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Show tbujuix: oaxt iahxs city, xjtah, sinsr jdax moiinikg, oveziijisb s, isoi. xiua x jolts: chribun :::Iti The following paper by Sir Mortox Fbewejt on the free coiaage issue In the United Sfates. We notice by the dispatches that Senator SuebmaJx expects that silver will be the main lssue next year. We are glad that Senator SnzBscAjr thinks so, and we would like to ask him what he expects to accomplish by persisting in his present coarse. We will suppose a case. We will suppose that Mr. Floweb, for instance, shall be noml nated for President on a ringing platform demanding free coinage, and that Senater Shebmast himself shall be nomi nated by the Republicans on a platform keeping silver with a gold string attached to It. What does be Imagine the result would be? He can tell - by looking at the result In Iowa this year. lie would not expect the vote of any Southern State of course, and we can promise him with every guarantee nec essary, that In the West he would lose SUN DAT. NOVEMBERS, ISM. Karros O C GOUUWI.1. rCXLIIMCD S?S. MOSKlttO. roe year. ..... I. TVv. Ms . months. ...........J..i...i,....ft.Ot ........ 3MO i. t : i 3 t threemontha..i....,,...i....i. ......., iottJsy Tribune, one year..4...,i........i. unJiy Tribune, sis months.;. ,. ,4 . year.....J Trlhun. ill tnnnthi Vklr W Weekly Tribune, S.W ......'. 8.J ia - JX'Si .75 Tribune, three months..., tkycommunications relating- to news or edito A II - rial matter should be addresxej to "Eoitqb Tu j Minn." AH remittance n't business letters shonM be eddreised to Tub Tkiii'iie Pcblishixo bait Lake Citr, lUnh. j i'lIUUSUISOCd.. Tilt THIBUBE a i Com-AJI- wV I . - TBI t T, . m CU1X.B MAXTBa, f- Our ancient growler Captain Jou5 Corf aw we presume rom his signal station at Soda Springs, aes clearly that the great cause of trouble between our country- and Chile! Is dud to'tbe fact that an i Irishman was sent as Minister to thai jcountry frorrt the U nlted States. llejclvo aversion of the liarrundla affair; and sots up that the fhlps of the United States cannot uniderj any circum stances extend th "rigHt op asylum" to political refugees; au says, bad the 'Trent" entered .&ew ork harbor for Instance, with Maaox and titATEii that all ithe ships In tbe Jlrjlllsuj navy would not havo prevented tM authorities of the jUnlted Btati'9 fro n taking those gentlemen ashore. Wh ch hiay be good law but we do not believe it Jor a mont. We do hot belie vol that Britain would have bellevdd it either. We Relieve that she would have given the United States notice that when Maspn and Slideill. wej-- on board one of her ships, thejy were practically on British territory, and that the taking of theni from that Ship would have been equivalent to an Invasion jof Ingland herself for the same purpose. termination of Again he speaks of the proceedings jf thej Court at New Orleans last winter as a!4'fiasco." We do not believe that jelthof. Xew Orleans had been Infested wltltl a band of as sassins for a jlong ttmd; most of them were) citizens or the United States by adoption, most of thom ver men who, had they gotten into difficulty In a for- elgn country, would have demanded the protection of the JnIte4 States; but so little did they regard bur. country and Its institutions that thoy held them-selvopen to engagements to kill any one,Vho had becomo obnoxious to any one blso. The very best pedple of New Orleans concluded to stop ttjat business; they gathered in la body, went deliber ately to the prison, and Skilled those misWhen theyj - had an crea,nts. - - mo-Gre- at e , te i . os ; vestlgatlon, a , fiasco it but! tsTTsa no. s ritTra Is the second ii3 California, Nevada. Oregon, Washing ton. Idaho. Montana. Colorado both Dakotas, Kansas; .Nebraska and Iowa; of course, too, he . weuld lose Indiana and probably Illinois. lie had better think this over and see whether he is on tenable grounds or not. In the meantime! ihls paper from Mr. Fkewex is In direct order, which Is as j "rs j' t follows: " ! ianvm tw coikaosI ihi "rmi tbi nrnio - j life-beari- A not penetrate the plating of the .Merri-oac.- 1' A few weeks later permission was given to use thirtypounds of ppw-Je- r at a discharge instead of twelve, the result wasthat a single shot was able to placeiractically out of the .craft than the light a much stronger Merrimac." Now the charge has been Increased so d much that Oo ship can withstand a and prothe shot; further, jectile nurjod is composed of were it to strike whych, kill everyone would vessel, &nd I well-aime- ma-terlal- A This char- acter of gun has not yet been perfected but ' it has gone so far that could the ittle "Vesuvius" be in Valparaiso harbor, and could all the ships of the blleajurnavy be rendezvoused there, e hat single craft, wit ich does, not in- size with any other craft in the uavy, could, were it protected from destruction for five minutes, sink every ne of the hostile fleet; and against tier missiles no armor that any ship bould float under, would last for one secona. Indeed when a little further progress shall be made in projectiles all that will be possible for ships to do will be to act can! be ts transports, because aeld up to the work of fighting, when they know that no matter how magnifi cent the ship may be on which they are em ployed, It Js possible . for an enemy with a single shot to blow the sraft out of the sea. Both on sea and land it begins to look though the days of war would pretty soon be over, simply because of the de struction to human life which would Tollow putting the engines of destruction, which men now possess, In actual e the Committee on Coinage, Weights land Measures, of which committee Mr.f Kelly m then chairman. When Mr. Kelly reported the bill in the lower House, Mr. Potter of New York asked : "Does It make any, change lij the standard of weight or flnenesa of the coin?" ,Mr. Kelly re- plled: "Itdoeeaot. Mr. Hooper of Massachusetts next appears with Mr. Kelly's bill la chargeand thla bill was read and pasaed In the lower House after the .1. , ji following dialogue r Mr. Holtaan aald : f I atippoae it la intended to have the bill read before-I- t la put upon Its pass-age- r-- right, and decent (people have eyer since, In Jew Orleans, breathed freer than the did before. To compare that to the killing of a lot of men with the, uniform of the United States on, and who Were In the pursuit of their legitimate business at the time, may answer, for partisan purposes, but the American people will not take that view of it. W .. The fact is that Chile Is composed of Mr Hooper "I hope not. It is a long bill, and two classes of people a teyr are edu- those who are interested in It are perfeotly cated and brave, and generally most familiar with Its provisions." Mr. Kerr of Indiana "The rules cannot "be sensible people,' but :they have been bulldozers for a long time. , Ever since suspended so as to dispense with the reading of Mr blur they trod Peru under, foot they have theThe can be." Speaker !rrhey had an Idea tnat tney are invinciDie. Mr. Kerr "I wantthe House to understand tbat iris attempted to put through tola bill They have just got through with a civil without It being read." war in which all the stormy passions of After which the bill was "put through by the race were kindled. The other class vote of 110 to 13. In. Chile are exactly like Mexican peons, section In thla blllwas aeo-Tbe race a are reads:' "The silver coins of the which tlon IS, proba stronger except they tfnlted States shall , be a dollar, a half dellar. a bly. When excited they care f nothin quarter dollar and a dime; and the weight r for human Hie, all their Instincts are dollar shall be three hundred and eighty-foucruet, and it seems it was this class of grains; the ball dollar, quarter dollar arad dime brutes that our sailors encountered. ahall be, respectively, one half, oae quarter and motion. five to one that not one tenth of the weight of ald dollar; wAicA The chances-ar- e ZX.VKS DJUKAJTOB. o Isydf tinder at'thrtr nominal ever Jbeard of coins $kall crowd man in that one amounl not txcttding fto dollar in any any for In a recent edition th9 Minister Eoak; the chances are they on paymtnt. t would have attacked English sailors In Here, then, was the olauae that for the first printed this item: deprived the silver dollar of its full legal Some of the free silver men now ear the same way and further the chances time tender prerogative. No Congressman suspected would be satisfied with the coinage ofthey the amwill7 make Chile that arq there was any such intention on the part of American product alone, leaving the silver that ple restitution for that act or that the the framera of the bill; all no doubt lof tbe outside world to shift for Itself. At read tbe legal tender limitation I as ap- tbe .time of. tbe passage of the. Sherman will hear from the United States. 'only to bullion deposit law. about fifteen months in the meantlraeytoo, there are a lot plying not to the dollar, but and of vbitUln tbe dollar, Very few lago, these men said they were satisfied with of .foreign graders In Valparaiso, and members were acan closely a coinage Ithe act, and virtually pledged themselves td to ask for no further privileges for silver. at a time when both gold and silver bad but they were all summer, and are still bill bait a year later they were as clamor from Inconverticirculation and been withdrawn that peoengaged In trying to prejudice ous for coinage as ever. If tbey I ble greenbaaka' were the only currency in the should unlimited secure the coinage ot the country's ple against the men of the United country. - ... i Droduct would, a few months aubse- States A for Minister Eoan, there The bill paased the House and; was referred to buently, they as loudly as they have be bowling have been vague charges manufactured Senate Committee on Finanoe, of which com been recently for the removal or au barriers tee Mr. John Sherman was chairman. No metal. The country the correspondents, jthat ha has ml foreign against man in his senses supposes that Senator Sherman prill grant no further favors to tbe silver been partisan tn his dealings in that was man a not entirely honest, and of his ability men. .... most fvere: his orders but strict, and position would do well thus; late In the day country, It IS Just as well to be fair about it. to set himself right Iwlth his' countrymen by and the reports from' tlu State Departthe time of the passage of the SherAt as Grant. Oarfleld, Blaine. Conkliag admitting ment are that i he! has, (la. noi instance and vei admitted, that he bad no man ha others bullion deposit law, which was but many violated thoso orders. pTho matter will knowledge that an apparently innocent bill for a up taw t best, the silver men be settled all rtght at last, and one way codifying and revising ths mint statutes covered didpatched not say they were satisfied with the to be right is' to copper every statement radical ohaagee in the, law of tbe land, of which no pledges, real or made acty Was aid their It the they their scope purport. made by men who are evidently trying obangea m pi led; they did say they believed the first duty of every Represeatatlve, to ask the to maka capital againstlthe present Judgment of bis eoasUtuenU. Tbe bill was (effect of the law would be to bring- sil J j amended by the Senate in order as it waa de clared to make the United States coinage ratio ver up to a parity with gold. And so It Some able seaman, probably a mem-b- of 1 to IS conform to the French ratio of I to would, jhad not some desperate speculaof the Salt Lake Yacht jciub, has a 16V4. as to which Mr. Sherman said (January 17, tors hurried In from Europe and from iMexfco enough silver ball ion to block communication In a coii temporary call- I8T8):. bill proposes a , silver ootn age, exactly "This made lo The the same aa the JTrench and what are called the the doors of the advance, which in three ing to account a statement natioae of Kurope, who have adopted weeks more would have brought silver Tbibusk relative to ihe ealliug Into associated standard of ailver coinage; up to a parity , with gold, android. 'it the international n "Charn-pip2$w. York of the clipper ship dollar the U, that provided by this bill, is tbe therB..--under Captain Watkumax in the precise equivalent of the fiveforfranc ,;..;? :: .; i ; pieoe," j.swas that it The great fault of the law old days, Th Tbibuwk is not a marine And then la reply to Senator Casserly, Senator t ; r continued United to the said: States Gov have Sherman till journal; it does not. pretend ' section a coin The for mere preoedlng as a provides ernment brokerage establishany marines aboard, f The statement whloh is exactly laterchangeablo with the Engto. deal ment xri.3 simply a. reproduction of the words lish daily In silver bullion, shilling and the five fraao piece of France; mate! Is on a not was the bark that that is. the five franc pieoe of France wlUoe the which province of a Govern cf a man who a of dollar of exact and the United the next great weakto when States at ment all; vvss lying the ("Champion" equivalent and la order to show this, ness of the law was that after all It con- sed it on, that Sunday morning. in oar silverouroolnsge; sliver coin shall float, and we are wherever as the sole basis on which to 'XL 3 only mistake made:in the account providing that It shall float all over the world. tinued gold ' "that HXue did conduct business, and made of what sil Trlbvsx yi a v probably, propese to stamp upon U, instead of our fineness and the intrinsic was was of wind used merely, a credit metal. or the ver the eagle, weight nearly aft, nc; say that Linderman has suggested this as There are some people in the United c rJy a 'ew points, from being, aft. , The coin aMr. coavesleat mode of promoting, internaThe statement being re st of it was correct. ': (States that would be content to have a , tional coinage." : s that a gale so furious was blowing aw passed limiting the free coinage of We cannot have mn interna Mr. Casserly t all prudent commanders had their tional coiaage on' the basis of our sliver coin. silver; to the; products of the United :. 1 s thrown up In to the storm, while this unless our silver coin is np to the sUndard of all States,, but they would 'couple with that nations with whioh we expect to bare relaIn the same statute that klcss old navigator was crowdlog on the declaration tions. Tow I aak the Senator whether thla bill rn'J taking the chance every proposes a stiver coinage of that character V silver money In the United States is Mr. Sherman-Th- is bill proposes a ailver Just as valuable as gold money, that the :.it cf going to jDavy Jones's same "the the French and two metals shall stand exactly ooinsge was no r. There possjble attempt what are called the associatedasnations precisely la the af Europe. In, .nautical krsbwledge. the who have aaeptea t&e taternatleaal ataadard of same estimation oy trie Government. . nefit of Tua" Ttazvxe: What was silver coiaage; tbst Is, the dollar provided by And when the Q zrai says: ' was tiiertly to'na'ke clear an' idea, thle hiu la ,te precise eqolvaieat t the five The eountry will crant no further "' .:.? j.' piece." '.1 wo succ.5lod;llt 'dolns perfectly, frsae Could language be more explicit: every Senator favors to silver men," the Globe Demo -i t, .t 3 critical corres-- 1 w to heard this staternen must have understood crat makes clear the ftct that it, too. tt'.l was a till to include Use UnitsJ With the rest of the .t zi journals cf zdlcy really that t.e rj wlti t La.;:a ncsetary utiaa t t 1 r 1 to c: I : Unit: C.t I'zt "r rs w to te cc:r ! i t " r com-?ar- - I Jm . - i . . j at . ;. y -- T . , VAGOUS ARE FOR BUSINESS, BUGGIES ARE FOB PLEASUflE. by-Englis- . Apply tHis to typewriters, , sr WOBTD-BifeNOWMI- FIAKOS ARB D sold only by WAEBEK. HEECABTILE CO., In all of Utb.. Idano ana Wooalng. F. E. We are also sole agents for Kaabe 4 Col.. Pecker Bros., A. B. Chase, J. A O. Klseber. Barnes Pianos; Story A and Smith Clark. A. B. Cbsse, Lerin A Blake and BridgeWe carrjr a large and complete asport Orgnae. sortment of the above named instruments always on band, any of wbieb we will sell on time payments if desired. No trouble to show instruments whether yon do or do not bay. Correspondence promptly attended to. Prices and terms quoted op appiloatlon. Old instruments taken in exchange. We oarty the largest stock of Instruments and sell at lower prioej than any boose west of Obioaao. Stores located a follows: Salt Lake City, 7 W. Second South; Orden. SOTS Washington. Are. Boise City. Idaho: Cberenae. Wrontiaa Et-ere- tt, s 3 F. 403 E Prog-'res- Ul-eDzm- 1 . " :i -i c--3- -t .It. . 1 f 1 r Eastern Misfit Clothin T- SaJiterri LEADERS rrrr .OF rf . FASHION. X : ""aBajaBjajawsM j8 ijrassaBsrBasfaB THE FAMOUS LEADS. jj I I aa. kw I I fc " -- This is a sample of the conrersation one may at onr priaoipal hotels t" hear say daj Mi. Jones Don't yon find it hard to get a ood Imported Cigar nowadays? Ms. Smith I bare? smoking the Imported bill went into article ever sinoe tbequit McKicley effect. I am smoking a Domestio Havana Clear me which suits better than the washy Imported Cigars, and they don't coat as roach. Mb. JoKit What is the brand of the Clear? Mm. bjhtm They are ha h uti v s ii FAMOUS"! street. Salt Lake City. w,. us build you a modern home after your own ideas? Easy payments, of course. CIGAR, at; 171 and .' . n a. "'B r- - COWS; - ' ; i ' ' ' l - I " ssaMsseipaw- - ' I , - " ' ' Main 173 - - ... I . 1 i:i I hare 100 Lot3 in different parts of the Ctty that I want to trade for Drood Hares and Cows. I hare retired from the Real Estate business f and wish to close out some of my Real Estate. ::w , m mi (Not Brothers ' - ESTABLISHED 1B7X ' & MILLER, MILLER -- no relation.) Opera House Olook. . t I (Sncoessorto Evans A Ceec), j . mm si s o THE- FAS!!IO;iACLE Tf.lLOn. Ka KOaiUiaSt P. O.T1ox3"j3. - V. CAf.TEnOH, T.T. D. I am on the trade if you are. Addre33 roe at my ranch. 1 alsa nOUEOPATMC t PUYSICIAII. have a good pasture and accommodato 100 head of horses For ' SA.ii li.uJUi A Ub.iAMill y partisulara addxss, D a for of Chroc'.s Kaii - V lUiiLli!i:iii-iLjiiL- ;, " ' BUY YOUR SUIT OR OVERCOAT AT .' .. ' ONLY GOODS TO WEAR LEADERS OF FASHION. Let made ; -- c r 4. axti Ci a. 13 c-::i- i..l v.. .) SpclaltT 'i C3ertral 37, Ua it 2ud booth, am.il Kfie tttrty years. lilwcfc, 4i - . j . Building. ' n t ' f WHY NOT J - will sell you one of our and paying a larger price to dealers Tailor-mad- e or Suit Overcoat, elegant in design, peHect in Journeymen EXTREMELY PRICES LOW such at that you. will be forced to and fit, are the admit our Tailor-mad-e garments ,;:x and embody style, fit and workmanship at half the regular price any Merchant Tailor can or will furnish.the some garment. These are stern facts and yourinvestigatlon, is earnestly solicite McGURRIN, s i i- half-mad- e e PARUbRS, t i -- C-- Garments Uncalled-fo- r at the beginning of the season, thereby enabling our custorhers to reap the benefit by wearing them during the cold weather. Tiepe 'a no need of anyone purchasing a cheap; Suit or Overcoat than-w- The ' 1- j ty, 'a 1 But We fire Selling! Off Du-rabili- - I .Hre Not Selling Out Misfit and is not only first as to Alignment, Ease of Manipulation, but is1 also Out of Sig-h- on Speed. . . WB At an enormous saicrifice our superb line of Tailor-mad- a the nE:i:iQTo:j tyfevuIteh on. f' fTHESE A. And are mannfaotored and note in addition that : " Inuestigate thesB statements; they are worthu yoiJr strictest scrUtinif. j THE TWO GREAT LEADERS. hs -- liVi-i- k. one-fift- . Globe-Democr- few plain, forcible fads sliaulcl nave weight with, you, es peclallywlien it is in relation to yoxir. pocket-boo- . j ; A) j no-me- f Stcinway and CM&ering j & sirboard by the concussioD. UT ng j , f . cooling down. Tbat It was) hotter gradually In geological times seems clearly Indicated by tbe coal beds found In tbe Arctic regions, and their existence even in the British Islands Is evidence: in the same. direction. In thoso far distant .times Marswas possibly a habitable and inhabited planet, but bas now probably passed the stage of its existence, through which our earth Is at present passing. When, lb the course of ages, tbe sun has stlU further cooled down, all life will probably ceaBe to exist on our globe, and In that remote epoch Venus will probably form tre theater of life. We do not believe much in thai. The earth is inclined on its axis; it receives the light and the heat of the sun now at a, little tip of the earth certalny-angleSand that axis would right it up So that it would no more be inclined. In that event all the Northern Hemisphere would, in a moment, be under a tropical climate, and It would not bo (Impossible for the pafni to. bloom in British Columbia, and for elephants to trumpet in the jungles of Labrador. A great many scientists believe that away back In Vhe past the earth was not Inclined on its ais, but that the change was made In aj convulsion of .nature so swift and terrible tha It amounted to an entire breaking Up of the crust of the earth, and to an entire change of conditions, which wbre brdught around more, rapidly than the dissolution of the Peo-- , In corroboration pie's party in Utah. of t.hi9 they point to tho fact thai In Siberia they have exhumed .from the Ic the bodies of tropical animals,! and point to the fact that destruction "came so" qnlckly that the" tropicarjvegetatlon, on which the animal wa, i boding at the That time, was likewise .transfixed. there was an escape of Vapors, which, when they fell, fell in frozen snow and literally transfixed the' whole Northern portion of the ?arth. And reasoning by the flow of rivers and the natural currents of the seas, many of these men believe that,, at some period of the future,, when the weight gets heavier on the Southern than It is on the Northern Hemisphere, suddenly the old world will back and the tip first conditions will be resumed. Possibly the sun is banking his fires. It Is natural to believe that,because it Is an inviolable law that everything on the earth and on the planets and on the stars wears out, and that the earth, the planets and the suns themselves are wearing' out. But about Mars being inhabited that of course is a speculation. All the Indications are that it never Was inhabited, at least not by people like those that inhabit this planet;, for the reason that It 14 half as far again away from ' the' sun as we, are,' which would greatly reduce the power of the sun upon the planet. But worse still, h the presthere is only , about sure of the atmosphere on Mars that there la on thej earth So if human beings inhabit that planet they are composed of different texture than those on this planiU Again, the planet itself as dense as is only seven-tentIs this earth; and so our Eastern contemporary has no more right to say that Mars Is not inhabited than to say that It ever, was Inhabited. And as for this old world on which we dwell, the probability isthat the elements of the human race Itself will die out as rapidly ' as the. capacity of the earth to maintain the race will, and that the earth and the race together will wear out rather than freeze out. ' - . re-vis- the O NOT BE IN FLUENCED BY ELOQUENT SOPHISTRY I olts of an enemy. ' When the Monitor" fought the Merrimac" at Ham d ton Roads, it oubt 'under the orders of the W De partment to use only twelve pounds of powder In a charge. The fesult was that the balls of the "Monitor" could happened. In 1372, both been metals had assassins those been previously admitted having alwayi beautifully and effectually killed. There to free coinage at a flfed ratio, a hill was Introwas no fiasco about that. The commit- duced by Mr. Kelly professing tobodiy land- the mint statutes. The bill waa referred to tee Was In doubt as to Just who did kill that WALLACE & CO., OF VOBLOI. TBS Under the heading "Life and the 26 W. Second South St, opposite Cullen Hotel. Planets" an Eastern scientific publication puts out the following: It la almost admitted by astronomers anduniversally physicists tbat thelsun is ncreasing fn its resisting; force, the re- ult will be after a little more that the hip Will have4 to do as did the soldiers after the invention of gunpowder they ivlll have to depend upon their science entirely, and take their chances of receiving fatal blows In return. Just as Jttle'of the craft will be exposed as possible; the machinery will be duplicated throughout, so that half shall be dis- bled the other half can work, andjt 111' be a problem of sharp firing and ulck maneuvering and unapproachable peed that will be studied rather than he. old Idea of depending: upon the off U , of and tbe guns Improved Quality armor was powder added to until it reached m point here if m knight waa unhorsed It required several squires to get him Into the sasldls again, or If av man fell he could not pick himself up unaided. Tbe next step was to limit the armor to tbe more vital portions, retaining only tbe cuirass and helmet. . Finally even these were thrown away. Somewhat similar 'may; be tbe transition In modern I navies- - The guns bavins beaten tbe armor. ships max have to discard their cota of mall and rely upon ofrense as tbe best protection, just aa intelligent pugilists cfefend themselves by. the counter rather than by the simple guard. I If it Is true that . guns are being increased In power faster than armor is trength of the craft to throw V"-- ' 1 - - ; me : ; Qlob-Democrt- In turn Middle Ages, when gunpowder was ' knights and 6 ret latroduccd, tbe armor of taen-at-arIn was gradually Increased weight to meet the) new weapons. As the Lt . i Sax Faawcisco. paragraph: at West BJU.ru Mjsra ovvs. ) In an article 6n the limit of armored ships an Eastern journal Includes this' ' Before proceeding to review the methods by which allrer waa demonetized at Waablngton la 1873, it la deatrshle to fralce thl point clear,' that it waa In the power of jany sruup of apeoulatora who could aeoure thla change In the coinage laWa of the p ni ted Statea to achieve the greatest financial coy p of our generation. ub aelect a tingle aeourlty, tbe prtoe of which rlaea and f alia with the price of altrer that security which repreaenta tbe allrer borrowlnga of theUoTern' meat of India, "ru pec paper," aa It la called. Here are some 85 erores of rupeea. worth 85,000,- 000 if the rupee la t 9 abillinga, and worth S42,fi00,00 ahould the? rupee fall to a abilling. year aincer when freah leglalatlon waa Only pending at Waalajngton rupee paper rose, aud denly aim oat 30 pr eent, ao that on this ailrer security alone, and In tlx months, ' there was a apeculatlve advance In value of aome 5,000,000. And I am well withlh the mark In aaylng tbat if, during thiootnlng aeaaion, Congresa were again to demonetize allver. aa waa done in ,1873, the aterling value of rupee paper would fall not leas than 50 per cent, while, on the contrary, a free coinage act will secure aa advanoe of 30 per cent or more, rnia is merely one 01 a aozen seouriues, the sterling price of which depends directly upon the price of silver; and. Indirectly, a fall In tbe Eastern exchange ratea brings about a fall in the' price of wheat, of cotton and other staples, the valuea of' whioh for future delivery: are the and medium, both upon the American Koropean bouraea, for most extensive gam Picture theni for a moment the bling. para tor who knew for poaitloa of an certain that the f atook of tbe London A Northwestern Ratlwsy waa about to fall flftv points, and you will have aome idea of the for- tunea that could be made out of the enaulng fall In ailver securities. If only it were possible to se cure legislation here which, shutting off the unlimited purchase Of silver at these mints,' should destroy, the free market for stiver in this vast not In .... p establishing country.' Let us uow see what in! I STATES. M- the expense ot the that: the which shows East; . has of aioboDemocra$ the editcr no conception of the question sat all, and talks wisely abont aoaoething of which he know as little ae be probably dees of the language of the llottentots. We tell him that the State of Missouri needs silver money much more than does the State of Montana or Colorado, or any other silver producing region. If will figare Tip the the of Missouri" for this year In exports i a s In wheat. corn, In beef, and in ill the ronEiGH oooos omx prodncts-otth- e land, of the mine and of I the factory, and then add to that- 30 per medOur Overcoatings in lig-htcent, that 30 per cent, will represent of the Missouri what exactly ium and producers weights, are the are losing this year because of jthe de- most select heavy ever shown in the eity. monetization of silver, and from it, perhaps will be able to estimate how much Full Dress Siits are one of our more the men of Missouri are Interested I in having justice done to silver than are special, features! the "men who mine silver In the West. the Nation was shortly to awaken to the fact that the bill which was to make American coined silver "float alt over the world, which in the words of the chairman of the finanoe committee, Wa to arrange for a silver coinage "exactly the aame as tbe French." which waa to promote international coinage" this bill bad positively deprived sliver of free coinage and legal tender. And yet Senator Sherman declares: today, with indignation, tbat be, .at least, understood the provision and scope of tbe bill, and that bo considered a dollar which was not even to be legal tender at home, was yet good, enough to float all over tbe world." Mokbtoh Fbiwii. k.' -- iv t . . ' - . . tr XiL;. zzx.i.z ::j.l .T f ( .- - . - i j . . t , r . -- i ; . t-- i s 'I 5 9 |