SENATOR DAVIS' VIEW. o f "liver; and I want to »ay one thine > >on that not one of these lir..fe»».,rl! foreign UlllVeraitiea, not oue ot these perhaps of capitalists, hoard and gather f WO or three years, and will probably will be struck down at a blow if the shal­ tor the oppression o f mankind. Now let survive to take the new medicine in low projects of the Democratic aud Popu­ me » all your attention to one fact. The abundance. But I say that they admit list platforms be realized. But you have heard from our free «o rli'w i.n , " „ini T * not ‘ fmii" ereat «re free-coiners assert, when they are told themselves—any intelligent sjieaker upon «o in i »n|e, one “ of "<• those that the increased output of gold is going that subject admit* that the inevitable coinage friends her«* that «>tli**r nations to tend very much and by natural pro- aud irresistible tendency and result of have done this. And there are many good Democratic Platform Strikes “ ' V ' * 1" '•* " ¡ » Kl.hje.-t, no, one.53 cesses to solve this question, that from the free coinage of silver iu this coun- people who believe that Fratu*e is doing I > ! •V *'.1''1" ! I,V ‘' "'lor» of the .....lei'll oiie-half to one-third o f the gold annually try will be to drive out the gold. Now it. un«l that the Latin uiii«>u—so-called—is the Government's I .... *‘"l"ili»ni. ha» ventured produced in the world goes into tin* arts, let us see how they propose to obviate it. doing it. Now. 1 would like t«» know why This statement is probably uu exaggera- It has always struck me that one of they can’ t tell the entire truth about this Foundation. t"i| "a h e Ilia I lash alone, i Applause. I tion. It is probable that oue-quarter of their most enlightened champions was matter. Let us n«»t de«^*ive ea«di * tn«»r SI , ' 1 V' ;V"'SV"U ' V 11'"- »■'•* »»"tliinii ...ore; th»* gold of tin* world produced annually Mr. St. John of New York. Ho has been and let n«»bo«lv deceive us. Th«* L itiu r.L ,. "; " I"'” ', under- goes into the arts, and it has been doing largely and copiously quoted by them — union is com]Hiae«l of France. B*4gium. '■' 1.0 file tree and ....limited ooinnao of »i|- it for centuries. Consider for a mo- ne was president of n national bank and Italy. Switzerland and (»r«*e«*e. It was BIM ET ALLISM . !! "> 'o IV I,\ few eri.-H meet, my fellow citizens, what an enor- | was president of the recent silver con- f«irni(‘d in 18*>5 by treaty between Uiose .. and repeated cries of mous sum. enormous aggregate— three j volition at St. Louis and by the bill IKiwers. whereby each agree«! until , the . l '*; * Now, see you gentlemen over billions, perhaps four billions, of dollars which he procured to be introduced in year 1880 to take th«* coins *>f the «*ther he " «h o ,a|led "y e«." and you gen.... are lying in the shape o f golden orna- Congress and which bad the endorsement powers at the rati«» <»f 1 5 t«> 1. Condition of Affairs Worse than War But Germany demonetized silver: she " " « > , - idled "no." »how» the nients. thousands of dollars of them i n ! 0' « e silver and Populist sentiment 1 "'"o o Ol oaiulon upon thi» »uhieot this room (»might. Now 1 want to ask , there, they promised to bridge over this had ceased to coin it. and so. in 1875. Would Result from Dem­ those great nations, headed h.v France inuiihteri. mid to j ........ there who you this question, if there Is a g o ld fain- >'»wnlng chasm which they themselves (the t.*et most scieutifi«»ally-gov«*rned country enine (O listen to me. you will listen dis­ ¡lie. if the power of gold is so absolute ocratic Success. admitted would o|*eti beneath their passionately you will diitoat my argil- and tyrannical as it is claimed, if its by l^um g mterest-bearing treasury notes in th«* world, and th«* one whieh has the most accurate financial ideas), I aay those uents. and I hope tinallj tl.al by the possession iu the shais* of coin gives its . * le . •? s<,,jnr‘‘d b.v deposits inn- von have done so thoroughly that »„. I, mv !i v ,l„. ,I,.»tiny ail,I <»f .«ilvet- or «.,1,1 Im lion, nr kv countri«**. after P;'-etl to make »11 these fallen with the wat«*r. eryone who knows anything about me prive itself of gold entirely. (Applause.) to mislead, and is not true ill fact. sttyiding «¿n the 20.000.- the only practical bimetallism. in Chicago, by which, upon principles and Let me precedents laid down by Ceorgc Wash­ tory are all against it. 'Pile present ex­ aud statistics say upon this subject, and 000 o f vanished gold. The nations «>f r«*p«*at this. I feel that I cannot hear it ington 100 years before, lie evoked the amples of nations who singly are endeav­ not trust to th»* vague declamation of the worhl will not melt down their iut«» your minds too often or too urgently strong arm of the Cuited States to re­ oring to sustain themselves under a single uii.v ihtmoii The vain,' (and I « i l i itivi- ip«in e«l « « » « r <■> depnsit it in the United that these nations, including ours, arc fur this statement in i s ‘ a,e* ,n ':P' " ry aud rn v ive merely a th«* only nations on the fa« e of tin* earth store law and order in this .country. standard lorbid tis to enter upon a voy­ veil my mi... .. age upon. I was going to say. untried moment), the valu»* of till silver coin in j silver certificate. [Applause and cheers.] that have any bimetallism whatever. waters, but no. upon a voyage which we .S om e o f t h e K v il* . tln* w.irhl in 187d w as $1.877,000.000. This net is covertly (and covertly is Ami why? Because they went to the Th«* too mild a word) denounced in the t ’ lii- • •an plainly see other nations are making In IH!)."» ¡t was $4.100. stopp«*«l. r Applause.] The universal is anything in this country or in any na­ ly view rocks of distress, the shoals and 187.“ was $:f.()4.’ .000.000; tln* vaine o f all use th«* interest-bearing bonded debt of teaching of history «iemonstrat«>d that tion upon which the stability of the gov­ quicksands of their course from the se­ tln* gold »-oin iu thè worhl in 181)5 was the Unit«*d Stat»*s in order that the miner there was a »♦* pressed without the the great an li upon which the ranged people now stand, and from which our ver eiirreiit iu thè world in 181)5, $.” .451).- to tin* mint meanwhile and get evi«l«»m*es immediate annihilation o f its companion, empire stands, the ultimate principle of opponents are attempting to lure them 500.000 was full legai tender. N’ow at- of publi«* »lebt two for on«*—a privilege gold, as » useful, working money medi­ And wh«• n any man g«»ts up and nhsoluteism that must exist somewhere by false lights and false alarms. (A p­ tend to me l’or a iinmieiit while thè niath- not granted to or claimed by any farm­ um. emati»'al «haluetiun is made. By this er, artisan, manufacturer or pr»xlueer dreams and soliloquizes and philosophizes in all governments, it is the courts of our plause.) Now we have got to take facts exactly statennmt it uppears that tln* quantity upon God’ s herituge. I say it is pro­ fie fore im* and tolls me he knows it won’ t land, where men sequestered from politi­ cal concerns and political ambitions, as they arc. We are not dealing with o f gold in thè world increased. betw«*en posed to use tin* interest-bearing bonded be so if w«* try where others failed, I holding the scales of justice even be­ glittering and glowing generalities. We 1875 ami 1805. ouly $1.257.-1 (MU»55. Ami hen*, also, is er that tin* American farmer has. and nmrcinlly, disparity results. Studi is tlm A C risi« * is I m p p i n l i n g . to history and to contemporary facts ausw«*r»*«I a statement confi«l«*ntly made by that reflex action inflict unexampled present condithin. and yet the fr«*«* silver ami plausibly maiutaiiied, aud yet erron­ misery upon our agricultural population. limn assert that it will I»«* in» such thing And worse than that, my fellow citi­ which no man can dispute, that every eous in fact, that there has in all this (Applause.) zens worse than that! I f there was free coinage country is on a silver basis. time been an «mormons contraction of In that state of things the abyss must in case legislative fiat endeavors to make Isn’ t that so? (Fries of “ Yes.” ) I make two ami two Hv«» instead of the obl- another tiling which the veterans if the tin* ourr«*in\v all over the worhl. yet be filled. No nation <*oubl stand such Iasi war thought they had achieved and another statement for von to think of. the««* figures «•«inclusively demonstrate a contraction. The most radical remedy fttsliioned r«*sult. two and tw«» f«»ur. ’Flu* trouble is that our friends have which the loyal sentiment of the North for I am not going to elaborate it—I am that that statement is not true. Now, would b<* absolutely necessary t«i r«*- thought it had achieved, it was the ob­ going to get into the figure»» pretty soon my friemls. I have not taken this from store it. and there wouhl only be tw o - confused the ratio of weight with tlm literation o f all sectionalism in this coun­ -„livery gold country uses silver and gold the statisti«s o f any other speaker or one is to get back to the honest. s«di«l rati«» o f value, ami are trying P» confuse the p«‘oph* with it. The ratio o f w«»ig!it try; we were to have no South, no North, »n amounts nearly equal by money nn- from any other b«iok. 1 know when* th«* no East, ito West, any more. The whole t*i»ns. Isn’ t that so’' ( ( ’ ••i**s of “ Yes.” ) statistns are gathered with tin* care standard on which all th»* commercial a ml tin* rati«» «>f value. \v«»r<* once tlm Tlmy country was t<> be a unity. Hut in these Dn't that s,* in the United States? which ««»mmainls tin* resp«*ct and eonfi- nations, including th«» United Stat«**. same, but they have ebaug«*«!. later days, we see the solid South com­ (Fries of “ Yes.” ) In France? (Voices ,|eiu-e of the <-iviiize«l worhl. and on the stand now. or to us«* an irredeemable «•hanged more than thirty y«*ars ago. ing up to the banks o f the Ohio and the “ Yf-\” ) ! make another statement for 21»th of July (only a few «lays ago) 1 pa pet* money. p«*rfe«tly limitless or il­ Other untbuis saw it and obey«*«! tin* im- Missouri as before the war. and with j veiir calm ami cool reflection, that no sil- telegra ih«*«l to the *wer«*«l me: (Applause.» Ami then Now 1 say that no legislative fiat wlint- tuo Keltcll'oii. And now. with the p;ich-j in v word tor it. Ho an' investigate ties • H o n . ( ’. K. Davis. St. Paul. Minn.: fa*«* «»f silver. fork of Tillman stirring up the doctrine subject. I say that no silver country has Th«* total valin* of all silver coinè«! iu tin* you would have another chasm. an«»(h«»r ev«»r—it have b«*en in tin* denunciation o f our courts •»:i«l of se.arrh from Mexico to Fape Horn and $l.S 17 .(MH).iH)() ami 181)5 JH.IOOJIUO.OOO. and the United States stands entirely treme than that, which it wouhl not b«* Tin* worUl’s sto« k «if gohl in 1875 is os- «in an irriMb'emable paper money basis, proper t«» say)—it dees not lie in the President Cleveland thrown under the find that this statement is correct. Another statement—and I make it up­ timat«‘«l to have be«*n $.5,045,000,000 and precisely the place "«• occupie«l lieftir«* power o f man to enact that a given «1 i- very fabric o f our government, they have chosen to pm forward as an issue some­ on a sens»» of niv responsibility after an 1 si)5 about $4.2(Mi.O(H).ono. K. E. Pres­ th«* war. and from which "«* struggl«*«! mciisioti. volume or capacity shall I»«* a exhaustive examination of statistics, in­ ti.u. director of the mint.” Ami these with s«» much passion of honesty ami hair’s hmnlth gr«*at«*r than the laws of thing which touches more iminediCely the conviction, the passions, the cupidity vestigations and records—that in every figur«»s 1 have just given you ar«* the fig­ love of national honor to emancipate the Almighty have fix«*«! it from the be­ Do yon want that again? ginning. (Appiatta«*.) Hud the honesty o f men. and which in it­ silver standard muntrv wages are pressed ures which I have just rend in tin* t«*l«*- oursolv«**. It is accessary that the ratio or propor­ self contains more disintegrating influ­ down to the very minimum of a wretched gram of tin* director. The gr«*atest busi­ (Cries «»f ‘‘ No. no.” ) But. my frknids. to look a little deeper tion o f \iilue should be invariable. It is ences to our prosperity than all the subsistence. It is so in Mexico, it is so ness transactions iu th«* way «if finance in Janan. it is so in South America. I «»u the face of tin* earth are made upon into this subj«»« f. The misery goes fur­ in*«'«*ssary fo r ‘the |»roduetion o f tin* tiling causes combined that I have mentioned. The Democratic convention, or the say that in every silver countrv wages statements lik«* that, ami when what I ther that wouhl be inflict«*«!. I have be«*n itself call«»«! money, speaking »>f it in its Democratic party, as now organized, has are pressed down to the very minimum have sa'nl is discussed the only answer talking heretofore about lawful money, great volumi*, as the volitili«» of tn«»n«*y in W e s«*<* aiialogi<*s that " i l l be made to it is probably that ami I mean by that, money issued by the tin* Unite«! States. joined the Populist party in bonds of un­ of a wretched subsistence. Mr. Preston ami the United States gov­ governments «if the worhl. tin* 1 nit«*«l everywhere: we sc«* an analogy in nature. holy wedlock upon the deiiKind that the The Reasons. Tnk«* tin* air we breathe. It is a com­ ernment is one general universal gold States included. But di«l you ever think United States shall take a position upon Now if it is true (T will not go into how little of the business «if this worhl pound suhstaime. mail«* up from oxygen the currency o f this country which I. the reasons for it), but if »t is true ns a bug. (Laughter.) Now let me give yon another state­ «»r o f any community lik«* St. Paul ami ami nitrogen at the ratio of aliont 77 speaking to you under the responsibility eoncrete. absolute fact, that no silver of a man who is sneaking to Ids neigh­ country, no country which bn« adopted m ent. The coinage of the nations o f the Minneapolis is done on what is cull«1«! to 2.5. and " Itile this ratio lasts it is from world in 181)2. 1805 ami 1804 was as lawful money? Statistics would seetu ?«> it we all «lraw our lives ami have our bors. say that I believe is fraught with ( »old. $172.475.124; silver. show that I>5 jier cent, of the triosa«- being. But change t«» any material «I«*- more disaster to this country than the th*' silver standard lua« any gold circula­ follows: greatest foreign war could possibly b’ ing tion whatever. I say that it follows that $155.517.547 : 1805. gold. $252.420.517: tions between man ami man in civilize«! gr«*«* and. instead o f being the vital, lif«*- the only practicable bimetallism on the Mlv. r. $157.052.000; in 1H1M. gohl. $227.- nations, especially in the Unite«! States, giviug air. it tmcoinea a «leadly and de- shout. (Applause.) is by way of checks. In «*iti«*8 they are struetiv«* miasma. And that is the subject that I have planet is by the nations with which the 021.052: silver. $11.5.005.785. A total in balanced against each other in the clear­ But the fre■«• « «»itmrs assert that iiiilim- •.5.80.408. W ith all ing house, and a few thousand dollars itc«l eoinage «»f silver will n*store it t«» a I am going to do so. ns I said in the be­ „ this bimetallism in the United State* «letluctioiis for r«*<(jÉhmg«* this output o f balanced tmtney dos«*s the day’ s transac­ parity with g«»bf. It has been trb*«l by which the new Democracy nnd Fopn- coined money is o^TOimenae volume. ginning, not with any attempt at deco­ Now I have thrown out these sugges­ tions. W here «•learing houses do not ex­ many nations o f th.. worhl. Has it done rative speech, not denouncing any men lisin are endeavoring to destroy by sub­ tions and will pass from that branch of ist— I mean in towns ami villages -the it in a single instniiee? N’«»t one. Th«*y "h o may choose to differ from me. for stituting a silver monometallism. (Af*- the discussion and «all your attention to depositing o f the checks in the banks, ami said the same thing when Fongr«»ss The bimetallism which this 1 tell you. my fellow citizens, that many pluMse i countrv and the nation* of which I have another assertion o f the fr«*«* coiners: I the collections o f the banks adjust bal­ passe«! tin* Sherman a«-t • »f 1800 . They and many a thousand men who differ sai«l buy of us freely 4.500.0*10 ounces a spoken enjoy i* the bimetallism o f fact alluded to it cursorily a few moments ances iu the same way. from us today on this matter one year Now. this is tin* greatest currency of month. *»r 5 4 .0 * h m n io ounces a year, ami ami actual enjoyment extending to that agi», but I propos«» to now treat it in from now will be wondering why and full extent which human judgment, hu­ the same manner in which I have treat­ civilization. Numbers are inadequate t«i von will see that sliver will go t;p t«» how they came to do it. (Applause.) ed the last pree«*«liug question. The free express its infinite superiority in numeri­ $1.20 an outme immediately. In the f*i«-*» And so I shall go on. I may be tedious. mp n experience, human apprehension— coiinT.s assert that ««infraction lias in- cal relation to the lawful money of <»f clamor, in doubt as to what iniglit be »■all it what you will—teach 1« the pro- I a in going to give you facts and fig­ portion in'which the m eni» cnn t-o on,. flicted all the financial and economic which we have lieen talking. This is the the result, in willingness, (it went too currency that no statutory fiat can ex­ far) to give such claims every oppor­ ures. I am not going to draw on my • * in a degree that one will not de- miseries that mankind has endured since pand. although it can contract it. But it tunity to be «b’iiioiistrafe«l whether (bey u"n imagination for my facts at all. ployed strev or drive out the other and that 1,875. Now I say that they themaelv«** is a currency which will contract Instan­ were correct or incorreit, that legislation The facts that I shall give you will bo both can co-exist together. (Applause.) coolly propose to bring about a contrac­ impregnable. It is for you to judge For there is. my fe'low citizen«, an un­ tion of currency in the United States un­ taneously to its very minimum bv the was enact«*«!. Ami silver «li«l g«» in the course o f about ten days t « » $ 1.1!) an whether the deductions I shall draw questionable dividing lioe-T shall prove exampled in the world’s history. I say o|ieration o f the Democratic and Popu­ on dee (Applause by one mail) aud the that they propose to bring al»oiit a con­ listic theories as announced in their jilat from them can be refuted. It further along, though It .* not neces­ tra« tion in the Uniteti States unexampled forms. Now what «Im*« that mean/ It free-coiners were exalted, and said, *‘ I Now what is the question? For a cor- sari for men who have read told you s o .” But. my friemis who np- means simply that the merchants, the vp -t understanding o f the question is al­ oven cursorily, for me to prove it-tfcere in tin* world’s history and fraught with manufacturers, the employer, the man of l»l.'imi at that «lelttsive statement, it htst- ways the first step towards the solution ¡, a rliriilinc line hevonH «h u h ro „ can­ I more evils than are roeorde«! in the mi­ every kin«! %ho pays out money ’ o hi* «•«1 but a slmrt time. Silver pr«»«feilcd to the controversy. The question is not not pa»» in the emnloyment o f the metal nai* of human woe. In that ease, if that fellow-men for lalsir. or for material will t til !«»"« r than it ever fell before. (Great is the higieal result ami inevitable «Ics- whether there should be the free and le»» value without " • " " ’ V 'i tinr of what they propose. I want to cease so far as he is concerned t«» *vm»t applause, i unlimited coinage o f silver In tin* mints Of It «lid not take it long to do it. The an­ other anil entirely atipplnntln* it. An,I T know wherein th* g«»ldbug is worse than that currency which rules all business <>f,all tin* nations, by the consent of th*' aa v that he who in-i-t- ,1 -a r i hurt,a I The la< k «»f confulence will product* that nual average pr«Hltietion in the Unite«! principal commercial nations o f the globe Ivi that the l'nite.1 State« »hall or can. the silver eel? contraction in that currency. The clear­ States f«»r ten years before that act was H e r « I* (h e P r o o f. upon a ratio to be agreed upon. That is netine "lone, eoin Shrer w.lhont limit. ings in the Unite1 it Now you ask me f«»r m y,proof and I $811,000.00*). uot the issue. W e nil might agree that " . ..oil. .1 hv the IVmoenttie anil Pop- In the clearing imuse- ran »«• 51.0*ii.oot) ounces, ami iu I8irj when this is brought about, as it will (**. oii.f p a form«' " no» « himetallt.t: he .« will proceed to give if. Tin* unlimited sfone. mind you. and not through the In­ to (»2.0***i.iHI*) ounces, nearly 20.00q.000 if the United States conducts itself with * »’ilver monom,'t»lli«t. who. after -pend- and free eoinage of silver in this country fluence of interposition o f the banks ounce« in«»r»* than we pro«fnce«l in the judgment upon this question. I sav we ¡n ittaekiog what he deems will drive out the gohl. This i* as indis­ where there are no clearing houses. The average of ten year« up to the time when uwfht all agree that that would be an Ihe Mol of the .lark i.lolatrr of mono- putable as any law o f physios, such as clearances o f the city o f St. Paul last that hill was passe«!, and it was then vice!lent thing. The Republican party foetalli»ni. end. by immolahn* htm «'lf th«* law «if gravitation. It has driven out week were something over $4.000.000. seen by all wise men. by all men who had the stability of the currency md the gold in has uniimit III every country * which * * « « » » • « *■«»•- u ; W NU IlllllfV II.I I 1*11' II '»mount IIII'I1 !.-| I Does a any man think that sti« h has pledged itself in successive’ platforms money as that was used in St. Paul prosperity of their country at heart, with to labor to bring about International " 'v o iv V"t‘ me riiht^her»— not e x .e tlr in cd!y «oine*! silver. Do you want the his- j intelligent vision, that that immense vol­ torteli and clear proof of it? In fact. ]fl«t week— $4,000.000—or in the ration. •froement. The most advanced think­ loei.a] eonneet ion—throw out » th«*n* is not an enlightened gentleman $ 811 . 000 . 000 . to transact their busin •*«? ume would break down—indeed *t did ers upon financial questions in both who will talk to you in adTocs«-y o f free 1 it was done by this currency o f civilizt- br«*ak dawn—the very theory upon which hemispheres are advocating, especially in .•oinitff** of silver who doe* not admit that ? tion which no nation «»an produce, which the bill was passe«!. (Applause.) It pro­ foreign lands, the resumption of the coin­ I this will be the inevitable result, bur they no nation can jegulafe or control, and I duce«) the pani«- of 1805. put distrust into age of silver, by united action of nations The silver tie-n «.*»«1 say it will «inly last two or three years. *ay that | P ' * irren cy. more imfiortanf the rnimls of nun who. before we did. long ago. independ- j that the patieat will probably survive than si* fold or national paper. before we passed that bill in 19B0y that ently of us, and uncontrollable by us. J i t combination", perh.p. of ...ton «. •»Mended or limited the further coinage The at FREE SILVER NOT x i i silver would *«. i t a parity with f o i l you will only give us a limited pufetf of 54.000.000 oiintvs u year. It «lid ) go to a |Mirity. How can they say ami look the American p«»«»ple in the t with steady eye. that where it failed I it is going t«» w»»rk entirely different 1 satisfactorily now? BRYAN Ho ON T H E R A T IO l S a n g a % D iffe re n t S o n g o n S u b j e c t W h e n H e w a s In Co ng re ss. j On the 16th o f August. 1888« on | floor of the House of Rcpresentatlj Mr. By ran sai«l: “ In fixing th«* ratio we should select t on«* which will secure the greatest | vantage to the public and cause the It) injustice. The present ratio, in my jfl incut, should b«> ad«»pte«l. A change tin* ratio could be made (as in 1854) reducing the si/«* of the g«»l«i dollar, by increasing th«* size of the silver 4 lar. or by making a change in the weij o f both dollars. A larger silver do wouhl help tin* em it tor. A smaller a dollar would h«*lp the debtor. It is just to do either, but if a change ni b«* ma«li*. the b«*m*tit should 1»«* given tin* di*ht«»r rather than th«* cr«*ditor. no <»m* accuse in«* o f d«*femling the ji n«»ss of any change: hut I repeat it, we ar«» given a elude«1 between a chai which will ni«l tin* debtor by reduc] tin* size of bis «lebt and a change wh| will aid the cr«»dit«»r by increasing amount which he is to receive, either increasing the number «>f his dollars their siz<*. tin* ml ventage must be gi to th«* debtor.” Legislation in favor of debtors or «•r«*< li tors, a s a class, would be class lj ¡•'latum ami wholly unjustifiable. QuJ lions betwi'en d«*btors and creditors i prop«*rly s«»ttled iu the conrts; and ev« «•ourr $vill hold that what is right for «uu;is right for tin* otlwr also. Mr. Bi an. tlu*r«*f«»re, «lid well to disclaim vo« a« y of any change o f the- exist!] rati«». Should <. change be made at a| tinu* h em ifter it cannot ami ought to aff«*ct contracts antedating i change. But in advocating the unlimited col age <»f silver bullion, at the present rat] for th«* owner and without coat to hi| Mr. Bryan do«*s propose a change of t entire basis upon which business is tra acteil. Wo ar«» informed by hint t[ there are three ways by whieh the m hetwe«»n gold and silver coin can he tered: 1. The shrinkage in size of t! gob! dollar. 2. The enlargement o f t| silver dollar. 5. Making a change in t size and weight o f both dollars. Eith] of tin's«» Hire«» methods contemplates ni'iirt*r approximation of the coinage i] tio to the commercial ratio and is so f forth honest. I f this approximation tin* two ratios were carrie«l to the poi o f ideality, tin* change suggesteil by hi] would be absolutely honest—nrovid that it is not retroactive in its applicnti to outstanding debts. 'Fliis is not. how«»v«»r. the change whi would follow the adoption o f free col age at 16 t«» 1. Th«-r«* is still anoth possible cluing«* to whi«*h Mr. Rry mad«* no r«*f«*reiiee in his speech, nam'el] the shrinkage of the silver dollar, silver dollar containing 571 % grains pure silv«»r. worth 55 cents in gold, whi nev«*rthel«»ss passes «•nrr«*nt for 100 cent in gold, is an anomaly in finance, uni explained. The explanation is simp Fifty-thr«*e <*eiits o f th«» «•urreni value this dollar is visible: 47 cents of its val is invisible, and consists in credit. Fr ami unlimited coiling«» would destroy thi n*«*dit. In advocating free coinage 16 to 1. therefor«». Mr. Bryan proposes nni ke tin* silver dollar sum Her—not to ti eye. but in fa«*t. This would be a change o f ratio in t purchasing power of th«* silver dollar, comi»aml with u g«»l«l dollar, from 16 to 51:1. To avoid this result Mr. Bryan grave proposes that w<* should do one o f t things: double the w«*ight o f the silve dollar, or else «»oin gohl dollars half the pivscut weight. Anybotly can s«*c th on«* of these wouhl have to be «lom* or«l«*r that i«lentit.v sh»»u)rcd in you «*ar that although you had plenty money and plenty of work that you w«* not buying what yoit bought ch enough: that tlmy w«*iv taxing the nmR for th«* b»*ii«*fit of tin* few. ami too nun] of lln* American peoph* listen«»«! to li It was tin* arousing of tin* «-lass of ployers against tin* employed: and «■mployed against tin* «*mtdoyer: and lunl tin* « Imng«* 'Fln*y gave us the rhea stuff, but in what eomlition di«l they] lcav»» the Americnn people? It rcmimls im* o f a ««»loreil gentiema who "jin teil to cross tin* Arkansas river and Ii.-i«l no m«»nus. II;* sat «town awliili upon :i log a ml waited until someone, should «•«nm* up. Shortly a white gen tleuian approncheil. H e says: ” B' I want t*» « toss this river: will yo pleiiK«* giv. an* tw«i «■«•nts? I haven't n\ «■«•nt iu tin* worhl,” ‘‘ W ell, sir.” he siiiil, “ if you haven’ t a cent in the worhl itp d«m’t iir*k«» .a damn t»lt o f dlffereM whi« li si«le o f this riv«*r yon are on.* Ami if i- with ill «In*:»|* g«»«»«ls thaff 11 1 • * k «* gcutlciiien furnish " k . They fillj the stor«*s with tlmir «lothiug. madi sho«l«ly. brought iu under an ml valorem] law l>> whhdi the ini|K»rt«*r is mn«l<* t sw«-ar that it is worth »»«»thing, ami it] is worth mulling. It is nunle out o ol«l hats piek«»«l up «nit of the str«»eti ami nll«*vs of <»ur foreign in Switzerland ami rotton sernks fro: Italy. It is «««.nt over to I»«* placed upoa Ani«*ri«*au backs. That is not the civile izntion we want. \V«• want Aim*ti*an ";ig«*s. American clothing and Atneri- us: ami they propooe »hi» «lotibling o f the fa«'«* value of silver.— From a sja*ech by ( ’«»ngr«*nsiiian Fow ler of New York at Milwaukee. ('a i-lis le 'a F iv e P o in ts . I “ There js not a fr«»e coinage country in tin- world today that is not on a silver basis. ii. “ There is not a g«»l«l stamlard Cona­ kry in the worbl today that does not usa silver as mouey along with gohl. III. “ There is not a Oliver standard country in tlx* worhl today that uses any gold as money along with silver. IV . “ There is not a silver stamlard country in the w«»rl«l t«slny that h»is more than one-thinl ns much tmmcv in eir«*alatlo*i per capita as rhe United HfairS. V. “ There is not a silver «tsmlard country in the w«>rld to«lay where the laboring msn receives fair pay for his day'o work.” ______ TWO