. VOLUME 3", NUMBER aj, nation "which yourVr system makes between the banker and tho rest of tho people, and you ara asked to explain why tho administration should always yearn .for tho financier and, yet bo indif ferent to the manner in which the financier treats his customer. , SixthHave you evor read Jefferson's opinion of a bank currenqy? Ho declared that banks of issue were moro dangerous than standing armies. He pointed out that their power to contract and expand tho currency enabled them to increase or decroaso prices at will, j When you know the spec ulative tendency of the dayand tho embezzle ments .which appear after every marked fall in stocks always reveals this how can you doubt that this power to change tho volumo of currency and thus affect prices will bo seized upon by those who stand at the head of tho banking in terests? If-you say that the law can reduce to narrow limits the power of tho banks, to expand or contract tho currency, does that not destroy the flexibility that thoso prate, about who want a rubber currency? How can you have flexibility without vesting somewhere tho power to contract and expand? Is it not dangerous to vest .this power In tho banks, and allow 'them to use it for thoir own profit? And if authority is given to tho secretary of- the treasury to control them, can you explain why it is safer to allow this official to control the vc io of bank currency than it would bo to control the volumo of greenbacks? Metallic money is a flexible currency. Tho amount can be increased by coinage or import and it can be decreased by melting or export. Tho paper portion of tho currency must bo either fixed in amount or flexible. If it is flexible there must be a power somewhero which will detorinlne tho conditions upon which it can bo expanded, or con tracted. If in your next report you advocate a flexible paper currency would it bo out of placo to ask you to give your reasons for trusting this almost omnipotent power to those frail and human members of society who engage in tho banking business and who are as constantly tempted to look after their own interests, as those engaged in any other business? VSeventh In what respect would an asset cur rency, such as you have advocated, be superior to an emergency currency issued by tho government to any one who would present a government bond and indicate a willingness to forego the Interest . on the bond while the currency was outstanding In, this way the government would loan upon Its own obligations to any one who had a govern ment obligation; it" would Bavo interest upon the bond while the currency was outstanding, and the man who drew the currency would bo interested in returning it when the stress was over. Such a plan would give relief to the public directly with out tho intervention of bankers. It is true that business men might bo tempted to put their ac cumulations in bonds which could be thus util ized when needed instead of In the banks, but unless tho government is being run in tho Inter est of the bankers this ought to be no objection to tho plan. Greenbacks thus issued would be a le gal tender, would not increase tho obligations of banks, and would not shako credit When the debt is paid ol the government can .still issue an emergency currency if desired. . If tho asset currency is safer and better for the people, you are the proper one to point It- out The case may be stated in a few words. Thero is a grave suspicion that the asset currency, now called an emergency currency, is merely the fore runner of a permanent asset currency, and this suspicion is increased by tho fact that you in your last report announced that the time had com when the people nad to decide whether they would have a permanent national debt as a basis for bank notes, or provide some other bafcis. The advocates of a bank currency recognize that it The Coinmonor. would be difficult to defend a permanent national debt upon which the people would pay Interest merely to give the banks a chance to issue notes upon which ,they (tho banks) would draw interest Is not this emergency currency the "nose(of the camel?" Qr, If that illustration has a foreign Jlayor, Js it not tho edge of tho wedge? a It not intended to establish the principles of an asset currency upon -which tho banks can expand later? if you believe In the right of the people to self-government, will you not admit that they havo a right to know the purpose of the asset currency bill? If you believe in the capacity of the people for self-government, do you not believe that they are capable of considering and deciding. this ques tion after a fair understanding of all the matters connected . with it? If such a currency is wise, how is it arid why is it that no republican con vention outlines a plan or specifically indorses the principle? And in this connection it may not be out of place to ask why it. Is that the republi can party has not for the 'last twenty-five years stated specifically in advance of an election tho financial policy which tho leaders of the republi can parly intended-to pursue after tho, election? If you, Mr. Secretary, will answer the ques tions above submitted either in a speech and I read your many speeches with pleasure or in an interview and you are frequently interviewed or in a government report The .Commoner will bo glad to publish your answer and to give it tho consideration which,, because of your official posi tion, your utterances deserve. THE COMMONER. Selfishness Admitted." Those who are in favor of turning the cur rency of the country over to national banks as sume, as a rule, that thV banks will exercise in a patriotic way the authority conferred upon them. Occasionally a republican paper is candid enough to admit that the banker acts purely from selfish motives, and such an admission Is worth repro ducing for the benefit of those who may ignor antly hold a different opinion. The Lincoln (Neb.) Daily Star is one of the most candid of republican papers, and in a re cent issue it had the following in regard to banks: "But a man who engages in banking, the same as those who engage in farming, mer chandizing, manufacturing, etc., does so for the purpose of making money for himself. That is why he puts up United States bonds as security for circulation because he ex pects to make a profit on the bank notes. When he can make a distinctly greater profit by recovering the bonds and selling them ho will ordinarily do it If a farmer could -secure from the government circulating notes on tho security of warehouse receipts for his stored grain, and if the price of grain should subsequently rise so that he could make much greater profit by recovering his warehouse receipts and selling the groin, he would cer tainly do it. That is to say, he would do just what the banker is doing all within his legal rights. "It is a simple plain matter of business. There is not a particle of sentiment in it Tho Banker and the farmer act on the same general considerations of interest and upon the same conditions of human nature." The Star is correct, in saying that "is a sim ple, plain matter of business," but if the banker is going to exercise the power for his own' ad vantage, why give him a power that can be used against farmers and merchants, and people in other occupations? If he is going to sell his bonds, and withdraw circulation every time he can make a profit by selling tne bonds, will not the currency fluctuate in such a way as to jeo pardize the interests of the public? Must tho security of the people be endangered whenever tho bank has a chance, to speculate and make, mdro that way than in ordinary banking? If the pub lic generally understood that the banker is as self- , - ish as other p;oplo, arid that he will use for his own advantage power put into his hands, there would be few outside of tho bankers' association 'who. would be in favor of turning the financial 'system, of tho United States over to the financiers, L,aw-ilade Value. In an editorial recently printed in The Com moner and entitled, "Tho Monetary Peril," it was said that: "The monometallist overlooks the fact that what Is at onco intrinsic value is in part the metal value created by law-mado demand. Tho monetary use of gold Is its principal use and if this use were withdrawn, -tho-market price would necessarily fail." v ; An El Paso, Tex., reader of The Commoner says that "this paragraph points out an argument against the Bihgle gold standard that is not, I think, sufficiently emphasized by the advocates' of bimetallism. That gold is not principally valua ble on account of any intrinsic value. inherent with tho metal itself does not seem to enter the mind of the average monometallist while they are con tinually harping upon tho law-made value of sil ver. It occurs to tho writer that converts from the single gold standard might be made among the honest and patriotic portion of our opponents by proving to them that a great part of what they are taught to consider intrinsic value of gold is onto", law-made value and would disappear at once if the nations ol the world should unite in de preciating that metal as they have done in the case of silver. What would gold be worth now if it should immediately be demonetized by all tho nations that have demonetizrd silver? The cham pions of bimetallism have been thrown upon tho defensive to such an extent that-in" trying to teach the people what would happen to silver if its free and unlimited coinage should" be 'enacted, they have not laid -sufficient k stress upon ...what would happen to gold if its free arid unlimited coinage should be curtailed or entirely suspended." Eyes are Opening. The Sioux City Tribune, a newspaper that in recent years has supported the republican party, has. concluded that "the banks that are on tho insldo of Wall street financiering are now asking for fiat money, but under the control of tho banks." And tho Tribune has come to the con clusion that "the country will probably decide on two things at an early day: to abolisn a tariff so high that monopoly may find shelter behind it, and to curtail tho privileges of the national banks." The Sioux City Tribune seems to have reached this conclusion becau 3 as it explains: "The Chi cago Tribune, a newspaper owned and edited by multi-millionaires, Ib responsible for the statement that the recent tremendous slump in Wall street was the direct result of a policy Inaugurated by the great financi-rs, and managed "by J. Pierpont Morgan, for the purpose of reducing prices. Prices were pounded aown, lower ana -lower, un til solid railroad stocks were bought on less than a 6 per cent basis. Then they took an upturn of 10 to 20 points. Many of these stocks Weie leaded on the public by Mr. Morgan. Steel stocis was sold to employes of the steel trust at moro than double the price it now brings. This was dono ostensibly for tho benefit of the more than 3UU,U00 employes. History will judge it diiferently." JJJ Cleveland and the Income Tax. A reader of The Commoner has called men tion to a publication which .-laims that Mr. Clee land secured the adoption of tho income tax na ture of the Wilson bill. As the editor of The Com moner was then a member ot the ways andJ$tf&n9 committee and assisted in preparing udrincomo tax .measure he knows whereof fie sJKis wUea he says tllat Mr. Cleveland was nodKy not r t i t j r .' . J.