THE O fAITA DATTA' BEE : PATITUBAY , JULY 18 , 1800. TnE OMAHA DAILY BER n. nosE\\Aiin mnnv MOUMNO. TEIIMS or * HI inonm lo.v. DMty n o Without Sunday ) One Y nr . I SM Dully liea nnJ HunJiy , Onn Year . 10 < v > Blx monltut . . . ; 5 ? Thre * month * . , . . * > J BuntlJiy llf * . One V nr . . J ? > Saturday iree , One Y ar . < . ' J ? AVc kly llec , One Y ar . 6J OJTtCItt : Omnha TIi ( > H o llullrtlnit , . Routh Omulm Binder lllk . Cor. N find ! 4ln Sts. Council llliinX 7 ? North Mnln Street Oitenjro Ollc ! , SIT Chnmlici of rommsrc" . New Yoik. IlnoinJ 1.1 , II end IS Tribune BMft. Washington , 1O7 1 * SttMt. N. W. COUItnsi'ONDl'.NPE : All communication" i-flallns to newi nnJ c < ll- lorlnl tmttor plmulil he nillr'rami To the CJItor All ljmln s IMtcia ar < ] tpmlttnnoM should be iiitrn ! ej to The ! ! < > e I'uhlMilnic C inrnny , Omaha lian died. * nnd | K t < > ni ( " oriiera to bo made tmvnhl * tn the onlcr of the company. run IIM : ITUUHHIMJ COMPANY. BTATUMnNT or cmcui.ATioN. Btntc of Nebraska I Douglas county. ( George II 'lz crmck. sccrctnry of T'16 ' nec 1 > ul ) " llshlnc comptin } I * Ing duly sworn. pros Hint the nLtunl mimlKr of full nrul uimlilete cnplrs of tlio Daily. MnnilnB , Ilvcnlm ? nnd Bumlay U'o printed during the month of Juno , 1805 , a us follow * Net dally mirage . . . . 13 44J onouan it TZSPHUCK Snorn tn before me nml Mih crlued In my rrcfence tills Itli iln or July. IF'if I ) N I' mil. Notary I'uldlc. I'm ties poliiR out of tlie city for the summon niny linro The Hoc sent lo fliolr mltlrcss by Icmvliifj an oidur at the biisliK'ss'olllco of the Ueo. TelfMihone 2.1S. Tin1 to 1 free Mlvoiltc who en IN himself tt bimeUrlllst N sailing under false colors riftj-seven % oti's will rn.il.o tbo No- biaskn populist ( k-lcfratlon to St. Louis one to bi > cotldlotl niul cultivated. The next piosldont of the United States \\lll bo a lawyer by ptofesblon Wo me confident no one \ \ 111 dispute tin.1 nccur.iey of tills staleini'iit. Bland Aoiu-lies for I'.rjan and IJijan vouches toi Hland. Hut tliose me the kind of - \ ouclieishleh the public al ways , accepts with a discount. Pilvatc firms and business houses monet not inislnt ; sal.ules of emjiloyes hist at present. Why should the lio.nd ol Kdn- catlon tieat Its einplojet. any dillei- eutlyV Its a Aviso child that knows its own father , and vice voisn. The populists , liowo\oi\ seem wllllnj ; to iecoKiil/o the democratic pl.itfoim as their own off- The exposition is noinK to bo a suc cess. Vut jour name down on the stock Mibseilptlon blinks and insino for join- self some of the ciedlt for milking It a success. If Bryan is "the .Silver Knkbt of the West , " as his spokesman and chaiini.iii of the Nebiaslv.i delegation lofuirod to him In the C'hlivjjo coinention , Sew all must bo "the Golden KnljIit of the Kast. " If Jefferson weie biought to life what u hoi i Hied look lie would have as soon as ho le.uiH'd the chaiaeteis of the men \\lio aio loudly iiislstiiif ; Unit they me following the onljJeffcifeonian doc- t lines. Iowa republicans piopose to in.iKc a campaign that will vindicate the claim of the state to bo one of the staunches ! of staunch icpuhllcan .slates. Iowa has n loputation as a icpublican stionghold that It cannot vi ell afford to lose at the end of this nineteenth ccntmy. The fight for the presidency this fall Is to 1)0 between McKlnley and Iliyan anil no amount of sideshow tickets put up by other p.uties will enable the people to evade the leal Issue , which is , Shall wo have honest , sound money , 01 lepudlutlon nml debt scaling tlnough a depreciated single silver stand.udV Bryan's reference to Bismarck's speech In which he said the funnels must stand together and piotect themselves fiom the drones of society who pioduce noth ing but laws is Imidly the appiopilutc thing coming 1'ioni him. I'loduclng laws , or rather tijing * to produce hiw , seems to have been Bryan's chief occu pation In locent yeais. The county toiniiilssionei.s rinrdo n ( orir of Inflection over tire county I'otuN to learn tliehcoiiilltlon and to e.Minilne the iniieiidiirrrl/eil roadways beyond Center mid Dod o .streets. It Is hoped the commissioners vvlll , ns the reMiIt of this tour , jiay special attenllon to the i matter i.t' roadway Impiovemeiit he- g , tween the city and the .state fair grounds. . The mayor and counell across the river linvo about determined to return to llr.st principles and put city prlsonem to woik upon the stieotH. Thlh was done until l.ibor oii airi/.itlons piote.sted , whereat tlio pi nut leu was ab.indoiied But when \airants are made to woik they boon conclude to leave the city , Urns lellevlii } , ' the taxpajeis of the e\ punso of fcedlni , ' them and protecting the ri'sldents frorrr theft and petty depieda- tlons. Our fienzled contomporatj- , which onlj' n few weeks ago raKcd the state In < iuest of free silver republicans , has nothing to say about the large niimbei of sound money democrats who do not liebltato to denounce the Chicago plat form , nor to say they will not \ole for Bryan. But the storm of demociatle dlsnppiovnl has only begun to gather. Within u few days the old line wheel will get together and decline in no mice.tain ! terms. And declaration will come fiom men made the democintlo patty In No ii , mwi without whoso counsel and 0Ul > j > ort It LOU Id not have existed. TIIItKK Qt O'NUIM * Neb. , July IS , 1S95. To the IMItor of Tlio Dee : "Will you plcnso Inform mo 1 \Vliy dlil congress ilcmonctlzc slher In 1S73 ? 2. Whnt benefit , If any , hag tills country derived from llio demonetization of slhcr ? 3. Who did receive any benefit from the demonetization of silver ? C C. McHUOH. I.'lt t fongross did not deinonetl/.e silver In 18751. Webster's dictionary defines the word "domonetixe" ns "to withdraw fiom u o us money. " There was no silun coin in use as moiipy In 1ST. ! . The o called demonoU/atlon act did not < l' > pilve any silver coin of Its function ns inoiioy. The act of 1S71 ! merely discontinued tbo coinage of the silver dollar of H2V& grains , the half dime and the J'-cpnl piece. The mint- ime of nil other slher coins was not Intelruptod and all outstanding slher coins , whether dollars or minor coins , retained their money functions. The slandmd silver dollar bns always been full legal tendei , and now has the same debt-pa.\lng power that gold has. Second Theie being no deinonetl/.a- tltm In the Ktilct sense of the tenn , this countijlias neither deilved bene- Ills nor Inclined losses fiom demono- tlxatlon. We piesume , liowever , that Hie infoimatlon souijht Is whether the Hulled States gained anj thing by the act of 1S7II discontinuing the fieo and unlimited coinage of silver dollars at the old lallo of 1C. to 1. To this -\\o \ answer that no matoilnl benefit or loss would have been sustained M > long as the pioductlon of silver and Hie cost of pioduellon of silver kept pace with Its value lelatlvo to gold. But A\heii the two metals pa i ted company un limited coinage of silvei at the old la- tlo would soon have i educed ( ho coun- tiy to a sliver basis , as It has Mexico. The assumption that fieo coinage would h'ne maintained sliver at the pi ice of 91.2 ! ) an ounce eontiavenes all past expeiieiice. In the I00 ! je.n.s fiom lt)2 ! ) the latlo of silver to gold had changed liom 10'/j to 1 to 15 to 1 although all the nations of Iluiope weie coining sihet without limit. The aboli tion of the unlimited coinage of slhei has benefited tills country by main taining the p'lilly of all its mono ) with gold , by raising public and pil- vate ciedlt by low ei ing the 1.1(0 ( of In Iciest and bj giving us a cunency that pusses at Its face \aliie the woild over Above all things , it tinned the tide of investment fiom Bmopo to the United States , by which we were enabled to build 100,000 miles of i.illio.ul within twenty years and develop the losoiiicej of the gieat west as they could not possibly have been developed In twice the time unaided by foreign capital. The answer to the second question also answois the tiitid. The Ameilcan people have been tbo beneficial ies , not fiom demonotix'ition , which Is a fig- men I of the imagination , but fiom lim ited silver coinage and the maintenance of an honest monej standaid. A It The Chicago plalfoim is justly de nounced as in spliit and puiposo io\o- lutionarjMr. . Bijnn declaies It to be leinociatie from the fiist sentence to the last. Men who h.no bwi domoci.its all their lives and still udhoio to the tia- litlonnl piinelples of the paity ladicallv lifter Horn the Chicago nominee In theh view of the chaiacler of the pl.itfoim. I'he fieo silver plank is not the onlj mo which these demociats condemn. One of them , Intel viewed by The Bee. -aid : 'I would not suppoit a platfoim which avowed its pmpose to looigani/e the supio'iio ( .01111 of the United .States mil which contemplated an op n opposi- ion to the life teniiio ot fedeial judges. " Itofeience Is made to that plank in the llatfoiin ) wliich toveitly attacks the su- nieme couit and openly Intinutos that a way must bo found to lovoise its recent tidings. This ievolutlonaiy piopositlon or sug- 'estlon is leceivlng wldespiead alten- 'lon ' , as It should do , for nothing like it has e\er botoionppemed in the platfoim of a great political paity in this coun- dy. Decisions of the supieine judicial ( lilunal have boon ciitlclsed and con- lemned , but wo do not let-all an in stance of a paity platfoim suggesting the leorgiini.iatlon of that couit in the way suggested by the Chicago platform V New Yoik dispatch says that the dis tinguished lawyer , Mr. C'oudeit , looKi upon this as the most dangoious and portentous Indication of what Hot be neath all this agitation. Othois think that In this assault upon the .siipiome court lies the gieatest danger in thl.i new cius.ide , for if that Institution can bo niado the victim of momentay ! pas sion and leoiganlyed at the will or ciijirlco of any paitjIhon the gieat anchor to the constitution , the gioat eon- seivatlvo foico which all students of American Institutions believe to have been that which made for the pcimn- nencj' of the American nation , will be shuttered. This attitude of the Brynn-Altgeld party lowaid the siipiemo couit of the United States , will , It is said , beantago- nl/.ed In the campaign in the eastern stales as eauiestly , it not ns conspicu ously , as the fioo silver pioposition. It should bo oveiywhoio , for It Is a matter that must sliongly appeal to every clti- /.t'li who b 'lloves It to bo absolutely o.s- sonllal to the pieservallon of constitu tional govoinmont that Jho highest judl- ilnl tribunal shall be kept aloof fiom and wholly Independent of patty passion and political iulluoncc. It miiy bo said that It has not always been free from those , but If this ho admitted It fur nishes no valid loason In Justification of the dangoious and revolutionary sug gestion of tin * Chicago platfoim. For men who gho their approval to sucb an attack upon the highest Judicial tribunal to cla'in to bo followers of Thomas Jef ferson and Andiew .lackson is an tin- pardonable Insult to the momoiy of those Illustrious men an insult Mndred to that of associating their names Avith the cause of cnuency debasement and icpudlntlon , The Chicago platform , after referring to the decision against the Income tax , say.sVo ; declare ( lint it is the duty of congress to use all the constitutional power which remains after that deci sion , or which may come fioiu Ha ie- vcrsal by the court ns It may horenfnr ( bo constituted , so that the burdens of tnxn tlou may bo equally and linp.it tlally laid , ( o the end that wo may all hon our proportion of the expenses of ( he goeminent. . " The success of the Hrynn Altgeld paity would threaten a reor- Kit libation of the upreme couit of the United Slates for the ptupose of making effective nil the loactlonmy and lovolu- tlonaiy sehouips of ( hat political cle ment. It would mean the possible subordination of that tilhunal to the will and dictation of a pmty. No good citi zen can contcmiilale such a possibility with complacency. T/J/B 10jtj < \ A HALT. 1'ubllo buildings constructed w lib pub lic funds are Intended solely for public uses , To this inlo no exception should bo made. While It might be appro- pi late to hold leceptioiis in public buildings for men who have been hon ored with positions of dust In city , state or nation , It Is manifestly a sub- vor-loir of the public Inteiest lo giant the use of public buildings to pilvate occupants or place thorn at the dis posal of partisan political oiganlza- llons. It would bo eminently pioper to receive a president of the United Slates In a public building , fcdoi.il , stale or oily , but It Is decidedly im- piopcr to open such buildings to the leceptlon of a candidate for the presi dency. The same is duo legiudlng United States senators , congiessinon , goveinors and judicial olllcors. inning the term of Major Bpmls rooms In rho city hall weie Impioperly given over to a mu.slc teacher for pri vate sliming classes and other tenants who pay no lent and ha\o no claim upon ( lie public and aio In no way connected with the public service. Moio iccently the city hall has been used for the reception louderod bv a polit ical club to its preferred candidate for governor , and its use has boon ofleied for 11 reception to the dcmoeiatlc can didate for president. It would perhaps be justly considered an act of discour tesy to withhold 1 lorn Mr. Bijan the pilvilego that was accorded Mr. Mac- Coll. But the pioposed Biyan iccep lion In ( lie city hall should be Hi" l.iot political demonsdatlon in tint build ing. Theie is no reason why the pee pie of Omaha should be taxed lor light ing and decoiatlng the city ball foi any partisan gathering. Its u--e should bo exclusive for non-partisan public gatbeilngs and such entertainments n. the city may fiom time to time be called upon to extend to dislinguisbed visitors fiom abioad. b ! ? UliJKCTIOXS The fanners in the western prrt of this county bavevoikcd themselves into : i lien/y over tire pioposed amend meiit to the constitution that provides Unit the goveinmcnts of cities of the metropolitan class may bo moigod in part or lu whole with the goveinmentH of the counties in which they uie lo catod. These f.rmeis aie uuneeossardj alarmed over an Imaginary increase of taxes. They do not compiebeiid the scope of the amendment , which Is 10 ally intended to i educe their taxes in -.tend of incieasing them. They appar ently o'voiloolc the clause in the pie posed amendment wliich makes the cons"nt of a m.ijoritjof the \oteis living outside of the citja condition piocedent to its being put into eiiect. In other woids , the piopositlon to con solldate any prit of the county gov- oimnont with the city government will have to bo submitted for their ap proval befoio any change can bo m.'de. Bofoio setting their laces again.- ! the adoption of the pioposed constitu tional amendment , Douglas conntj fanners should acquaint themselves with its true objects There are now two treasmors collecting taxes In Omaha. One has his ollice In the city hall and the other in the county coin I house. The Omaha taxpayer Is , there- loie , obliged to make sopai.ite calls upon two deasiiH'is. The city of Omaha Is at the expense of something like V-0000 "I'd ' the county about > 10X ( ) ( ) a year lor a double tio.isurj force , and thousands of dollars aie squandered in addition for unking needless duplicate tax lists and audit Ing of accounts which should bv lights bo done bjoijo force. The Loui'ty is at Imjjo expense lor pieclnct assessments , both in and out of the city. If these afsossmcnts wore all umdu under the supoi vision of one genoial assessor wo would have moio equitable assessments with gie.iter totals of assessed valuation and theie- foil ? lower tax rates. The pioposed constitutional amend ment does not contemplate or permit the annexation of the county outside of Omaha to the city of Omaha or the levying of city taxes upon county lands. It is designed simply to con solidate ceitaln county and city olllcej and to do away with a system ( hat Is ciimbor.somo , costly and Inconvenient. It Is a move in the dliecllon of economy nnd not In the direction of waste. In any event , every change that may be pioposed will have to bo 1,1 tilled by the voteis of the city as one body and the voters ontsldo of the city as an other. The local labor unions have gone to work In earnest to get subscriptions for tliu exposition. We ventuio to piedlct thoj' will smpriso ovcijbodj' by the success attained , for ovoiy mechanic In Omaha stands rondy and willing to con tribute according to his moans to an undertaking that must ceitainly bring an Incalculable amount of employment to craft-mon. The pioposltlon Is a simpjo 0110. Any man Is willing to invest $10 In a piojoct that piomlsos certain , speedy mid tangible rotunis to him and his neighbor. It is light and pioper that ( ho people of Nebraska , without regard to puty : atllliatlon , shall do homage to a citizen who has received the piesidontlal nom ination , but the demonstration at Lin coln can In no sense bo inteipieted ns an Indication of vhat the electors of this state will do In November. In the language of Candidate/ Bryan , "the In dividual Is but an atom ; ho Is born , he a eta , he dies , but pilnclplos me eteinul , " and ( hoJiufris of JCobrnskn will this jenr of nll others act upon principle. Mr. Kuan , attributes his nomination for the itiWrleiioy solely to the outcome of a pec til Mr eoinblnaUon of clicum- stances. 'Tills Is a very coinfor table philosophy , , u will explain his over- 1. , . _ . , next November just ns easily nsj. It explains his convention triumph. Nryarr further takes no credit for lnlnii | | nbotit fire pin-ullar com bination nof clreiimstalice ! ? , and will similar ly'tk'ijv all blarrre for the circum stances tliatadeternilne the election. / -M M i The natlniinl silver convention nt St. Louis Is expected to have 12'H ' ) delegates 'ami an equal number of alternates In attendance , and the popiilNt national coin out Ion In the Mime city and at the same time will have neaily ! , " ( ) ( ) dole- jcates on Its uiombcishlp loll. The .smaller the number of votes cast by these politicnl pintles lln * lingoi ap parently are tlie conventions which do- teimlno tire paity policy and name tlie parly candidates. It Is becoming moio mid moio manifest that our people me in earnest In their offoits to piovlde me.riis tor tbo exposi tion. No mgumcnt Is requiiod to Induce the aveiage man to sub-crlbo. lie bad awaited the miival of the committee and cheorlully put down his name. It would be woith many dollars to the fund to have the big men's subscilp lions announced. The question Is , AVI11 they give in piopoitlon to their moansV Mr. Biyan was nominated on Uil- duyand letmned to his home in Lincoln on riidny , but ho will bo defeated for election on Tuesday. A Ittu'c riinriu'lcflMlU- . Kansas Cll > Ktnr The German-Americana aio maintaining their reputation for thrift and financial sagacity by their unanimous opposition to tlie Ideu ot free coinage. Oul ii f 'I'll ilc. Ncvvi. Thoio was never so vvldo a revolt of the press of a great party of the country. Hardly a paper of national importance and high standing Is left to tlio democrats east of the Mississippi nnd north of the cotton states. ri-KlitK riiiiinelnl Ilnilil-Mf-Dnu us. ChlcnK" ] 'o t Hven Costa Illra lias como to a gold standard and \\ill Ime a great celebration In honor of Its anlval at financial maturity Sllverltts would like to have the United States put oh the cast-off clothing of a countiy like Costa Uica. nllH Jonriul Tlio free silver dogma that the half Is equal to the hole is v not geneiall > ac cepted as gfiod mathematics even in tlio so- called stiver states The more the American people evei > where contemplate that pioposi tlon the greater will be the dissent. A i Miijitrlt > for Colil. I'litlailelphla 1'rc * " . The voters of the country .are pretty evenly divided between' the republican and the democratic partyv At St Louis about eight- ninths of thb dolagates were foi the existing gold standard. At Chicago one-third of the delegates were for It. Putting these two things together would Indicate that the voters of tlru entire country are for the gold standard by' ' aboftt 2,000,000 majority. ' Tlie Ho ft of < liY-'OrKniiN. Chicago Tribune. There Is .a rift In the lute The sweet bells aio jangled and out of tune In their tintin nabulations The organs aie plajing , but the ensemble is caconhonous All over the democratic orchestra , Instead of pla > lng the 1C to 1 march with swelling harmony , im portant In-Jtiuments are pla > ing independent tunes which would dlstiact the cart , of the conductor If he were not all mouth. The list of bolting democratic organs up to dates n.imbers 135 Of these the south Is first with n , the middle btates second with 37 , the west third with 31 and the New England states fourth with 21 Of the total number twentv-one arc Get man democratic riOHspapcis , and the most Influential In the vailous sections wheie they are published AM In n Third Tlt-Kct. New York Hun ( ikm ) The cause of honest moiuy and the de feat of repudiation in other words , the succcsb or defeat of MeKlnley cannot be subordinated to any question of demociatle organl/alion or regularity. It Is tbo duty of every American to join the forc.ea of the stiongcst and most hopeful opponent of the populist convention at Chicago And the Ohio cum'idato Is the man I'atrlots must follow MeKinley against the enemies of the republic who como from the , as though ho were the icgular commander for defense against nn enemy from over the sea. Sentimental Alloglnnco to the name of n prostrated and now impotent democracy or Insistence on the technicalities of Its or ganization It Inimical to the most desired end , the preservation of the national credit. MTS ron srnuAirr TO CIIACIC. Tlio 1'nrt 1lir Nrindn Svnnlnr llore In tlii "fili.lp ( if ISTJJ. " Senator Stewart of Nevada was a con spicuous member ot the senatorial syndicate In Chicago , and took an active part In turn ing the democratic convention over to the silver bulllonalres lu order to "avenge the crime of 1S73 " Senator Stewart Is regarded as an avenger from 'Wayback , but that Is a mistake There was n time even since the crime when lie talked differently , and the facts and circumstances are cited from the Hocord by the Washington col respond ent of the New York Tribune as follows It Is true that ho aided nnd abetted "tho crime of 1S73' by voting for the coinage act in all the vnrlrms stages through which It passed In the two \cars and more during which It was pending In congress nnd that ho took a prominent part In the discussion of the mcasuie but within tlie last few years he has succeeded In con\lnclnc ! many credul ous persons by bis solemn and repeated as set tlons that he sinned through Ignorance , that ho did not know that the "dollar of the fathers" was dropped by that act in which , by the way , It never had a place Mr Stewart of couisp. has desired to Impress everybody with the belief tlist If he bad Known at the time that the art did not ail- thnrl/e the coinage of the silver dollai , ho would have fought It v.llh all his might In a speech which ho delivered In the senate on June G. IS10 , lie declared "I repeat tint silver was demonetbed without discussion In eltbei house of con gress , It was dumonctlrcd without warning to the people , and It was either a mistake or something woise So far as I was con cerned I was Ignorant of It , nnd I am reidv and have been ever since I discovered It to do all in my power to light the wrong 'llio fact that I waa here when this great wrong was perpetrated has been one of the reasons why I have worked for the last sixteen years In this cause" Now , licio are two distinct assertions , both ot which nro flatly contradicted by the iccord rirat , that Mr. Stewart did not know- that the hllver dollar ( except the tiado dollar ) was eliminated from the coinage by the nU of 1873 , and second , that , as soon as he discovered this great wrong , ho at once began to try to right It , nnd had con tinued to try for sixteen years pilot to June , IS'iO The bill which became the coin age act of 1S73 finally passed both branches of congress and became a law In January of that year Now evidence recently dis covered or rcdlscoveiod by the Tiibunos correspondent shows beyond question that at least as caily as Kebtuary 11. 1S74 , Sen ator Stewart was officially appilsed of the fact ( If he was not cognizant of It prior to that time ) that the act of 1S73 did not pio- vldo for or authorise the coinage of a sllvci dollar other than the trade dollar On Keb- ruary 10 , 1S71 ho offoicd nnd the senate adopted a lesolutlou lequebtlng the stcie- taiy of the tuasury "to state what time will bo u < | itlred after tbo resumption of specie payments foi the mints to manufac- tmo the amount of subsidiary silver coins which will bo requisite to replace the fiac- tlonal currency " In his reply to this reso lution , which was read In the senate on the following day , the secretary said "The capacity of the mints for the coinage of subsldlaiy Mlvcr coin in addition to the gold trade dollnr and minor coinage , 1s equal to about $10,000,000 per annum , and that , if wo assume the amount of fractional currency which will probably bo In circula tion to bo from ? 10,000000 to $50,000 000. about four years would bo required for the purpose Indicated by tbo resolution of tlie senate , should provision bo made for tlie substitution of subsidiary sliver coin for fractional currency. " After the secretary's letter had been read Senator Stewart remarked : "My object In calling for that information was this1 Whenever specie payment is re sumed It will be necessity to have silver coin on hand , nnd with the v lew of taking some steps toward having the mints of the United States manufacture this coin in time I ask that the communication be referred to the committee on nuance and printed " Is any clearer or more conclusive evidence than the foregoing necessary to show that I Senator Stewart knew exactly what coins were authorized and provided for by the act of 1S73' The secretaiy of the tieisuiy de fined them as "subsldlaiy silvei coin in ad- I dltlon to the gold , tiade dollar and minor I coinage , " and the senator fiom Nevada ac cepted the definition Hut this is not all t Senator Stewart not only know the scope and effect of the coinage act of 1S73 , but he heaitlly appiovcd it at least as late as Kcb juary 11 , 1S74 , when be declared himself In favor of the gold standard Ho did so In a speech on a bill to amend the national bank ing law. In the course of that speech he said"The "The only way to relieve the country is to move right back to specie payments ; let every man in the country know what , the value of his money is ; let everybody know what n dollar la worth" Now what did the senator from Nevada mean when he s > aid "specie payments ? " Payments In gold and silver coin' Not at all , foi In the same paiagraph from which the above quotation is made he used this language : "Let us do as all the people of the world have been doing fiom thn beginning , meas ure our values by gold " "What docs the senator want ? " asked Senator Logan "I want the standard gold , and no paper money not redeemable In gold , " WAS the reply tn part. Again In a speech on llio * amo subject In the senate on Tebruary 20 , 1S7I , Srnalor Stewart declared : "Gold Is the universal standard of the world. Kvervboly Kno\vs what n dollar In gold U worth" In those days , before ho h.id discovered or realized the enormity of the crime of 1S73 , Senator Stewart was fighting against the Issue or Inflation ot n paper currency not redeemable In gold , nnd In the course of his speech of February tt lie pointed out some ot the evils of a depreciated and fluctuating currency , In language which Is as applicable to silver Inllitlou In IW as It was to greenback Inflation In 1S71 In part he said "I2very country has found that a depreci ated currency was attended with evils all the time , and It has been the purpo e ot every country to relieve Itself of It as speedily as possible Om country Is able nnd strong enough today to do the same. Let us do It , and then we shall have some measure of vnlue that the fanner can com pute that the miner can compute , that any nnn can compute. Then the man who goes west to buy produce will bo under no nec-'sslty to Insuio himself ngalnst the fluc tuations of the currency The farmer will then know hnvv to measure the difference In pi Ice between his wheat lu llllonls nnd the wheat In Llvcipool It will bo the transportation nnd the necessary commis sions without any Insurance on account ot a fluctuating currency The wheat will bo measured by the same standard g ld In Illinois as it Is In Liverpool , and any man can flruro It up " H will bo thus seen that ns lute certainly ns lYlmmty 20 , 1S71 Senator Stevvnit was what ho now calls H "goldbus1 ami de nounces with all the epithets la bis ample nnd opulent vorabulaiy , ancf that he know nt least ns early ns l'ibinary 11 , 1S7.T that "tho etlmo of 1S73 , " In which ho bore n share , had been committed , nnd that he did not begin to denounce It until some later period probably not before there had been n considerable dec Hire In the commercial value of silver bullion M VI.IUMM ; , iirrinM : > v llliof ( > lVriTfcil ( o s . .rUie J'lir- | > IM < > ot 1'iiM1 SIU i-1 Ken. Kt Louis ( Jlobo r > oinocrnt "If Jeffeison tould enter this hall to night , " said Senator Vest , In a speech In St Louis Tuesday night , "he would , ay , 'Stand by the Chicago platfoim1' " It Is clear from this asscitlon tint the senator either knows nothing about the Chicago platform or he knows nothing about Jefferson - son The Chicago platform dcclaicj for the fieo coinage of silver at the 10 to 1 ratio Or , translated Into cveiyday lan guage , the platfoim wants the government to receive bullion fiom everybody who brings It and to place upon each piece of bullion which can be bought In the nuukct for CJ cents the stamp 100 cents Now let us-see what Jefferson did with a sliver dollar which wus far honester and better than the one the Chicago platfoim wants coined in unlimited quantities Vv hen Jeffeison enteied the presidency ho found silver and gold coined at a ratio of 15 to 1 , the gold being eagles , half eagles and quarter eagles , the clollni gold pieces not being Issued fiom the mint until m.xny years afterward. Hut this coinage latlo , which was nearly correct that Is , tloso to the market ratio when it was established In 1792 , had diverged fiom the market line in the next ten yeais. Sliver cheapened In the Interval , nnd shortly after Jefferson entered the presidency the bullion In the silver dollar lar was worib only 97 cents or 98 cents nb compared with gold at the prevailing latlo. This was n veiy narrow gap between the coins compared with the present gieat gulf , but it sent gold out of circulation Jeffci- son , wanting to keep gold In ell dilation , stopped the colmige of silver dollars , and not a silver dollar was Issued from a United States mint between 1S03 and 1839 , except 1,000 of thc'in in 1836. If Jefferson suppressed a coin that was only 2 or T cents fiat , what would ho do with a coin that Is 47 cents fiat , such as many men pretending to be followers of Jefferson are demanding s > hall be Issued now ? H will bo noticed that the Jefferson whom we mean Is Thomas Jefferson , the third president of the United States Is this the Jeffirson whom Senator Vest refers to' If it Is the senator owes an immediate apology to that distinguished democrat s memory. A cause must be weak , Indeed , when It has to be sustained by slanders on the illustilous dead It seems ama7ing that Senator Vest could make this assertion be fore an Intelligent audience of Jeffersonians and go unrebuked There must have been at least a score of persons among his hear ers who know that when ho declared Thomas Jefferson would endorse the Chicago plat form the senatoi was beaiing false witness. A IHM1I31.V I'lllI.OSOI'Ilint. Atlanta Conitltutlon Don't know If tlif world Is butter Or glttln' a good do il VVU M , Hut , winter 01 spring , 1 know one thing ; It's .1 Tiuity good world for us ! So tr Im up the roses , Mollle. That climb to tbo lips o' vou The vlolt-ts sweet ut the children's feet , And give mo , i rose or two. Don't know If the world Is bolter I'm out o1 the fret an' fnss ; Hut I kinder think , as I cut nn' drink , It's a purty food world fer us ! So trim up the roses , 'Mollle , An' look to the violets blno ; An' kiss the boys , with their lompln' noise , An' plvo me u kiss or tvvol NHY STONH , A UKMiNismNon OF run nixo , 11Y A. CONAX ixn I 13 i A new "erlnl itory begun Ti .ter Sun day to continue for sevenli n weeks The tnle Is told bv the hero him elf ni retired run U otllcer , nnd lie rec ills thol Incidents of his rnreer v\hru x boy-I The storv bns boon pronounced bv cotn-l pi'tmt critics to bo ono written In Dr. ! ' Doyle's very best style HOT CAMIin N3 br Tin : VAST. Abridged hHroiv of the jno if evcltlriff presidential contests simp the found ing of the republic Prliu-lpnl UxIduiM upon which mic'ret * en b r < i' nimcd - IMHNnu sphit often pMiiMi < M in rx- trornn foims c'inipnlKim Unit wunmht Tiitn to tbo highest pitch of excite ment. SUNMCPN TKIJASUUnTN TI1I5 MlSSOtWIt Sloiv of the He-nub now In ing piose- ruled for the unlu n vvlo. k of a Mis souri ilvor stpmnpr whloh ! > * > < lirrn Innlul In tire winds of HIP run for nliout thlllv Ji its-Tin oirun w is an exorptlounllv Milunblo on nnd llio o who hnvc taken up rim mnnh lire busily elifragfd plosrontini : It by tlto- nlu of old t-ovi rnrnonl ninjm The bent rout | IH Impi'Hshnlde Roods wMeh amount to u fortune should they bo KUccessful lu Uniting It I'NKUMATIC Tt'llTfT'OSTV.t , SI"HIC'15' N\vv svlpin Invmllng tin | > lit . di < - pnrlmpiits In nil pomitili-i l xn. > n niMttH about to bo Mli-d In this pouiitiv How llio tube xiivlro Is opi tut d nml win 10 It otTits ImpiovpttUMiH on the bllor nnd tolciunph systems us now In vogue. " " " IN WOMA"N"R" HUM UN blvlos , materials nnd tiltnmlriRM np- piopimtply Used foi sumiri-l mourning ' e'ostUtnes-'VvniU of the' Kiiwhrn Sun , the woman's mljtmct to I'm Misomy- lloiottlng ( iY\v < ! s n u-K-ular oemrtpnco with iln > mirsorrs Vnshlon note's from thp fii hioti CM ntots HPIUS of lute-rest about well known women THI : AVIIR IN snnrTv Soclotv In Jnlv Is sufTiiin under op- proiolon of tbo he it Pnl < i mnrm-nts nro of the garden pnly ordoied - dlrms etontlnrrc on the- list out of town \KIIors Whetonbouts of rho Orniih l soeletj frailer s Tin : rnMiNcT"mNruATioN "TbP Orldlion ling , " u storv of Anerlpnn pilrlntlmn nnd SpiinlBh Imtied of the Mtnrs nnd stripes A 10- yeai-old Amrtlum prl/e winner ut the London drawing exhibit- - uilo of thp youngsters nnd other bright bits for llttlo nnd big. WITH Tin : wimTiuNC winir llot divs for the sroirhet llcnr- ixtlvolv and liter nllv O'Or.ulv nnd bis ball bearings Hlcvelos for army pay trims The whcH-lninn ns n fieror In politics Latest news among thp local win el clubs -Oosslp of nroir nnd women who aio devoted to tbo bicycle IN Tin : WOULD or SPOUT Intpnstlng explanation win birds mlRritp Uevlevv of the ptlnclpil sport ing i-ve nts of thewiik nt linim and ulitnul Sit ivvs fiom tin1) isi bill dlx- mond-Pios | ) ( ' ( is for the-eoll. KIitbli tes -Nevvsv gust of uote-s on thru ly sportIng - Ing topics. Lr.DNi\vs SI : VICR lull Assoilitcd pre > ss foiclRii entile nnd ilomcstlitHcrinph sirvloc Tbo Now " oik Woild's spi-eliil foreign cor- 1 1 sponde-npp Unilv xlptl special lle-WH HOI v Id- from Nelir.isUa low x nnd the western st xtes Well written nml ac curate local news reports THE Oi\iAiiASuNDAY BRE , _ Tim nnsT NuwsrArmt. .IIN < ; MNC itm vnvs. ChlcnRO Tribune "SKtoeri to one , " she murmured ; " > eq , This d i77lltiK sehome. I oli-nily uuoss ; It fnlrly makes my poor head whirl , Sixteen engagements for one girl " Dmvlllo Chronicle lie can't pay Ills bo ml , for his stnr o MUCCOBS Ilene.ith the horizon bns sunk ; lie's nn oloplmnt now on his Ifindlndj'aj Imrnls , And that's why sho's holding his t runic. I. A W llulletln ' 'I'm onto you1" tlio mini pool tiled 'lo the trousers It Imil dotted "Ab , jes , " the trousers s ullj sighed ; "f see you h.m1 me spotte-il " Detroit Tilbime HP hud warm friends , * So I've boon told. Till be made thorn hot , And now thcj'ro cold Washington Stnr Oh. lightning bug , how filr your Whit peaceful hours jou pusa ; You lavishly Illuminate , And get no blllH for gas CIeelanil Leader She boarded the rur , nnd Into her eyes C line a look of wild dospilr ; For when nhe oji.rmlneil her ] > urso she found ) Only n milk ticket there. Sim pleadi dVhon shall I have vogue ? Ah , win li will my fiimo begin9' And echo nnsvvend tlio giuedoss roguo- "When you line .1 doublu chin" Snincr\lllo lomnul Hero lies a politician , In Ills lust , conti.ii ted bed Ho was a llur all Ids life. And now lie'a lying dead iriookljn I.ltV A natural in inner vvns her aim , Slncoru anil simple , and all that , Slut failed but Kb" was not to blame , 1'or hbo re-Hided In A lilt ! UR special odds and ends July sale. Positively the last opportunity you will have to buy Ik ? bzst high grade clothing-on earth for a mere song. Our 20 per cent discount sale left us with broken lots of all grades of suits and odd pants in Men's , Boy's and Children's wear. We have decided to make a big reduction in the already low prices and almost give them away to sell them all out , it would take too much time and space to enumerate the many bargains that are here offered. But place these lines before you , for your good , if you want a good suit cheap for now or next year they are the best on earth for the least money , all our own make and every one warranted. Straw Hats ยง 1.25 Straw Hats 500 Dent Fail to read t/iis it will for Men , TBoys and Children for for Boys and Children never happen again. You will Jind every 1/iwig on tables handy for you to SOc see , and we want yov to come and see 750 Straw Hats them and satisfy yourself that this is $ i 50 Straw Hats for Menj "Boys and Children for i one of the greatest mark down sales ever offered. 50c WE ARE DETERMINED 'TO SELL THEM. BROWNING , KING & CO. , ' Reliable Clothiers , Hatters and Furnishers , Southwisi Corner Fifteenth and Douglas Streets , 4