Conservative * WHAT OF TIIK SIIA'KK DOI AK ? Under the above caption the Donglns County World-Herald prints the follow ing as to currency : "TUB CONSBKVATIVB proclaims , with out four of successful controvorsion by Allen , Bryan , or any other populist or fusionist , that Any quantity of johl in bullion or any quantity of silver in bul lion should lit ! ofr.roc.Uif Ike same value as the name quantity ofold ( or the same ( /nanlily of silver in coin. 'The melting pot is tiio test of coined money. That which loses value in molting is bad money. And that which does not lose is good money. ' " The advocates of bimetallism also say that 'any quantity of gold in bullion or any quantity of silver in bullion should bo of exactly the same value as the same quantity of gold or the same quantity of silver in coin. ' When silver was admitted to the mints for free and unlimited coinage this was as trap of silver as it was of gold. When silver was barred from the mints the price of silver bullion began to decline. Let us restore silver to its mint privileges and thus accomplish what Mr. Morton pre tends to desiro. When , however , wo agree with Mr. Morton's first statement , it docs not necessarily follow that we indorse his second statement that "tho melting pot is the test of coined money. That which loses value in melting is bad money. And that which does not lose is good money. " Will Mr. Morton en large on this point ? When a silver dollar lar is placed in the molting pot it is "good money. " It loses its value in molting and becomes not "bad money , " but no money at all. Does the fact that the molted dollar has lost its identity a. money , or , if you please , its "value , " make "bad money" of the silver dollars that have not been melted ? Anticipating that Mr. Morton will answer the last question in the ailirma tivo and will declare the silver dollar is not good money in any condition , The World-Herald would ask how it happens that this government has outstanding something moro than $400,000,000 o" "bad money" and its representative ? If "tho melting pot is the test o coined money , " what of the silver dollar ? TUB CONSKHVATIVB , answering says In 1803 India closed her mints to fre coinage because silver had with th India mints wide open to free coinage dropped sixteen cents an ounce in the bullion markets of the world. The clos ing of the mints to free coinage was caused by the discount on silver and not the discount on silver by the closing of the mints. If keeping the mints open to the unlimited free coinage of silver could have brought silver back to par wquld the mints have been closed ? The World-Herald may see hero the error of its assertion that "when silver was barred from the mints the price of sil ver bullion began to decline ! " The historical , recorded fact as to barring silver from the mints is , that it was barred because it had declined as bullion until it was relatively to gold bul lion below par. The makeshift authors of the Bland-Allison aot which became a law February 28 , 1878 , held the same illogical and pernicious views which The World-Herald now advocates. Allison of Iowa and Bland of Missouri declared that opening the mints of the United States to the coinage of silver bullion into four hundred and twelve and half grain dollars at a rate consum- ng from two to four millions of ounces month , besides making those dollars a legal-tender at their nominal value 'or all debts and dues public Land pri- ato" would keep silver up to a par , vith gold 1 But the experiment failed utterly. Up to that time from its ncoption this government had coined nly eight millions of silver dollars. A.nd under the Bland-Allison act before 1890 three hundred and eighty nillions of new silver dollars , vere put into circulation and by H there were four hundred and uiiie- ieen millions of Bland-Allison silver dollars omitted by the United States niuts. But the Bland-Allison act , in stead of enhancing silver saw that metal decline fifty per cent as to the value of rhe bullion in a 412 } grain dollar. The Douglas County World-Herald can ob serve the fallacy of its reasoning by a perusal of the Bland-Allison act , the message vetoing it by President Hayes and the bullion market reports showing a steady decline. So decidedly a fail ure , so diametrically different in results from predictions , was this Bland-Allison botch of a law that even its originators and advocates favored its repeal July 14 , 1890. The act of July 14 , 1890 , took the place of the Bland-Allison failure to maintain the price of silver ; it "directed the purchase of silver bullion and the issue of treasury notes thereon. " It compels "the secretary of the treasury to purchase from time to time silver bul lion to the aggregate amount of 4,500 , 000 ounces each mouth , or so much thereof as may be offered. " It was thought by McKiuley and other advocates of free coinage then prominent that this would help keep up the bullion price of silver But silver continued to decline. And in 1893 this later makeshift in fiuanc' ' known as the Sherman act was con demned as disastrous to the country and repealed. Good Money and Bad Honey. The Douglas County World-Heral objects to a quotation from that lead ing bimetallist of Europe , Henri Cer nuschi. He said "the melting pot the test of coined money. That whicl loses value in melting is bad money And that which does not lose is gooi money. " Before a silver dollar is placed in th melting pot it is good money becaus the government of the United State has pledged itself to maintain it at a parity with the gold dollar. When it is molted down it becomes bad because the government has not pledged itself to maintain at a market parity the bullion in a silver dollar with the bullion in a gold dollar. When a gold dollar has been melted down it has , in bullion , the same purchasing power it had as coin. Vnd it needs no governmental aid to mke it current in all the ninrkots of mankind. The United States is liable 'or moro than four hundred millions of ilvor dollars which it has uttered to irculate on and bo held at a parity with gold. They , as bullion values , are bad tlollars. They are good as currency dollars only because of a pledge which nakps them , through treasury notes , 3onvortiblo into gold. Melt all the gold coin the United itates has ever minted into bullion ; melt all the silver coin the same waj * . A.ud there being no less of purchasing power in the former and a loss of moro ban fifty per cent purchasing power in .he . latter , THE CONSERVATIVE concludes ; hat the former is good money and the atter bad money. In their amusing "UKNEVOM3NT ASSIMILATION. ' and brain-splitting prestidigitations the administration organs and presi dential apologists are having a vast amount of fun with themselves and offering no small amount to critical students of our "foreign ( foreign in moro than one sense ) policy. " In a recent issue such " " an "organ" propounds the following questions : "When the Philippines have been conquered by the military arm , what then ? " "We cannot undertake to say how this status har monizes with the president's scheme of benevolent assimilation. " "Benevolent assimilation means something else in the common acceptation of language. " It certainly does 1 But since the ad vent of McKiuleyism , language has been so twisted that even a Philadelphia lawyer could not tell what humaui- tariauism or constitutionalism means. Freedom seems to mean to buy men first and then assimilate them with benevolent bombs and fixed bayonets. Herrmann is nowhere with McKinley as a prestidigitator. McKinleyism seeks to assimilate men with a club and then give them government milk from the cow of benevolence. This is no new Americanism. It is the same benevo lent assimilation we have offered the Indians and the black men. It is the same benevolent assimilation our English connection offered the Hindoos , and the nations of Europe are now offering the Chinese and many African people. It is the kind of benevolent assimilation wo offer the thief and murderer. It is the same benevolent assimilation the negro is now receiving in the South. If that kind of assimilation ever succeeds in engendering benevolent feelings in those thus assimilated they possess some kind of an unmanly virtue hitherto unknown among the races of men. FRANK S. BILLINGS.