8 The Conservative. tiou now , but we never refuse one when it is offered to us in payment of n debt , and we seldom notice , when it is hnnded to us , whether it is a banknote , or a greenback , or a "coin note , " or a silver certificate. I suspect that very few per sons whom we meet on the street could tell the difference between them if they were asked. ELASTICITY OK HANK ISSUES. Now , the advantages of the banknotes over the greenbacks are these : In the first place , they can be made "equal to the wants of trade , " as the saying is. They arise out of the wants of trade and in no other way. When crops are to be moved it is only necessary for the grain buyer or the cotton buyer , or the wool buyer , to offer his promissory note for discount and he gets the banknotes im mediately. The bank exists expressly for the purpose of supplying them on adequate security ; and no security is better than crops in warehouse or on the way to market. This is in a case where the banks are enabled to issue their notes expeditiously in the manner pro posed by the banking committee's bill. INFLEXIBILITY OF GOVERNMENT ISSUES. But the government never discounts anybody's note. There is no law auth orizing it to do so. It is not fitted for such tasks. The first and indispensable requisite of a banker is ability to dis criminate between good and bad com mercial paper. The government has no machinery adapted to that end. Some people think'that such machinery might be devised. I do not agree with them , but it is sufficient to say that it has not been devised. Therefore , the govern ment's circulating notes are a fixed sum , limited in amount by law , an ironclad mass incapable of expansion. They are capable of contraction , however , in the sense that when they are not wanted they flow into the Treasury vaults , or the bank vaults , and stay there. When a demand for money comes to move crops , or for any other legitimate pur pose , the quantity cannot bo increased ; nor , if it could be increased , would the government have any machinery for placing it where it is needed. This is one of the advantages of the banknote over the greenback. HANKS CAN HE COERCED AND PUNISHED. Another is that the bank has com mercial assets to pay its notes with , and can be compelled by law to pay them , whereas the government has no commer cial assets and cannot bo compelled to pay. The paper that the bank has dis counted for the grain buyer , the cotton buyer , etc. , represents the circulating capital of the country and is usually secured - cured by bills of lading , warehouse re ceipts , etc. If that property is not good , nothing is good. Even the government credit rests upon that in the last resort. It is needless to recall the spasms and struggles of ISDiJ-'UG over the question whether the government could , if it would , or would if it could , pay its notes on demand. The contrast between that scries of events and the usual procedure of banks when their notes are presented for pay ment is sufficiently glaring. Not the least advantage of the banknote is that if the bank refuses payment , its assets , including its deposited bonds , are at once seized and applied to that purpose ; and if there has been any fraud in its management the managers are sent to jail. We commonly think of the na tional banknotes as secured by the gov ernment because government bonds are deposited against them. These bonds are in fact the bank's property. They wore bought with the bank's money in the first place , and they remain its pro perty so long as it redeems its notes on demand. By retiring its notes it can resume possession of its bonds at any time. There are details of the banking committee's bill relating to the security of the notes which they propose to allow the banks to issue , which I have not time to examine now. I am not in favor of any banknotes which are not abund antly and oven superabundantly se cured. CONCLUSION. The advantages of banknotes over greenbacks , then , are twofold : They can be made elastic in volume and equal to the- wants of trade , and there can never be any dispute about their re demption in gold , whereas greenbacks are not elastic and cannot be made so ; they no have relation whatever to the wants of trade ; disputes about their re demption may arise at any time and are in fact the very pabulum and bono of contention in our national politics. This I consider to be the present phase of the currency question. Mono y aclver- tisca' ° "e " ? upon farm mort gages in THE CONSERVATIVE of this issue will be loaned at a rate of interest less than one-third of what the original set tlers paid for money in the territory and state of Nebraska prior to the crime of 183 ! ! , T. Sterling Morton has been asked by the government of the Argentine Re public to organize a Department of Agriculture for that nation , based on the plan of the United States depart ment. Mr. Morton has not yet an nounced his decision in the matter. The invitation is certainly an honor , and cannot be otherwise considered both by Mr. Morton and the people of the state of which ho has been an hon ored resident for so many years. Hav ing recently commenced work as editor of one of the'most brilliant papers in the West , Mr. Morton may well bo ex cused for hesitating whether to leave it oven to accept the flattering offer from Argentina. Seward Reporter. The foil owing ASCIIAPOF HISTORY. relation is com municated by one of THE CONSERVATIVE'S friends ; one of the men best qualified of any now living to speak of the early days in this region of the West. He gives it as illustrating the Indian gift , commented on by many writers , of seeing straight to the heart of a matter , and laying it bare to their hearers with a few vigorous words. It deals with two names , famous in the Indian wars of sixty years ago. After the death of the half-breed Osceola , taken prisoner by the United States forces in Florida against the laws of nations , while ho was covered by a flag of truce , the leading spirits in the resistance which the Seminoles main tained for a year or two longer were a chief named Opothloholo , a man of near eighty years , and another who had gained the proud distinction of a white man's name : Billy Bowlegs. Their little war was soon extinguished , and those who remained of their people were transported to the Indian Terri tory ( or Indian Nation , as the old-timers call it ) where they were bidden to live long and prosper. They wore not the strongest there , however ; and upon the breaking out of the Civil War they were driven from their new homes and across the border into southern Kansas by ii tribes that had been enlisted in the cause of the Confederacy. Indians are bravo , and are not averse to fighting with men ; but they take a pleasure that an English- speaking white man cannot understand , in what conies after with the women and children. A baby is taken by the feet and waved in the air , and then his little fat brown head crushed against a rock or tree ; while a yelling squawwith a sharp knife , a strong arm and good nerves can be made to furnish a whole program of amusements. It does not appear , however , that a red-skinned husband and father particularly enjoys witnessing these festivities , nor learn ing of them afterward. ' The eviction of these Indians was ac companied by a vast amount of the most horrid atrocities , and the govern ment was obliged to take cognizance of it. It was decided to allow them to take part in the recovery of their territory. Mr. Robert W. Funias was instructed to enlist them in the regular army for that purpose , having the rank of colonel. He accordingly raised the 1st , 2nd and 3rd. Indian regiments from among the Seminoles , Creeks , Choctaws , Cherokees and Chickasaws , all those tribes having like wrongs to complain of. Among them cauio old Opothloholo , now over a hundred years old , and of unquestioned authority , as well from his character and record as from his great ago ; and with him a nephew of his old associate , who maintained the luster of the family name , being called Billy Bowlegs , junior. Colonel Furnas took the field in 18(52 ( and operated in