QUERIES An Open Letter to the Fopocratic . Candidate for the Presi dency. SOME PERTINENT QUESTIONS. Apprehension Excited by Campaign Utterances Refuses to be Allayed. The New York World, in an open let ter to Candidate Bryan on 'tuesday morning, puts some grave and important (mentions to him. and urges Iiiui to answer them if he wants to be elected, as the people are pondering those very points, and their votes will turn on how thev are answered and explained by him. The readers of the Tribune should peruse this editorial, which is reprinted here in connection with Bryan's peech at Madison Square garden last night. The World says, under the caption "To Mr. Bryan:" To Mr. Brvau: On the 10th of July, the verv day of your nomination for President, von addressed a coinmu'lu-a- tion to the World in the following words: To the World: The restoration of silver to Its ancient place by the side of gold will, in mv judgment, restore the parity between money and properly mid thus permit a re turn of general prosperity. The World, which did such effective work In behalf of an Income t:fV will flud a still larirer Held of usefulness In supporting the gold and silver coinage or tne constitution. WILLIAM J. BRYAN. The World has conscientiously oousid- Aru.l vnnr rnnrtwilll rpnupst. It lias carefullv studied your speeches made l,.ni.,.T ',m.l cin. o the ChicMini enliven- tion. It has studiously examined your record in Congress. It has impartially traced vour career as a politician, a lawyer, an orator and editor, in order to I obtain an understanding of your real I character the hardest thing in the world to ascertain concerning any man It has miblished -every word that could be obtained from your eulogists and as sociates, with the same end in view, it has done all this in the sincere hope that the knowledge gained or impressions re ceived would relieve the fear and appre hension excited by some of your utter ances, and particularly by some parts of the Chicago pluttorni, on wnicli you stand. In this connection it is only just to remind you that the plank in the Chica- I go platform seeming to reflect upon the integrity of the Supreme court and in dicating a purpose to pack that tribunal in order to secure a desired dit-ision, and the other resolution denouncing "government by injunction," have been severely criticised by conservative and law-abiding citizens. The people have a profound and abiding respect for their highest "court, even wncn iney are ns apnointed in their decisions. They would be glad to hear your interpreta tion of the resolution, which is generally accepted as a stupid and intemperate attack upon the Supreme court and the avowal of the purpose to reconstruct it in accordance with the beliefs of the platform makers should your election present the opportunity. Is this your understanding? Definition is also called for of the resolution denouncing "arbitrary inter ference by federal authorities in local matters." This is generally believed to mean free riot with free silver, as weH as sympathy with lawlessness and disapprobation of President Cleveland's action at the time of the Chicago strike. Yet all who believe in law and order as the very life and root-basis of civil ized government regard this as one of the most highly creditable acts of his administration. What is your view of it? Are you. Mr. Bryan, for actual and practical bimetallism the equal coinage of gold anil silver at a ratio that will Iiennit the fret? circulation of both money metals, as the ratio of l(i to 1 has never done? When you say that 'you favor free coinage by the United States with out waiting for the aid or consent of any foreign government, do you mean that the concurrence of the great com mercial nations with which we trade is not desirable and even indispensable if the country is not to sink to a silver basis? Do you really favor the mone tary isolation of the United States the family of great nations? Do we not want our money to be accepted at its . face value all over the world.' lou m sist upon tne right ot tne peo ple of the United States to legislate for themselves upon an questions. Tins right is not questioned by any, so far as we know. But the right does not imply the duty or the wisdom. Con gress has the right to declare that our surplus agricultural products shall be sold abroad. But would such an asser tion of national independence benefit the country? Would it have helped the farmers of the United States to have had the $8,000,000,000 of exports in the last ten years kept in the home mar ket, or to. have sold them for a depreci ated currency while buying in return at gold prices? If you would not favor the isolation of the United States why should you desire its financial isolation? In the interest of a clear understand ing of your position, and to allay if pos sible the fear and apprehension which you know to exist, will you answer these questions in your acceptance of the presi dential nomination, which yon are about to deliver? Yon must lierceive in the preparations for a second Democratic ticket, and in the divisions and distrac tions among your Populist and Demo cratic supporters at the outh, a growing danger to your cause. We assume that you wish to be charted. These are some of the points upon which you can se cure votes by allaying apprehensions. You may also be able to do this by reply ing to these questions, suggested by your telegram to the World 1. When in the history of this country has silver occupied "its ancient place by the side of gold?" Has there ever been a time when the two metals circu lated upon equal terms as full legal tender money, with the mints open to the free and unlimited coisage of both? If so, when was it? 2. You say that the restoration of that condition will, in your judgment, "re store the parity between money and property." Will fori kindly explain what you mean by this? What is the "parity between money and property?" Do you mean that the "restoration" will put up prices, undo the cheapening effects of im proved machinery, transportation, etc., and increase the cost of living to all classes of the community? If so, will ?ff inSTfLe I" the cost of all commodities is likely to promote "a return of 'general prosperi ty?" Will the workingman, whose wages are stationary or nearly so, be made more prosperous by having to pay more for his flour, meat, groceries, chickens, eggs, fruits, vegetables, clothing, house hold utensils, rent, and all the rest of it? iWill even the farmer be better off with. a double price for his produce, in the wholly improbable! contingency that Eu rope will consent to pay it, if he must pay double for everything he has to buy? 3. You point us to "a larger field of usefulness in supporting the gold or sil- ver coinage of the Constitution." But what is '"the gold and silver coinage of the Constitution V In what clatise of the Constitution, or iu .which of the fif teen amendments, does the fundamental law prescribe a gold and silver coinage or any other coinage? In which does it mention any coinage fnrther than to an tnonze the general government to coin money" and "regulate the value there of.' Acting under that authority Con gress at first authorized coinage at 15 to 1. Was that the "gold and silver com age of the Constitution?" If so. how has 10 to 1 come to be the coinage of the Constitution? Under the lirst ratio silver was undervalued and refused to circulate .except in the form of worn and abraded foreign coins. Our own silver coins, even the subsidiary pieces, were melted down for bullion' because they were worth about 3 per cent, more than gold dollars. In all the period up to the time of the greut silver discoveries Con gress sought to make the coinage ratio the same us the 'commercial ratio. It never authorized coinage at any other. Was that the "coinaire of the Constitn tion?" If so. will it be a return to it for us now to establish free cViunge at the ratio of 1( to 1 when the commercial ratio is about 31 to 1? 4. Will not free coinage at 10 to 1 re- dlice the value of the dollar unit by about one-half . Will it not be in fact a repudiation of about one-half of all our debts, public ana private? . Is there not dainrer that it will cause the return to us of all the Ameri can securities held abroad sroverniiii-nt. railroad and industrial stocks and bonds thus precipitating a panic of mailt uro- Jiortions, with, long years of depression to follow? t. ill not your election nnon the Chi cago platform cause the calling in, be tween November and March, of all col lectable debts, all loans, all mortgages that have expired? And will not this produce such a distress as this country has never known, nartieularlv in the West and South, where caiital and credit are most needed and depend upon I confidence as their basis? I 8. Will not free and unlimited coinage nrive an the five or six hundred millions ot Bold and gold certificates out of use as money or as hank reserves.' w ill it not cause a currency contraction of the most disastrous proportions, inasmuch as the utmost capacity of the mints to coin silver cannot mnU B-nnd this n-itli. uranai ror several years to come? y. will not free coinage place us at once on a financial level with Mexico, India and China, and can we afford tn go upon that level? 10. Is there anv eonntrv in the world today which gives free 'and unlimited coinage to silver.' Mexico does not. India does not. None of th Control nr soutn American States does. We know of no country that does, of no example mat can ne stunted. 11. Is there any eonntrv in thp world now on tne silver basis which is as nros- perous as the United States, even in this time of depression? Is there any in which wages are so high as they are here, or in which the dollar received in wages will buy so much? Is there any silver-basis country that has a large commerce, prosperous manufactures, or a well-to-do agricultural class Is it not a fact that in every silver-basis coun try in tne world abject and hopeless nov erty on the part of the masses is the rule.' i 12. will you explain to us for our en lightenment and guidance how our coun try is to escape like conditions if we go to a silver basis, or how we are to avoid the lapse to that basis if we adopt tree ana unlimited coinage at IB to l when the commercial ratio between the metals is about twice that? l.i. And if yon tell us, as many free coinage advocates do, that free coinage will raise the commercial value of silver to the coinage rate, will you explain to us how in that case free coinage is to make money cheaper or easier to get. how it is to relieve "the debtor class." how it is to increase the price of wheat or any other commodity? 14. You may be aware that there was last year on deposit in the savings banks of this state alone .$043,873,574. This enormous sum belonged to 1,015.178 de positors, giving an average to each of $398.03. It represents mainly the-small savings of the thrifty poor. Nearly all of it has been deposited since the pres ent standard of viHue was adopted by thp government. Do yon think it fair or just to impair by 47 per cent, or by even 1 ner cent, the value of the money in which these deposits were earned and in which today they would he paid? 1;. I here are in this state N. l!l pen sioners. I hey drew from the govern ment last year nearly $14.1100.000. Con- sMorine the nature of this debt of honor when lastly due can you look with far vor unon any policy that might result in paying them in a- depreciated currency? 10. There are in the country JW38 building and loan association, of which 418 are in New York. These associa tions have 1,745.125 shareholders all of the working and saving classes. Their assets last year were $450,007,504. repre sented chiefly by mortgage loans to homeseekers. of whom 455.000 are mem bers of the associations. These associa tions have nearly all been organized with in the last fifteen years under the exist ing money standard. Can you think it fair or beneficial to the working people to reduce by 47 per cent., or any lesser sum. the value of these investments of the thrifty ,joor? 17. Is it not a tact worth consideration in proposing h descent to the silver stan dard that the thirty-nine old-style life in surance companies alone' doing business in this state Inst year had in force here nearlv 2.000.000 policies, insuring over $5,000,000,000. The assessment compa nies ami various benevolent orders have a vast amount more. Would it not be an injury and a wrong to the beneficiaries of these polices the widows and orphans, whom a provident love had sought to protect to compel them to re ceive in payment depreciated money? 18. The "rise in prices" which you predict as a result of free silver coinage would, ot course, mean an increase m the cost of living to all the people to wage- earners, salaried men. and the whole body of consumers. Do you know of any case in wnicn a rise in wages or sala ries has been parallel with the rise in prices? Is there any way to render it certain, or even probable, that the wage earners will be compensated for the in creased cost of living? 19. Yon attribute the decline in silver to the demonetization of the silver dol lar in 1873. though that dollar was not then coined in any considerable numbers, and was not in circulation at all, owing to the fact tnat silver bullion was worth more in the market than at the mint. Do you consider that the increase in the world's silver production from 61.100.000 ounces in 1873 to 165,000.000 ounces in 1895 had something to do in causing the decline, even though gold, the standard money of all the great commercial na tions, and the most sought after of mon ey metals, has also increased its yield meanwnue : siirer - nVoTed innendinrtheScoin: ns ' i j.1 age of noncirculating dollars. Has your attention been called to the fact that the government coined only 296,600 silver dollars in 1873, but that from January 1 to June 30 of this year it coined 7'.- 500.412, or 908,691 more than in the entire eighty-one years of its history up to 1873? These questions are asked in all sin cerity. The World would be rejoiced to have it made clear that the policy of free and unlimited coinage at 16 to 1 in volves no danger to the country, but promises prosperity, to all thpeopIe. If would be relieved to have ita apprehen sions allayed and its misconceptions, if they are misconceptions, correctea. he Democrats in vast numbers who share this curiosity and these apprehen - sions stand by what they believe y, be gard to the currency. . This polky. was' declared in , 1870 and reaffirmed in 1892 in these words; " . 1 We hold to the use 'of both gold and silver as the standardmoiiey. of the! country, and to the coinage of both gold and. silver without discriminating against either metal or charge for mint- age. but the dollar nnit of coinage or both metals must lie ot equal intrinsic and exchangeable value, or be adjusted through iiitornntinniil agreement, or by such safeguards of legislation as snail insure the maintenance of the parity of the two metals, and the equal power of j every dollar at all times in the markets j and in the payment of debt; and we de- I mand that all paiier currency shall be , ke"t at par with and redeemable in such coin. We insist npou this - policy as especially necessary for the protection of the farmers and laboring classes, the first and most defenseless victims of un- : stable money and a fluctuating currency. 1 hese Democrats still hold to tne. anc- trine of dollars of both money metils el equal value, that the country may l.avr the benefit of a concurrent circulation of gold and silver, and paper redeemable in the same. Why not give these iJeuio crats a chance to vote for you? Why continue the. alienation of so hirgre . body of intelligent, honest and "on.jci-entious-voters? If you are ready li.r bimetallism, and would welcome .nt-r- u.'itional agreement, if it can be secv.vd. t.i Affect a change without possibilit) of disaster at home, why not say so? You surely cannot object to an established and world-wide parity of value between gold and silver money. Why refuse and reject international agreement? BRYAN'S CREED. The Gist of His Long Argument In a Few Short Para graphs. I believe it will be a blessing to the United States to lose five hundred mil lions of gold. I believe it will be a Messing to the United States-to take half the purchas ing power out of its five hundred millions of silver dollars. I believe it will bp a blessing for the United States to take half the purchas ing power out of its billion dollars' worth of paper money. 1 believe that to cut a dollar in two is to double its value. I believe that 50 cents is twice as much as KM) cents. I lielieve that the farmer will be better off when he sells half as much of his produce as he does now at the same rate. l believe the tarmer win he nenenttea by having to pay twice as much as he does now for everything he does not raise anil must buy. ; Since I hold that the farmer wo.nd lie better off if he sold half as mut.h ns he does now at the same rate, it fol'iws that I hold the farmer will be stil! tet ter off if he sold quarter as much as be does now at the same rate. Therefore, it follows that I ho!.' it would be better for the farmer if h s-old nothing at all, but let his pro'lae rot on his farm. I hold that the city workingman would be better off if he earned half us much as he does now. I believe that all the widows and or phans whose means of support is invest ed in loans will be blessed by getting back 50 cents on the dollar their bread winners toiled for at 100 cents in the dollar, and that they would be still bet ter off if they had to go to the poorhoiisp. 1 believe it would be a blessing for 000.000 depositors in savings banks who have laid up SU.OOO.OOO.OOO by toil at 100 cents to the dollar to get back half the amount of their savings instead of the whole. , I hold that the country would lie liet ter off if half the value of the capital of the 4000 national banks, amounting to nearly $700,000,000. were extinguished. It would help business all over the coun try. I believe it would be a blessing on the states of the American union if the $000.- 000.000 deposited by private persons in 4000 state hanks were reduced to 50 ents on the dollar or largely lost alto gether. This would encourage thrift aud animate enterprise. 1 hold that the states would be fur ther blessed if half of the $250,000,000 -apital in state banks were shrunken to half their debt-paying power. This would heln the farmer. I believe it would be n blessing to towns if the fire insurance' companies were so crippled that they could pay only half the tace value ot risks. I believe that it would fall like a bene diction upon the holders of thirteen bil lion dollars worth of life insurance, on which they had paid 100 cents to the dol lar, to learn that they can realize only 50 cents on the dollar of their policies. 1 believe that it would be an en couragement to. home mnkers to know that the four hundred and fifty million dollars in building association shares were to shrivel to half their value. I believe that, although owners of ilver would not permit the metal to be oined into dollars for Americans when it was worth more. to export than to oin. although coinage was free and un limited, owners of silver are unselfish patriots in desiring to coin unlimited sil- eT into dollars now when' they can get chance to do so at twice the worth of the silver at the market price and half the value in the dollars to the people. I hold it to be a solemn dutv to the 800.0(H) invalids and the 220,000 w idows nil orphans on the pension roll of the nation to deprive them of half the amount paid each -monthly. It will be esieeially heroic for those who get along now on Siu a mouth to contrive to live on $5 a month. I believe that it is better for the United States to grade down with China and Mexico than in with Great Britain. Germany, France, i Austria-Hungary, Holland, Belgium. ,1 hold that expulsion of all our gold and contraction of half our silver and paper is expansion of our currency. I hold that the law of gravitation can be suspended by act of Congress. I believe a financial quicksand is rock bottom for a nation. ' I believe that the best way to build up a country is to destroy it. I believe my wife lias more political sense than all the politicians in the conn try. God bless both of us. Amen. Chicago Times-Herald. Will Have to AVork for It. After Mr. Bryan shall become presi dent and free coinnce shall be ncenm- plished the people who were so eager to establish such a conjuncture of circum stances will finally discover that rh are no better off than they -were befi IS'ot a man of them will be able to g dollar, whether worth 50 cents or otl: wise, except in the same wav that money has always been got. It mnst K t,t;o .! o.n f 1 1 1...... ... ui "V""1 .""'- ' Sr'en ehi8ng' Jhere 18 no De sl- Orleans Jr-icayune. Maj. McKinley's talks to the old vet- erans who call upon him are models of short,, patriotic speeches, as have been all his short speeches since his nomi- nation for President. There are few people criticising McKinely as a one-idea man in this campaign. -., . Foolishness of the Declaration in Favor of Monetary In dependence. pflpill ICT inrAC fir rM A Mpr rurULIOI ILT-rtO UT MilAnlLi . - r,.u. .- t lL. 4k- cr u i iu i i ji v t . r "iitsmpi 10 invoKO ine Ma- tion's Fathers in Support of Free Coinage. . . Among all the crazy assumptions of the Ponnlistic platforms, perhaps the most foolish is the one that we can cre ate and maintain a monetary system in dependent of that of other nations. To make this stroke of idiocy more prepos- - - t ,,.. ii! 7S sustain it. The efforts of the fathers were most earnestly and steadily directed to bringing the young republic within the commercial brotherhood of nations. and nothing was further from their thoughts than the idea that the progress of the country could be facilitated by a declaration of financial independence. Fbr sixty years after the passage of the mint act. i.nzhsh. t rench. SSDamsh and Portuguese coins were freely circulated in the United Mates, and were a-.legal tender for the payment of debts at eer5 tain, values fixed by act of Con cress. In his celebrated Mint Report, Alexander Hamilton endeavored to co-ordinate our monetery system with that of other na- tions not to make any violent departure from -European practice. The only strik ing departure that was made in the legis lation framed on Hamilton s recom mendations was in fixing the coinage ratio between gold and silver at lo to 1, and the result of this quickly demon strated what the Populistie Democrats call our "financial servitude." That is to say, ft showed that while the mints of France were open to the free coinage of gold at the ratio of lo to 1, we could not keep our gold from going where it would have most value. The difference was only about 3 1-3 per cent., but it was sufficient to drive gold out of the country, so that in the words of Senator Benton its extinction was complete. .If the establishment of a ratio of their own was a strike for financial independ ence of Europe on the part of the "fa thers, it was a manifest failure, and established for the first generation of the republic a regime of silver mono metallism. But this was not in the least what they desired; in fact, so little were they impressed by the necessity for keeping silver as a part of the circula tion that the coinage of silver dollars was suspended by executive order in 1805 and was, for domestic purposes, at least, never resumed. mat is to say, the fathers were so determined to get back the gold that for thirty years they had been shunting into Kuropean mints that they hxed a new ratio, which of fered 3 per cent, more to the possessor of gold bullion than he could get in France or Holland. That the bullion iu the silver dollar thus became more valua hie than the bullion in the gold dollar did not trouble them much, for they, appar ently, did not want the silver dollar- halves, quarters and dimes of this metal being sufficient for their wants and all the subsequent coinage of that much talked-of but little known piece, "the dollar of the fathers," was for exort to the Kast. Here, again, if monetary in dependence was what they are aiming at. the result was a- failure, for Kurope diverted into its own mints the silver of the United States as peremptorily as it had done the gold, for the simple rea son that no law could compel the own cr of bullion not to take it where be irot most for it in returned coins. But the Populists are determined to have an economic and financial system which shall make us masters of our own affairs." Among the preliminaries of such a condition of things, they are at least logical enough to recognize the ne cessity of interfering with the freedom of private contract. That was a !cure for financial lameness not thought of by the fathers of the republic, and .is one generally deemed to be contrary to the letter and spirit of the constitution which they framed. But the transformation of the Democrat into the Populist seems, among other changes, to work a surpris ing indifference to the value of the safe guards of the constitution. From old habit, there is the customary profession of allegiance to "those great essential principles of justice and liberty upon which our institutions are founded, only to be followed by a series of propositions destructive alike of the principles mid Institutions. On whatever other points the makers of the constitution may have idiffered. they were entirely at one as to the obligation both of nations and of in dividuals to make an honest provision for paying their debts. Rochester Post. The Difficulty is the Tariff. In a recent speech at I.a Grange, Iud., Senator Burrows said: "With all the vagaries of the three Bryan platforms they all unite in the de mand for the free anil unlimited coinage of silver at 10 to 1. and to that question Mr. Bryan' devoted a goodly, jiortion of his time in his speech of acceptance. lie declared that 'times arc hard, prices are low, and something is vitally wrong.' It is not the. crime of '7.'1, however, but the folly of '92, when Harrison was defeated and the prosperity of the United States lestroyed. "Mr. Whitney says: 'Don't tall; about the tariff.' But the whole difficulty to day is tariff. When McKinley is president the money question will settle itself. .More silver dollars were coined dur ing Kepublicnn administrations than dur ing all of the other eighty-three years of our history. "Panic always accompanies free trade. During the thirty years from 1-Xi'l to 1892 we had unbounded prosperity: wealth advanced: this republic took a lead in manufacturing ami stood ahead of all other nations until March 4. 1S!I.'. The public debt was reduced (luring ie publican administrations, and increased under Democratic. Then? is not a sinli- day .but the government is ruimitiir be hind. The deficiency during Julv, 1890. alone was $13,000,000. lhe results of the Democratic txilicv are so evident that a new issue was nec essary to give them even a fighting chance before the iieonie in this paign, and so they say that in 1873 the nepuunenn party caused the t rouble l.v demonetizing silver. If that is so whv did it not show itself before 1893? We were prosperous in '92, and the crime had beeij, committed before then." Gen. Walker's Bimetallism. Francis A. AValker. president of the Boston Institute of Technology, may be called the leader of the bimetallisms' of 1. TTnitful Sttnna an f.. .. X " - c y Uico, oy Ul utll ill politics can be called a leader of a more- ment which has become a politicaHssueT national bimetallism for more than twen- y years. - He. speaks with authority on all economic questions, but' bimetallism ma7 De called his hobby, A new book, written without regard to the present situation, but singularly ap- propriate, ' has just appeared. bearing Gen. Walker's name on the title page. It is a plea for bimetallism and in strong oipoiuon xo ine goiu uioiiouieiuijisis, He says, though, as" every other true hi- metallist says, that the attempt on the part of this country to coin silver in unlimited auailtities free, without an nn derstanding with other nations, would be an assault on the cause of bimetallism and practical suicide for-the finances o the United States. In 1878 Gen. Walk er said: "For us to. throw ourselves alone into the lireach. simply because we think silver' ought not to have been demonetized and ought now to be re stored, would be a piece of Quixotism nn worthy the sound practical sense of our neonle. The remedy of the wrong must be sought in the concerted action of the civilized states, under an increasing con viction of the impolicy of basing1 the world s trade on a single money metal, This is his omnion today. - As to the possibility of free coinage without an immediate fall to a silver basis, and the strident claim that thi country is big enoueh to "legislate for it self," Gen. Walker points out two facts. The stock of precious metals has so greatly increased in the world, and com muiucation and transportation are so much more, rapid than of old. that even France Jonnd it impossible' in iXt continue free silver coinage. Since there is vastly less' money metal used in tb United States than in France, the in fluence which this country can exert upon the money market of the world is less than tha. influence of .France. And yet no one accuses Gen. AValker of be ing less a patriot or less proud of the country for which he fought than the youngest orator of the far -west, j ue difference is that he is a student and a man of sense. Syracuse Post. The Money of the Constitution AVhnf wild talk is this of the "silver- ites' " convention, "in favor of restoring to the people of the United States the time-honored money of the constitution , I . t.., 1 1. V goia ana silver uui uhc, wu.. TIip constitution Drescribes no . such money, nor any form of money what ever. vtnt if it is 'Void and silver not one, lint hnth" that thev want, why are they not contented now? Both gold and silver are in circulation now. on equal terms, in larger quantities than ever oeiore, Tn tha tivontt.twn vears since the blood curdling "crime of 1873" was perpetrated more than titty times as many snver oi lars have been coined as iu the eighty rpara tirpcedilicr. The simple fact is that the United States has a very much larger actual supply of full legal-tended silver money thnn nnv other country in th world. excepting India and China, and a larger supply in proportion io u pijuiiiiiuu than any other, excepting France, Spain and Holland, it nas more gom m circu lation, actualllv. than any in the world excepting only France, aud more propor tmnntc lv than any Kuropenn country. nvcnntiiic Great Britain. France and Germanv. It also has more money o all kind's in circulation, and all at par, 4-l.nn mnut tlfltinllll of thp WOrlll. Less talk and more reflection would convince these would-be currency re formers that we already have what thev talk of as "the time-honored money nf th.. constitution." ill abundant supply for every man who is willing honestly to earn 'it. .New lorn l rinune. Mills, Not Mints. More truth cannot be crowded into an equal number ot words man is loiinu in this passage of Maj. McKinley's speech in renlv to a congratulatory nuuress iroui some of his Old comrades in arm; I rtn not know what you thluk about It, but I believe it is a good deal better to open .... h mills nt the I nlted states to tne in n,,.. A..,oi-l,. thnn to onen 110 the mints 01 the rnlteit States to the sliver of the world rhis goes hard and straight to the win fif the matter. Times are not dull iu Pittsburg because there is no mint coining silver or goui dollars in that city, but because the great iron work are not running on full time. There was no mint at work in South Chicago .when the rolling mills were nt work bv night and by day. but there was a wage roll of ."fO.OOO.OOO a ..nr It wax not tiecaiise of the activity of thp mints that louisiana nearly dou bled its sugar output, but because ot tne McKinley bounty. It was nor Because the mints were more active in 1891 than in 18i that 111 the first year men were striking because they could not earn more than $3 per day. and in- the last were huntinc for work at iu cents, and for the most part, not finding it. The mints were turning out as much money in 181BS as in 1S91. But the mills were uot turning out so many yards of cloth or tons of iron. . , Start the nulls .and the mints will lie- come active. Keturn to protection, and the currency will settle itself. Chicago Inter (Venn. Free Silver and AVuges. A correspondent attempts to explain how wages would be increased under free silver coinage by asserting that trades unions, through strikes and other means, would force the prn-e of labor to a higher standard. Ibis is sheer nonsense. Kxnerience has conclusively demon strated that wages, under a debased sys tem of currency, never increased iu the same degree as the money cost of com modities. If there was ever a condition of affairs which was favorable to such nn Increase it was during the Rebellion. AVe were not only 011 a cheap money basis, but the ranks of labor had beu norniously deileted to send men to the trout to nntiie ior tne repuniic. let. what actually occurred? Judged by the purchasing power of his wages the la borer in 18i3 received only 70 cents where he had received a gold dollar 100: in 1804 he received about 81 cents and 111 isihi a little over it cents. But how do workingnieii fancy the iden of hem:; compelled to resort to "strikes 11 order that their wages may have the same purchasing power innr iney uo now? It will occur to sensible toilers that if free silver cotnagu is going to precinitate strikes, not really for higher wages, tint -simply to keep the wages that already exist, it will be the nnrt of wisdom to let well enough alone. New York Commercial Advertiser. To Sound Money. Democrats. Here is n brief and simple catechism r sound money Democrats: "Do you want to beat Bryan?" "If von want 'to beat Bryan, do you know of any other way of doing it than bv electing McKinley?" If vou want to heat Bryan, and 1I1111 1 know of any other way of doing it than bv fleeting McKinley. why don't you ake vour coat off and wade 111 and elect McKinley?" Answers to these interrogatories arc respectfully solicited from sound money Democrats' who declare the currency the paramount issue mid yet refuse to act as if they believed what they said. Bos ton Journal. Curiosities of Our Money. Few persons nre aware that silver cer tificates are not legal tender, though re ceivable for public dues. The fact was recently, it is stated, forced on the attention of the postoflit department by a person who refused to accept the cer tificates in payment of a money order. Thus, it seems, the government is obliged to receive silver certificates, but cannot pay them out to any oue unwilling to re ceive them. Should our silver friends be come able to legislate, they will doubtless make the' certificates legal tender, so as to force the unwilling patriot to take the paper representative of 53 cents at a 100 ceut valuation. HALSTEAD'S LETTER: Writer Introduces Himself to the . Farmers Telling of His Own : Rural Experiences WHATISWRONG WITH FARMING? Propounds and Answers This Question Advocating McKinley and His Policy as a Panacea. Special Correspondence of the Chicago Dally News, New York, Aug. 5. I desire to intro duce myself to the farmers by saying I am by trade one of them, though for a long time engaged in daily labor on the, daily papers. There are still some frosty old friends of mine who can testify of their own knowlwlge (hat fifty years ago there wasn't a boy in Butler county, O., who could turn a furrow better than I. or was more expert in using plows left or right handed on hillsides or level lands, so as to leave less unbroken land at the turns than I, and there is 110 light work I would like better now than plow ing corn when it is about as high as a pluiwboy. The trouble then is it is so brit- tie, and it is very provoking to have the pretty stalks broken and many a horse I have lammed as a punishment for put ting his rude foot into a hill of corn. I wns a great boy to bind wheat, rye, oats or barley with double bands, and once I tied up a blacksnake in n sheaf of wheat so tight be could not get out, and there never was a snake or a boy more aston ished. 1 could heat the girls dropping corn four grains to the hill and I know all about husking frosty ears of corn with a bone husking peg, held by a strap over the two middle fingers of the right hand; and the accomplishments of dig ging potatoes without cutting them, and mixing green ami dry food for horses, aud watching calves become cattle, colts evolve into horses, lambs and pigs bloom iiiiu Mieep mm nogs, are, wun an ine hopes ami fears associated with them, fa miliar. The .practical farmers will de tect in these observations the presence of a line of information not pulled out of books or picked up in schools. I know, too, about the way good old farms grow less vaiuanie. 111 pite of laithful atten tion, apd how it is that some farmers who do not buy pianos on the install ment plan find it a pleasant experience to borrow money. Farmer Are Discouraged. The news has been circulated a eood deal and not conclusively contradicted that this year a good many farmers are so discouraged by thp way their affairs have been going that they are. ready to- do something iiiicxiM-ctcd in politics that some of them think maybe there is something in free silver that would just tit their case therefore, that there- are Republican farmers who if not en lightened nre liable to vote for Brvan and Watson or Bryan and Sejvall. They have heard so much about free silver as- a patent medicine to cure the rheuma tism, heartburn, earache, fistula, dyspep sia and vertigo that they do not know but they will try if. If they do they will make the same mistake the workmen did four years ago and invite even a greater misfortune than they tumbled upon themselves. There is absolutely nothing in free silver for farmers. Whatever they want for relief it cer tainly is not depreciated money dollars debased. We have been going oil now with dollars of the same value as that of gold for eighteen years and a change- in the purchasing power of a dollar will not help any honest man. unless it is incidentally and in a itctty and frac tional way. What is the matter with farming? The owner of one of the finest farms in Kugland, within sight of the forest of Windsor and the towers of Windsor castle, stated to me that wheat had got so cheap in England that t Ii . straw was more valuable than the grain. The de pression is not exclusively American. I he trouble is acknowledged what is the'remedy? Whatever may be wrong, and however difficult it may be to right the wrong, there should not lie a fann er iu all America so ignorant as not. to- know that the man who has done most to frame 11 tariff law to help the farmers is William McKinley. . What McKinley Has Done. - ' What did he do? Consider sugar boun- . ties, for one thing. If the law had been ' allowed to remain as he drew it Nebras ka by this time would have teemed with eei-sugar manutacioiies, every one n In to the farmers, aud the soil of Nebraska is better for sugar beets than that of Germany only needs a good start to establish an enormous and in valuable industry. The McKinley duty on barley caused the raising of millions of bushels additional to the average of former crops, and this reduced sensibly he excess of wheat production. 1 :11s is an example of what we mean by the di versified industry thnt the protective sys tem promotes. AVe want more of it. and that is McKinleyism. hy nre wheat and butter down? As to wheat: The use of agricultural ma- hinerv and the improvement 111 trims- nortation has cheapened labor and ex tended available territory. Argentina is nrodurious wheat held. I he soil is ilmirable. the rivers are deep, the plains ive full swee-i to the machinery, the rail roads have nothing else to do than car ry the whent to market and the steamers arry the grain to Liverpool in Inure car- oes. Sailing vessels whose sails are pulled about by steam, saving hands. heaiH'il the cost of putting uown av- nrii'a wheat in Liverpool. Kgypt. India, inai'.a. Russia, compete with us in the wheat market of Western Eurooe. The we'd is a sort of eonntrv ii"hhhnr!iood. What is the matter with butter.' Ijcc the nrice of butter go up 111 .New 1 ork to 25 or 30 cents a pound a living can be made producing butter at those fig- ures what happens? A cable niessaue goes to Australia and there are ship- lents ol tliousnnns or tons or excciienr utter at once. And it can be plained n New York and profitably sold at 12 ents a pound. 1 caunot be produced New lork at those bgures. 1 Ins il lustration is not imaginary. The trans- fmiis supposed have occurred recently. What is the remedy? We can answer confidently that the coinage of more lver dollars will not be a help. We on ght to raise our own ln'r'ey. our own ops. our own egffs. chickens, onions nd potatoes, to make our own sugar nd our own tinplate, so as to give the dvantnge of our own markets, the most aluable in the world or that ever were it. to our own people. 1 ne produc tion of articles we have just named would turn over to American working men 100.000.000 of gold dollars annually. nd then custom womu improve mo vable of the farms. Ihere is no patent nostrum about this. Our records are full of the proof furnished by our own vnprience. The best thing the farm er can do is to try McKinleywm. jiu rat 1 in 1st cut. . j THREE