AUGUST 31, 19M fetBRASK cTi.c HISTlMiUL bUClETY The Commoner. 0 years ago that Ire Invested forty-lour cents in postage stamps, pasted them on a letter ad dressed to Secretary of the Treasury John Qf Carlisle and awaited developments. Ho bid for about $8,000,000 of bonds at various prices and was allotted $1,500,000. These ho disposed of at a tremendous advance, realizing nearly $100,000 profit. That was his start as a flnancior. . 'I've got a warm spot in my heart for postage stimp bidders he said laughingly to a World reporter, 'and, moreover, I have proved it Sam Byerley, tho express company clerk who was smart enough to put in a successful bid for $5,800,000 of tho Panama canal bonds, won't have to go back to his desk in the American Express company's office when ho returns from Europe. I have had Byer ley elected vice president of the Abraham "White Bond company, a new corporation. He will fill tho bill. He has an expert knowledge of bond matters and has shown that he possesses the kind of business courage and judgment which pushes a man into the forefront these days.' " TWO OFFICIAL STATEMENTS, one showing the aggregate money in circulation in the United States March 1, and the other the pro duction of the great South African gold region for the month of July concurring has, in the opin ion of the Omaha Bee, a suspicious significance. The Bee says: "Our total circulation on that date reached the unprecedented figure of $2,757,000,000, being an Increase of $12,800,000 for July and $152,400,000 for the twelve months. The per capita thus on that date was $32.52 against $32.45, the highest point ever reached before. The treas ury report shows that not in half a century has the proportion of gold in our circulation been so great as now, nor as rapidly growing as lately, most of the great gain in recent months being gold and a large part of it through importation by transfer of the South African output. In July the officially recorded output of the South Africa mines amounted to $10,500,000, as against $8, 700,000 as the highest previous record, and the total product of that district alone for the current year will probably be $120,000,000, or not very far below the low point of the world's gold annual output within the memory of men still living. Themines of the United JEjtates are expected this year" to add over $100,000,000. The world's pro duct, fotbe, year can. hardly be much less than $350,000,000, or far more than the annual incre ment of the value of b'bth gold and silver not many years ago." THE FIRST COINAGE in the American col onfes, says a writer in the Kansas City Journal, was in 1652, when the general court of Massachusetts established a mint in Boston, and John Hull, mint master, struck silver shil lings, sixpences and threepences. The Journal's writer adds: "All of these coins bore the device of the pine tree. They were of the same fineness as the English coin of like denomination, but of less weight. This mint continued in operation, for thirty-six years. After a while the 'royal oak' was substituted for the pine tree, in order to .'con ciliate King Charles II., who disliked this mint ing by a colony. All the above named coins bore the date of 1652. But twopenny pieces were added with the date of 1662. No other colony had a mint until 1659, when Lord Baltimore caused shillings, sixpences and groats to be coined for use in Maryland. James II. issued ten coins for circulation in America, though few of them found their way 'hither. In 1722, 1723 and 1733 copper coins were minted in England with the legend. 'Rosa America? There were also copper half pence issued in 1773 for circulation in Virginia, and in 1774 silver shillings were added. Florida and Louisiana had colonial coins of their own be- . fore they became parts of the United States." THE HENY GEORGE memorial isnow attract ing widespread attention. The Johnstown (Pa.) Democrat says: "It will. have been sixty seven years on the 2nd of September since Henry George, whom the Duke of Argyll many years later derisively dubbed 'the Prophet of San Fran cisco,' first saw the light in Philadelphia. Not many Pennsylvanians know that this man who ex ercised so profound an influence on the thought of the world and whose philosophy is daily find ing a wider and wider acceptance was a son of the Keystone state. For some strange reason the majority of the people have the impression that he was of foreign birth. Yet Henry George was a native of Pennsylvania and his youth was spent in the City of Brotherly Love. It isfthe. purpose of the Democrat .to celebrate the sixty- seventh anniversary of tho birth of thin lllnnJrfnnn son of Pennsylvania in a befitting manner and its issue of September 1 will ho a sort of memo rial number, enriched by contributions from many men distinguished in tho great democratic move ment to which 'Progress and Poverty,' 'Social Problems 'The Land Question 'Protection or Free Trade?' and 'The Condition of Labor' gavo so tremendous an impulse. Among these contrib utors will bo William Jennings Bryan, Justico William- J. Gaynor of tho supromo court of Now York, Edward Osgood Brown of the appellate court of Illinois, Tom L. Johnson, Louis F. P03t, William Lloyd Garrison, Willis J. Abbott, Robert Baker and many others. Already acceptances of an invitation to contribute to this number have been had from men of high standing in tho demo cratic movement and it Is believed that those art icles will bo entirely worthy of the writers and ot tne occasion." THOMAS SPEED MOSEBY, pardon secretary to the governor of Missouri, has written for Harper's Weekly an interesting article ontltled, "Does Capital Punishment Tend to Diminish Capi tal Crime." Mr, Moseby's contribution is a record of inquiry, addressed to the attorney generals of the forty states, which Inflict the death penalty. Eighteen of the forty declined to express an opinion. Only sixteen of tho attorney generals of states which inflict the death penalty declared themselves as clearly of tho opinion that capital punishment does tend to diminish capital crime. Two of the forty were positive In their conviction that tho death penalty does not tend to diminish capital crimes, and stated their opinion that tho death penalty should be abolished, while four of the forty gave qualified answers. In the five states of Kansas, Maine, Michigan, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin, where capital punishment does not exist, the attorney generals have noted no In crease In capital crime since the abolition of tho death penalty, and generally express themselves as satisfied with tho conditions existing in their respective states. In Michigan, Wisconsin and Rhode Island capital punishment was abolished over fifty years ago, and has not since been re-enacted. Though nominally prescribed by law in Kansas, the death penalty can be executed in that state only upon the governor's warrant, and the Kansas governors have persistently declined to issue a death warrant, the condemned persons, meanwhile, remaining in prison. In five other states where the death penalty exists the trial juries have power to commute it to life impris onment. THE DEATH PENALTY was abolished in Iowa several years ago, but was again en acted by the legislature, as the attorney general said in his letter to Mr. Moseby, "because of the increase of. murders In the state." Mr. Moseby says: "It does not follow, of course, that these sequent murders were consequent upon the aboli tion of the death penalty. Singularly enough, the experience of Maine has been quite tho reverse of this. The death penalty was abolished in Maine in 1876. In 1883 it was re-enacted for the crime of murder alone. In 1885, just two years later, the governor of Maine, in his message, re ferring to the death penalty, remarked that there had been 'an unusual number of cold-blooded mur ders within the state during the two years last past and that the change in the law relating to murder had not afforded the protection antici pated. Two years later, in 1887, the death pen alty was again abolished, and advices from Maine are to the effect that the sentiment of the people of that state is so strongly against capital pun ishment that there. Is little likelihood that the death penalty will ever be re-established there. The general tendency of American legislation is now and for some time past has been, unquestion ably, against capital punishment." FROM A PERSONAL study of niore than two thousand cases Mr. Moseby is convinced that most crimes are committed by persons who either expect to escape all punishment, or who, upon the spur of the moment, are regardless of all punishment, or who are governed by cosmic, social, or individual factors which render the prospect of punishment inoperative as a deterrent agency at the time of the commission of the crime. Mr. Moseby concludes his Interesting art icle in this way: "If not necessary to kill "the offender for the protection of society from the individual malefactor or to deter others from the commission of similar crime, then justification can be Bought in the lex talionis alone; or, in other words, it must be justified purely as a mat- ter of retaliation and vindictive punishment, ac cording to tho Mosaic principle of 'an oyo for an oyo, a tooth for a tooth otc, And, indeed, though defended by publicists on otbor grounds, tho p?o lotariat always justifies capital punishment for murder ns purely a matter of retaliation, thinking it ontlrely rational and jU8t that tho blood of tho culprit bo nhbd by way of ntonomont for tho blood of- his victim; for, as somo of tho ultra pious declaro, it is written that 'WItoaoover shed deth man's blood, by man shall his blood be shod Yet tho laws of modern civilization (with this slnglo excoptlon) nowhere contemplate retaliation or revenge. Such considerations are entirely for eign to every modern juristical concept. Al though the Idea of retaliation was common among cortain of the ancientsnotably tho Hebrowa and among tho barbaric peoples of Europe dur ing tho Middle Ages, It Is no longor recognized in tho civil establishments of tho modern era, If a man burn tho dwolling of another, wo do not burn his dwelling In return. If ho publish a libel the law does not decrco tho publication of a libel against him. If ho commit a felonious assault, tho law does not authorize a similar assault against him on tho part of the victim or tho vic tim's relatives, as was tho case under the ancient laws of England. All these crude conceptions 6f justico have gone tholr way, with the thumb screw and tho rnck, with trial, by compurgation, combat, and ordeal. And tho cruel and vengeful laws of capital punishment, 'those laws In the language of Victor Hugo 'those laws that dip the finger In human blood to write tho command ment "Thou shalt not kill," thoss impious laws that make ono lose one's faith in humanity whoa they strike the culpable, and that cause ono to doubt God when they smite tho Innocent' thoBO laws, too, are passing away bofora the enduring eloquenco of men like Baccarla, Motesquiou, Tur got, Franklin, Guizot, Hugo, and John Bright, and tho inexorable logic of an experience that is teach ing the world tho folly of shedding human blood:" PERISH THE THOUGHT i The Union Pacific directors held a meeting July 19. To an executive committee they re ferred the question of a dividend. Tho dividends were announced August 17. During the four weeks intervening between tho reference of dividends and tho announcement of tho dividends the, Union Pacific and Southern Pacific stocks enjoyed .a material advance. Tho Wall Street Journal do clares that "during the four wcoks .during whfbb this exclusive knowledge rested with tho Union Pacific directors these two stocks have scored tho moat remarkable price movements of their history." The Journal undertakes to banish the thought that any directors, or executive officers of tho Union Pacific or tho Southern Pacific "sold his honor for stock profit." It refuses to believe that any director, or executive officer of tho Union Pacific or the Southern Pacific "sold his honor for stock profit." It refuses "to believe that any of the directors or officers knowing that a dividend would be declared, and that there would be a consequent advance in the stock went out and slyly purchased large blocks of these stocks because, In tho opinion of the Journal, that w6uld not have been fair, it would not have been hon orable, and it Is, as tho Journal says, "an awful thing to be so bound in chains of honor." Of course, these gentlemen would not have in dulged in such tactics. They are of the stuff from which "defenders of the national honor" are made. Indeed, in 1896, they were conspicuous among tho men. who made "great sacrifices'' in order to preserve tho honor of this great republic of ours. Would any of these defenders "sell his honor for Btock profit?" Perish tho thought; for we do not know that an old line Insurance official ' could not be persuaded to misappropriate the funds of his policyholders; an officer of the re publican national committee could not be re strained from "putting it back" when he learned that he had been the recipient of stolen funds; "and a duck would not take to water on a warm day in June? " JJJ The St. Joseph (Mo.) Observer, a weekly dem ocratic newspaper, has made its appearance. C. F. Cochran, formerly representative in congress, is tho editor, whllo Frank Freytag is the business manager. Mr. Cochran has a wide acquaintance among democrats, and the fact that he is editor of the Observer will provide for democrats, at least, the assurance that the Observer will faith fully defend the public interests. JJJ "The way to. keep cool in bed" remarks an exchange, "is to go to bed with a calm and placid mind," That would be easy if the grocery bills ' and rent were not due. . ' ' - x &