Conservative * general scramble of such a readjustment. All of the now "prosperity" which others are said to enjoy is obtained at their expense. The plea for rising prices is made in behalf of property-owners those who have real estate or commodities for sale but there is a very much more num erous class iu society who also have something to sell , viz. , the wage-earners. Under the industrial organization of to day they comprise the millions. They are the class for whose welfare and pro gress society is most concerned the class in which are grouped those who most need the protection that the laws are designed to give. Whatever efforts are made to raise the conditions of men should lift from the bottom. The Interests of Labor. In his "Six Centuries of Work and Wages , " Thorold llogers , the English economist , quotes and endorses the fol lowing statement from Tooke's great work , "History of Prices , " published iu 1887 : "According to all experience , whether within modern observation or recorded iu history , it may be laid down as an established maxim that labor is the last of the objects of exchange to rise in con sequence of dearth or depreciation , and that commonly the price of labor is the last to fall in consequence of increased abundance of commodities or of in creased value of money. " Since then iu a general advance wages lag behind , this class at such a time is put under constant disadvantage. Its members must be continually getting their pay increased in order even to hold their own. That is the worst possible position for the wage-earner. The most commanding position that he can occupy is to have a standard of value iu which wages may be steady , while the prices of commodities fall to correspond with every elimination of labor from their cost. Then all the forces that make for industrial progress work for him. Then his share of our constantly increasing production of commodities is laid promptly at his door. Every year sees the purchasing power of his wages in crease without aggressive action on his part. None are so ignorant , timid , or dependent as to be unable to buy at lower prices when they are prevalent ; but all are not equal in the intelligence , courage , and resources required to make a continuous fight for a higher rate of wages. It is true that as prices advance ahead of wages , the increasing profits of em ployers stimulate the demand for labor , and gradually advance the price of the latter. This only illustrates the ten dency of natural laws to restore an equilibrium that has been disturbed. After prices have ceased to advance , as eventually they must , wages will finally resume the relative position , they have lost. Unfortunately , when prices cease j * rti t ijajuij ij ti to advance after a period of expansion , they generally do BO with a crash which disorganizes the whole industrial ma chine , and throws thousands out of em ployment. The crash is commonly attributed to the interposition of some now influence ; but it is as inevitably a part of the whole movement as any other feature. It seems inevitable that we are to have a great increase in the volume of money , accompanied , no doubt , by full industrial activity and much speculation the world over. It will be a good time for debt-paying ; but unfortunately people ple do not pay their debts at such a time. They see too many good things that they think they ought to buy. People make debts in booming times and pay them iu hard times. Those who think the government ought to provide money enough "to do the busi ness of the country on a cash basis , " and that panics and commercial depres sions could bo prevented by a "sufficient supply , " will learn that indebtedness more than keeps pace with any increase , and that the most marvelous outpouring of gold may be followed by unparalleled stringency in the money market. The JTormor Golden Kru. The only increase in metallic monetary stocks in recent times comparable to the one now being made was that following the discovery of gold in California and Australia. The stock of gold and silver coin in the world , excluding Asia , iu 1850 has been , estimated at $2,000,000- 000 , and in 1860 at ยง 3,800,000,000 an increase of 40 per cent. The present stock of gold and silver coin outside of China and the Straits Settlements is about $7,500,000,000. To add 40 per cent to this stock iu the next ten years would require a net annual increase of $ { 500,000,000 ; and ib seems entirely probable that this will be made in gold , besides any additions to the stock of subsidiary silver. The influence in Western Europe of the increased output following 1850 was modified by the extraordinary movement to the East which set in about that time. The building of railways iu India , and other extensive investments , with a rapid increase in exports , raised the not imports of gold and silver into India for the five years , 1855-59 , to an annual average of about $05,000,000. That was talcing 40 per cent of the entire product. The expense of the Crimean war , with the subsidies and loans made by England and Franco to Turkey , distributed largo sums of coin iu Eastern Europe , a re gion comparatively destitute of it. As a result of those movements , no increase of metallic stoclcs in the banltB of Wes tern Europe from 1850 to 1800 is ap parent. It is generally accepted , however , that the output of California and Australian gold was responsible for at least a part of the rise of prices which occurred from 1849 to 1870. Jevons estimated the average rise in commodities from 1849 to 18(50 ( at 24 per cent , and the net rise to 1809 to 19 per cent. He considered that this sustained advance was duo to the depreciation of gold ; but it is diffi cult to see how the influence of the wars and now trade conditions which inter vened can be so identified and measured as to enable any calculation to be made of the influence of the new gold. Hunk Kesourees IncruiisiiiK * If wo look only to money in banks , and ignore estimates of production , con sumption , and coinage , we got rid of many uncertainties ; and after all that is the potential quantity iu monetary stocks. Money in idle hoards , and re quired iu pockets and tills for the daily exchanges , is not available for loans or for now enterprises. So far as money is the basis of credit , it is the supply in banks that is effective , and supports in dustrial undertakings and speculation , and that through these channels has bearing upon prices. The supply of money iu banks is now increasing more rapidly than at any previous time. The stock of gold in such depositories in Europe and in the United States , we have seen , has increased nearly 40 per cent in five years. Another feature of modern trade re lations which has au important bearing upon the effective use of monetary stocks , is the vast accumulation of high- class investment securities known and traded in in all the important money markets of the world. Their value is so stable , and their shipment so easy , that in large degree they take the place of gold in the settlement of international balances. An unusual harvest in one country with shortage elsewhere is com ing to require less and less an alarming drain of money from one to the other. In conclusion , as we contemplate the waste of capital and productive energy in the search for gold in the Klondike and elsewhere , the time seems opportune to recall the comments of the French economist , Blauqui , in reviewing the outpouring of the precious metals which resulted from the discovery of America. Writing about 1840 , when the rich flow from Mexico and South America , which for several centuries had poured into Europe , had almost ceased , and the mines of the New World seemed to be exhausted , he said : "Everyone knows today that the real advantages which Europe derived from the discovery of the mines of the New World do not coino exclusively from the abundance of the precious metals , but from the cultivation of the commodities for consumption which constitute the basis of our exchanges with that country. Gold and silver hav e disappeared ; cotton , sugar , and coffee remain. The single discovery of the potato was worth more thau all of the mines of Mexico and Peru. " GEORGE E. BOBEHTS .