PUTTINa RINGS ON THE RIGHT HOGS; ' THE DALLES CHRONICLE "WEDNESDAY. .OCTOBER 14, 18U0. BRYAN'S INDIA FARE. His Repeated Assertions Concern " kg India Wheat Proven False. HON. JAMES BRYCE SPEAKS. Supplement Denials by Members of the English Parliament and a Prominent , London Merchant . In the speech delivered by William Jennings Bryan to the farmers of New York assembled at Chautauqua, the In dia wheat fake was revamped by the silver candidate for president. The as sertion made by Mr. Bryan in his Omaha debate last May that the Eng lish speculators could drive great bar gains in buying silver and trading it for India wheat to the detriment of the American farmer was reiterated and embellished by his fervid imagination o as to create the impression that the -decline of silver has made India the most formidable competitor of the American wheat and cotton growers. As usual, Mr. Bryan talked at random -without taking the trouble to acquaint .himself with the actual facts. The Bee now has the facts and the figures that effectually explode Mr. Bryan's India fake. Over two months ago the editor of the Bee directed a per sonal inquiry on this subject to Hon. .James Bryce, who is now and has for many years been a member of Parlia ment and was a member of the British board of trade. Responding to -this letter, under date of August 1, Mr. Bryce says: "You are quite right in thinking that British merchants gain nothing at all "from the closing of the Indian mints. The sharp competition, especially of the Hindoo native merchants, cuts down -their profits and they lose heavily on -the exchange between India and Eng land in turning into English gold the -silver prices they receive for the goods they export to India. The export of food stuffs from India has not, I gather, in creased during the last few years and the closing of the mints has not increased it. Manchester and our manufacturers generally complain that business with India is unprofitable. Our cotton indus try is at preseut greatly depressed. So Britain at least gains nothing. You will, therefore, be safe in denying that there lias been, or is. any bonus or benefit to British merchants or manufacturers." This letter has been supplemented by 3?rof. Bryce with an article prepared by lis brother. .1. Annan Bryce, a very prominent London merchant, who was ior many years a resident of India. Mr. -J. Annnn Bryce says: "For Mr. Rosewater's guidance I have made np the annexed statement, which tsbows in parallel columns the exports of -wheat from the United States, Argen tine, Russia and India up to. 1873 be fore the fall in silver and rupee ex change becaine pronounced. You will observe that while the exports from the United States, Russia and Argentine are . on the whole increasing, those from In i -dia are falling off, and that in the year 181)5 the exports from India were the name as in the year 1877. Of course it does not do to reason on Individual years, ais there may be special circumstances, such as famines, to account for very short years. For instance, 1878 and 1879 were the years of the great fam ine in India and 1892 was the year of the famine in Russia. Dividing the last twpnty years into ne- ' -riods of live years each, yon will see that I -during the last three hve-year periods the exports from India have been falling off. wnile those trom the United Mates. Ar- gentine and Russia have been increas- i jng. although all the while - rupee ex change has been steadily falling with silver. The figures prove conclusively ;s regards Indian wheat, which has always been the great bogy with the American silver man. that the India ex port has bad nothing to do with the fall of silver or rupee exchange. The silver man would be more sensible if he were to take alarm at the growing ex ports from Argentine and from Russia. But he could make nothing of the silver .argument here, for neither Russian nor . Argentine exchange depends on silver. "Both ccuntries, during the whole of the . -period embraced in my statement, had ior the basis of their currency and of -course foreign exchange an inconvertible paper currency and not either silver or -gold. "Altogether the facts illustrate- the soundness of Mr. Rosewater's conclusion that the fall in prices of commodities is due to more economical production and -transport. In India, in Russia and in Argentine wheat exports became possi- 'ble not because the exchange value of rupee, the rouble or" the dollar fell, but 'because railways were built into districts previously inaccessible. In India the -providing of railway facilities stimulated the extension of irrigation. In the Punjab, for instance, many millions of .acres were brought into cultivation under irrigation as soon as the opening of the railway to Karachi made the export pos sible. But in India there" no longer remains any large new field to be opened up. and in most of the wheat-producing districts which depend on irrigation I believe as much water is now taken out of the rivers as they can give. Ameri ca therefore need not fear India much in the future, even if silver and rupee were likely to go lower, which they are not." The statistical exhibit accompanying this statement is exhaustive and con vincing in support of the conclusions arrived at by Mr. Bryce. In 1873 the export of wheat from the United States to England was 45,791,666 bushels; from Russia. 47.040,000 bushels: Argentine made no exports and India exported n fraction over 1,250.000 bushels. In 1877 wheat exports from the United States had reached 107,426,666 bushels; from Russia. 57,120.000 bushels; from India '15,633.333 bushel: Argentine still had no wheat to export. In 1893 wheat ex ports from the United States had reached -223.813.333 bushels: from Russia. 109.- ,375.000 bushels; from India, 27.066.666 ouKuriB, auu irom Argentine, .wv.wi btfshcls. In 1804 Argentine exported 65,000,000 bushels of wheat to England, while India did not increase its export over the preceding year. In 1895 the wheat' export from the United States was 170.333,333 bushels; from Russia, 150.333.333 bushels; from Argentine, 42.000.000 bushels: from India. 15.120.- -000 bushels. ' The average price or wbeat in Bom bay from 1869 to 1875 was $1.20 per I 'was passing through Iowa me months ago, and I got an idea from gome hogs. Laughter. An Idea Is the most Important thing that a person can get Into his head, and we gather our Ideas from ev ery source. As I was rfding along I noticed these hogs rooting in a field, and they were tearing up the ground, and the first thought that came to me was that they were destroying a good deal of property. And that carried me back to the time when as a boy I lived upon a farm, and I remembered that when we had hogs we used to put .rings In the noses of the hogs, and then the thought came to me, "Why did we do It?" Not to keep the hogs from getting fat. We were more Interested in their getting fat than they were. Laughter. The sooner they got fat the sooner we killed them; the longer they were In getting fat the longer they lived. But why were the rings put In the noses of those hogs? So that, while they were getting fat, they would not destroy more property than they were worth. tLaughter and great applause. And as I thought of that this thought came to me, that one of the duties of the government, one of the Important duties of government. Is the putting of rings In the nosesi of hogs. Applause. " From W. J. Bryan's Labor Pay Speech, . bushel, which was equal to the price of one ounce of silver. From 1876 to 1880, while silver was going down, the aver age price of wheat at Bombay rose, to S1.4U per bushel. Between 1881 and 1885 the average mice of wheat at Bom bay was $1.10 per bushel, 'and from 1886 to 1890 $1.01 per bushel, although silver had been tending upward. From 1891 to lS95'the average price of wheat at Bombay was 95 cents per bushel. Had wheat followed the price of silver it should have btcc only 68 cents Der bushel. Cotton exports from India to Europe have been equally at variance with the theories advanced by Mr. .Brvan. In 1874 India exported 1.236.8S2 biles and in ISTo 1,241,326 bales. JJuring tee nve years following its cotton ex port was below 1,000.000 bales. In 1879 it was only 641.458 bales. During the five years ending with 1895 the cot ton export from India has been steadily decreasing. In 1891 it was 1,028,417 bales; in 1892. 9.V1.UU0 bales; in 1893, 857.771 bales: in 1S94. 797.070 bales: in 1895, 625,000 bales. In contrast with this the United States exports of cotton have been steadily increasing. In 1890 they amounted to 5.020.913 bales: in 1S91, 5,820.779 bales; in 1892. 5.S91.411 bales; in 1893, 4,431.220 bales; in 1894, 5,397,509 bales; in 1895, 6,965,358 bales. Thus it will be seen that the India bugbear has no foundation, but has been conjured up for political purposes by Bryan, Harvey and all the apostles or silver. umana Uee. . THINGS TO REMEMBER. . ... , ,ne rotutm Abojtt Silver and Protee- tion. First That there is not a free coinage country in the world today that is not on a silver basis. Second That free coinage will not raise the price of American wool one rent while foreign wool is coming in free of duty and is crowding American wool out of the home market. Third That there is not a gold stand ard country in the world that does not use silver along with gold and keep its silver coins worth twice as much as their bullion value. Fourth That the free coinage of silver will not start a single factory in this country, when under the Democratic tar iff the products or loreign labor are shipped into this country cheaper than they, can be made here. Fifth That there is not a silver stand ard country in the world that uses any gold as money along with silver. Sixth That free silver coinage will not create a demand for labor when Democratic free trade makes the supply many times greater than the demand. Seventh That there is not a silver standard country in the world today that 'has more than one-third as much money tin circulation per capita as the United States has. Eighth That free silver is not going rto increase the price of nor the demand for farm products so long as the Ameri can workingman, who is the principal consumer, is kept in idleness by trans ferring his work to the hands of foreign workmen through the medium of free trade. Ninth That there is not a silver-stand ard country in the -world where the la boring man receives fair pay for his day's work, and it is largely these men's products that have come into this coun try by the grace of Democratic free trade, and wiped out the prosperity we enjoyed prior to 1S93. Zanesrille Times. Free Silver and Degradation. Labor, today, has reached ' its crisis. This is a very simple proposition, to anyone who looks at it with common sense and reason, but one on which hangs the fate of labor. If labor votes for Bryan and free silver, it votes away one-half of its wages. It will vote its organizations and unions out of exist ence. For degraded labor that is a drug ' on the market, too poor to save a penny, too feeble to lift its head against wrong and oppression, cannot maintain an or ganization against power and wealth. It will vote its children into ignorance and toil from their earliest years. - It will vote its women into the tilling of )ts fields, into drudgery in brick yards and into slavery in the very mines which silver men will operate for their own advantage, at the expense of everyone in the United States who works for wages. It will vote itself into bondage from which it cannot escape in our day and time. The statistics of every free sliver country in the world will prove this proposition to be true. MAJ JKIEEY'S HOME A Household Truly Homelike and Entirely Free from All . . Ostentations. NOTES OF A VISIT TO CANTON. The House Where the. McKinleys 'Made Their Home for Twenty-five Years. - Sojourning a few days recently near Canton gave opportunity for a charm' ing visit to that new center of attrac tion. - Canton is alive with enthusiasm, the courthouse; business places and private houses are decorated with flags, por traits of Maj. McKinley, national colors and various national and patriotic de vices. It is easy to recognize the McKinley residence by the lawn, which is worn brown and bare by the delegations that continue to come from all parts to pay their respects to the future occupant of the white house. Never before have women taken such an active interest in the presidential campaign, and never before since the nomination of President Lincoln have women s hearts been so stirred over the condition of the country, and while many are interested because of The main issues of the campaign, all are interested in the Republican nominee for president, because of his standing as a man and a citizen, and his social and family lite. The residence of Gov. and Mrs. Mc Kinley is homelike, and free from os tentation. A porch extends along the entire iront ot tne nouse, some bne old trees cast - a grateful shade upon the lawn, and beds of flowers attract the sight. We step into the softly carpeted hall, furnished with easy chairs and colors restful to the eye: a moment more; and we are received by Mr. Mc Kinley. Ihe reception room, on the risht of the hall as one enters, is used an an office, and here at all times of the day Mr. McKinley receives news and tele grams that are commnnicated directly to his residence, of such matters as per tain to and are of interest to the cam paign. While he talks his secretary occasion ally bands him a telegram which he reads without interruption to the conver sation, s Mr. McKinley will remain in Canton most of the time until after the elec tion in November. It has been his in tention to take a short trip to some point on the sea coast, but he has decided to remain in Canton. "I have no wish," he said, "to shut myself away from the people." bpeaKing ot tne activity of the women in the campaign, he said: "I am glad the ladies have such confidence -in me." I was glad to respond: "We do have great confidence in you, Mr. McKinley, more than it has ever before been our opportunity to express." Would you like to meet Mrs. McKin ley? Mother is one of our family, but at present she is away on a visit; and n.'though she has reached the age of 81, she is in excellent health." Any anticioatd pleasure we mav have had in meeting Mrs. McKinley is more than realized. Seated in (he handsome parlor, where all lights and colors har monize prevailing harmony impresses one first and last in the McKinley home with some dainty crochet work in blue zephyr in her lap ' talking with a lady visitor, is the future mistress of the white house. It is easy to say of this woman who will be the first lady in the land, now that she is approaching her zenith, that she is one of the loveliest women we have ever met. but such is the oft-repeated Verdict of the many. , At brat glance we recognize Mrs. Mc Kinley. from her pictures recently taken, the shining hair parted in the center of the forehead, rippling softly over the beautiful brow, a sweet, almost girlish face not a line or wrinkle marring its smoothness the incarnation of womanly sweetness. One who is sensitive and observant, need never to have heard one word of Sir. McKinley's family life to understand the relation Mr. and Mrs. McKinley occupy toward one another, and while the pleas ant morning conversation proceeds, we seem to feel through the atmosphere of the room every word of the spirit and ex istence of the happy wedded life perpetu ated, . which Browning expressed and painted in his "By the Fireside." We are looking at and discussing pic tures of Mr. and Mrs. McKinley, when one of the family, taking up one of Mr. McKinley, which from the view of the face shows the deep thought line extend ing the length of the forehead, remarks: "Mrs. McKinley does not like these she thinks that line looks like a scowl." We all smile and quite agree with her, that mat picture does not do him justice, and we think what picture could por tray him as be is, the charming person ality, the kindly, genial manner, the clear, perfectly modulated voice, the bright blue eye, and clear complexion, and the fine smooth skin that a wom an might envy? While his pictures can not portray this, they do show with fidel ity some qualities of the man whose splendid constitution has uever been im paired by excesses, the erect form, the brown hair, that shows but few traces of silver; the broad, full forehead, deep set eye. clearly cut features and square, massive jaw, the features and bearing one might look for in the hero of the battle of Fisher's Hill and Cedar Creek, where he was breveted major by Presi dent Lincoln. Mr. McKinley's passionate love of j Cowers is recognized by his friends. Are not those roses lovely i says Mrs. McKinley, calling our attention to some vases ot rare red roses, upon the mantel and D rackets ; "but 1 love these, glancing at a bouquet of sweet peas on the pretty table beside her. "The roses came in such a beautiful wooden box. T!ie name of the giver is not here. Wil liam," addressing . Mr. McKinley, and, taking up a card and reading, "To Mr. and Mrs. McKinley, from your devoted friend, " "The magnolias were sent from the South." As Mr. McKinley rises, our eyes follow him, and we catch a glimpse, through -an open door, of a dainty couch in white and gold, and Mrs. McKinley says softly, "William, there is a baby asleep in there." So gentle is the step on the thick car pets that it could not awaken the lightest sleeper, and holding the great snowy., waxen blossoms for our insDec- tion he says, the recollection, perhaps, suggested by the thought of the little sleeper in the adjoining room, "We commenced our first housekeeping in this house over twenty-five years ago. Here our little ones were born and passed away, the old home's endeared to us by many pleasant, hallowed mem ories. The silken flag that adorned the chairman's desk at the Republican con vention at &t. iouis is draped on one corner of the piano. The gavel used by the chairman on that occasion, a beautiful piece or carved workmanship, was shown us. "It is said to have been made from a piece of one of the logs from the log cabin in which Abraham Lincoln lived. It is a pleasant thought to a lover of relics and to the patriotic," says Mr. McKinley.- There were also some beautiful bad ges: used during different presidential campaigns, one a white satin badge used dnrine President Tyler s campaign. bearing his motto, the design of which would have done credit to the finest of today, with all our modern accessories of art. Mr. McKinley .is, as it has been said. "the deliverer of a new gospel to women and children in making protec tion and the tariff plain to them," and we may add. that is his blameless politi cal, professional, religious, domestic end social life, he has also revealed a new gospel to the young men of our country. Mary Stuart Uolnn. Bryan's hope of success is grounded wholly on the late P. T. Barnum's the ory that a fool is born every minute. Paste "it in your hat that free coin age and free trade, the great pair of name-producers, go hand in hand in this campaign. Yon can't support the one without voting ior tne otner. - Mr. Brvan is too confidential with his audiences for dignity almost plaintive, sometimes, in his appeals to them to say whether or- not ne "looks ue an anarcn- 1st." . s ' FARMERS AND TARIFF Home Demand Supplies the Chief Market for Agricultural Products. WHERE THEIR INTEREST LIES. Effect of Curtailing the Purchasing , Power of the Men Employed in Factories. We export about one-third of the wheat grown in the United States either in the form of flour or of wheat. We export only about 5 per cent, of our corn crop'. The exportation of other grain is as a rule trifling in quantity, al though the very low price of oats for the past two years, owing to heavy produc tion and a falling off in the home de mand for consumption by street rail way horses and driving horses, has led to a considerable foreign movement in this grain. Of our meats 'we probably export about 10 per cent., although exact statistics are not available on this' point.. These figures are sufficient to make it Elain to the intelligent farmer that the ome market is his great market, and that any causes which reduce the home demand for provisions directly injure the farming interest. Besides the staple articles of grain and meat, there are a multitude of farm products for which there is no market at all except the home market. This in cludes the whole range of perishable fruits and vegetables, and also includes to a very great extent the dairy products. Other important items are poultry and eggs. All thrifty farmers know the value of home markets for such articles as these, and know, too, that much of the profit of farming comes from the minor productions of the farm. If we are to have increased home con sumption of farm products we must have labor generally employed, and at fair wages, in the towns and cities. To keep labor well employed it is absolutely es sential under the present conditions that we should have protective duties upon a large range of foreign-made articles. This is no longer a matter of theory, about which intelligent men dispute. It was held for a time by the advocates of free trade that the superior intelligence I of tne average American workingman ana the superior quality of the machinery he used would be a sufficient protection to insure our own markets tor our own manufactured products. This is a de lusion which no intelligent man now ad vocates. The extension of commerce by steamship lines all over the world, the laying of submarine telegraph cables, the world-wide habit of travel, the cheap ness and convenience of transportation, and the general spread of intelligence by newspapers has put the entire civ ilized and semi-civilized globe in close business relations. Our ingenious labor saving machines are being introduced into China and Japan, and no important improvement is made in inventions in this coutry that is not immediately known in all parts of Europe. The skill and producing capacity of the mechanics and operatives of other countries are constantly being increased by the sharp ness of competition and by the introduc tion of new methods and machinery. Labor all over the world is tending to a common level. Now the thoughtful farmer will readily see that if we were to keep up the abili ty of our own shop and factory popula tion to consume his product in liberal quantities we must maintain an excep tional rate of wages. If through such free-trade legislation as Mr. Bryan and his followers advocate we are to lower our American wage-earning population to the standards ot living prevailing in we manufacturing countries which compete with us. then there would be a great surplus of farm products in this country tor wnicn tnere wouia oe no noun mar ket. We must put up a tariff wall to keep out a flood of such articles as we manufacture in our own country, or we will soon be deluged with cheap wares and fabrics from Japan and China as well as from the low-paid labor countries of Europe. The farming industry Is unquestiona bly in a depressed condition today, and the cause is not far to seek. Look al the hundreds of silent factories with their smokeless chimneys, all over the country, from Nebraska to Maine, and form, if yon can, an estimate of the immense multitude of people formerly employed in these establishments, whi are now eking out a poor living as best they can in other vocations, manv ol them, no doubt, in farming and garden ing, where they have become competitors with the men who formerly supplied them with food. If the free-trade move ment led by Mr. Bryan goes on to its natural conclusion, whole lines of in dustry which have survived the Wilson bill will be ruined and hundreds of thou sands of employes will be thrown out of work. The conclusion ought to be plat to every thoughtful man engaged in agr ricnltural pursuits. We cannot afford U reduce our wage rates to those of for eign countries. We must make for Mr . selves all articles needed for our ordi nary, every-day uses, importing only such luxuries as foreign countries bav special facilities for producing. Tarif for revenue only means the ruin of thi farmer, and tariff for protection' mean a well-employed town and city popula. tion, and good home markets for every thing the farmer has to sell. CAMPAIGN NOTES. "I wonld willingly defend free trad with my life," said Mr. Bryan in his firW speech in Congress, and as he is ziom defending free silver with his toagv -only it is easy to see to which policy ht is most devoted. Democratic orators and organs mai evade the tariff, but the workingmen ot the country cannot, for to them it crs sents the unavoidable issue of work mai prosperity or idleness and poverty. While the Popocrat demagogues ar shouting "Down with the rich," th" Republican party advances with the crj "Ud with the poor." and proposes Ihf enactment of measures that will provide work for the workers and prospent for alL Sam .Tones is r '-Ing if not expres sive, lie declares iut he would raraer 'climb a ladder with an armful of eel. tnan to undertake to fuse with the mitl dle-of-the-road-Fopulists. The workingman does not want f cheaper dollar. He wants steady em ployment paid ior in aonars as gooa sz gold. The simplest way to elect McKinley t to vote for him. Mr.' Bourke Cockraa ob serves to his fellow Democrats, and tha, remark contains all the wisdom f ai the ages. The one question Bryan never answers is the simple one, "How about free trader The Bryan party Is made up of al kinds of factions, led by all sorts oi cranks, and if it should get into office il couldn't work together. In denouncing wealth the Democratic organs are consistent with their party for it has done everything it could t make the people poor and keep them so. The Republican pledge to promote tbt free coinage of silver by international agreement offers the only solution of thi money problem which good business mei can accept, and for that reason even th Democrats among them are working wit the Republican party this year and wit vote for McKinley. Any Popocrat who believes that Bry an can carry Kentucky when Palmer is a native and Buckner a native and a rest dent of the Blue Grass state, doesn't know the Kentucky nature. It is easy to see from Thomas B Reed's speeches down in Maine that hi is perfectly serene and happy. But thet he usually feels that way. He was bori so. Mr. Bryan errs in saying that it is idu . curiosity that draws people to his meet -ings. It is both interesting and profit able to study a man who, in this civilised . . country in this age of the world, ap parently thinks that wealth can be cr ated by legislation. "What gain would we make for tl James G. Blaine eighteen years ago. "i on ooening the gate for silver to Hon in, we open a still wider gate for gold to flow out?" The question is still n answered and still timely.