DiTrrt IJCi ik.VO tk done. .communicate wiUi .v uiiam twin, wtarwo-Ve-ownnd near th nlanimrl . I Omana ououav.. J. , .-.., . SUPPLEMENT TXD THE COLUMBUS JOURNAL. Friday, Sept 10. OHIO DEMOCRATIC PLATFORM. Its Assertion and Arsamcnti Con sidered and Aaawe-red. Hecognlrlng that the money question Is paramount to all others at thin tiuic. we in vito attention to the fact that ihe Constitu tion r.auK's silver auil gold together as the money metals of the United Sides. This statement is inaccurate and inten tionally misleading;. TLe only place in which the constitution "namcc silver and sold together" is where it declares that "no State shall make anjthing ibut gold and silver coin a tender in payment of debts." It does not say that siiver and ?o!d shall loth be coined in an unlimited manner or that cither one or both shall be i lined at all. but specifically gives to Con sr's the jiowcr to determine whtt the coinage of the Tinted States shall be. both a to the tnet.ils used and their relations by saying in explicit tenns in section 8: "The Congress shall have power to oin money and regulate the value thereof." It does not "name silver and sold togeth er" a the platform says, but names gold nnd silver together, pointedly Riving the preference to sold by savins in section 10: "No State shall make anything but sold and fiilver coin a payment for debts." If anything is to le inferred as to the re lation which it intended that the two metals should bear it U clearly that gold was to be preferred, since it is first named in the only place where the metals are mentioned. If the f rimers of the platform wanted to te frank, why did they not follow the wording of the constitution in their statement and say "gold and silver" instead of reversing it and saving "silver and gold?" The first coinage Jaw passed by Congress under the Constitution made the" silver dol lar the money unit and admitted gold to free 'jlnage at a ratio bated upon the bllver dol lar unit. The first coinage law clearly made gold a standard by first naming all the gold coins which, it said, should be of the value of a given number of units, and said that the unit should be "of the value of a Spanish milled dollar as the same is new current, and to contain 41G grains of standard silver." If the advocates of ilver insist that this act interpreted the meaning of the constitution and that this interpretation must be followed, why do they now insist upon a staudard silver dol lar with only 312 grains of silver in stead of the 410 grains which the act specifically names? By their own propo sition they demand a violation of what they claim is a constitutional requirement. This act which they claim is an interpre tation of the constitution on this ques tion provides that "every fifteen pounds' weighty of pure silver shall be of equal value in all payments with one pound weight of pure gold." If this is an inter pretation of the constitution why do these sticklers for its observance propose to vio late it by saying that every sixteen pounds' weight of silver shall now be qua! to one pound of gold? Would there not be equal authority for saying that vvery seventeen or eighteen or twenty or thirty ixiunds' weight of silver shall be equal to one pound weight of gold? By their own proposition to change the ratio they admit that neither the constitution nor the first act passed under it is binding us to the future relations of gold and sil ver as money. The fact that this act spe cifically said "that every fifteen pounds' weight of pure silver shall be of equal value with one pound weight of pure gold" indicates that gold was intended to be the measure of value, for had the framers of this act intended that silver should be the measure they would have said that one pound of gold should be equal in value to fifteen pounds of silver. Alexander Hamilton, who was one of the framers of the constitution and whose report to Con gress was the basis of this act. said of the alleged unit, the Spanish dollar, "that spf ies of coin has never had any sertled or standard value " while gold has a fixed price by weight with an eye to its fineness. This greater stability of the value of gold coins i an argument of force for regarding the money unit as hav ing been hitherto virtually attached to gold rather than silver." If the framers of this platform insist that the first coinage act passed under the constitution i an exact interpretation of the meaning of that instrument, why have they and their party always insisted that a protective tariff is a violation of the constitution when they know that the vvry firt act passed under that constitu tion declared that the tariff duties which it levied were "for the support of govern ment nnd the encouragement and protec tion of manufactures' We declare that tire -act of ISTJ basresnlted in the appreciation of gold. It. has not "resulted in the appreciation of gold," because gold-has not appreciated. Any -article "appreciates" in value only when there is an increased demand for it either because of the reduction in the quantity or an enlarged need for it in the current affairs of life. The figures of the best statisticians -aow that the pdd com of the world and the total money of the world have increa;! much more rap idly than the population since 1S7. hence the absurdity of the claim that it has "ap preciated" in value, tss the amount for each individual in the world has greatly increased since the passage of the act in question. The gold maney of the world has more than doubled -since 1873. the sil ver money of the world has nearly or quite trebled in that time and the paiier money has also increased largeir. while the pop ulation rf the world has iacreased only 25 per cent in the same period. It is tnus evident that the total an&ount of money for each individual in the world is much greater tkan in 187:1 and ihat there can thus be n increased per capita demand fr gold and hence no "appreciation" in its value while the fact that a large pro portion of thr? business of the world is now performed with checks, drafts and other forms of credit without the direct use of money further reduces the demand upon gold. The mines of the world produce more gold to-day than they produced of gold and silver together in 1S73. the silver production of to-day is nearly three times what it was in 1673 and the amount of silver now annually coined is more than was produced from the mines of the world in 1873. The number of silver dollars coined in the United States in the fiscal year just ended was two and a half times as many as in the entire history of the mints prior to 1873 and the total number of full legal tender dollars coined by our mints since 1S73 is 5t times as many as were coined in the entire history of the mint prior to the act of IS73. We declare that the act of 1S73 resulted In an appreciation of gold and a corresponding fall In prices. Since it is shown from official statis tics that there has been no appreciation of gold but on the contrary a vast increase in its production and coinage and an in crease in the other classes of money of the world, an increase much more rapid than that of the population, the cause of the fall in prices of commodities must be look ed for elsewhere. This fall in prices is due to the enormous increase in produc tion, and to the reduced cost of produc ing and transporting the products of the farm, factory, forest and mine. Senator Peffer, in his report to the Senate in 18i4 on the cause of the fall in agricultural prices, said: "In Kansas it appears from the report of the secretary of the State Board of Agriculture that it costs 50 cents to raise a bushel of wheat, in Pennsylvania the average cost of pro ducing a bushel of wheat is about 63 cents. Wheat in India costs but about T3 cents a bushel on the farm, 12 cents more puts it aboard ship and 25 cents additional lands it on the wharves in Liverpool. This fifty-cent wheat from India competes (in our best market, Eng land) with wheat on American farms at an average cost of GO cents per bushel. Wages of India farm hands run from 0 to 10 cents of our money per day." The same report shows that the cost of producing wheat on the great farms of California and the Dakotas is less than half the average cost in the Central Mis sissippi valley, while similar conditions prev.nl in Argentine and Australia, which through the extremely low ocean freights are also competitors with us in all the markets of the world. The reduced cost of agricultural products, due to the com bination of low freights and the use of machinery, finds a parallel in the reduced cost of manufacturing in all lines through similar causes, and also in the reduction in the cost of mining and the production of the precious metals, which thus supply the money of the world at a greatly reduc ed cost of that prime measure of value, labor. leoid and retained only Iir-currency and tree monometallism, while other nations, making gold the standard and coining uVrer on government aeeount circulate botii metals in large quantities, approach ing thus more nearly to true bimetallism titan those which by the free and unlimit ed coinage of silver at c iratio widely different from the commercial ratio of the two metals obfin only silver monometal lism. The condition of the people of the countries maintaining the gold standard, or what the framers of this .platform term gold monometallism, ia one .of vastly greater prosperity than that of the peo ple of the countries maintaining the silver standard. There is more money jier eai- ita, better wages, better homes, more com fort of life, more education and more general intelligence among the people of the gold standard countries than among those rf any of the countries having .the silver standard. .Mexico, which is j.rob- ably the most prosperous of the silver standard countries, has a total of $-4.1)5 per capita for its people, the South ArT iean Statt: a per capita of less than $2 aside from the uncovered and depreciated paper. China $3.o., the Central American States .5.Oi while Germany has $17.5'J per capita. Great Britain $20.7S per cap ita. United States $22.57 per capita. Neth erlands $24.25 per capita, and France $35.77 per capita. "Monometallism" has indeed "locked fast the prosperity of an industrial people in the paralysis of hard times" wherever it has been established by the process proposed by this platform, viz.: the unlimited coinage of both met als at a ratio widely differing from their relative commercial value. Cold monometallism Is a British policy and has brought other nations into financial servitude to London. It is also a German policy, a French policy, a Belgian policy, an Austro-Hun-garian policy, a Netherlands policy, a Danish policy, a Russian policy, a Chilian policy, a Peruvian policy, a Japanese pol icy, and in fact the policy of the most enlightened and progressive nations the world over. If the United States were to abandon her present system and under take a greatly enlarged use of silver with out the co-operation of other nations she would abandon the company of the most intelligent, enlightened and prosperous nations of the world and join the ranks of the weakest and least intelligent nations, all of which are hastening to adopt the gold standards as rapidly as possible. It Is not only un-American but anti-Amerl-can. and it can be fastened on the United State? only by the stifling of that spirit and love of liberty which proclaimed our politi cal Independence In 1770 and won It In the war of the Revolution. The "spirit and love of liberty which proclaimed our independence in 177C" and which is still strong in the minds of the people of the United States is not in favor of reducing the citizens of this country to the level of poverty, degradation, ignor ance and practical enslavement which characterize the condition of the masses in the few remaining silver standard coun tries of the world to-day. The only at tempt to "stifle the spirit of love of lib- tor pnbllc and prmste debts. r irtilcB ia receivable for duties to the United State, snail be Issued by tne Government -if the United States and hall be redeemable in cola. This means that aril the paper racney of the country shall be issued by the Govern ment, and would ;ihus be either "fiat money" or must be ustained by keeping in the treasury an enormous metallic re serve, much larger than the one which now exists and which causes so much dis satisfaction to the Democracy and its fiat associates of Populisric and socialistic tendencies. In support of these principles we Invite the co-operation of all men who love liberty andhatecorruption. oppression and tyranny. A combination of higa sounding word, intended only to mislead and inflame un thinking people, and coming with extreme ly ioor taste from a party whose eufcrc record up to the time of it removal from power in 1S01, was directed against the "love of liberty" and in favor of "oppres sion and tyranny." We hereby declare all trusts and monop olies hostile and dangerous t the people's Interests and demand a vigorous enforcement of all anti-trust laws. etc. All of which sounds we'll. But the peo ple are naturally suspicious of such de clarations coming from a party which neg lected during its four years of power to enforce the existing anti-trust laws, and which framed its'tjriff law in the inter ests of the sugar trust, the greatest trust of the land with the singie exception of the one which it is now attempting to place in control of the nation, the silver trust. We demand the immediate recognition of the belligerent rights of the Republic of Cuba. etc. Which it is generally conceded would be of little practical value to the Cubans, and would probably destroy the opportu nity of bringing about, through the peace ful and proper methods of diplomacy, the results for which the people of that island T are now struggling. erty ever made in the United States be- We declare that the act of 1ST.:, demonetiz ing sller without the knowledge and ap proval of the American people, etc The act of 187; did not demonetize sil ver, as is claimed by this sentence of the platform. The act itself says in specific terms that "this act shall not be con strued to affect any act done, right ac quired or penalty incurred under former acts but every such right is herebv sav ed." thus clearly stating that it did not demonetize any of the coins authorized prior to that date, while every one of the four hnndred and fifty million stnmlini silver dollars coined since the passage of that act i and has constantly been a full legal tender, and none of them is or has been demonetized. The act of 1873 was not passed "with out the knowledge and approval of the American people" as the platform asserts. It was submitted to Congress in ApriL 1870, printed thirteen times, discussed at intervals until Jan. 1. 1873 (nearly three years), the debates and discussions filling 144 pages of the Congressional Record" which was published daily during the ses sions in which it was discussed. The American people had ample opportunity to know all of its provisions, and that there was no popular disapproval of it is shown by the fact that 112 of the mem bers of the House which passed it were re-elected, many of them continuing to serve in Congress to the end of their lives, while several are still members of that body, notably William M. Stewart of Nevada, who voted for the bill and who. in a speech delivered on June 12, 1871. said: "The laboring man and the producer is entitled to have his product and his labor measured by the same stand ard of value that measures your national debt. You require from the laboring man gold to pay the interest on jour na tional debt, which is right, which cannot be avoided if yon mean to save national honor: but then give him the same money with which to pay that debt. The ques tion will never be decided until you deter mine the single question whether the la boring man is entitled to have a cold dol lar if, be earns it, or whether you are going to cheKt him with something else." We declare that the act of 1S73 has resulted in a heavy Increase la the burdens of taxation. The increase in the burdens of Federal taxation are mainly due to the increase in expenditures for pensions, public build ings and river and harbor improvements, and any party which would specifically declare against a continuation of these would quickly find itself repudiated by the people. We declare that the act of 1ST?. has reunited in a heavy increase in the burden of ail debts, public and private. The census figures show that the in crease in debts since 1S73 has been, in a very large share of the eases, for the pur chase of homes or the improvement of farms, and that the sections in which this increase in mortgage indebtedness has been greatest, have shown as a result the greatest activity and the greatest increase in actual wealth and vnnine prosperity. We declare that the jet of 1873 resulted in the enrichment of the money-lending class at home and abroad. The money lending class can only "grow rich" by the interest which it receives for money loaned, and everybody knows that the rates of interest have greatly fallen since 1873 and that the opportunity for enrichment by this means must conse quently have been correspondingly reduc ed. The usurious rates of interest which were possible in many sections of the country prior to 1S73 are now absolutelv prohibited by State legislation. We declare that the act of ists resulted In the prostration of Indus try and the Impoverishment of the people. Industry was not "prostrated" or the people "impoverished" until the success of the Democratic party at the polls in 1802, and its free trade legislation which fol lowed paralyzed industry in the United States and transformed its communities of busy workmen into idlers, thus bringing "prostration of industry and impoverish" ment of the people." There was never greater prosperity in the United States or-' any other country tnan that of the years immediately preceding the Democratic success of 1892. and never greater "pros tration of industry and impoverishment of the people" than that which followed that Democratic success. It is because of the "prostration of industry and impoverish ment of the people" through the opera- I of peace, etc tions of the Democratic party that its I So nr we gan in lSo'l by the very party and the very leaders who are now proposing to de grade the working people of this country to a level of those least intelligent and prosperous on the face of the earth. We demand the free and unlimited coinage of both silver and gold at the present legal ratio of 1 to 1 without waiting for the aid or consent of any other nation. A policy which all the intelligent nations of the world have abandoned since the enormous production of silver has brought it to a ratio of 34 to 1 with gold and the divergence still increasing. The product of the silver mines of the world since 1873 is practically one-half as much as that produced from the mines of the world in 300 years preceding that date, as shown by the highest official authorities. We demand that the standard silver dol lars shall be full legal tender equally with gold for all debts, pnbllc and private. It is now "a full legal tender for all debts, public and private," except where such men as William M. Stewart, John P. Jones, Arthur Sewall, John P. Altgeld, John R. McLean and other silver leaders deprive it of its full legal tender value by making their contracts and loans and rents and interest payable by the poor in gold only. Every one of the 450.000,000 standard silver dollars which we now have is a full legal tender for all debts, public and private, and the party which asserts even by implication that this is not the fact intends either to discredit those dollars or to deceive the people, or both. We favor such legislation as will prevent for the future the demonetization of any kind of legal tender money by private con tract. An excellent plan: but the fact that the leaders of the party proposing this now refuse to follow that plan in their private affairs, casts a suspicion upon the good faith of this public assertion. We are opposed to the policy and practice of surrendering to the holders of the obliga tions of the United States the option re served by law to the Government of re deeming "such obligations in either silver coin or gold coin. Every holder of obligations of the Unit ed States can receive bis pay for them in silver if he desires or in gold if he desires. If the Government were to insist on pay ing in cue metal to the exclusion of the other it would immediately discredit its obligations and at the same time injure the standing of a large share of the money which it has itself issued and promised by implication or in words to keep as good as the best. While these obligations call for payment in "coin," that term, when the acts authorizing the bonds were passed. related only to tnat wnich was the equiv alent of gold in value and purchasing pow er, and to attempt to take advantage of the fact that the metal of which a part of this coin is now made has in the mean time depreciated in value, and force coins of that particular class upon the holders of those obligations would be dishonest and would lay the Government liable, as it does those who propose it, to the charge of taking advantage of a technicality "to do a dishonest and treacherous act. It would bring upon the Government of the United States, as it does upon the men who now make it, the contempt and con demnation of honest men the world over We are opposed to the Issuing of lnteret Wbeac's Valuable Liesson. The silver leaders are utterly unable to explain the rise in the price of wheat, and at the same time maintain thei t ar gument of last year. The ablest of them, including Mr. Jones of Nevada and Mr. Teller, have ventured upon the task, but all have failed. All are forced to confess that the natural law of supply and de mand does apply in the present price of wheat. But 6uch a confession could not have been wrung from them a year ago. Then they were contending, almost fierce ly, that wheat was low solely because money was scarce. Increase the volume of money, they insisted, and wheat would go up. But it would not and could not go up without such an increase. Wheat is now at the dollar mark, and even higher, and yet there is no more money in the country than there was last year. And free silver meanwhile has not only not been decreed, but the policy stands re jected at the polls. Now that the problem has been solved, and by a process which all may so easily comprehend, it seems strange that so many people last year should have be lieved so implicitly in Mr. Bryan's con tentions about money and prices. The Nebraska leader and his lieutenants would allow nothing whatever to the law of supply and demand. Silver had been struck down. By that act half of the money of redemption of the world had been destroyed, and hence low prices fol lowed for everything. They picked out wheat for illustration, and now wheat, obeying the spurned law of supply and demand, goes to. the dollar mark. Short crops abroad, which create a demand for the American wheat supply, knock the spots out cf the illustration, and force a confession from the silver leaders which completely disjoints all of the fine-spun theories upon which they tried to put Mr. Bryan into the White House. Washing ton Star. Myers and McLean. At the recent Democratic State conven tion Allen O. Myers was the personal representative of John It. McLean. As such he not only carried out the wishes of his chief, but was. in fact, the most influ ential Democrat in all that gathering. He dictated the platform, and on the Sunday before the convention, which met on Wed nesday, told a Blade representative exact ly what it would contain, and he told it straight. Myers knows McLean well. He was connected with McLean's newspaper for years, and each trusted the other to the extent that he dared. For a time there was enmity between these two men. My ers was not drawing a salary from Mc Lean. At this time Myers wrote a book. It was labeled "Bosses and Boodle in Ohio Politics." On page 213 of this book Myers had this to say of McLean: He has no morals. He Is a stranger to sen timent. He is not deterred bv scruples. If he has an object in view and has the money to buy it. In his code of life no law. no man. no community has a right to question his act. He believes every man has his price. He goes straight to results and cares noth Ing about public opinion, methods or the rights of others. When he can get or has got what he wants he pays promptly and liber ally. It doesa t seem possible that such a character ran exist In an enlightened age But John R. McLean is a fact. His exist ence must be acknowledged. And now this same McLean is boss of the Democratic party in Ohio, and a can didate for United States Senator, while this same Myers is his chief henchman loiedo Biaae. mirer, the Baltimore Sun, expresses in this paragraph. dinned from a recent edi torial: "It will not lie long at the present rate before we shall have duplicated the cost of the war in (tension. This would be readily acquiesced in. however onerous, if the money all went to the deserving, but the fact that most of it is wasted is legitimate cause for criticism." W aste is unnecestnrv or useless ex penditure. The Cleveland theory, as for mulated by the Sun. is that most of the money paid to the veterans, their widows and their orphans, has been unnecessarily or uselessly expended. Mr. Cleveland lie lieved that the pension roll was honey combed with frauds. In order to test that belief he was supplied with ample facili ties to hunt down and punish frauds. He spent a deal of money in that quest, and the result x js a complete vindication of the substantial honest v of the nensioners. In his last annual message he presented facts and figures by which he involun tarily proved that the pension roll waf a roll of honor. But although his hunt for frauds was something very much like a failure, he met with success in holding up widows pensious. Washington Post (Dem.). .Mexican Workingmcn in Hard Xiiici. A special commission sent to Mexico by the Trade and Labor Assembly at Chi cago last fall reported that teamsters got $1 per day in Mexican money in the City of Mexico, while those in the city of Chi cago get $1.75 per day in American dol larf ,w,"u' as indicated, are worth near ly 2Ji times as much as the Mexican dol lar. Street car drivers get 75 cents per day ia the City of Mexico in depreciated money, and in the city of Chicago $2.25 per day in good money. Printers in Mex ico, $1.25 per dav; in Chicago, $3. r.-cs-nicn in Mexico. $1.20 per day: in Chicago. $3.--0. Shoemakers in Mexico. $1.25: in M'LEAFS GOLD BOND. TEXT OF THE DOCUMENT AND SKETCH 'OF ITS HISTORY. Man Who Would Pax Workiassaea in 40-Ccnt Silver Dollars Demaada Gold, and Gold Only, for Hint aelf. Official Record Show It. The demand for information about John II. McLean's gold bonds continues so strong that we reproduce this week the bond in full with a brief statement of in history. It is its own comment upon the candidacy of a man who advocates a cause of payiug workingmea in 40-cent silver dollars and demands good gold dol lars, and gold dollars only, for himself. I he transaction in question is that of a contract made by him with the Columbia Athletic Club of this city it 1S89. in which he requires that organization to make sundry obligations, amounting to $70,000. payable to him individually ia gold coin, both principal and interest. The transaction related to the construc tion of a club house for this organiza tion, the Columbia Athletic Club of the District of Columbia. In that year he made an agreement with the club by which he sold to it certain lots in the fashionable northwest part of Washing ton, near the War. State and Navy De partments, and ereeted thereupon a com modious and costly club house, the price ( thelaqd and the club house being $70, 000. This money the club agreed to pay on or before the 1st of March, 1009. and issued bonds payable to John R. McLean, bearing his name npou their face. These bonds he rennirei! th T?ih In ?vrp tit Chit-go, $2.50. Carpenters in Mexico, pay in "gold coin of the United States o $1.25 per day; in Chicago. $2.80. Bri k- llie present standard of weight and fin layers in Mexico, $1.23; in Chicago. $4 ness." also requiring it to pay the "into per uar. r.nborpr in Movirn :iTU. rents vsv lucreon m lite olil com." per day; in Chicago, $1.25. When'it is re- j There can Le no doubt about the ncci . niembercd that these wages quoted in Mexico are now being paid in alleged dol lars which are worth but about 43 cents as compared with our dollars, which are worth 100 cents, the contrast in earning capacity is something appalling. Business still Improves. Business conditions continue to improve and the reports which come from the high est authorities on this subject are all sat isfactory. The latest issue of Dun's Re view, commenting on busiuess conditions the country over, says: "Every city re porting this week notes increase in trade and nearly all bright prospects. The great change in business is emphasized by the presence of a multitude of buyers from all parts of .the country, by their statements of the situation at their homes, and, more forcibly yet, by the heavy pur chases they are making. But the custom ary signs of prosperity are not lacking. The strong rise in stocks, the growth of bank clearings and railroad earnings, the heavy speculation in many products, but most of all in wheat, have made the week one of surpassing interest even to those who best remember the upward rush in 1S79. It Was Not True, or Course. "No man in public office owes the public anything." The calamity organs are publishing the above and crediting the statement to Sen ator Hanna. The Senator is said to have written the startling sentiment in a letter to Attorney General Watson. It must be classed, says the Times-Star, among the things that are important if true. But it will hardly prove useful to the silver Dem ocrats as a campaign issue. Its virtue in this respect is badly damaged by the dis covery that it is a pure inventiou. Mr. Watson declares that no letter ever re ceived by him from Senator Hanna con tained such a statement. This early ex posure of the fraudulency of the cam paign efforts of the McLean-Chapman crowd is a stunning blow to the rampant apostles of free silver. racy of this statement. The bonds were prepared and signed by the officers of the club and turned over to him. and some of them have since passed into the hands of other parties who now hold them. Not only are these bonds still extant and readily obtainable by those who- desire to verify this statement, but a still more permanent and unimpeachable record of this transaction is found upon the official records of the District of Columbia. The details of the entire transaction between Mr. McLean and the Columbia Athletic Club are set forth in a copy of a deed of trust given in connection with this tranr action. Among the details of this trans action, which are found on the official ree ords. arc copies of the two series of bond which the club was required to g!"e as its form of agreement to pay Mr. McLean the gold which he required from it. There were fo be two classes of bonds, one clas amounting to $45,000, each bond to be for the sum of $1,000. the second class of bonds being for $25,000. also payable in gold, and bearing a higher rate of interest than those of the first class, a copy of which is herewith appended: COPV OF TnE BOND. leaders now abandon their time-honored principles and ask restoration to power on a currency proposition which has been discarded by the most progressive nations of the world and is being rejected by oth ers as rapidly as possible. We are unalterably opposed to monomet allism, which has locked fast the prosperitr of an industrial people in the paralvis of hard times. The adoption of the free coinage of sil ver at the ratio of 1C to 1 would result in true monometallism, with silver as the money n.etaL This is proven by the fact that every country which has attempted to retain the silver standard or the con current free coinage of both metals at a ratio widely different from the commercial ratio of the two metals has lost all of its bearing bonds of the United States in time of nr ofp " ""e So are we all of us, and but fn- !. misfortune that the Government of the United States was placed under the con trol of the Democratic party in 1S92 there would have been no necessity for issuing bonds "in time of peace." It'is something new for that party, however, to announce a general opposition to "issuing bonds in time of peace," as this has frequently happened under Democratic control of the Government, beginning with Jefferson and ending under Buchanan and Cleve land. Congress alone has the power to coin and issue money, and President Jackson declared that this power could not be delegated to corporations or Individuals: we therefore de nounce the Issuance of notes Intended to cir culate money oy national banks as In derocrtloa of the Constitution, and demand Is Pension Money Wasted ? The outcry against the increase of the pension list since the McKinley adminis tration came in still continues, and we have little doubt that it will go on as Ion- as new names are added to the roll. It is not a popular clamor, for a great majority of the American people, irrespective of party, are in favor of the pension laws as they stand and desire their impartial en forcement. One of our contemporaries thinks it unfortunate that .some plan can not be devised to stop the growth of the list. Death is doing a great deal in that direction. It clipped off 3.O0O names last year, and it will continue to clip at an increasing ratio as the years wear on, for even the youngest of the surviving vet erans are getting to be old men. We have, in a recent issue of the Post, explained the increase of the list since the 4th of March by showing that it was due to the Cleveland hold-up. Nearly all the applications granted under the present administration came over from the Cleve land regime. It was the settled policy of Air. vieveiana to noiu up claims and pass uicui .iiuufe lu uis suiicsMji. xnere was no saving to the treasury in this in the long run. for a pension dates back to the time of the application. Most of the held1 up claims were those of widows, clearly proven and sure to be allowed. The Cleveland administration deliberately halted the work of the pension bureau and kept thousands of poor widows out ol the money that belonged to them. If any one doubts this the records of the bureau ill prove it. And it is in perfect har mony with the whole course of Mr. Cleve land on the pension question. His views "Wool at Twenty-rive Cents. Cadiz Republican: It is with pleasure that the Cadiz Republican can announce this week that the price of wool in Harri son County is twenty-five cents a pound. During the past week Messrs. C. M. Hogg & Son have purchased the clips of wool raised by the following well-known farm ers of Harrison County, 35.1100 pounds in all. paying in each case twenty-five cents a pound. The clips of Dunlap Brothers. Cadiz township: John Clifford. Green township: S. B. Porter. Green township: R. R. Cochran. Cadiz township: Joseph L. Thompson A: Son, Cadiz township: Henry McKee. Green township: John McDivitt. Stock township: Samuel Hedges. Cadiz township: Ross Mansfield, Wayne town ship. Jefferson County; H. B. Lacey. La ceyville. and Oliver Roob, Green town ship. What Would Happen. "If the Democrats should gain control of Ohio they would send to the Senate a man who would support the vicious prin ciples of the Chicago platform. The State would be gerrymandered, and fifteen or sixteen men. instead of five, as at present, would be sent to Congress to support these same vicious principles." Chair man Geo. K. Nash. THE roMMBIA ATIir.ETIO CLCU OF THE DITRICT OF COLUMBIA. FIESI IDEIGABE FIVE P3 CE57. G8LD B05D- that G pajer which is made a legal tender j re juat about those which his ardent ad- Itrief Comment. The increase in the production of gold in all parts of the world is proving very discouraging to the free silver theorists. The value of the silver dollar has fallen 10 cents and the price of wheat has risen 25 cents per bushel since the free coinage orators were insisting last year that wheat and silver went hand in hand as to prices. The 1900 election is likely to find the world with a billion dollars more of gold than it had in 181)0. The wonderful in crease in the production of gold in all parts of the world is proving very discour aging to the free silver theorists. The friends of the free coinage proposi tion who have been insisting that their pet financial theory would, if put in practice, increase our sales abroad are not discuss ing very loudly the fact that in the very year in which the country refused to adopt free coinage its exports were the largest in its history, amounting to $1,032,001.- 300. Miss Genevieve Griffith, engaged in raising Chinese pheasants in the Waldo hills, eight miles east of Salem. 'Ore., has about 200 young pheasants that are now taking on plumage. They are yet running at large, and it is hardly possible to dis tinguish domestic from wild birds around the Griffith place. Tor value received, the Columbia Ath letic club of the District of Columbia hereby acknowledges itself Indebted, and hereby agrees to pay. to John 1L Mc Lean, or the bearer hereof, on the first day of March. 1DU!. One Thousand Dol lars, in gold coin of the United Status, of the present standard weight an3 fine ness, at the Citizens' National Bank oZ Washington, at the City of Washington, and Interest thereon in like g!d coin at the rate of five per cent, per annum, on the first days of September aud March of each and every year, on the production ami surrender of the proper coupon here to annexed. This Is one of a series of forty-2ve bonds each of like tenor and effect, numbered consecutively from 1 to 4.". In clusive, and -el-tired by a first mortgage deed of trust bearing een dale herewith, executed and de'lvered by said obligor t' ahl :e.rge V. Sw:irfzl and A.'T. ISri'toii as trustees, for the holders of said bauds, conveying the sa1d estate therein described and the buildings, bet terments and improvements wlitrii may tie recteu or piaecii tliereon ami duly re corded iu the etfice of the Ileorder of Deeds of the District of Columbia. If default of payment of interest on these Ixmds is made and continued for days after due demand, the principal thereof, at the option of said trustees, subjn: to the control of the majority in Interest of said bond, shall become due as providi I In said deed of trust. The obligor hereby expressly waives all. any. and every beuerit or privilege of any ex tension, stay or appraisement law now existing or which may hereafter bi en acted and of all right or equity of re demption In case of sale or foreclosure under the tpruis and provisions of said tlrl of trust. This bond is subject to redemption on the first day of Starch. ISM. or on the first day of September or March of any year thereafter at the option of aald obligor, provided proper notice of the In tention to redeem aud pay for same be given In writing to the holder hereof per sonally or by publication Iu a newspaper of general circulation In said city of Washington, and In either ease not less than days previous to the date named for said redemption. In witness whereof, rhe said Columb'ti Athletic Club of the District .if Columbia lias Issued this bond to be signed la its name by the President, sealed with the corporate seal, attested by Its Secretary, this first day of March. A. D. ViSO. (Signed) COLUMMA ATHI.2TIC CLUIi of the District of Columbia. CHAKLKS A. HUADBL'UV. President. IIOWAKD I'EP.ItY. Secieta.-y. The interest coupons attached to tbit bond tead as follows: -J.-,.UO On the first day of September. ISST). the Columbia Athletic Club of the District of Columbia will pay to the IxMrer Twenty-five Dollars In gold coin of the United States at the Citizens' Na.Ional Bank of Washington. D. C. being six months'" In terestonitsflrstmortgage bouds. Clasa A. The continued rains of the past few days have caused serious loss to the coal dealers who have boats moored near Ba ton Rouge. La. The fleet of W. G. Coyle & Co., ab-mt fifteen boats, filled with water and sank. Mexico Predic ment. The recent enormous fall in the price of silver is driving Mexico to consider the advisability of going to the gold standard. The example of Japan. Russia, Peru and, in fact, all the intelligent nations of the world, is having its effect upon the states men of that country, and. followed, as :t is. by the business troubles growing out of the great fall in the value of silver, warns them that they must fall in line with other civilized nations if they expect to maintain taeir business pad financial standing. Business must indeed be bright when the New York Journal, which a year ago was insisting that nothing lint the free coinage of silver could bring prosperity to the United States, has published a full page article showing a prosperous condi tion in New York and the country over. Dr. James B. Angel!, the new United States minister to Turkey, has arrived at Constantinople.