'Lysines -points.1 The Fallacies of the Gold Stand ard Clearly Exploded. I(iic.'b delivered at Bal.ra Sen, ii, by Bun. ( Hylvaater Pennoyer.) rn t nur.CiTizENSor Mario County If - - . j appear before you to-day for the pnr pttM of addressing yon briefly on the great overshadowing question of fiuuui e. ( i -bull not attempt to f arniib complete .t.tUlice or formulate definite arga- meets on behalf of tbe restoration of il- 1 riras standard money, which 1 favor tnd which the pent mass of tbe Amer ican people favor. Tney are not parti cularly needed. The eventa in thiacoun tr for the last Quarter of a centnrv. and mure especially for the last three years, have been replete with convincing stu- ! tistics and persuasive arguuientaaguiust the single gold standard, puttiug to fbauie the eloquence or arguments of tbe most learn 'd statesmen or the moat profound scholar. Two years ago 1 sai l in a reply declining au invitation to ipesk in Montana, that " if the prevail ing hard times would not persuade tho people of this country to abandon th.; exUting gold standard, then no c.- I qnence of mine could persuade them, neither wouia tney be persuuUea though one rose from the dead." When such an orator as the bard times now rrought upon this country iy the adoption of the single gold siamlnrJ policy is abroad in the land, carryiug conviction to every hamlet and every fireside with snch force and Dower as to completely shatter old party ties and the v political associations of a lifetime, and , to solidify in one political organiiation tlio almost unified masses of tbe coun ts try, then individual argument has lost its force and personal eloquence is ba ! reft of its power. The careful student ' is well conversant with tbe fact that ' there have been repeated occasions in 'J the world's history when great niove ; uieuta of tbe people have occurred, . which, in their depth, extent and power completely refuted the claim of Individ- nil leadership, and even passed the lim- its of human guidance. In 1814, Nspo V Icon said, " one year ago all Europe was marching with ua; now all Europe is 3 marching agninst us." There was then I a great and almost unaccountable j change of publio impulse and sentiment, and such a wonderful change is occur- rinj in this country to-d-y. I THE KEVENCE QUESTION. I Tbe advocates of the single gold stau I daid are still endeavoring to divert tiio attention of the people to the tariff qneation. They claim that the prevent : tariff is the cause of the present trouble, j It is a protective measure, affording an average of 40 per cent protection, nearly ; as high as the war tariff of 1801, and yet : because a few articles which before were ; protected were left by it unprotected, they endeavor to fasten the wide-spread disaster which has overtaken the coun try upon tbe slight change. The main industry left unprotected by the pres ent tariff is wool-growing, and they use wool to pull over the eyes cf the peoplo. The present paralysis of business is caused by financial and not by tariff legislation. In May, 1890, while making my can- ville, Asa. and auUUregon Uity, at ail ol which places are large I rick woolen manufactories. We then had bad tw n-ty-uiue years of wool protection, the McKinley bill was then pending in con gress and sure to become a law, whio afforded greater protection, and yet those three large manufactories were idle and had been so for about six months. What was the matter? With sheep on its thousands of hills, with large woolen manufactories and with its people needing its products for nearly every night on this canvas I slept under cotton comforters why was not Oregon manufacturing woolen goods? It cer tainly was not because of tariff. It was entirely owing to the fact that the Volume of money in the country had not kept pace with the increase of busi ness and population, and so the price of products and profits of bnsiness, as well as the wages of labor, bad fallen so low that the people were unable to make anything and so were denied the nec essaries as well as the luxuries of life, j It is indeed a most sad commentary on the condition of our country, rich in soils, and fertile in its resources, when a large proportion of its domestic immi grants are bora into the world, aud shiver on their advent, because their parents cannot afford the soft woolen covering needed. The idea of McKinley that he can raise our people out of tbe slough of poverty in which they are now p'aced, by taxing them still more when they cannot get money t pay their present taxes, is indeed so brilliant ' as to make him nmqne as a statesman, an 1 so novel as to entitle him to secure on it letters patent wi'hont question. 1 THE INCOME TAX. f Three years ago in its law providing for ,.ie venue, Congress instituted an income : tin. If it had been collected as it onght to . have been there would have occurred no Idellciency of revenue, but at the instance . ' . I 41 1-1. . M ai . l : l i "i iud weuiiu oi me uouuirjr, wmcu uu, sWta a brier except! .n, enjoyea an J immunity from federal taxation, the ' Muireme Court overturned tbe law and jt u re with two of its own previous decis li ms. The l'resident thereupon refused i to enforce the law of Congress anil so, ? ... 1. I I . 1 i - 1 . "hub mo law Btauu.i on me statute bxiks unrepealed, it has never been en iorced and so remains a dead letter. An income tax is the most just tax that could be levied. A tariff tax is a tax upon the industries of the country, while an Income tax is a tax UKn tbe wealth or tbe country. A tariff tax is notes "urily an unjust tax, as under it a poor man pays as much as the rich man if be lives as well, while he puys more if he has a larger family. An income tax is one under which every man pays accord lug to his ability to pay. The most ivilized government levy an income tu. it is n reality tbe back bone of the LritUb reveune system, it is abou', jo be introduced in a graduated form in il'i n:tv..; and o: uerinuiiy it . m tin xtr-m-st d ;;ie. It ia the law in the I HlUdrta m. I,ut it is not now enforced owiun to a li: .if dyspepsia ou th part of oue of the j.i ig. f the S ipreiu Ujiii t. and a ti. of Weakness ou the pail of t he fedora! nei-utive. Uuder the next ad ministration it ought to be enforce 1. The nnt executive will lake an oath that " he shall take cure that the laws be faithfnlly ex-cuted," and he un doubtedly will see that the income tax law will be enforced. In ord.r. how ever, to avoid nuy possible frution be tween auy of the departments of govern ment, Congress should at its earliest convenience pass a law inhibiting any ol the federal courts, through writs ol injunctiou or otherwise, from interfer ing with the collection of the national reveune. They have no such constitu tional right now, but they imagine tiny have, aud therefore Chiiv-s should at once settle the matter. The federal inferior courts are the creatures of C m gess aud Cjngress can prccribe thui jurisdiction. Of this there is no nor tion, aud such an iuhibitim would lie binding upon them and would leave Congress uutraiumeled in the exercise of Its exclusive constitutieunl proroga tion to levy aim collect taxes. ' SO-CALLED SOUND MONEY. A very great dcul is now being sniu about sound money, but wheu the sys tem of the sound money aJvocate is thoroughly diagnosed it will be found to be the very direct opposite of a sound money syttem. .Misleading and delusive adjectives have wrought a vast deal of misery in this woi Id. J he serpent per suaded Eve that the fruit of the forbid. den tree was "good" fruit, and as a consequence our first parents were driven out of paradise. 1 he single L-old basis advocates have pcrsu.n'.ed C mgres that theirs was a " sound money scheme and as a result our country is plunged into the pit of industrial de pression aud financial disaster. l.at is the sound money doctrine It is to have gold alone tbe money of redemp. tlon, to stop the coinage of silver, to convert greenbacks aud treasury notes into bonds, aud to allow the banks to issue bank paper based upo ; these bonds, or, as some demand, upn tho.r capital derived from other Sources, ilio bank paper would not lie a legal tender and so the great bulk of the t urn-Ley would be a non-debt paying currency. Now sound money is money with which debts can be paid, and any currency with which debts cannot be paid is not sound money. It will thus be seen that the so-called sor.nd uiouev scheme is one that wouid foist upon the people a vast vrluuie of bank rag money, which would have to be presented to the bank bluing the same before it could be redeemed, and which paper when issued by the bauks, r is the custom now, would be sent by them to distant pat of the country so that it would bo difficult fur the bidder to preseut the same for redemption. It is a delusive, dangerous schemu of the banking fraternity, which has fattened and grown arngiut by governmental favors to not only control the gov ernment but also to em-lave the pciple. Ihe ouly thing sound about the scheme is its appellation, and that must be used only in a l'ickwi. k an teuse. It is alleged that the prince of dark ness when occasion requires in order to further his nelarious purpo es can ap pear as an angel of light, an I in initia tion of tins illustrious example, if not animated by u like purpose, the advo cates of an unsound bank rag-currency, bereft of a debt-paytr.g power which they propose to be the main aud only currency of circulation, nro now atti tudinizing with all the grace of public benefactors, before the people of this country as the only advocates of sound money. The plain isttue U between the silver dollar nr.d the bank note; between "bard" legal tender money and "rag" non-legal Under currency, and tbe so called sound money advocates are thn stout oppoters of the sound " bard " money plan. REAL SOl'ND MONEY. The money system proposed by the three allied armies of reform iu the present presidential contest is the only real Bound money system. It is to do away with bank paper entirely, to coiu both gold aud silver iuto standard money ai contemplated by the consti tution, and to have the paper currency required by the demands of trade and commerce issued direct by the govern ment, and all the unney so coined or issued to be real sound money, a full legal tender in payment of all debts, public and private, allowing no Imli vidual to discriminate against any of the money of the realm. With such money in the possession of the people, prosperity would immediately follow. The money in band can be used to pay the debt at baud. There would be no scurrying around the country to get bills on the nearest bauK, and no necess ity of paying commission to the bank's broker, or obeisance to bank officers before you can pay your debts. Ibis system of finance would relieve the people of this country from the existing bank tnralliloiuand woniu nueraie mem from the care of lbs British money lords who are now caring for the American ueonle as the wolf cares for the lamb. If this svttetu had been adopted aud followed by the gnve-nineut from its foundation as propoced by tne luimoital Jefferson, who said, "Dank paper must besuppiet.-ed, and the circulating me dium restored :o the nation, to whom it Leloi Hi." au I ns proposed by Jackson, whj vwi. cqmU.y opposed t . bank paper and who favi.red a government bunk 'founded nu.iuthe credit of the gov eminent an t us revenue," how differeut, indeed, and Nov much more prosperous might have ti c:i the condition of the country iu the j 'i-t and at the present tia.e. The p.-r;oli of depression and pauio wliii::. have carri d sorrow and ruin to countles-i homes, acd which have always nulted in the loss of the many lor the enrichment of the few might have I en avoid rd, for so long as tbe government is. a s all the money of the country, cl thi g it all with full legal teNiler iUum1Iw4 Ut mu UiriWI ! lielow jr while that governm. tit is! solvent and i in the possession of plen ary taxing power. There never was an I instance in the world's history to con- trovert Him proposition, bin-h being j tbe case, the citizens of a government pos..MMii( gach , nllHm.lHi system, I would be subjected to no periods of panic or depression, ruinous to somej and harmful to all. All gold and silver should te coined and the amount of. Taper money should be rei?nlated bv the ! demands of trade and commerce. NEED OF HII.VEB AS KEM'.MITIOX MONEY. It is estimated, in round nnmliers. that there is in use iu the world as money alout four billion dollars of gold, silver aud paper each. With both gold and silver as money of ultimate redemp tions there would be no difficulty what everiu carryiug at par the present or even a greater amonut of pajer money. Eight hilliou of metal money is a broad base on which to rest four bilious of p:i p r money. There is pleuty of coin with which to redeem the paper, aud so there will be pleuty of confidence that it can be redeemed. There has a great deal been said about our present financ ill difficulties being the result of a lack of confidence. That is ind ed very true. But the lack of coulid.-nco results from alack of coin. With plenty of full re demption coin money there will be plenty of confidence. With a sea city of such redemption money there will necessarily be a lack of confidence. Coiu is the basis of confidence. The American money system that woul I uialie both gold and silver the broad base fo: tho support of the required paper money has, however, been supplanted by the British system, that nukes gold alone full redeiupt ion money and the ban) of support for bothsilver and paper as cur rency. And so the world now hua a four billion base and an e ght billion su perstructure. The wise men of the bauks and the wiso men of the public press assure the people that this plan is the very proper thing, and those who differ with them are unschooled iu finance The American financial policy demands that the pyramid should stand on its base; the British policy demands that it should stand on its apex, and the Republican party and the Cleveland ad ministration have adopted the British policy, and make gold alone the money of redemption On July 1st, M'O, treasury reports show in circulation in the country at that time: Kilver certificates, three hun dred and thirty-one million; treasury note's, ninety five million; greenbacks, two hundred aud twenty-live million; national lank notes, two hundred aud fifteen million; total of t ight hundred and sixty six million. This amount, ac cording to treasury practice, was re deemable In oId, and at that rate the treasury held one hundred and eleven millions of gold with which to redeem. Our so-called wise men of finance call this it souud money system. It is sound in the same sense they iipi wise. After having borrowed f-.'iiS.OOO.OOO of gold in the last three yeirs, we now have in the treasury about one hundred million of gold with which to redeem nliont nine hundred million ot paper. The pyramid is standing on its apex, and sooner or later will topplo over. Can any one expec' a restoration of continence umler such a condition ? If silver as well as gold was money of redemption, the base would at once be broadened, and confi dence would be restored. a niiNois policy. From 1805 up to 18CH, 94,0O0,O0O of greenbacks had been turned into bonds, when in that year the friends of the greenbacks cried halt and caved :140, 000,000 from destruction. That was twenty-eight years ago. Oue dollar at interest at four per cent, compounded semi-uuuually trebles itself in twenty- eight years. But for such opposition, the bondholders would have received on that amount of bonds $GI)2,000,000 and tbe government would still have to pay, as it does have to now, f:t 10,000,000. Is it any wonder that the money lender favors the issuance of government bonds? Is it any wonder that the people oppose bucIi a policy ? During the three years of the Cleveland ad ministration that has closely followed the policy of John Sherman and the Republican party t.'O'.'.Ooo.oOO of bouds have been issued in order to sustain tbe single gold standard, soino of which run thirty years. In twenty-eight years the bondhold r will have realized ij.'i.'l 000,' 0 on these bonds, and the govern ment will still owethef.'ii'.VO'VOJ. If the pre.ieut administration hated Bilver so much that it would not permit of its coinage iuto standard money, it could, instead of issuing interest bearing bonds, havjsecured from Congress tho privilege of issuing non-interest U-nring treasury notes, aud if those notes hud been made a full le,-al tender in payment of all debts, both public aud private, over ten million of dollars interest money could have been saved annually and probably they uover would have been presented for redemption, as they would perform all the functions of money. If this had been done how different would have been the condition of the country today. The treasury notes would gUdly have beeu taken by the people, they would have ente-ed into geueral circulation, they would have supplied to just that extent the money so much needed to reitore business and revive industry It is indeed the misfortune of the pres ent administration that its record will go iuto the piii'es of history, linked with fetters of shame to bond issues and hard tunes, when it might just as well have been associated with the restoration of silver, the issue of treas ury notes and the return of prosperity. Jefferson favored the issuance of treas ury not ej nii'l 1 .OjO.Ouj were issued by the Van Buren mluimistration, while the Democrats of every period have favored "hard money," which means both gold aud silver in preference to bank cnrreiicy. The pns -ut adminis tration has njec'.ed, in tho finance question, the traditions of the Demo cratic I aity lUi. Cvl'r-E OF PANICS. yh ia Ik- i. armful to business, uothing boa caused so much misery, snffering aud despair as the freqneut periods of depression and panics which have visited the country. The cause of these panics in every instanoo has lvn tbe same money contraction. The great panic of lt?37 was caused by the demand of the Federal Government for specie In payment for the public lands, aud although all g''d and silver was then coiued at the mints, the volume of metal money was entirely inadequate to the requirements of busiiuss. IVuiaud on the bauks was made for the required specie, to which the batiks could not re spond, aud the whole fabric of bank currency, based on the money distrili uted by the Federal Government among the several states, became nearly worth less. The busiuess of the country, re stricted to the insufficient volume of metal money, became crippled, aud dis aster and ruin followed. , The pauio of ISoT was primarily ' caused by the act of Cotigns, Febru ary, 1W7, demonetizing foreign coins, ; which up to that date had beeu Icil tender money. In 1S03 Congress had demonetized all silver halves, quarters aud dimes iu sums over and now, ! Congress, having demonetized foreign j coins, the banks could no longer hold such demonetized silver as reserv.s, and they were sent out of the couutry never ' to return. The panic of 1873 was caused by the ' contraction of currency to the amount of over one billion dollars. This vicious ! legislation of Congress visited Uxm the 1 couutry one of the severest panics in j the whole world's history. The pros-1 pf rity which had prevailed even during the war was followed by a period of unparalleled depression. The census re turns show that the wealth of tho conn try in 1S0J was fifteen billions ; in 1M it was thirty billions. With sufficient money, more wealth was created iu one decade than had been created in all the previous years of the nation's existence. From lf ft" to 1N7II the contraction of the currency, exclusive of coin, was $1,230,. l0l),0X5. With the loss of tin currency was indissolubly linked a stoppage of busiuess enterprise, the depreciation of values, the stagnation of trade, and the enforced idleness of countless thousands of American citizens, who were con verted into tramps by the very same legislation that had converted the bond holders into millionaires. The panic of lstiS was ennsed by the most foolish and criminal sdicy inaugu rated by the Harrison administration and followed by that of Cleveland, of making gold alone the money of redemp tion. Kince that policy has been adopted, and since silver has been discarded as standard money, the business of the country has leen dwarfed to tho narrow gold basis, aud wreck and ruin hnvo fol lowed in the wake of the contraction of the volume of legal tender redemption mouey. History, reason and experience of mankind all teach the same lesson iu finance, but the monoinetallists heroic allly oomluit all these lessons. They are wise, only iu their own conceit. The fol lowing statements are furnished without comment: Amount of currency, exclusive of coin, in treasury and circulation on September 1, 1W!, as takeu from books of the treasury department by Moses W. Field, (Our Money Wars, page 173). ITIUtENCY KKIT. 1, 18"). V. 8. notes :n.liin,(iiv9 FraetintMl curreney I'l.Kl.Tc: National lank notes Ishii.imi Compound lut. h'Kul toudr notus.. iU.u.'l.liii Trrasury t per eeut legal tender. . . it! .VW VI TVniHmrr loan cortllleutiM 1 i?,lK ;i.l Certifli-atna of liulelitmlnuia H1.UI i.iui Treasury notus past due I.Mcl.iui Hlat bauk ntitua 7,s.7 .VJ Thru year treasury nutea (vli.iim.iau Total fl,tf.0,(i7s,;;t Amount of currency, exclusive of coin, in treasury and circulation, July 1, lM'JO, according to the treasury reports of that date: CCltltENCY JULY 1, lbOO. Iu clrculutlou. Quid eartlHi-atea fl'.'.M.r.K Hlivor oortineatoa .M.iV,t Treasury notoa 111 U. S. notoa ..'! ,1)', Currtney rartilloatea :iI.hi,u 0 National bank notui iii, tll,:'.-7 In treasury. Mold certlflcaUis 4'.'7.l 0 Bilver oortittcatMa ll.:i u.mvl Trmsury nut 111 ;H,Ol,.liu U. H. notes l-'l. '.iLs Cuneniy certinVatoa 1.i,imi National bauk notva Ih.ims.ijJi Total l.liu.;ul,l Zictit In '& over Va, tsTn.NSil.u.'t. DEBT AND BoNHAUE. Thirty years ago there was legalized bondage in this country of the colored race. To-day there is the legalized bond age of the whole seventy million of American citizens. The policy of bonded indebtedness and the ontrac tion of debt-paying mouey has been prosecuted by tbe money louners until we are nearly bound band and foot iu their tolls. Business is so unproductive that they am willing to invest in gov ernment bonds at 3 and 3 ier cent. During the last years of Buchanan's ad ministration, on account of tho Utah expedition and the small revenuo de rived from the low tariff, tno govern ment, desiring to borrow money, was compelled to pay over 10 per cent for it. That showed the fuct that money in vested in business was so remunerative that 10 per cent government bonds were undesirable. All this is now changed. The only thing that now pays is mouey invested in government bonds at from 3i to 5 per cent. In the hist three years the government of the United States has issued ;'2,j0o,0OO of interest-bearing bomb), ami the control of the fed eral government is now in the hands of the money lords, with the president as a nominal figure-head. With heavy Inter est to pay tbe foreign bondholder, uud with heavy taxes to pay the vast army of federal office-holders and treasury leeches, and deprived of good and suffi cient money with which to pay, the American citizen to-day is in a like con dition with the b.raelites iu Egypt, who were compelled to make their required tales of brick while deprived of the nec essary straw. Where is this policy to end? If continued, what will be the fabe of onr children f Wealth will be come absorbed by the few, and they will ' be the task-master of the world. .Vnllmll, the English statistician, esti mates the total amount of th. pil l money of the world at six billion dol lars, which is two billion above (ho geueral estimate. Cf this amount the Kothschilds now own one-fifth, l'ut in ' government 3J per cent bond and, com- pounded semi-annually, their wealth in ' S3 years will ulsiorb the entire stock of golJ of the world, and if wo remain on ' a gold basis, tin y will bo tho masters of , the world. I'rior to the discovery of ' America by Columbus, the entire money i of Europe had passed into the control of . one class of men. Under Providence ! America was discovered, tho precious metals were found and Europe was liberated from its thraldom. Provi dence bos placed within our reach the1 precious metal silver, which will enable us to lilierato ourselves from our im pending thraldom. The issue is a pln'u ' issue. Hiall we continue ou a gold basis ' and remain the serfs of tho money lords, I or shall we restore silver as standard money, break tho shackles which bind us and stand forth as free men ? OKI.I'EN IIHUJITUY. Idolatry is an inherent sin in tho human race. And it is a grievous sin. I There is no tin upon which the Almighty looks with more displeasure, and there 1 has Imh'u nothing which has been moro I idoluvd than gold. Stocks and stones, ! images of wood and clay, beasts and ' reptiles, the sun, and firo have ull had I their worshippers, but to nothing else ' has the devout and wide-spread homage : Imh.u paid that gold has received. Ne buchadnezzar, King of Babylon, erected a golden imago 110 feet high to which the homage of the entire nation was licstowod. And the chosen people of (lod after having passed dry shod through the Hod Sea, after having fol lowed tho pillar of cloud by day and tho pillar of firo by night, after having drank from tho smitten rock aud eaten the heaven-sent quails and in mm, and right following the visible pnwenco of the Invisible Hod amid the clouds and fire, tho voices of trumpets and the thunders nud lightulngs of Mount Sinai, while their chosen leader wns still on the mount, made them a golden calf and worshipped it, utterly forgetful of tho Cod w ho had so miraculously led aud sustained them in their journeying". And even now iu the latter part of tho nineteenth century, and iu tho broad light of the experience uud civilization of the whole human race aud the irre futable evidence of our Almighty Knler of the Uuiverso of nations aud of men, we find as iu the ages of the past, au unaccountable idolatry of gold. Now, the object of devotion is not in the shape of the Babylon imago or the Israelitish calf, but it is in the form of the British gold basis. Tho devotees of this basis are just as unreasoning and unreasonable as were the devotees of the linage uud tho calf. And will not God punish this Idolatry as ho has formerly punished it? Three thousand Israelites fell for their idolatry and King Nebuchadnezzar for his wua was driveu from men and did cat grass like oxen. Aud for this idolatry of a gold basis is not a whole nation suffering? Let ns hope that, like the Babylonian king, tho worshippers of the gold basis will ulti mately hnvo their understanding re turned unto them, that tho evil they have inflicted upon tho country may lo lifted from an alllictod people, and that silver may be restored as standard money and prosperity may bo restored to the land. DF.PIlF.CIATION OF VALUE. Justice Walter Clark of North Caro lina said that ou recent trip to Mex ico, when arriving at El I'aso he changed bis United States money iuto Mexicun money, receiving nearly two dollar for oue; that tweuty years ago both dollars were at a parity, thus demonstrating that either the Mexican dollar had de preciated or the United States dollar had appreciated; that the Mexican dol lar had not depreciated, as was shown by the fact that cotton was 14 cents a pound, wheat a dollar a bushel, nnd wages the same as when the two dollars were at a parity, while iu the United States cotton was seven cents a pound, wheut fifty cents a bushel and wages about half their former rates, showing conclusively that the United States dollar had appreciated, and that such appre ciation had been to the injury of the laliorer and producer and to the benefit of the money owner, the value of whoso wealth huil Itccn really doubled by our financlul policy, which had demonetized silver and placed tbe conutiy on tho narrow gold basis. A Missouri farmer about a year ago stated that com was then tweuty cents a bushel aud potatoes ten cents a bushel, and that if the salary of President Cleveland for one year was paid In corn aud potatoes, it would take to pay it 125,000 bushels of corn and S50.000 bnshels of potatoes. In the spring of 1H1KI President Cleveland doslred tho banks of the couutry to give to the peo ple an " object lesson," which would force them to acquiesce in tho rejieal of the Sherman law. The bunks, in obe dience to his wishes, withdrew their loans and precipitated the panic of that year, which prostrated tho industries of a nation, ruining millions and currying loss and sorrow to nearly every house hold in the lund. That was indeed a molt hateful and harmful objoct lesson, lie could now partly atone, for the wrong then done if he would give an other object leeson beneficial in its teaching. If he would consent to take one year's salary in corn and potatoes, and would build a big red barn ou the shore of Buzzard's Bay in which to store tbem, that barn would be a warning to generations yet to come against tho folly of demonetizing silver aud con tracting the currency of the country, through which fatal policy the purchas ing power of his salary had wonderfully increased, and the value of the farmer's products had woefully drfcreased. THE BAN KINO POW Ell. That our worst foes are sometimes those of our own household has been repeatedly demonstrated In this country by the in- r.-.hi-s p -w-r wl.i.-U Lin Leen exerused by tho ban!i. During Jack Mm' adiiiinistratit n. in the futilo effort lo circumvent hn i, ti. Bauk of the I lilted Slates precipitated a pallid upon the country, At Ihe outbreak of the Ciil Win-, the gold of tho lank was withdrawn from circulation ami lay hidden until it could conio out and fat ten on a n at mu's mvc.isity, and now in tlu present war l !vivn the producers of the United Stavs and the money power of it rent Britain, wo find tha banks of the country occupying a posi tion identical with that w hich tlioTorlej occupied in tl.o Uivolutionary wars. There is something in tho busuies of the money changer ami tho money lender, w hich is calculated to blunt tho lnorul sense uud wi i!;eti the patriotic spirit. And it was alwaysfo. When the Savi. r of mankind was on earth, he found luni;n;me adequate to condemn the sins of all cl.iv-s except those of the bankers, up u vho-o back ho laid the whip ih he drove Hieui from the temple. That tho bankers were the only class which the gentle Savior scourged with u whip is a most remark able fact, which is will calculated to direct public attention t their conduct and its effects upon the community nnd the nation, and which should also serve the purpose to that cln-s of our fellow citizens of subjecting their own uiotivts and actions to a most rigorous process of self. examination. It is also a luor t remaikable fact that of tho twelve npusihs chosen by our Savior from tl.o various walks of life, no single oue w as ba-e enough to betray Him except Judas, the banker. And it is no very violent presutiipii.uito sup poso that lie. like marly nil bankers, was a i;old bug, and that tho remorse ho suffered after his treacherous act might have been iu pint occasioned by the regret that lie had not demanded gold instead of depreciated silver as the price of tho bed aval of his Lord uud Master. The pertinacity of the banking schvino to keep control of Ihe finances of the country by which the bankers cau dictate to the got riiment uud enslavo the people, and Hie iiUcnce of reuiorsu they exhibit iu the expansion of the volume of currency and then in contract ing it, by which heartless process count less thousands are iiupoveribhsd, while their accumulations pass into the posses sion of the hauliers, stand out before tho American people us a most solemn warning, in the lali;'u;io of Jefferson that "bank paper must lie supprets.-d and the circulating medium restored to the nation to whom it b !oii;:, " and iu the language of the ohl Jacksoiilan Dem ocratic platform " That tho separation of tho moneys of tho government from banking institutions is indispi'nsiblo for the safety of tho funds of tho govern ment uud the rights of tho people," litNi.M.-.TAI.I.Ii' lit mo MIS. A few years ngo many persons who had learned the lesson taught by his tory, nnd who, reasoning from cause to effect, foretold tho disaster that would liufall the country by a continued re fusal to restoresilver us standard money, were denominated by tho plutocratic press of tho country, w hich invariably sneezes whenever tho bankers take snuff as "calamity howdi is." Tho tables nro now turned, and now the bankers and their aprs have become tho very worst kind of "calamity howlers." They prognosticate nil manner of evil from the restoration of silver us money. They declare that it will drive gold all out of the country. That is just what they prophesied when the Bland law wis passed eighteen years ngo, ami they now ignore tho fact that from 17H to lHtM, while that law was in operation the treasury reports show that the .Imports of gold exceeded tho exports by tvo hundred and twenty-four million, ai d that the stock of gold increased In this country over f IjO.iloo.Ooo. Another bugbear is that foreign ua tlous will flood our couutry with sliver. Thero is no danger. All the nations de sire more diver, and would very much like it if we would continue our present financial policy in order that they might continue to purchase it as they havo been doing at its depreciated value, as a commodity instead of buing hereafter compelled to pay its real value as money. Another buglsnr Is that tho restoration of silver Is in the interest of tho sliver lnlno owner and would lieiietithim. Its demonetization is in tho Interest of tho gold mine owner and why should ho lie benefitted any more than tho silver initio owner. Both gold and silver nro money metals so recog nized by tho Constitution and both should bo treated exactly alike. Of course the restoration of silver would bnllt the silver mine owner just the same as it would benefit ull other classes, including those who nro a) bravely fighting against it. Another misstatement ot the moiio inetallists is that tho presi nt higher value of the United States dollar over that of tho Mexican dollar lies iu the fact that our dollar U redeemable in gold, while the Mexican dollar is not. That Is not true. From liTS to October 14, 1HU1, no oue even for ouo moment tupposed that the United States treasury i would ever lie foolish enough to redeem silver certificates or tho treasury notes in gold and yet during that period, the same us since, their increased value over tho Mexican dollar was maintained. I The old trade dollar of 4. -) gruins, not a legal tender, sold ut a discount at from five to fifteen per cent, while tho preseut standard dollar of 41 .'i grains atauds I about ut pur, oud would forever stand ' fully at pur if it was uudo a full legal tender, which It is not now, us the law 1 gives the bunker that most unjust privi lege which no other nation on the face ' of tho earth ever gave to its citizens, ol 'discriminating against silver, the law ful money of the realm. Itnstore silver ' as standard money, make it full legul b-nder ill payment of all d-bts, publio 'and private, refuu to any and all citi- 1 tens the right to disci iuiinuto against it, and then tho demand tor such sound hard money w ill b" r.o great as to for ever maintain it ut par. It will then, ' wheu treuted like gold, be just as good I " - i !