Show BLANDS BIII 00 What are you going to do with your silver bill a correspondent asked of Mr liland of Missouri the father of tho proposition propo-sition for free coinage 0 Lot it rest for awhile now ho said 0 Wo cot n very encouraging vote on it ftltotnIelet cll dtoro We will let it rent for awhile and may do bettor next time dlifr you would add n dunes I puttini a dollars worth of silver into the dollar you could pass It couldnt you Yes I suppose to llnl that would bo just increasing tho obligation of tho debtor class 20 per cent and I dont think we would be Justified t1n doing I that Wo will let tho matter rest awhile and let Congress bear from tho people They will bo heard from Congress is hearing from the people It Ions heard from the most powerful labor organization in the world and < l tho industrial classes generally are evincing evinc-ing an amount of earnestness which cannot fail to force recognition They propose to increase rather than diminish the currency volume and < l they do not propose to pay their indebtedness in-debtedness < in dollars costing onoflftl more than those upon which their obligations obliga-tions were based That is tho popular sentiment and < l the one which is bound < l to prevail for it is based upon sense reason and justice |