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About Hillsboro independent. (Hillsboro, Washington County, Or.) 189?-1932 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 18, 1896)
IS 2 001 S2.00I S2.00I 2.001 ts.coi 2.oo:i THI Independent and Oregonian ) ONC VIA row J I Independent and Oregonian a DoUmb IIILLSB0R0, WASHINGTON COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18. lj-yu. No. 17. Vol. XXIV, mill 1 rTWrTtt o i;n kha iwmi:cT uy. 8TATE OHflCKltS. ' ... Wm. I' I-"'1 'I.' ... lUrr"...-. U. Lin-Mil ;:::r,;iluin.,,Kt,a,,, $--i i ..it 1'rinler. . . ... . I i ..('has. r.. vv .'v.-rnm J ; !..(, Flftll PiKtrlltl As- im-y tilth 1'iHirict 1- J, l COlNTY M'KICI.K. I:, r. . , I. (t. r .rvitiisumera j 'l"i' ' i i . ri:I . ' ril-ir 1 1. ;i,ur r A .-H..r s. i ool hurmUni!eiit '.. I. A. I- i w. I ' 11 ,i.S'.r.t k Ij. Mrl """'' ,1 . II. 1 it Iv .'. .nri'o H V All -; in ' 1.. K. W.lkts. OI'.KOO CITY LAND OFHCK. ?1 1 Y OKr'lCI'.KN. ( ...It. H .,,.1.11, Mil"'f K. I'"' ' I Jul I(1WUM( " W. 1!. W-li:.'ll- I S. H Suuli'V C. 11. ' J, 'i Htlli, fll' h ii r. i .i i" i K. (i. I v.. .'. An i i W I'. . . .1. I'- U . .,mid of Trust i I il , of IV 1'OKT OfFICK lNFOUMVl'loN. Ih ...ail. close at tlie H.llsl"' j 'w,'oh! W.,.t Union. lfc.lUat.y- d V.ir j Mill, t 11:30 a. " I ''V'l-Brmhiton and Lnr,l. W...i..dj n ! .,!i,iStiitdHyt lll.iWa. w. i:..lH,rt. A. Miller V in. iaUoay I'iUMlCU AND HOCIETY KOTtCiW. WIKi5ATKAl. (JHCKCII. m .... nn,l Fifth atn-etn. Frcnohms? ( ,..y Sul.bKtU. m..riiinu nnd ewiim. Ki'. i.hMi iw-b.H.1 b 10 o'ol-k a., r ii ...iina TbiuHdnv evi'imitf. J..,.layt,W p. i. AH ..rv.-. - ' ' . .,, ,r l,rl!li. I'ltire.tin',' una I J. i vone r,.r ii.iuy KVAN 1". IHI'.H! . uul tliltd Hnnuay hi i r,.nrth Kimuay at 1 1 k. it. ami 7 .' M- V .i nu : I'wi ' b. wiit y of Chris' . n ti r n. I. n - r M ry Kunday .wninn at 7 ..Vl.K-k, , bii . ,l,vwili..lallO. M. l rayflr " 1 Knrailiiy oin at 7 c.'oU-k. 1'ri.aolmi at Otonoo. on nrat and third Sunday of eaeu uiouth at 11 a. x. P. g. Wiustku., 1'asUr. t tVANflKUOAL CHl'liOH. -Cofnkr It Y.fib and Fir. PracliiiiR Byi-rSuaiiiiy v.-ii!.I at p. m.i I. ,,, . -, . ... n. ii . . Hnnilftv nruin n - ' . rv r ii.i i-tiim e-ry vuiHuy ,L-rn oiwlina v..ry t.y.dHy ryiu.i.K. , 7 i.. i'ratt, imalur. " -i(IWV ClirifltiHU Clinrnh, U. I.. M l''v ' ..,t..r.Halii. and Third, l'r.!,...;: .'. u .it. 11 r. in. Had J:.-.u p. : .n,'.-il-i.V, bHM l. ni. . IB. - ' ,v. . W ' in. - - ?1 lUST 1H1T1ST ClllUtlV.H )t " I A.. PUMP llllltl ftllU II". (!. H...M..,d and f.mrth hiu.lmili. ...-.urn ..... m il., it.i.u. i " ,1 III . M. - I , I I'. t'lftitClf. O. I".. KHir- p i .r. i 1 1 , 1-riM.ol.i.H! every Sabiiulli iiK.rnin.' .mj I. ',,,.!. hoIkkiI every :.ld '' I i. M. lit"H;a nieeliiiK tvury h.nid ' i ,.. M Uoneral .ruy. r ....etint; " ;., .lnvoveninu. Ut at.d Si-; , .ii j tueiixnoiul 1'aemliiy evi-nitM"! ' ...illl A. O. H. t m.I SIIOIKI LIlHOE NO til, a. o. r. Hlid t'l i.l i i V.. nieeta every t.'H" . in Mm ...'.til I1. V. II. HALHIiJ. A 'J W i I. Kviiiht, Hi'oorili r. iiinslilern of Kt'bekiili. -ill! -1-vXSO KKHFK All l.OIMiK : 1 1. 1). . F.. in-. tbtd fri i un.r,l;iv ve.iin,. " :.i. NKV AIM K I I. AA 1 i ii 1 1 rn n K fv o y. r. tr ii. r )i.i.h:ki: ouancjk, no. i i . .-,,1 iiiid tit, Sitm, 1. f ei'.i-li i t fsl. ,'fllilHkl li, '.mib hltli:, S'i'. I. ... . I . . i ; ri..v "f i.i ' f-'' ; t ,....ln...d..v evi.nK'H: ! ' ' :.), n , . Ii ill. V isiuirnii'id" ' "''., I W. A. FiN l.V. i M.' li.vuiT. Seo'y. . f. I . -. i.'.''M '-rv Hnn.lnyevfiii.il. -il ,v '. 1 i. i-ii. ririrtiii.'l (' i:.'h, Vvi iiu- . . , Ii v ir.iiti d In f,-nd.t ' k.:A A i 1 . Si l!:ilhl.'mp SMcrs. x 1,-1 A IKMl'i.l; N". 1'. , , i v Jnd ii'i l t ! v- J I, - !-i ,: V .1 I ..'...M-!C Ml t I . ' M'.-.K M.iSi.; ' A. Ilm k, M ... M ,i' :. mid .'. k. or r. ,IX I.OIXiK, NO. St. K. l; 1'. .m hi Odd hVll'iwV llnll "i. M ' i ,.1 i.r-i'ii eek. Snj ini'iiuii; hi, 'M -n d lO liidjO III.V'UI'JI. .1. M. WAI.I , C. C. i.i, K nf it. A H. .1. 1 . anil A. l. ( M l I I V I.OlM.K NO. , A. F. i i - .!, iivery ri-itnrd-.y niSit on I ,i.: ,n or eaob t.nuitli. W. 1). VOOl, W t; i a ,. ti 1 1 i . Sei-relary. l J f. E. S. n n rit.v i' i Fit. no. ;n.t. r.. i.i Mitn-mui rfiiijieim hti -I'li-nd.-iv ii ra-'l. ni'.iit ,i. Miw. W. P. II Ailf.. w. y I K .NkitC ei ret iry. pi I W. I . T. I . ? i : 1 1 r()i:., w. o. t. i MKl.rs I N ! I t i- l ni eiil"ii-u t'friri ' i i"i t' in e u ii month nt 3 o' 1 k t'. I I VI IN 1-l.tlN.H FKKMHVIK'.ltN I', -in n. lU-i'iilar p-eaolmis;. nil, i . , k A. Mi hniulny .-lnii. I'' n'ri.vk .: w.li. I ltituoiir. , I'i" ' i K. 0. T. .. 'l. TENT. N'. Ii. K. I. 1. M a..- in Ul.l t-ivlo.v. il l i, i ,ir;.l l" lltiri.il IV evi-nlnj. ft' I . A J..S ; 'H M IN. 1 li. K. i -it I Mill IV l Ni'VMI MLN r N . I. ; I. (. O. V.. ceets on l-rsl una : u ..'nv. nf eseh ii.m-a. M v till . , ?Wilte, . noson rovr. . !, 1. 1:. ! '.is IN l.ltAViV: IIAl.t, N TIIK . -i aii I I'ur l Sr n-d.i). i f ( l ... nil ..".' uYi.v'k, P. M. A. M. COLLINS, ot'iu, A. M.. V. C. Aitjuunt. 9 M Highest of all la Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report AD&oimzzv puke rilOFESaiONAL OABUH. TIIOMIS II. TOSKl'E, A TTOHNEY-AT-hAVV, lilLUtHOUU, OUUUON. Orrina: Mornn Mook. L. . 4D1HS . M. BIHBFTT, UAKKETT AHA MS, lTOUNKVS-AT-LAW, A UII.USHOllO.OKROON 'utrl lllouk. Itooms 6 aud 7. Orrira: w. P. smith. BOWMAN. Nutaty I'ubllO. NUITII & HOW M AS, , TTORNEYS-AT-LA W. UiLl-KMOUO. OUKGON. (.Kritu: KiHiu J MorBaii block. C. K. KISUT, 1TOHNKY-AT-LAW, I'OUTLASD. OKEOt.N. A It.x.m No. 8. PprHand HinBa Hank lluililintf. Sioond and WabinRtoq btreeta. VKO. R. BAHLET, TTORNEY-AT-LAW, IIIl.tallOKO, OREGON. l!..i !eia ntent Tor ILifM lu.uranr. Co. Uoom: Ko. 13, Morgan Hlock. S. T. 1,1 Mi I' AT ER, M. B. C. M. piIYSICIAN AND SURGEON, 1UIXSHOKO. OKKQOK. (irww: nt raideno. eaat of Court ll.m. wher. b. will lonnd at all time, wben not vinitinB patienta. J. P. TAMIES1E, M. Bm s.-: llltLSBOKO. OBEOON- ' Bn.JM-i.n Htrw.ta. tMUoe bonra. H-.H0 to 1 . . 5 to It and T to t) p. m. Telephone to iiii:hv-or day. W. I. WOOB, M. B., IUYSICIAN AND RUROEON, IHLLblJOUO. OUEOON. Orrim: In Chenette How. HiDW- uriier First and Main atreeta. I". A. BAILEY, M. B. . 1II YSICIAX, SURGEON AND IIILiLHHOHO. OUEOON." OvyV-y: in J'harmary. Viiion Block. VM ntien" d t... niKht or day. ne.denoe,. W. Ci.r. Huse Line ana oeouu li.MXOX, jKNTIST, 1 ()l:K3 OltOVE, OBEOON. ,,w makin teoth for 5.00 and l.W , , r t ; U-Ht ..I material and kmaub.. Will (.'..mare with Beta coating JS. ,.,.: iioie.l withont pain, r ......k- i .... . ill work warranted. north of Brick ,!,... Oibe. hour, from 9 a. m. to4p.rn A. B. IHII.EV, B. B. M. jy.NTisr, lliLIl!0i;0, tlKEtiON. 1 and 2. M..rttn A Baiiey Bl ' ,iint VJII.KFS BKOH. ,ND hLHVEYORS. A' .lK.VCliHtS llli.LHDOBO. OUE(H)N. & Cn for Bar Look Typa vnriier. of l'ntoinoe. Two THUS. B. HUMPHREYS. t ioWEYANCTXCJ AND C A ISSTU ACTING OF TITLES. 1IU.1.HUOKO. OUEOON. IrhI iaira drawn and Loana on Ileal Emnta negotiated. HnineB attended to Willi iiroruptneM and dilatrb. (rrir: Main Street, oppoaite M e Court H.itiiw. M. BEM0S, PRACTICAL MACHINIST, UILI.SH01U). OBEOON. All kinda of repiirina on Steam Engine mi l Iknlera. Mill Work. Threshing Machine .Vowrt, Feed Cnttora, rlewing Maohinea WaUina Mnohinea, Wringera, Pnrar. Se.-lea, Solira ground. Onn and Lock K.ii.ihing, Saw gronrnl and flled; and bare large nnmnrr of aeoond-band enginea and I 'lil.m foraalo. All work warranted. Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder AwarJnl GoU MeU Malwiaur Fair. !aa Fmom. Hosts of people so to work iu tho wrong way to cure n j wbea St. Jll bm Oil RErUBLICAX PLATFORM. Tli Rcimliiic.-iiii of tiiu Uii'iteJiitaloa, n-tiiib.o 1 iheli- r-iiri-a-ntaiivtH in National I onviirinii, ujiiis-ii duir for tlio pojmlur and l.istorio ju-.ti'ici'i' ii of their t-l;.iini to tliu u a en o-s m-lt'eve-menu vt tl,.riy ye.ua of U-publi-an rule, enrnest y uml conlidontly address themselves to theawak-ue 1 intelligence, xpeiieuoe and OiUiscii-uoo of their coun trymen in tho followiuj djclaratiou of fat-ts and jiriuoitile.s : For the fir-1 time inoo the Civil Wur the Aniei ltan j ei jilo have wil tit led the calami ions oon.se,iuenci-i of tu 1 and re stricted Doniocr.iiic cui.tiol of tin Gov ernment It has hee i a n-o- rj, i f cupur alleled Incapacity, dialiou. r mid ilister, la ailiuiui t mive uiuiiiigt-uient it has ruthlessly sacrificed ludiniienealile reve line, entailed an increasing delicit, t-kod ont ordinary currei t exiieu-g wuh bur rowed money, jii.el up ti.e public debt by 1208,0.0,10 iu tiino ( f jeuc, forced n adverse ba'ance of tra do, kept a per petual m na e imntrina over the redem tlon fund, fawned Ain ricnn crodit to alien sytidiratea, nnl rev rwd nil llift measures and rexnlta of siv-ci'Hhful Kn pnblican rule. In the broad effect of its poUcy it h.ispri-ciita!ed panic, blighted hidu.try and tradu with prolonged dtv pression, closed f icluries, reduced work and wage, halt d enterpri.ie and crijn pled Amerioan jiriiilaciinn, while stimu lating foreign jii-iidn -liun for the Amer ican market. E. i-iy couai.ipi-ntioii of pnblic safety and individual itit'-restdo-mandi that the (JovfiMiiient Khali be risonel from the bands of those who hare shown t hem-elves im npablo to con duct It wit' out iiiati-r at home and dishonor abroad, and hIihII be restored to the party which f-r thirty years ad ministered it with imiHinuiled success and prosperity. . THE TARIFF. We renew an t emphasize our alle giance to the policy of protection as tho bulwark of an American industrial in depence and the foundation of Ameri oan development nnd prosperity. Tina true American policy taxes foreiin pro ducts and encourages lioine industry, and it puts tlie burduu of revenue on foreign goods; it secures the American market for the Auiei-iian producer! it upholds the American htaudat dof waes for the American woikmrmau; it puts the factory by thesidi of the farm, and makes tie American furmer less depend ent on .foreign demand and price; it diffuses gerferijHarirt, and found', ih atrnigth ef a1! on the strength of each; In Its reasonable application it is ju-t, fair aud impartial, equally opposed t foreign control and domestic monopoly; to sectional discrimination and individ ual favorititUL We denounce the prevent Democratic t iriff as sectional, injiirioiis to the pulv Ho crsdit and de.structive to Lutinoss en terprise. We deuiatid bucU an e.piital le tariff on fori ign imports wliicli como into coujpi titon with American pro ducts as will not only turniah utlripiale rerenuo for the Horn ary exncnsi-a of the 'Joveinnn nt, but will proteat Am-r-ican labor frnin Iho ifo.itriidation to tlio wapte level of other lands. Wo nre n t pledged to any particular nchedul.a. The question of rates is a practical qu g tlen, to be governed by the cenduiocs of the time and of production; the rul ing and uncompromising principle is the protection and development of American labor and indiblry. The eon a try demands a riht settlement, aud then it wants a rest. RECIPROCITY. .We believe the repeal f the reciproc ity arranKfments nt-Ko'iated by the last Republican adminUtr.it on was a na tional calamity, and we demand their renewal and extension ujam such terms as will eqnali.e our trade with other atlons, remove the ietr ctior.s which now obstruct t'ne s ile of American pro ducts in the ports of other countries, and secure cniari?".! markets for the pro ducts cf our farms, foiests aud facto ries. Protection an 1 rcc iprocity are twin measures of R"; nl,l ci.n policy, and go hand in hand. Deiiue ratio rule has recklessly struck down both and both must be ri'-est.tb i -hod. Protection lor what we pioduce; free admis sion for the nectaries of Ufa which we do not produce; reciprocal agre mente of mutual interest which gain Cpen markets in return for our open markets to otl ers. Protection bui ds p I'ome-tio industry and trl aud Seoul's ettr own market for onrselvea; reciprocity l.nil lj up foreign trade and finds an outlet for our surpius. PUUAR. We condemn tho present Administra tion for not keeping fai'Ii with tho sugar producers of this country. The Repub lican party favors such jrotoctiou as will lead to the production ou Ameri can soil of all the sugar which the Am erican people use and for which they paid other countries more tuuu (i00,. 0O0.C00 annually. WOOL. AND Y.'OOLENS. To all our products to tho.-e of the mine and field, as well as those of the Shop and the factory to hemp, to wool, the product cf the Kre:it industry of sheep husbandry ns weil as to the finished woolei s of the mill wo prom ise the most ample protection. MERCHANT MARINE We favor restoring ti.e early Ameri can policy of diacrimituting duties for the upbuilding cf our merchant marine and the protection of our shipping in terests in the foreign carrying trade, so American ships the product of Ameri can labor, employed in Aiunricau ship yards, sailing under the htara and Btripee, and manned, officered and , owned by A ruerlcans may regain the j 9 14 rare It in th V7I l Jir-f'sat eit. '(MM carrying or our roreigu commerce, MONEY. The Republican party is unreservedly for sound money. It caused the enact ment of the law providing for the re sumption of fiecie payment in lb?V; since then every dollar has been as good as gold; we are unalterably opposed to every measure calculated to debase our currency or impair the credit of our country. We are, therefore, opposed to iiid MiaiiBe of rzcept by in ternational agreement with the leading commercial nations of the world, which we pledge ourselves to promote, an 1 until such agreement can be obtained the existing gold staudui-d must be pre served. All our silver and paper cur rency must be maintained at parity with gold, and we favor all measures designed to maintain inviolably the oV ligations' of the Uuited Mates and all our money, whether coin or paper, at the present standiuM, the standard of the most enlightened nations of the earth, PENSIONS. The reterana of the Union armies de serve and should receive fair truatiaent aud generous recognition. Whenever practicable they should he given the preference in the matter of employ ment, aud they are entitled to the en actment of such laws as ari best calcu lated to secure tho fullillment of the pledges made to them iu the dark days of the country's peril. We denounce the practice in the pension bureau, so recklessly and unjustly carriod on by the present Administration, of reducing pensions aud arbitrarily dropping names from the rolls as deeerving the severest condemnation of the American people. FOREIGN RELATIONS, Our foreign policy should be at all times firm, vigorous and dignified, and all our interests in the Western hemis phere carefully watched ami guarded. The liawaiiau islands should be con trolled by the Uuited States, and no foreign power should be permitted to interfere with them. The Nicaragua canal should be built, owned and oper ated by the United Suites, and by the purchase of the Danish islands we should secure the proiier nnd much needed naval station iu the West Indies. ARMEMIAN MASSACRES. The massacres iu Armenia have ' aroused the deep sympathy and just in rii irnutinii tf t Vie Ainnrii'MH iiAniila un, 1 we believe the United State should exert all the influence it rati properjy exert to bring these atrocities to an end. In Turkey American residents have been exposed to the gravest dangers aud American property destroyed. There and everywhere American citizens and American property must be alwolutely protected at all hazards and at any cost MONROE DOCTRINE. We reasaert the Monroe doctrine in its fullest extent and we reafl'um the right of the United States to give the doctrine effect by resn mdiujr to the ap peals of any American state for friendly intervention in case of European en croachment We have not interfered aud shall not interfere with the existing possessions of any European power iu this- hemisphere, but those possessions must not, on any pretext, be extended We hopefully look forward to the even tual withdrawal of rhe Kuropean pow ers from this hemisphere ami to the ultimate union of all Euglish-speakiuij parts of the continent by the free con sent of it inhabitants. CURA. From the hour of achieving their own Independence, the people, of the United Slates have regarded with sympathy the struggles of other American peoples to free themselves from European domina tion. Wo watch with deep aud abiding interest the heroic battle of the Cuban patriots aga: ist cruelty aud oppression, and our best hopes go out for the full success of their determined contest for liberty. The Government of Spain hav ing lost control of Cuba, and being un able to protect the property or lives cf resident American citizeus or to comply with iu treaty obligations, we believe the Government of the United States should actively use iU influences and good offices to restore peace aud give in dependence to the island. THE NAVY. The peace aud aecurity of the repub lic and the maintenance of its rightful influence among the nations of the earth demand a uaval powsr commensurate with ita position and responsibility. We therefore favor the continued en largement of the navy and a complete system of harbor and sea coast defeusea. FOREIGN IMMIGRATION. For the protection of the quality of our American citizenship and the wages of our workinguieu against the fatal competition of low-price 1 l ibor, we de mand that the immigration lavs b thoroughly uforced aud so extended ss to exclude from entrance to the United States those who can neither read nor write. CIVIL SERVICE. The civil service law was placed on the statute books by the Republican party, which has alway. sustained it, and we renew onr repeated dcclaratioi.s that it sha!vba thoroughly aud honestly enforced and extended wherever practi cable. FREE BALLOT. We demand that every citizen of the United States shall be allowed to cast one free and unrestricted ballot, aud that such badot be counted and returned as cast. LYNCHING. . We proclaim our unqualified condem nation of the uncivilized and barbarous practice, well known ns lynchimr, or killing of human brines upected or charged with crime, without process if law. NATIONAL ARBITRATION. We favor the creation of a National Board of Arbitration to Sett'.o aud ad Just differences which may arise be tween employers and employed engaged iu interstate commerce. HOMESTEAD We telleve In an immediate retnrn to the free homestead policy of the Repub lican party, aud tirte the passage by Congress of the satisfactory free home stead measure which has already passed the House aud is now pending in the Senate, TERRITORIES, We favor the admission cY the re maining Territories at the earliest prac ticable date, having due repaid to the interest of the Territories and the Uuited SUUs. All the I'cd.-ral , Ulcers ap pointed for the Territoiles should be elected from bona fide residents thereof, aad tue right of se.f-goveruuient siioald we telleve the citizens or Alaska should have representation in the Con gress of the United States, to the end that needful legislation may be lutein- genu enactea. TEMPERANCE. We sympathize with all wise and legitimate effort to lessen and prevent the evils of iutemperance and promote moraiiiy. RIGHTS OF WOMEN. The Republican party is mindful of ine nguia or women. Protection of American industries includes equal op- jTonunities, equal pay ror equal work, and protection to the home We favor the admission of women to wider spheres of usefulness, and wel come their co-operation in rescuing the country irom JJemocratlo ;and Populist mismanagement and miarule. Such are the principles and policies of the Republican (Mtrty. By these princi ples we will abide, and these policies we will put into execution.- We ask for them the considerate judgment of the American people. Confident alike in the history of our great party and in the justice or our cause, we preseut onr piatrorm ana our candidates, iu the full assurance that the election' will bring victory to the Republican party aud prosperity to the people of the United Btates. If dull, hpiritlet ami wtupid; If your blood U thick and slugiMh; If your appetite is capricious! and un cei-taiii. You n.id Sarsaparillu For best rt-suIU take DeWilt'u. It recommend ilself. W. E. Brock Ask your physician, your druggist and your friends about Shlloh'a Cure for Consumption They will rccom mend it. For sale by the Delta Drug In order to obtain United States patents you must show an invention not already in use and entirely differ eat from all others. Such Is Hoe Cuke Soup. The ouly patented laun dry soap in the market. The whole system is drained and undermined by Indolent ulcers and open sores. DeWitt's Wilch Hazel ! Halve speedily heals them. It is the liest iile cure known. W. E. Brock Consumption, Ingrippe, pneumonia Hid all throat and lung diseases are curi-d by Shiloh's Cure. For sale by the Delta Drug Store. I If you have ever seen a liille child in the agony of aummer complaint you can realize the danger of the trouble and appreciate the value of instantaneous relief always afforded by DtVitt(s Colic and Cholera Cure, For dysentery and diarrlneti it is a reliable remedy. We could not nilbrd lo recommend this a cure t'ti less it were a cure. W. E. Brock. The lest Cough Cure is ShiloliV Cure. A neglected cough is danger ous. Stop it at once with Shilob's Cure. For sale by the Delta Drug Store. D in't Iritle away time when you luve cholera morbus or diarrhiea. Fight them in the beginning with DeWitt's Colic and Cholera Cure. You don't have to wait for results, they nre Instantaneous aud it leaves the liowels in a healthly condition W. K. Brock. Catarrh cured, health and sweet breath secured, by Siiiloh'a Catarrh Remedy. Price 60 cents. Nasnl injector free. For sale by tholtelta Drug Store. It dosen't mutter much whether .sick headache, biliousness, indiges tion and constipation are caused by neglect or by unavoidable circum stances; DeWit's Littlo Early Risers will spedily cure them all. W. E. Brock.. . Thousands of cases ol consumption, asthma, i-oiighs, elds and croup are cun-d every day by Siiiloh'a Cure For khIc by I he lielta Druf Store. Poison Ivy, Inwct bites, bruises, scalds, burns, are quickly cured by DeWitt's Witch lUxel Salve, the great pile cure. W, E. Brock. Are you made miserable by indi gestion, constipation, diz.iness, lose of apietite, yellow skin? Shiloh's Vitiilicr is a positive cure. For sale by the Delta Drug Store. Many a day's work is lot by sick headache, caused by indigestion and stomach troubles. DeWllt's Little Early Risers are the iuot clTivtuul pill for overcoming such diffleuitics. W. E. Brock. For ilys"psia and liver complaint you have a printed guarantee on every bottle of Siiiloh'a Vitalizer It never fails to cure For sale by the Delta Drug Store, DeWitt's Sursaparllla is prepared for cleansing blood frm impurit-t-s ntnl dl-oii-M'. It doe this and more. It builds up and strergtbens constitutions impaired by disease. It recommends Itself. W. E. Brock. Constipation cause more than half the ill of women. KarlV Clover Hoot Tim Un iItanrit cure for consti pation. For sale by the iH'Ita Drug .Store. HHoy will he boys" hut you can't MXnui to loose any of them. Be r :n.y for the green apple season by having lie Witt' Colic and Cholera Cure In the houe. V. E. Droek. Karl's Clover lltxtt Ten Is a ure cure for hctvtache anl nefvnua dia ea-e. Nothing relieves.' uiikly For sale by the Delta Drug itor A GREAT SPEECH Judge Aldredge, at Atlanta Ec foce Convention of Amer ican Bankers. Wit ud Ramor, With Sound Lofte, Kept th Caavvatloa Im mm Cpraar -Cm Stat Bo FlalBly Thai All Cm tcntattit It, Amuwrmd Im Tars Cbluch Huff and Boll worm Tmw 16 tm I Cranks-What MakM UUmt LowtItoporlaat Prioo That Uav Rlas nlna 1873. Pvrbapt tb nound moaey MjHx-h tu greutmt demand tnall parUof tba country, and tbetlo- at kind for whjtah ia tuont constantly growing, i thai of Judg Oorge N. Aldredgt) of Dalian, Tex., dttlirerud Oct. 10, ltttt, at th ooDTeution of the Am or loan Bankers association at At lanta, Oa. We ar certain that all of our read ers will relish the wit and bum or which upmit the dignity of the bankers. They will also find It very instruotWe reading. We reprint It In fuU below: The propoelttoa that thl government should ooln silver for the world, In unumiu-d amouiit. at double Its market value, is so rpUKiiniit to Mis common sense of mankind that it uttvht tu be unnecessary to discuss it. and would be but for the faot that a portion nf our people haya been misled by appeals to their prejudice and by the specious reasoning of eophUts. If our Jovernment were auked to declare that two uarts equaled a gallon or to rvvlae the multi plication table and eii;i;t that 10 tiims 10 equaled 90U all m n would st-e the fully, but when asked to believe that lu worth of mlver, by being touched by the government stamp, Instantly btmoniea worth l-tt, many people honestly believe this miracle may be atvoui pllshed, and many others affect to believe it fur practical purposes. In all ages of the world there have been d luslons In referenos to money, and In spite of uniform disastrous results many are ever ready to listea to the teaching of any charla tan who claims that be hssdisttuvervd a short er routs to wealth. They rafune to apply to money that bard common sense which they exercise in dealing with the everyday affairs of life. The ignorant have always had super stition about silver. Among the negrotisof the south nothing would kill a witch but a silver bullet. That our ancestors 100 years ago fixed a unit of value In gold or silver and fixed a ratio be tween them is immaterial to us. 1 heir exam pie in so doing la not more binding on us than their methods or business, their means or transportation, or the implements with which they sowed and reaped. It would bo a sud ooinmentary upon our inteUigence if we had learned nothing in IU) years. We do know that In fixing a ratio they attributed no iwatfio to tho government stamp, but sought diiiguut- ty to ascertain the market virtue, of the two metals in the leading nattousof the world and conformed, as they thought, strictly to this market ratio. By pursuing the method adopt' rd by them we would now fix the ratio at about W to 1. The consistent man Is not the one who stands In one plaoe always, regtrdl(M of the changing conditions around hiiu, but it Is ba who, with intelligence and eircuiuHpee- tion, adapts himself to the changed condition of affairs. Gold Versos Silver Standard Countries. For nearly W fears every raliKhtened nation in the world has been ou a gold standard basis. They are all represents tivs governments, and their laws are made by their people aud fur their people. The government which first es tablished the gold standard is more otx-dient to the will of Its people than ours Is. When an important administration measure is defeuted by tho representatives of tits tnghtih people, the government Is immediately placed In the hands of the opposition. The gold standard nations are thote that have reclaimed the world from barbarism and have giveu It all its learning and Invention, where schools and churches abound, where the dignity of man ia maintained and labor properly rewarded, and they control the commerce of the world. These nations, after tsting gold and silver for hundreds of years, voluntarily adopted the gold standard. No nation today lias the silver standard from ch4oe. It Is only because they are weak and helpless to remedy the evil that any of them remain on a silver hsttis. But to day tho United tttates, the foremoHt nation In all tho earth In solvency and resource., In in telligence and energy, Is seriously Invited to abandon the standard of eivilixitiiuu nnd com merce and to consurt w ith half civilized, half olad people, who are weak and itfnr;int, who have little or no commerce, when bull fltrht abound and schools do not, where human laoor In sharp competition with tho nuvk and lowly jackass, whcreabreechelout l;rt furred to a full suit a 1 where the bu'k of the pot-pie know ao mor. u jout a standatd of value thun a mule about the uebular hypoths1x. hur ly ws would do well to take a look at the cour pany before we ait down to tho fraat. Pre Cot aage Argument. The Invitation la that this country, aft-r having adjusted Its enormous bnslm k fur M f ears to a gold standard. Khali Midd nl v r ust all business and all v-.:Iue tj wh:U i termed a double standard of ttM and Nilver. The arguments advanced iu behalf of such a ohange are: First. A double standard resting niM.n gold and silver would give a more corn-t t measure of value and one leas Hsble to fluctuation than a single gold standard. Second. Uold has appreciated tn value and all property measured by it has declined In value. Third. The supply of gold is inadequate to make It a safe standard, and the scarcity of it will tend to tho depression of prices. Fourth. Tho free, unlimited coinage of sil ver at the rsttoof lo to I will create unlimited demand for silver and restore It to par Fifth. Free and unlimited coinage of silver at 16 to 1 will increase tho prices of property. Mythical Doable Standard. With reference to tho first proposition: A standard of value is some exact measnm which enters into and becomes a part of every con tract, and to which all obligation are refer able. If our government could, by legal ena-l ment, fix the value of gold and silver in the markets of the world and could keep them ad justed to a fixed ratio, a double standard would bo practicable. But It cannot nx or maintain value. The buyers of the world, the merchants, do that.1 When Abraham purchased his lot in Epbron a cemetery, be weighed out to Ephron silver "current money with th merchant." And the merchants of the world have been saying what shall be "current money" from that day to this. Governments are as powerless tosupprnd the Isw of value as they aro to suspend the law of gravitation. Such being the case, I can con ceive erf two standards, one of gold and the other of silver, and contracts might be made referable to elthaff standard, but the ind ter minate double standard, resting on two met als aot linked together by any binding obit aattoo, but both acting under go as you please rules, Is to mo absolutely Incomprehensible. We uaanot bind them together as wu So two mettle in tho pendulum of a clock or in the mainspring of a watch. No people ever did business under the Imaginary double stamlard, and every att-mpt to en f ores It has rult4 in alternating from one standard to the other. Englsnd tried It for sTO years, and it was an utter failure. Franca changed her ratio lit times ia lit years trying to wslk the donhle standard tight rope. We tried Hand went fir! to a silver basis, then to a gold basis, tbea to a pap-" basis and then back to a gold basis. The phrase "double standard" Is a contradic tion of terms. Standard means correct mess are, and there cannot be two different correct measurea of value any more thsa there can lie two different eorrect weights to sell by, two d i it t rent eorreot eompasssa to sail by or two different eorreot thermometers to measure temperature by. If one measure Is correct, tba ether can aot differ from It snd be correct. Oroshaaa'a Law. It Is an Inexorable law of money that when two metal ars coined at a fixed ratio and both mads legal tend If either Is anuVrf ahwd in the coinage law the undervalued metal got out of circalatloa. About the middle of tho fourteenth century Nicholas Oreemn. the father of finance in Franca, announced his great law to Charles V; 1 years later Coper nicus, the founder of modern astronomy, an sou need it to the Prussians, and years still law Ureshaaa anBounosd It to Vnen Elisa beth. Macaulay In his "History of England" Stows how perfectly this Isw worked In Erg fend and eloquently dearrtbes the dir-rul frnsenuenea. He was describing coin de based by clipping, bat still legal tender. A e-in la lust as had whos aebaaaj) lr over SJ in coinage tm whin clippu or counterfeits.. hi the tnH c;v-- the ertt!if'r to dewtved, avd iu the ottn r he is forced. H In aimply the difference Ixiwten theft and rubbery. The law of money ha? never failed. Wo know what will be its optrutioii Jut as we know that the deadliest puiuou will kill lei'uuw it always hat killed. Wa Now Mava 16 to 1 lliiuetalllsm. The guld standard advueates Udiwve in guld aa a Mtundard with the lurgtwt possible safe use of sliver anumg the ih.su ptu. Tho lit tu 1 dreamers Uliive iu (he sot-alUd double stand ard, and we aro driven hv thin Inw to the ua of silver ajoue. All gold standurd oouu trios UMt tar-' amounts nf wtver and no silver standard country um-s sny sold what ever. As the practical qucrittou Is the use of the mutalM. it follows Hut wu aru the bnm-tulli&t and the Id to 1 people are the niuiioiiiwtalllat. H-nou the buttle that is to bo fought to a finish next year is whether ws will r in ui n under a gold atamlt.rU, with actual biiiift:illiiu in uo among the people guld and itilver circulating freely without dinvriuv iuatU ii strain t either or Khali we have a so ctilk'd doubit) Mtantlard at the mints and no vhere elh, with nilver moiiumt-tallihoi iu ac tual u t The buttlu lit n tWft ti miltMiance and khadow, betwwu (Ikinv w ho want bim.talliHiu in fact and thoMt who want it in nai.ie only. Wu aru the fririidt of silvir money, w ho would bViug to its aid the ower of tho government to keep it good, and they are iis enemies, who, by unlimited cotnugt would take froiq It the guaruiite of parity by the government, snd thereby di -grudt it to its maikrt va(u. Our goverunu nt has leen ami tu uow coin ing silver at the ratio of lo to 1. It is enabled to do this, bocuuc under the btw it can re strict the amount coined, ami, being vested with thU control, it undertakes tu make every dollar good money. Tlie moment the Kvcrn uient loses contrtd of the coin a km, inniiih me Iu its ability to protet t tho money i-Mit ,1 14 gone, snd a nilver dollar then r ou it mer it and is wcrtb .rJ et-ntn. Tu iihir.trate: A merchant could very wi II guarantee the ex-M-uses of his clerk if he were allowed tu con trol the expenses, but if the clerk demanded fru and unlimited 1 xpennes then the int r- ; chant would have to "utaud tram under" and ! 1 t the ex pi uies take care of IheiiiM'lves. Wo hoar a great deal of indignant dnelunia tlon tHcaunu the itoveiumt nt iuv not p:y it- "cum oitiatloiiM in silver, 'lo muiutaiu Hie parity betwtM-n gold and silver it is exseutial thst the govermuunt in receiving- it.- dues snd paying its debts iiu4 Ik'uoro tlm inferiority of mlver, Just as a mother pretend not tu see the limp or hur lame chiM. This gives the option or metals tu tlie perm n deuliug with tho gov ernment, whether aw debtor or eredittr. If tie govern men t should discri minute airuinHt h! J v by refusing to receive it for dues, or by linnet ing on paying it i instead of gold, that moment the parity would be gone aud the silver 1 every man's pocket would would lie at a di: count. Its coinage being under the control of the goverumuut, tho government makes it good at lbs counter, and this makes it good at every counter In the world, If there is anything in the double standard stability Ides wo ouiit to work for it for all it Is worth. If two metals will fix value better than one, then three metaU will beat two, and four beat three, and by having eiyht or ten motuls In the itnmlard we can anehor it so that it will not craw 1 an Inch in 1.0U) years. Iho second proposition is that gold has ap preciated and thereby depressed prices. The same oauMe operating upon a number of ar ticles will produce the same effeet In all thot nut afftMtted by a contravening caune. When we contemplate prices, we find that touru the gold standard was adopted, Fib. 12, ImTJ, somo srticles haw de lined in value, some havu remained stationary, while somo risen iu pries, and no contravening causes wiU ac count for the failure of gold to depress all alike, We 11 ud that no two article) have de clined at the same time or in the satue de gree, nor has any one article remained uni formly depressed. This deinonntnites that, at to those articles that have declltiud, no one controlling cnue can be asnigned aa bavin 11 produced these results, The stock argument or the 10 to 1 people In that wheat and cotton have declined, and they seem tu gloat over the fact. 1 knew an old negro whu, when anked how he was getting along, always replied, "foorly, thank Ood! and they are thankful when tho country is poorly on wiicirj and cotton. Mnce imts the vast fertile prairies of the northwettt have been turned into wheatflelda, so that the pro duct ion of wheat tn the Vulttd btates has been doubled since tlieu. 1 he same thing has been going on In KusMia and South America. Tim wonderful improvements iu machinery fur harvesting wheat nnd the exteiihion of rail roads for trail port in it tu market gave sn immense Impetus tu the production of it. A farmer can make more money raising it at f cents per btmhel today titan he could at 11 per UUHhei m years ago. 1 lie result has been that tho overproduction of wheat has reduced its price, and the gold standard bad nothing to do with the reduction, its price is regulated by supply and demand Chinch Hugs, Caterpillars and Boll worms Last Hay a little bug settled down on the wheuttlclds of the nortliwct, and in one or two weeks eat up one-half of the Id to 1 argu ment on prices and sent the prices lsMk Into the neighborhood of thueof Ihid. The old hay stx-da, who knew tho huhits of the chiuch hug and the kind or a multiplication table he ued in regulating the Increase in his family, took the trains for Chicago, comtnenoed buying wheat snd broke all tlie "smart Alecks" In the city. They may have talked gold itaudard depression at hopie, but they put their money ou the chinch bug in the city aud won. The cat erpillar snd Ijollworm can do the same thing for cotton. I only know the chinch bug by reputa tion, but 1 am personally acquainted with theae worm. They aru composed of appetite and skin. They do not care a tinker's blearing for anybody ' ntundard, and when they invade the cotton fields of the south they send the pric of cotton up In every mart of the world, gold itandard or no gold tandard. They have been doing buainena with U this so?niiier and have moved the prico of cotton up 61) er cent. This bug and th-e worms haven't many friends, but as sluggi rs in an argument w ith a 16 to 1 crank they am entitled to the belt. Cotton brought 1 a pound in cw Vork dur ing the war, and au tu 40 cents a pound the first year after the war un account of the four years' cotton famine from lfctil to lwifi, and it was several years getting down to Its normal price. The price declined when we mode Po much of it. The lariet cottou crip made with lave labor was 4,iW,..u bales, nnd I rememtjs r It was confidently predicted that no snefa crop would ever be made with free labor. The crop of In', 2 was leas than ii,iiU'l bales, snd we gradually 1ncrrad it t a Httlo less than 10.- UUD.UUO tates in 14. Imiia, Kgypt and Braxil are also ralsittg larg'-r crnj of cotton- The Immense crop of )ii4 won thrown upon a market illy prepared to receive it. For three years there bad been U rn cotton goods oon- sumed than usual, owing to the worldwide panic and deprenwiuti of bUHinetw foUuwtng tho baring failure, and these two conditions meet ing overproduction and underconsumption bniught cotton down to a very low price. Some of the PctpulM U il us there cannot be overproduction until every msn, woman and child In the world has a rotund stomach and a full suit of clothes. This is baned upon the. communistic idea that It Is tho duty of gov ernment to tkf care of every loafer h 1 too lasy to work fur a living, and Is too con temptible to waste an answer on. Prteea of Corn, Hogs, Hatter, Potatoes r:te-. Have Risen Mlaoe 173. If the gold standard de)iresss-d wheat and cotton. It was surely loaded at both end, for It has shot some things np in price. The corn Crop of the United htates is more valuable than both the wheat and cotton crpn com , bmed. The crop of com made Just preceding the grild standaid, tn Jw;j, sld for H4 cents at : Id figures, snd the cr p of 144 was worth 45 ; nents tn gold, and It has generally been above the lrfT2 price. The oat cnp la about equal to the wheat crop. Uati were worth cents tn 1872 and ifit cents tn l'f4. Fst beef steri Were worth M0 In u in Ki snd fxj in gold In 15 Hogs are worth more now than they were tn , IHTi and hsvs generally be n higher than they were then. The fsrmcrs' wives get as mu-h tn (old now for butter, chh kens and eng as they iid In greenba'-kf. in W i, and this crop is more valuable than the wheat and cotton crops OMinbitied. Toliarcti, putats-a, bacon, 1 hay, coffee, leather, whisky and a hundrsd other things have not declined In price. Labor, I .and. Wool aad Horsea, The labor t-rop in eual in value to all other : crop combined, snd It bss steadily advanced bx pric. Land i much more valuabW tn gold , Sow than tn K-', ntw itlftandtng tt was de- j prewed by the panic of Ink.' snd tfi. The price I f wool has derlired, but the worUl's prodwe ! tton of it, siuce ! "A hsa doubled and the mm I ef It baa been partly fiui ptanted by th use of 1 tton gofjda. H -r-ws have d'-eltned, but the railroafls, electric esrs and bicyrb are doing , the Work they owl. The roat of the pm1oc- i tlon of an article ilTj tt mine. This Is m-cea- asrily ars brcnnie if the profit Is In r ire. ethers 1 will basttractetl n th-Latin ss until the price Is-bmught to it proper P-vel. All article man- of act or -d by mahiury hare d'clined 1n price, j for the reastm that wtfh em h invention the I euMt of pro'loctng the article in teaxened. Il l- Baa lud has pr-jlu' d mora reu theaiKidng production in the lat SO yeurs Uian iu all the ages of the World Uforu' that time. Theau grand triumphs of man over mat ter, inw-ud of allowing duprveaiou from a landard of valuta, how forth the glory and tliktnliy of the human Intellect, aud are an un mixed blestug tu the whols huiusu faiutly. (uld suy oue outside of a lunatic aylum at tribute all tbeo diwrsa and lncouwtenB movsmvuts of prices to one cause, and that caue acting eveuly and uniformly ujou uil things alikuY W hat Makes I ate rest Lowt interest has decJIued since lr tu my part af the country from s per cent per mouth tu ft aud It percent per annum. There Is no deny ing the fact that the gold bugs did that Tba south and WeM have saved wore ou thedciiuu nf interent than they have lust in the decline In wheat and tHttou. Interest is always low utub r an huuest ataudard, amoug au bi'iict p-ople, whero money ia plentiful. It Is lower in London thau iu any other spot on the glob bocuu.-MJ her Htuudard Is stable and hi-r cuiw iiierctsl.iutegrity has been the care of her sttutcaiucn and her pcniple for sges past. Eng land's punctuality iu meeting her obligations has made Loudu the clearing bouas of tba world. Tyru wiu the Loteloii of ancient times, heated ou the easier 11 end of the aledlterra ueau, site reignetl tiueeu oC commerce for eu turies. The stvptt r of commercial itreatnerst pasaud from her wheu her own children reared Carthage at the other eud of that sea. Home J years ago Kugland planted colonies in America, ami today the United Htates is Eng land's ouly formidable rival for the 001 u mvroe of the world. Tho object lesson of an cient history Is being repttated. If the Insstt able mine owners by use of their millions, snd the place hunting demagogues by unctuous p peals to prejudice, autvued In driving this e mil try from the standard of eivlltsatton sml i'oitimt'rts, the ataudard that announces in tcrity at home and iiinpirvs conlldem-e s broad, tu a hat standard and stiver basts, tie u KnKland will have no rival to grapph w ith her in tho marts of the world. Mora Gold and Mora Credits. Tho third proposition Is that the supply of gold is lnsumcient tu mako it a correct stand artl aud its acarctty will tdUtl tu depress prices. The averagu annual output of gold of thu world for the first half of thin eeutury, iu round numbers, was II.YUUU.OU). From 1MJ1 to lNk covt-rtng the gold bojui iu California and Australia, thu yearly average was $l.)u,Ui0,UA. The output for IttUJ was tla&.uuu,uuusnd for tlKl.Oiiu.uiO. The birth rate among gold using countries is nut increasing, while the produc tion of guld Is on the increase, as Just stated Tins answer ought to satlory even the extreme 10 tu 1 people the "per capita" Populist laselally tn view of the fact that improvements Iu power aud machinery aro being applied tu the ttroductiuia of void, while the sen 1 us of in- "veution finds no inducement onVrud nor lisld for operation In the Mipulstton buaiiieas. Uy next auswer is that the mure highly en lightened thu world becomes, aud thu greater the improvements in business methods, the less necessity there Is for the use of actual money of any kind. Steam aud electricity have so knitted civilised people together that they are practically one community. Business men speak to each other arouud the world ss tf they were assembled tn tlie same building. Their busiueas is dona on a system of credits, w ithout the use of money, except fur ultimate settlement. Nor Is this method confined to butftuess men. It is broadening with thu evolu tion of man from a lower to a higher plane of Intelligence, A farmer may now live for a whole year on the fat of the land and nevur handle a dollar In money during that time. He luay receive checks fur his crop, deposit them to his credit with a bank and draw ou the Lank fur what he owes and Hemls. Nei ther he nur the men whu bought his urop hud a dollar iu the bank. They only had credit. there. The bank owns the money in its vault, aud its customers simply have the bank's obliga tlon. Bank credits perform precisely the same Work that gold aud silver du, and they er foriult much quicker and more conveniently. The Scots are the most conservative people In thu world, and they have had the best banking systuin of any fieoplv for HuU years. On a gold reserve of tJi.uW.Uuo tbnjr support bank credits to the amount of H4a,&tt,0UU. The best author ities estimate that only one bill of exchange In &u0,ot0 Is ever paid in money In England. Oold, silver and other money perform 1 per cent of the exchanges in this country, and credits In the shape of bills, notes, checks, etc., do the other Vtf per cent. The business of the world could no more be done today with gold and silver than ita Inland transportation could be done with ox wagoue. Thu Id to 1 orator., In deuuunclng the act of 1S7J, assurt that half the inouey of the country was destroyed and hold out ths idea that our money has been contracted to that extent. In ln',4 our population was eU,dUo,tJU0 and our per capita of money was lU.Tg. In leV4, after tho country hail been suffering with gold standard for ill years, our population Is fe.ift.youo, and our per capita of money is hV44, snd we have much better money now than ho had then. The adoption of the gold standard as a meas ure of value did not increase tlie demand for guld fur use to any great extent. Alcohol ia the standard for measuring the strength of all spirituous liquors, yet that fact has nuver been found to be Very at raining on alcohol. A Surfeit of Silver. Fourth proposition, that the free and unlim it-d coinage of silver at 14 to 1 would create unlimited demand for silver and restore it to a par. Huw the mere coinage of silver can In any way Increase Its use among the people I am unable to understand. If there wss nut enough of It for use as money and tho govern ment was limiting the coinage of It and there by denying the people of the use of tt as money, then there would be force in ths prop osition to increase the coinage of silver. But our condition is exactly the rerrrse of that. The amount of coined and uncoined silver in tlie trwasnry Is $:d'i,000.uuu, while th s mount In circulation is shout 107,OUO,UUO. Tu encourage the use of silver by the people the government exchanges coined sliver at its mints for gold or legal tender currency and mys the express charges oa Ike silver to any part of the country. This coined silver is all good money. The dollars are legal tender fur all debts in any smwutit, and the halves, qur ters and dinn s nre exchangeable In turns of JU for guld or other legal tenders. Notwith standing the tudm nvnt offered by the gov ernment to promote tlie use of silver, it has hithertu laueii unable to furos into circulation more than slut one fifth of its stuck on hand. Th n, why nil tfiis eUmor for more siinsgcf If a man had five times as mu h blood In his lmdy as his arteries aud veins would etrcuhtto and ffiir flflhs of It Was lying Idle around his heart, w-mild any one nay that such a mau needed a tree and unlimited infusion of blood? A government can no more iuuu e people to use money they do not want than ttcnii induce them to eat what they do not like. The true place ,f tiiver is ana abaiige money. It Is Indis pensable for tliiit pnrjKtse and nnsutted tu any other, and all the silver tongucd orators li tlie kind ciin not change this f;e-t. The f , $2 .Vi snd tti gold pice were too small and were unpop ular as change money, snd ths government tnpd the coinage of the Mi, On the other hand, stiver Is not a debt pay ing money tu any oonudorsblo amount, nur the nion- y of commerce, for the reason that tt Is too bulky snd too heavy. When a man gets evt r f5 or llu of It, he unloads sn the first Lr,k be com Pi, and the Lank unloads oa the tr Hsiiry. Thus tho circulation of it Is lim its d to Jtist I at the people will use. When the p. .p,- .j, t enough of a thing, they know M. and ou ennnot argue with them shout It. Th y are gullible on theories, but int- nsclr privticitl tn biiMiiiesa. "The f.reat Crime of IS79." We have heard a great deal abont dcmonetl- tstn.n of fjivi r. Let 11 see then tent of "the gr. j.t crime of K.t" In Witt, in order to pre- V' i:t the MtlnoWiury coin from going abroad, 1h" ilv. rhslff dollar was reduced In weiuht from ' t. c grams, aud IheouartUirs, dimes 1 U e nt 1 I. ci s were reduced In the same pr--rsi.rti.iii. flu-Mi coins were tlien made a Uv'l t-u'l. r for only to In amount, and tha re t f them f.,r prlvsta acitrant was stop- pi 1, but thu government purchased the silver l'-.,l(.ii Hiel toiuetl tie-ai as tie y Were atled. . iTinie w:u copirnltt'-d in H7:i against ti e rinw, lurtrs, dimes and half dimes. That ( i ine w committed under Millsrl Fill- J'i iS the units were ssarle legal ten ds r for sums aot exceeding llu. In. Is,. the tnuard silver dollar of 41". grains wss left out of tlie eolnsge set snd tha trade dollar of au groins was substituted for It.. This w sa dme at the requsfitof that Paciflu sIojh. to vnsble our dollar to compete, with the Mti.B dolisr of about that weight, in China and Jspsn. Tha standard dollar was l a legal tender from Fb. 12, Itf.d. t Feb. Ks.at which time its reruiaaaew aa prvld nl for, and it wss retnstatad as a legal tender for all debts, la wbatevsr amount. But V"JU, U of this "daddy dollar" was coined prior t 1 t, fmt of a tidal wilnajjnof tl.uiu.ojii u. ffersia ''tHmd tha nrdmure sf It in isia .ni for y-ajrs not one of thrnn was coined, and the dad dp never svrmplatned. They did nwt have sena emsah tn sea that J. ffr,n'. hi oW 4. Iiimbard streatl These doliara J 'ont 'n,t4 9 fourth JW.)