but the mine owner would be benefited if silver should go up from 68 to 129 cents per ounce, and we can hardly suppose that -Mr. Bryan is run ning this silver crusade for the sole and exclusive benefit of a handful of million aire mine owners. His whole argument is for cheaper dollars if it has any sense or point nt all He entices farmers to join in the cm snde by suggesting that they can pay tneir dolus easier with cheap dollars. He is like the unjust stewurd who said to the debtor who owed his lord a hun dred measures of oil. "take thy bill and sit down quickly and write fifty." He tells the wage-earners that it would be a good tiring for them to get their pay in cheaper dollars and that in some roundabout way cheaper dollars would give them steadier employment. He tells the holders of insurance poli cies that it would be a blessed thing for them to have their losses paid in cheaper dollars, because the conioanies would lose more than they (the policyholders!1 woum, nie aggregate or premiums ex ceeding the aggregate of losses, and the premiums being paid in cheaper dollar'. He tells the depositors in savings banks that it would le a nice thing for them to draw out cheaper dollars than they put in because if they don't they may not be able to draw out anything, or they may find it necessary to draw out all their money to meet livjng ex penses. By such puerilities lie seeks to induce people to swallow the free silver pill. But we observe one strange oversight. Mr. Bryan did not cx.iluiii how cheaper dollars would benefit pensioners. lie might have told them that they could more than make up their loss by dead beating their landlords and butchers and grocers. But he lost his opportunity. Perhaps he will attend to that in his "formal letter." When it comes to that he may think it best to make it a little clearer, if he can. how workinguicn. policy holders, de positors in savings banks and investors in building and loan associations would be benefited by getting their pay in dol lars worth anywhere from 10 to 50 per cent, less than the dollars they are now getting, or the dollars they dcimsited. in vested or paid in ircuiiums. There is ground remaining to be cov ered in thnt "formal letter." though the "informal" speii-h was two hours long. Chicago Chronicle (Dem.J. Iticli and the Poor. Here now conies up this thoroughly un-American question of the rich against the poor. Some criticism is already lev eled at this movement because those en gaged in it are represcntatives'of proper ty in their resjiectivo localities. It is characterized as the rich man's move ment. Property is banding together to carry its ends, and those ends are inimi cal to the wage-earner anil the farmer. This simply is criminal nonsense. There is not the slightest warrant in reason for any such statement. The paramount is sue of the campaign is a -business issue. It relates to the very life blood of busi ness whether that blood shall be puri fied and kept pure, or vitiated and im poverished. Surely that proposition reaches nnd interests everybody. And another point. What authority" is there for the assumption thnt in moving iu his own interests the business man is'mov ing against the interests of other men? Under a free government all interests are allied. Tin- business man cannot prosper if the wage-earner and the farm er do not. It is impossible. If the crops fail and the mines and factories are idle, so that the farmer and the wage-enrner have no money, how can the merchant, or the banker, or the manufacturer thrive? Where is business to come from? On the other hand, if times are good and confidence prevails, all feel the benefits alike. Not all in equal degree, of course. That could not lie. That never has been. Thnt never will be. But to the extent of their stake in the game, when the winnings are large, the farmer and the wage-earner get flieir share nlong with the business man. Washington Stnr. Japan and Mexico. "If sliver Is such an nlinminable cnrsp. why are Jnpnn nnd Mexico booming with prosperity?" J. K., Amber, Mich. No one says that silver is an "abominable curse." The project of go ing to the silver standard is one which would bring on an era of panic ami financial disaster; but to say this project is hnd is not to say silver is n "curse." Try to apply reason to the subject, not prejudice nnd emotion. The question is a plain one of business and only common sense is needed to settle it rightly. ion say Japan and Mexico are "boom ing with prosperity." How do you know this? Prosperity is an extremely relative term. In both countries the wages of the working class are so low tbat an American workingman would deem them starvation wages. He could not live. Mexico is far more prosperous than she has been for many years, but it is because, nnder President Diaz, there has been peace. The country has not been the scene of chronic revolution, ns it was up to a few years ago. Wages are very low, and manufacturing is profitable. Japan is just adopting the use of machinery in manufactures, and is yet far behind us in everything. Toledo Blade. TALKED TO VETERANS, Survivors of the Twenty-third Ohio Eegiment Journey in a Body to Canton. M'KINLEY AND HIS COMRADES. The Major Makes a Speech Which Rouses the Old Soldiers to Enthusiasm. Two hundred of Maj. McKinley'g old comrades in war called at his home on August 12. They came from Cleveland principally, but many of them from dis tant points. They were survivors of the Twenty-third Ohio Volunteer infantry. The regiment was famed for its war record, the number of its hard-fought battles, including South Mountain. An-, tietam and lien. Shermans many bat tles iu the Shenandoah valley in '04; for the number of its killed and wounded. and also for its great men noted in war and civil life. Of the field officers only two survive Gen. William S. Rosecrans of San Fran cisco and Gen. Russell Hastings of the Bermuda islands. The scene today was a touching one. Mrs. McKinley sat in the hallway near the porch, from which the major re sponded to the eloquent greeting given him by Uapt. .lonn s. J'ilen. mayor ot Willoughby. The old soldiers cheered and the old flag waved with every burst ot applause. Uapt. JMIen told ot il- liam McKinley as a private soldier, say- ing in part: Comrade: Wo have assembled here today from all parts of the union and rrum many vocations iu iiie iu cuiigriuu- late you, our comrade in arms, on your nomination as a candidate for the Presi dent of the United States. I remember that Co. K had one member, very youth ful in appearance, so much so that Cant Robinson of the Fifth infnntry made some inquiry as to age and consent of parents. .bager Tor the rray, The answers of the recruit were t-o prompt and so decisive and his desire so very modest, and asking to be en- roiled as a private, mat tne omcer witn- out further hesitation administered the oath and W llliam McKinley. Jr., at the age ot il, was maoc a iuii-neugei pn - vate soldier in the Union army. (Grent nppiause anu xnree cneenj ior .ucn.ni-i witn you in mat great uivu war. Ap ley.) platise. I bid you welcome to my home. Then away to the hills and mountains You .already have mv benrt: von have of West Virginia, where we fought nnd skirmished the summer away, meeting and deteating tjonreoerate lien, j- ioyu at Cnrinfnx Ferry. September 10, imil. in recognition or your iiravcry, ei- nciency anu nuemy to uuiy. you were in April. 18(!2. almoin ted to the commis sioned staff commissary sergeunt. 1 nose of us nresont whom vou then served un ready to boar testimony to the very marked improvement and regularity of service in this one branch of military life. If from any cause tbe coming of the supply trains were delayed and ra tions were short. "Mack" did the next best thing nnd made a requisition on the country round about. At a later day your gallantry and fidelity secured your promotion and assignment to duty on the general staff. But whatever the dis- tinction or disparity in rank you always retained dose touch with the boys who were your first associates m army lite. Jn conclusion let me say that the spirit of INtil is not dormant: that, as we went shoulder to shoulder in the defense of I raise, nnd the yield is light nnd uncer our country, so now with willing hands I tain; but we are great on corn. Make and united voices we stand for our conn- try's honor and for our country's flag. 1 hirty-hve years ago you stood witn your omrades as a private soldier m the great rmv which was contending tor national ife nnd national union, today you arc :he chosen lender, ntit of a mere party. nit of the neonle. contending for law Hid order, national nonor una tne in- notability of the public faith. 1 our ild comrades are with you now as then. yve stand shoulder to tionlder now as llien. W e rally about you and the glori- nns banner vou now carrv with our old live and loyalty, and declare with you Hint "the inoiiev of our country must be is sound ns the Union and as untar- I aished ns its flag;" With an abiding jiitli in the virtue, intelligence, honoi I 4 nd iliscriminntinir judgment of the I American neonle. we again congratulate vou and bid vou tiodspeed. it. rent up- iilauso and cheering.) Happy Reply of Mr. McKinley. When n storm of applause had sub sided Mai. McKinley responded: ' Capt. Kllen and My ('omrades "f the Twenty-third Ohio: tins can ot tne sur viving members of the old regiment with which I served for more than four years nt mv home is a most gracious .let on their pnrt. and brings to nie peculiar and special gratification. As I look upon this little body of men assembled about me. nnd remember that ' this is but the remnant of the old 1 weiity-third mat. thirty-five years ago, had 1010 sturdy vonnir men on its roll ready for duty. iind that it was twice recruited to the total number of nenrly 22(K. that here is gathered iiossibly less than TOO. and"! mat is one-rourtn or ine surviving in- hers of our glorious old regiment. I am I vividly reminded now rapnny tne jonrs are passing, and with them are passing our old associates ot the war. the sur vivors are scattered through twenty four states of the union. Some of our members are in the territories. One of them resides on the other side jf the water. But wherever they are. and in whatever vocation they may be engaged, they all love the old regimental organiza tion which is the proudest thing to thein on earth. Applause. We had. a great regiment; grent in its field officers; grent in the character of the rank and file that constituted it. Our hearts go out with tenderness and love, I am sure, to the first colonel of our regiment. Gen. William S. Rosecr.ins. to his distant home iu California. Great applause. We all remember his splendid tlisci- Eline and gentle qualities. and we rem m er with what pride we marched nnder his command in West Virginia iu 1S01. Tribute to SeaiumoD. And we remember, too, thnt ether regular army officer, that splendid sol- Hier Gen. E. I. Scnnimon fcheersl not the most popular man in the icgi- I ment in its earlier days, for we thought his discipline very severe nnd his drill very hard, but after the battle of South Mountain, Gen. Scammon was the most popular man in the regiment. Ureat ap plause. We knew then for the first time what his discipline mennt and what strength it gave to us on the baltleheld. Nor can we assemble here as we have today without recalling the third colonel of the Twenty-third tjnio. wno was long est with us, Rutherford B. Hayes. Great cheering. He was beloved by'every man of the regiment, and no braver colonel ever led his soldiers to battle. Nor Stan ley Matthews, the first lieutenant-colonel of the regiment the great soldier and lawyer. Applause. Nor can we forget Comley, glorious old Comley. Cheers nnd cries, of "Nor Mrs. Hayes." Nor Mrs. Hayes, the faithful friend of the regiment; and we have with ns today, and we are all glad to see him, for I remember in 1864, after his dreadful wouud, we did not suppose we would haiV him K-ith us' again we bavfr 'witH ns today that brave soldier comrade, Col Rilssell B. - Hastings. ' Applanse. I was glad to note in th eloquent speech of my comrade, " Capt." Ellen; thnt the old Twenty-third Ohio stands in 180ft ns it vtood in 18(51, for the country and the country's flag. Great applause ami cries "For McKinley. too." " Nobody could have doubted that, knowing the metal from which this old regiment was made. My comrades, you are just as loyal to country now as you were loyal to country then, and as you stood from 1H01 to ijHH for the preservation of the government of the United States, you stand today' just ns unitedly for the honor of the government and the preservation of its credit and currency. Cheers. .. Protection and Hound Money. I do not know what you think about it. but I believe that it is a good deal better to open tip the mills of t o Unit ed States to the labor of America than to open np the mints of the United States to the silver of the world. fGrent cheering and cries of "Yon are right." Washington told us over anil over again that there was nothing so important to preserve ns the nation's honor. He said .that the most important source of strength wns the public credit, and that the best method of preserving it was to use it as sparingly ns possible. No gov ernment can get on without it nnd pre-' serve its honor. No government is great enough to get on without it. In the lurkest days of the revolution, Robert Morris, its financier, went to one of his friends in Philadelphia after he had in volved himself as a debtor for a large sum of money on account of the gov ernment nnd said to him: "I must have $'1.5(10.000 for the continental army." His friend said: "What security can you give. Robert?" He answered: ".My name and my honor." Quick "came the reply: "Roliert. thou shalt have it. Applause. And from thnt honr: nntil now the country's honor has been our sheet anchor in every storm. Lincoln pledged it. when, in time of wnr. we iHMnol paper money. He said: j,;V(,ry dollar of that money shall he made us good as gold." And it was left to Rutherford B. Hayes, your old colonel, as President of the United States, to ex ecute the promise in the resumption of s-lM'cie payments in 1S7!. Cheering and applause. When Robert Morris said that they had nothing to give but their honor there wns behind his word 3.000. 000 of struggling patriots. Today behind the nation's honor are 70.000.000 of free- i men, who mean to keep this government I and its honor nnd integrity and credit unquestioned. Great applnuse.J I thank you, my comrades, for this call. Nothing hns given me greater i pleasure. Nothing gives me greoter pride than to have been a private soldier had it for more than thirty years. Great cheering. It will give Mrs. McKinley ami myself much plensure. I nssnre vou, I to have you come into our home. fAp- i puiuse nnu inree cneers lor .Mcivniley.J THE WISE KAXSAKS. How They Sought to Increase Their Wealth by Legislative Enactment. F. A. Stillwell hag prepared a leaflet purporting to give a history of pertain events occuring near the close of the Nineteenth century. It wus declared to be a period of depression, during .which it occurred to the wise men of Kansas I that they could legislate themselves into I u III nonce. The governor assembled the I wise men -and said: I A Kansas policy for Kansas is the I need of the hour. - W heat is hard to I ye. therefore, a law m accordance with I which sovereign nnd august statute corn snail lie put upon n par with wheat. i ney shall tie interchangeable, and the price ot corn shall be the same as the price ot wheat. I J lie wise men passed the law as the I governor had ndvised and all the neonle i or tne state rejoiced, lor their cntis were . tun ot corn. '1 hey could hardly contain I themselves till the governor had snrned I. the mil which. raised the price of Kansas I corn irom i; cents to 4r cents a bushel. All the people now felt rich. Thov I bought many luxuries nnd tbe most of them went in debt. Then the farmers trom other states began hauling their corn to Kansas. It seemed ns if the coun- try was all corn and it was nil hendod for Kansas. The neonle of Kansas took their medicine that is. thev took the corn nun gave up their wheat The farmers from the other states thought Kansas people were queer, but they kept bringing them their corn. Corn came in nnd wheat went out. When the other states saw this vast accumulation, the price of corn began to decline till it could be purchased any where except in Kansas for 10 cents "a bushel. In Kansas the urice wns still 45 cents, which was the price of wheat, but there were no buyers. When the autumn came the Kansas people did not have any wheat for' seed. ..Then they sent to the neighboring states and im plored, fanners to exchange wheat at a Iinrity with corn. But the farmers said: "We will exchange one bushel of wheat for four nnd one-half bushels of corn." "Our law." replied the Kansas people. puis corn ana wnent at a parity. J hoy are equal, for our wise men said they should be." And the farmers reulied: "Your wise men lire asses; let them eat your corn. So the Kansnus went back home and nil their people were iu de spair. I hen the governor again assembled the wise men nnd said to them. "Most consummate, picturesque nnd glittering goll durned fools. There is but one bigger fool than yourselves. It is he who addresses you. We thought we could bluff the ever lasting law of supply nnd demand with our statute. We tlinuglit we could leg islate value into a thing and make our people rich by a law. We jhought we were patriotic. We were idiotic. Let ns honestly acknowledge our as sininity, repeal our fool law, get back into line with the other states and imag ine no more that we are wiser than the whole world. Do this, and may we live long enough to know that the other states have ceased laughing nt our folly and that our own state bus ceased curs ing us for it."- Then the wise men reiicnled the law. but it was ninny years before the neo- pie recovered from the effects of the corn scare. Questions for Wagearnoro. , History teaches that in nil cases where the cost of living has suddenly increased as a result of depreciated money wages have invariably been the last to respond to such conditions, uoes anybody be lieve that with 53-cent dollars as the sole money of redemption the wages of the 850,000 railway employes would be doubled? Would the salaries of the 750.000 school teachers be doubled? Would the wages of the C.0O0.0OO wom en, and children who work in factories be doubled? Certainly not. Galveston News. - To William J. Bryan. Ton shnll not prod the sides of inbor with roads of silver. You shall not im pale the laborer's wife npon the prongs of high cost and low -wage. Waterbury American.