1MH A-lblril ..iW-W-S-- f I "I HIS arousing discourse by Dr. Tal mage wtll excite interest by the J manner in which it uuili come of the great evil now abroad. The subject to "Enemies Orerthrown ." and the text tHaua lxviii., 1, "Let Cod ariae, let hi oeaaxw dc scattered. A procesaion was formed to carry the ark, or sacred box, which, though only 3 feet inches in lens-th and 4 feet 3 inches bb height and depth, was the symbol of Uod s presence. As the leaders of the pro cession lifted this ornamented and bril liant box by two golden poles run through four golden rings and started for Mount Zioa all the people chanted the battle ymn of my text, "Let God arise, let his enemies be scattered." The Cameronians of Scotland, outraged hy James I who forced upon them reli--gioos forms that were offensive, and by me terrible persecution of Drumniond, Dalsiel and Turner, and by the oppressive laws of Charles I. and Charles II.. were driven to proclaim war against tyrants and went forth to fight for their religious liberty, and the mountain heather became red with carnage, and at Botbwell bridge and Aird's Moss and Drumclog the battle ymn and the battle shout of those glori ous old Scotchmen was the text I have chosen, "Let God arise, let his enemies be scattered." What a whirlwind of power was Oliver Cromwell, and how with his soldiers, named the "Ironsides," he went from vic tory to victory! Opposing enemies melted a he looked at them. He dismissed par liament as easily as a schoolmaster a school. He pointed his finger at Berkeley rastle, and it was taken. He ordered Sir Ralph Hopton, the general, to dismount, and he dismounted. See Cromwell march ing on with his army and hear the battle cry of the "Ironsides," loud as a storm and solemn as a death knell, standards reeling before it and cavalry horses going back on their haunches, and armies flying at Marston Moor, at Winceby Field, at Naseby, at Bridgewater and Dartmouth j "Let God arise, let his enemies be scat-! -teredr What Battlecry. jS!) you see my text is not like a compli mentary and tasscied sword that you sometimes see bung up in a parlor, a word that wag never in battle and only to be used on general training day, but more like some weapon carefully bung up in your home, telling its story of battles, for my text hangs in the Scripture armory, telling of the holy wars of 3,00 years in which it has been carried, but still as keen and mighty as when David first onsheath " ed it. .It seems to me that in the church " of God, and in all styles of reformatory work, what we moat need now is a bat tlecry. Ye raise our little stauaara ana iitit n'n i trii nuine of some mnn who onlv a few years ago began to live anil in a few years will cease to live. We go into eon " test against the armies of iniquity, de ' pending too much on human agencies. We use for a battlecry the name of some brave Christian reformer, but after awhile that reformer dies or gets old or luses his cour age and ben we take another battlecry, and" this time perhaps we put the name of some one who betrays the cause and sells eat to the enemy. What we want for a battlecry is the name of some leader who will never betray us and will never sur render, and will never die. AH respect have I for brave men and ouien. but if we ire to get the victory all along the line we must take the hint of the Gideonites, who wiped out the Be douin Arabs, commonly called Midiamtes. The Gideonites had a glorious leader in Gideon, but what was the battlecry with which they flung their enemies into the worst defeat into which any army was ever tumbled? It was "The sword of the Lord and of. Gideon." 1'ut God first, who ever you put second. If the army of the American Revolution is to free America, It must be, "The sword of the Lord and of Washington," If the Germans want to win the day at Sedan, it must be, "The word of the Lord and Von Moitke." Wa terloo was won for the English because not only the armed men at the front, but . the worshipers in the cathedrals at the rear, were crying, "The sword of the Lord aad of Wellington." God First, ' The Methodists have gone in triumph across nation after nation with the cry, The sword of the Lord and of Wesley." The Presbyterians nave gone from victory to victory with the cry, "The sword of the Lord aad of John Knox." The Baptists have conquered millions after millions for Christ with th cry, "The sword of the Lord and Judson." The American Epis - isiaalisaa have won their mighty way with the erf, "Th sword of the Lord and of ; Bishop ITIlvaine." The victory is to those Who pat God first. But, as we want a kattlscry suited to all sects of religionists ' ad to all lands, I nominate as the battle try of Christendom is the approaching - Armageddon the words of my text, sound ad before the ark ss it was carried to Mount Boa, "Let God arise; let his ene- - asisa to scattered." Aa far as our finite mind can judge, it sneaks about tin for God to arise. Does tt net seem to yen that toe abominations of this earth hate gone far enough ? Was tVre ever a tone when sin waa so defiant 7 were there tret before so many fista lift ed toward Cod, tall lag him to come on If dart? Look at the blasphemy abroad! inut towering profanity! Would it be niMII HT HI wmw w vmmwmvc uiv vl- 4 sW ML.Ut. t MM. on of tt that Oe nam of tbe A r ' "7 Ci tslotlmm Christ are every i ' 1 1 ItJW-'MM taw npsj rro-v- --laUsBweftfsVMddrutTtb o smrdat, yet who f-'l to worn than " ' 1 1 Jrs, tx Ooat erisao rl CSS to m stttMk ) pbemy. A man traveling in Russia was supposed to be a clergyman. "Why do you take me to be a clergyman T said the man. "Ob," said the Russian, "all other Americans swear." The crime is multi plying in intensity. God very often shows what he thinks of it, but for the most part the fatality is hushed up. Among the Adirondacks I met the funeral procession of a man who two-days before had fallen under a flash of lightning while boasting aner a Sunday of work in the fields that he bad cheated God out of one dav inr how, and the man who worked with him on the same Sabbath is still living, but a nelpless invalid under the same flash. tears ago in a Pittsburg prison two men were talking about the Bible and Christianity, and one of them, Thompson by name, applied to Jesus Christ a very low and villainous epithet, and as he was uttering it he felL A physician was call A I .. . 1 i ,.. . ru, uui no neip coum oe given. Arter a day lying with distended pupils and pal sied tongue he passed out of this world. In a cemetery in Sullivan Conntv. in New York Bute, are eight headstones in a line and all alike, and these are the facts: In 1N61 diphtheria raged in the village, and a physician was remarkably successful in curing his patients. So confident did he become that he boasted that no case of diphtheria conld stand before him, and nnally defied Almighty God to produce a case or oipntheria that he could not cure. tiix youngest child soon after took the disease and died, and one child after an other until all the eight had died of diph- vnena. ine Dlaspnemer challenged Al mighty God, and God accepted the chal lenge. Do not think that because God has been silent in your case. O nrofane swear er, that he is dead. Is there nothinr now in the peculiar feeling of your tongue or nothing in the numbness of your brain that indicates that God may come to avenge your blasphemies or Is already avenging them? But these cases I have uotictd. I believe, are only a few cases where there are hundreds. Families keep them quiet to avoid the horrible conspicu ity. Physicians suppress them through professional confidence. It Is a very, very, Tery long roll that contains the names of those who died with blasphemies on their lips. I arraign profane swearing and blasphemy, two names for the same thinir. as being one of the gigantic crimes of this land, and for its extirpation it does seem as if it were about time for God to arise. The Day of Drink. Then look for a moment at the evil r drunkenness. Whether you live in Wash ington or -New York or Chicago or Cin cinnati or Savannah or Boston or in any of the cities of this land, count up the saloons on that street as compared with tue saloons five years ago, and see they are growing far out of proportion to the increase of the population. You people who are so precise and particular lest there should be some Imprudence and rashness in attacking the rum traffic will have your son some night pitched into your front door dead drunk, or your (laughter come home with her chil dren because her husband fans by strong drink been turned into a demoniac The drink fiend bits despoiled whole streets of good homes in all our cities. Fathers, brothers, sons on the funeral pyre of strong drink! Fasten tighter the victims! Stir up the flames! File on the corpses! More men, women and children fur the sacrifice! Let us have whole generations on fire of evil habit, and at the sound of the cornet, flute, harp, saikbut. psaltery nd dulcimer let all the people fall down ar.u worsuip rung -ico;ioi, or you Khali 1 caiit into the fiery furnace under koine political platform! I indict tliis evil as the regicide, the fratricide, the patricide, the matricide, the uxorcide, of the century. Yet under what Innocent and delusive and mirthful names alcoholism deceives the people! It is a "cordial." It is "bitters." It is an "eye opener." It is an "appetiser." It is a "digester." It is aa "invigorator,"- It is a "settler." It is a "nightcap," Why jon't thej put on the right IhMs "Ks seuce of Perdition," "Conscience Stupe fier," "Five Drams of Heartache," "Tears of OrpliHuage, "Blood gf Souls," "Scabs of an Eternal Leprot-y," "Venom of the Worm That Never Dies?" Oifly once in awhile is there anything in the title of liquors to even bint their atrocity,, as in the case of "sonr mash." That I sec ad vertised all over. It is an honest name and any one can understand it. "Hour mash!" That is, it makes a man's disposi tion sonr, and his associations sour, and his prospects sour, and then it is good to mush his body, and mash his soul, and mash his business, and mash his family "Sour mash!" One honest name at last for an intoxicant! But through lying la bels of many of the apothecaries shops. good people, who are only a little under tone in health and wanting some invigora tion, have unwittingly got on their tongue the fangs of this cobra that stings to death to large a ratio of the human race, The JJeadly Cup. Others are ruined by the comtnoj and all destructive habit of treating custom ers. And it is a treat on their coming to town, and a treat while the bargaining progresses, and a treat when the purchase is made, and a treat as be leaves town, Others, to drown their troubles, submerge themselves with this worse trouble. Oh, the world is battered and bruised and blasted with this growing evil! It is more and more intrenched and fortified. They have millions of dollars subscribed to mar shal and advance the alcoholic forces.. They nominate and elect and govern the vast majority of the office holders of this country. On their side they have enlisted the mightiest political power of the cen turies, and behind them stand all the myr midons of the nether world, satanic, A pot lyonic and diabolic. It is beyond all hu man effort to overthrow this Bs stile of de canters or capture this Gibraltar of rum Jugs, And while I spprove of all human agencies of reform I would utterly de spair if we bad nothing else. But what cheers me is that our best troops are yet to come. Our chief artillery Is In reserve, Our grealest commander has not yet fully Ukea the field. If all bell is on their side, all heaven is on our side. Now "Let God arise, and let hie enemies be scattered." Then look at the impurities of these great cities. Erer and anon there are In the newspapers explosions of social life that make the story of Sodom quite re spectable, "for such thlaga," Christ says, "were more taltnibU for Sodom aad Oo orrah" tbaa far tha Ctoraatae aod Beth. smfcntt of gmtie Ught, It to M aaasMl ttlllWtilllWMbtir sit.ons with two or three families, ur fined ladies willing solemnly to marry th very swine of society If they be wealthy. The Bible all aflame with denunciation against an impure life, but many of the American rqinistry uttering not one point blank word against A is iniquity lest some old libertine throw up his church pew. Machinery organized in all the cities of the United States and Canada by which to put yearly in the grinding mill of this in iquity thousands of the unsuspecting of the country farm houses, one procuress confessing in the courts that she had sup plied the infernal market with 150 victims in six months. Ob, for 500 newspapers in America to swing open the door of this lazsr house of social corruption! Ex posure must come before extirpation. The Cry of Bin. While the city van carries the scum of this sin from the prison to the police court morning by morning it is full time, if we do not want high American life to become like that of the court of Louis XV., to put millionaire Lotharios and the Pompadours of your brownstone palaces into a van of popular indignation and drive them out of respectable associations. What prospect of social purification can there be as long as st summer watering places It is usual to see a young woman of excellent rearing stand and simper and giggle and roll up her eyes sideways bo fore one of those first-class satyrs of fash ionable life and on the ballroom floor oin him in the dance, the maternal chaperon meanwhile beaming from the window on the scene? Matches are made in heaven, they say. Not such matches, for the brimstone indies tes the opposite region. The evil is overshadowing all ov cities. By some these immoralities are called peccadillos, gallantries, eccentricities, and are relegated to the realms of jocularity, and few efforts are being made against them. God bless the "White Cross" move ment, as it is called an organisation making a mighty assault on this evil! God forward the tracts on this subject distributed by the religious tract societies of the land! God help parents is the great work tbey are doing in trying to start their children with pure principles! God help all legislators in their attempt to prohibit this crime! The Iay of Jads-ment. But is this all? Then it is only a ques tion of time when the last vestige oX pur ity and home will vanish out of sight. Human arms, human pens, human voices, human talents, are not sufficient. I begin to look up. I listen for artillery rumbling down the sapphire boulevards of heaven. I watch to see if in the morning Light there be not flash of descending scituitersv Oh, for God! Does it not treat time for his appearance? Is it uot time lor all lands to cry out, "I.et God arise, and let; bis enemies be scattered?" I got a letter asking uie if I td not think that the earthquake in one of our c'ties wa the Divine chastisement n that city for its sins. That lettcs I an swered by saying that if ali our Aau'rican cities got all the punishment they deserve tor tbeir horrible impurities rb earth would long ago have cracked, opeuing crevice transcontinental and taken down ail our cities so far under that the tin of our church spires would be ."K) feet ts-low the surface. It is of the Lord's mercies that we have aot been consumed. Not only are the uITairs of this world so a-twist, a-jangie ami rackiid that there seems a need of the Divine- antimrance. but there is another reason. Have you not noticed that in the history of this planet God turns a leaf about every 2.() years? God turned a leaf, and this world was fitted for human residence. About, 2.IKK1 more years passed along, and God) turned another leaf, and it was the deluge, j About 2,)N more years pasM-d on. and it: a the Nativity. Almost Zfi'tt more years passed by, and be will proimhiy kiu ! urn auother leaf. hat it skull be I con-' not say. It may be the detu.ii.tion of all I these monstrosities of turpitude and the I (Stabliiiitnient of rigbteoUiiie in ai! the, earth. Ue can do it, and be will do it. I am as confident as if it were already ac- i roinplished. How easily he can do it my 1 text suggests. It does not ask Cod to I hurl a great thunderbolt of his power, but j just to tiam from the throne on which he : hits, llnly that will be necessary. "Ieti God arie!" ! Redemption. I It will be no exertion of omnipotence.' It will be no bending or bracing for a mighty lift. It will be no sending down 1 the sky of the white borne cavalry of heaven or rumbling war chariots. He will only rise. Now he is sitting in the ma jesty and patience of his reign. He is from his throne watching the mustering of all the forces of blasphemy and drunk enness and impurity and fraud and Sab bath breaking, and when they have done their worst and are most surely organ ized he will bestir himself and saj : "My enemies hare denied me king enough, and their cup of iniquity is full. I have given them all opportunity for repentance, This dispensation of patience is ended, and the faith of the good shall be tried no longer." And now God begins to rise, and what mountains give way under his right foot I know not; but, standing in the full radi ance and grandeur of his nature, he looks this way and that, and bow bis enemies are scattered! Blasphemers, white snd dumb, reel down to their doom, and those w ho have traffick4 in that which destroys the bodies ana souis or men ana tainilies will fly with cut foot on the down grade of broken decanters, and the polluters of society that did their bad work with large fortunes and bigb social sphere will over take in their descent the degraded rabble of underground city life ss they tumble over the eternal precipices, and the world shall be left clear and clean for the friends of humanity and the worshipers of Al niighly God. The last thorn plucked off, the world will be left a blooming rose on the bosom of that Christ who. came to gardeniae It The earth that stood snarl ing with its tigerish' passion, thrusting out Its raging claws, shall lie down a lamb at the feet of the Lamb of God, who took away the sius of the world. And now the best thing I can wish for you, snd the best thing I can wish for my self, is that we may be found his warm and undisguised and enthusiastic friends in that hour when God shall rise and his enemies shall he scattered. Copy ri g bt The Nation that Is Sure. When a nation is true to G(xl and bis principles, knowing no compromise, no hesitation; whpn It loves tuoae principles. Incar nate them In Its laws and Institutions, aid, so far as It la In Its power, Insists upon other nations honoring them, that people la always sure to win the day. Bar. Dr. Dwrld Gregg, Presbyterian, Brooklyn, M. T. Course smiling Wisdom to only ZlCRim OP THE AGE CLOAKED UNDER THE TERM, "SOUND MONEY." (Tpoa Pretraae of Prsoorrlfisi the Hon esty of the Carrcocy the Money Traat eka to Fasten Unoa the World an Appreciating standard. The terra "sound money" ia used by the advocates of a single gold staudard to cloak the moot gigantic crime of the ages. Tbe use of a term associated in the mlnda with stability, correctness. and orthodoxy, for tbe purrxme of se curing nientaJ acquiescence and elud log Inquiry, when Investigation would prove tbe very oypoaite to that which the term Implies, la a recognltltou of the existence of moral forces that must be reckoned with. Sound money is money that will pre serve a practically unvarying purchas ing power 'hroagh a prlod of years and prenerfe tbe equltlea of time coo- tracts. Money to meet this require ment must Increase In volume with tbe Increase of population and Its use. 2(e money can be demand for money can be called boo sat or sound under which debts con tracted to tke paid la one, Ave or ten years cannot be paid without doing an Injury to either tbe debtor or creditor. When a debt la contracted a business transaction lbut haH completed. Tbe transaction ls finished wbeu payment Is made, at wki."h time the ineaey of payment should bear the' same relation to property and commodities In gstneral that existed at tbe tl u the del was contracted. With sucb a money tbe production of wealth audi the develop ment of tbe resources of a country wtll reach their maximum, auif tbe suvcess of Individuals In busineae will be iiu-as-ured by the Intelligence and? Industry of each. Such a money will not enrlt-b Its owner while locked up In a safe. The owner can pnofit only through lis use. Money is not soond or unsound Be cause of tbe material of wbk-b It la composed. Tbe tewt of soundness is !t unvarying power t purchase things in general. If all transactions between man and man worn completed at ouce and no debts were ereausd calling for payment In money at a future time, tbe question of bimetallism or a gold utaud ard would not be under discuattlon. A plentiful supply of gold and sllv-er from the mines would give price an up ward tendency, stimulate production, aud such a thing as enforced idleness would be unknown. Hut should tbe supply of money 1k cut off through the fullure or exhaustion of the mines, fall ing prices would ensue and ih profits of Industry lessened. If such condi tion should continue a long time the money value of all forms of properly would U. vastly diminished and pro duction would become liuilltvi to the, Imperative demands of dally life. Thy it will be seen that under a con dition of cawh payments and the als seuce of d?bt no motive would exist for tb tlemouelizatlon of either metal aud hence tli money quest loti in Us present form would find no place In the arena of politics. If tlicru were no debts to be p:t!d In money at a future day, uo person could be fouud who would favor the deuiie tlzatiirtj of 'it.hor metal or a contract ioti of the money volume. The assault that has been made upou silver as a money metal Is the work of a combination of ihe creditor classes who own the Kinds and niorttrnes against the nations, slates aud people of the world. The umoutit of the world's Indebtedness Is said by the lx-xt authorities to exceed one hundred and fifty billions of dol lars. A very large proportion of this IndebiedilWis Ig held by a comparatively small nuiiilx-r of persons residing in less than a dozen of the principal cltlt-H of Europe aud America. The barge own ers of securities effected an alliance or organization over forty years ngo. They are Interested in making money scarce and dear. The fall of prices that bauk rupts the mau of enterprise, drives la bor Into the street to starve, and con fiscates the equities of debtors, enriches them by giving a larger purchasing power to the money In which their in terest and principal must be paid. This combination at the present time controls legislation on the money ques tion In all the principal nations of the earth and In none more so than In our own. The constitute a money trust With cold alone the standard money of the world there would be Just sufficient of It to pay six months' Interest to the treat creditor combination, and It would require ail the gold money In existence thirty-three times oTer to pay the prin cipal The owners of these securities are also the owners of tbe prlurlngj banking bouses at the great money centers of the world. Tbe tax gath erers backed by the sheriffs and armies of tbe world are their collectors. In tbe payment of Interest a stream of money from all the nations of the earth Is con stantly Cowing Into their coffers. Through the great banking housi-s which they control at the money cen ters, whose dealings are only with oth er banks, tbe money is loaned again and finds Its way back Into the chan nels of trade. The banks under the control of the great creditor combln atlon possess the power to discrim inate against any state or other bank. refute It credit and force It Into llqul d atlon. So great ii tbe power of this creditor combination that not only the banka of tbe world generally but the corporations and trnsta who must have bank accommodation to successfully prosecute their business are terrorised by tbetn aad forced to faror tbe legis lation they Indicate upon the money question aa U prlea of continuing In business. Tbe creditor combination to wnat to uMUt wfctn wo us tha term "money power." Tkoy an tko only profit by a shrinking money rotutrtir, low prices snd hard times. To inflict evil condition upon the world aiul unjuntly enrich thenisdves thereby, they find It nix-esmiry In a country like ours to deceive the voters. Hence they coined the term "sound money" to pla cate our moral aeuse and elude Investi gation. The' American people are tbe only frew people, where each citizen has a vote that counts equally with every other. The money question will test our alrllity for free government and determine the fate of free Institutions among men. The Issue is at Inst square ly drawn. Th issue cannot be evaded and each voter must answer for him self In deciding tbe momcntons ques tion. The hearts of ail are right In tlllgenc alone la needed.--Silver Knlgbt- Watchman. Henry Cay on Contraction. That like causes produce like results, without reference to the particular time at wbicb said causes exert tbelr Influ ence is proven In tbe cane of financial contraction by a speech made- In 1H40 by the great Henry Clay. Tbe follow ing extract from a speech made by bltn during the mibtreasury debate of that year is reproduced from the New iiowd o Denver: The proposed substitution e an ex drwive metallic curewy to the mixed medium to which we have been so long familiar Is forbldilen by the prin ciples of eternal Justice. Assuming the currency of tbe eountry to consist of two-thirds paper and one-third metal, and asmiimlrig alse that tbe money of a country, whatever may be Its com ponent parts, regulates all value and expresses the true amount which the debtor has to pay hicredltor, the effect of the change upon that relation and nit on the property of tbe country would Ih? most ruinous;. AU property would be reduced In value to one-third of Its present normal amount, and evory debt or would in effect have to pay three tin i as much aa he bad contracted for. Have gentlemen roflerted upon fhe confluence of their system of deple tion? 1 have already stated thai the country Is Ixini down, by weight of debt. If the currency be greatly dim inished, a beyond ail example It bits been, how Is-this dibt to ! eMln- guish-d? rroperty, the resource on which the ilelitor relied for his ty- ment w ill decline In value, and It may happen that a man who hoiusnly con tracted a debt on the faith of prriewy which, bad a value at Urn time fully ade quate to warrant the debt will tlnd him self wtlped of all his jsroperty and his debt remains unextinguished. The gentleman from Pennsylvania (Mr. BucUauan baa put the case of two nations. In one f which the amount of Us euxren7 slmll Im? double what It Is in th other, and. as ht eontomls, the prices of all property will lie dim Me In the former nation of what they are in l 1m? latter. If this be true of two nat ions. It must be eqirally true of one whom circulating medium Is at one ! rlod double wha l tt Is at auother. Now, as the friends of the bill agree, we ' hav been and yet are in this Inflated J plate: our currency has lieeti double, or In something like that proportion, of what was necessary, and we must come down to the lowest standard. Iio they ; not perceive that inevitable ruin to 1 thousand must be the Inevitable eon- j sequence.' a timn. for example, own- Inj; property to the value of i.0OQ con- j tracts a delft of ?.Vxi. Uj- the red tie- j tion of one-half of the currency of the I country his property in effect becomes reduced to the value of $2.ri00. liut his debt undergoes no corresponding re duction, lie gives np all his property and remains still lu debt Thus this measure will operate on the debt or class and that which for that reason most needs the protection of govern ment But If the effect of this hard money policy upon the debtor class be Injuri ous it Is still more disttmrous if jiosslble to the laboring classes. Knterprlse will be checked or stopped, employment will become more dlftlcuH, and the poorer classes will be subjected to the greatest privations and d 1st res. And what Is the remedy to be provid ed for this unhappy scute of the coun try? I have converse freely with the members of the Philadelphia commit tee. They are real political working men intelligent, s-ell acquainted with the general condition and with the suf fering of their partlcutur community. No one who has not a henrt of steel can listen to them without feo'lng the deep est sympathy for the privations and suffering unnecessarily brought upon the laboring classes. Hoth the commit tee and the memorial declare that their reliance la exclusively on the legisla tive branch of the government Mr. President, It Is with subdued feelings of the profotindest humility and morti fication that I am compelled to say that constituted as congress now Is no re lief will be afforded by w unless lta members shall be cnllghtebed and In structed by the people themselves. (To the vice president.) To you, then, sir. In no unfriendly spirit but with feelings softened and subdned by the deep distress which pervade every class of our countrymen, I Make the ap peal. By your offleial and iiersotml re lations with the president yu maintain with him an Intercourse which I neither enjoy nor covet (Jo to him and tell him without exaggeration, but In the language of truth and sincerity, the ac tual condition of his bleeding country. Tell him It Is nearly ruined and un done by the measure he baa been In duced to put into operation. Tell blm that his experiment la operating upon tin; nation like a philosopher's experi ment upon a convulsed animal In an ex bauated receiver and that K muat ex pire In agony If be doea not pause, girt M froe and sound circulation and suffer tfca onortiot of the people to ba retired TaB kla f tU alarm ing decline In the rain" of all property, of the dejrreciatlou of all Urn product ' of Industry, of Ihe stjittnatton In every branch of business and of the clone of numerous manufacturing estnbllnb i meirts which a few sliort month ago were In active and nourishing opera j tion. i Iieplrt to him, If you can find lan ' gnace to portray, the heartrending w retchedness of thousands of tbe work lnsr classes- cast out of employment. Tell him of the tears of belplea widows no longer able to earn tbelr bread and of unclad and unfed rpun who bare been driven by bis policy out of th busy pursuit In which but yesterday they were gaining at honest liveli hood. Cheap Interest Mean Hard Time. "The gold available for coinage In 1SJ8 will be nearly twice the supply of both metals for that purpose In 1883. Hence the glut of gold accumulating In the world's banks and the fall of in terest. When tbe best money can bo borrowed with good security nt 2V, per cent It Is, perhapa, cheap enough and no reasonable man can wish to sub stitute something cheaper." Orego nlan. When there hi a great glut of gold In the banks. It Is a certain sign that the people are destitute of It; when In a land like ours, not yet half developed, money can be obtained at 2' per cent on "good security" It Is a certain proof that no ordinary property la good se curity. Cheap Interest hi a land llko ours I a certain sign that property values are In so mncertainr a state that men dare neither invest In nor improve ordinary property. The reasoning of the Orcgonian la from so fa Lee a stand point that Itexcltcsa suspicion that tbe writer has no comprehension whatever of tbe theme whU-b be essays to din cuss. Tlila country does not want cheap Interest on government bonds. It wants the finances put In a form to enable men to engage In business with a pros pect of making a little profit ; to make sure that If tbey purchase property to day it will bw worth a much or a littie more a year beuce. tne would think that a journal aa bright as the Ore gonlati would scent danger in tbe fat that with thp lut-n-aslJiic gold It appears only aa a lut la the money centers, and by some accursed spell the men who own It dare not use It lu business, but hold It to hftn upon, or In v. -si it lu only thai form of securities which are a Men upon the industry ami protwrty of a whole nation, state or city. t'Ump Interest In the I'uited (fcates means bard times. Salt Lake TrUune. Kniclish Policy to . lee-t Ante-leu. A bank note currency lKi.ted on I'tilted Suites bonds, held by liihLm lmnkers, iuvolver tla coutivl of our money sup ply by tUeui. This Involves toe adaptation of our fiiiandnl policy to those the English iiiiieril froveromerit carried out In India anil lta other subject provinces. Us colonial policy Is to get ha much out of Jucfla aud to give as llt-le ns possible. It forces up tbe price of money In order to force down tho price of Indian wheat, cotton, rice ami other agrbrultural food stall, aud raw material. NeccssarOy, the English bidders of our bonds occupy Uie some attitude towards our producers that they do towards those -f India. It Is n pnrt of English Imperial policies to keep down agricultural pric In all iKirts of tho wrld. English bondholders, rnn lxlng national hanks In the rutted Htates, will continue to use their whole Influence for this purpose. Un less we can have free eolnujre tbey aaiw succeed. Klxteou to one or, bust, means that we are going to have It In spite, of bayonets, and In spite of boodle. Jour nal of Agriculture, It Kye to the Main thnnre. The people generally may be Indig nant over the brutality of a Weyler in Cuba or engaged Id a righteous war to drive Spanish barbarity from the West era LleiniKphere, or grieved over tho siitTerltiK of our own biuve soldier on account of the InaensiMlty, Indiffer ence aud Incompetence of the War I)e pnrtment, but tbe gold combination and the bankers' association, unmoved by any of these things pursue the even tenor of their way with coolness, de liberation aud great industry, looking after thu Congressional elections. They bare a banking acbome pri-pari-d, and lta passage through Congress, wbilo .they hare a President pledged to sign It. outweighs all other cotuslderailons to them. If tbey can pas tbelr bill and get their banking scheme Into operation they fully believe they will then havo the people at their mercy and will bo aide to control all succeeding elections. Sliver Knight-Watchman. Nonsense at Wsahinsrton. It Is given out that Secretary .of Btato Isy resigned because he la a poor man and couldn't afford to entertain the for eign ambassadors and things as social custom In Washington foolishly de mands, hay could butt made himself a great man If he bad attended to busi ness and not tried to make a social play of bis cabinet position. It's all non sense to feel It a duty to feed the for eign diplomat on champagne and ter rapin. Give 'cm draught beer and bun sandwiches, If they must lie -fed. Tbla thing of having a champagne appetite on a lieer Income baa raised tbo dlckena with many a man before Day. Toledo Bee. An Ignis Fstnna, Tbo nation Is only tbe sum total of fhe Individuals that compose It; and tho progress of wealth Is Illusory If ob tained at tbe. prlco of tha gouvral ml. ery. Blsmondl. When Will They th isjbtt Unjuat taxation has alwayi boon tho eanao of revolution. To-day tbo homo bttlldora of America art paying ton timoa tkotr Joat share of tho taiasvBow lea. will th7 pan tbto to Mwml