The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 16, 1908, Page 9

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SUPPLEMENT = lant oe ae — of painting | go forth and publish the Ruler’s will to bones, the 3 ing Nght, as « coloeeal {his faithtut suvjecte, And aeneyite tae | sania: But tt lit notes upon them to the extent of $600,000,-| from tnose states. woul The Butler Weekly Times, nl, ‘he Center of @ system, with multi-| trumpets sounded, and there was burry-| formerly: 7! : eo a ye FR van amendment, and. would. re- les of met its antics, ence pleasure of the ks. De-j| sist its BUTLER MISSOURI satellites sen and things revolving like|ing and scurrying in all directions | through the bitt mn ot t : Uberately, therefore, we have put it in| insertion of sucha trove etn, TBS i. — round me. I have done the|throughout the land. High officials, | tican panics. As ang a ne “ the power of the banks to expand and | was a deliberate ‘and cunnis ¥ in | No. 38.| Stine, “Om®, Service, but I remain con- (drawing munificent salaries, hastened | Nowa, be bre thew < } bond | contract the volume of currency almost | political trickery, nothing ‘mote nor less . jus of the fact that that service is| hither and yon to obey the sov = face t extent of $0,000.00. Every | It was done to prevent the passage of — * 7 not 80 ex sovereign will. | frowning face man should know that a sudden in-|such a law. No measure ceptionally conspicuous as to In his first <pub- | crease of the circulating volume to that | abhorrent to Republican’ rosuexes, ore Some went to the south to organize the | dishonesty, lawl we f shea warrant me in lifting myself by my own | official retainers there encroachment y er “{l otter he proposed to sell them, as|extent would tend greatly to appreciate pang most boot tain that they might, if ‘aw requires they should sold, and, in many instan: orien thane ag ene tstraps to the admiring gaze of man. ‘Sy Rublle without discrimination. tor | it a4 cconomle tact heowa at a ine Fy Jed ye ull paid on the terms of the offer, | telligent men that as the THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1908. o ty Secure the achievemen’ r erest quently h ts of of men. plans to and tie 'y he arbitrarily char that | money grows the value of property and | butions and hods. rfl SPEECH OF SENATOR W. d. STONE |s.cmsx.= 8s tsi Sint man-an |tcten' te exigmcee "mien "rnere | eat hy os iw on Stee ted es [dae easPaeatn, be aebln tta of Get and vee Dacre fe Sal es 5 ~ | aver yard of policy at ¢ Hi > i ‘ sum J @ circulation of the , cl oD . trerage cltizen—neither better nor worse | Others went north and east and west to] aualified approvsi. | bat® mor Ray ttle he did on the country would give a tremendous im-| take up and pase cee maeTY to RS. in any other man who loves his coun- once discussed w dual petus to business activity and to the in- | and simple, pledgi Publicity bill ‘pure reat : nin fill Recon ans wi to crease of values, On the other hand, if | cratle support Sr tha apanere ee pos Delivered at Marshall, M nd hn the contrars, Be mi | SRPORIOrS “aan Suddenly withdrawn trom circulation. ag | Mark Sey wiauened &t for our at 4 hee | the bank make investments it be-under the provisions of this | come out 3 gooey j a — 16, 1908. with the foibles of my kind. All I can bee pgs sit (an inveiee ay on.ae unconscionable and | law, the instant effect would be to cut | among. con OY % Sg, Pefare, that ol kc is to do my duty as I Grote bank: fe owl ess and force | campaign fund n wil r4 see it, an w to that he urris lone will be found to 4 ad w Piliswchtinnda: aioe = ; iindet™hs Alone. As to the a, 0 009 ot 1ao"hot assume ‘that'bankers whe aan | bankers mors, Senerous than national * e As President w r quire” intention to re- | a) themselves of the law would be Week Tt has been said by some who oppose Official representative of the Winke| Dim the wisest, most (hough 5 cent cash, from. the | guilty of such misdeeds, but I do rly 8 my re-election to the Senate that T am jlobe- Democrat, erlenced, men it tninlatretion’ the | remalning #8 per Gent snoall teenie te lan crane ot mae . ne 3: beige lier ac en llegar as cdo ns in : | be mot to tear slo ‘it RARKS as Rovermment’ deposits. with- i country, I have read and heard| through the passi @ ponderous machine ‘stead! and to do the “ to [Der Cenk tten tow. Cheee ds draw 2 xem Statements of that kind. ‘These state-|has been moving and still moms long |S i ,SuaRERnAU crushing out “all” op: finoed sate ¥ Ut: | Purchased a W08 botae. sed Yet Sees Ca y pped as . . jo Camy ments have not alarmed me nor excited |® mounting way. I believe that the aver- f the tisuee awed hie’ bp and ‘with. his ta | posit” witha f, ire other Basa de- tp, very deep concern. Hitherto, aa all Mis- | ge of intelligence, morality and iat House, mawed his b ete. cannot ‘be dangers. that coniigut interest, the ‘bank, while | asseverate that in thelr opinion the panle | elect e d , sourians know, in my various political | Ship rises from one generation te pain amazement, for once impotent and | the steat body c! | nen tis | ceiving 20 per cent’ interest “on” the | fusal af nachens’ tere te ee the nined struggtes, whether for personal advance- | That the world grows better from year | and such Old war hemes genx: Hl Eulshed for things sane and jceused the bases este ROE LUS Be | Hw and to, the manipulations of bankers | thelr al gmoney, ai Ph Woo ment or for the promotion of public pur- | t© year I have no doubt. But to say that |", Cullom and 2s were bowled | Without stunts s rs tie’ [of being chiefly Weigetnte Romgant did, | than to all things else, should permit | occasion, y eee as ? poses I belleved to be for the general] We Are upon the verge of the oullenlon.| Over, HK®-ten ‘pins. The like ot It Te would ‘bre ri lus, this favoritism is astounding. It ie such | tovconfer fae grate coe inte, Young | Jeaving executive presser 2 iP» | food, I have relied with greatest con-|!8, I think, wholly visionary. le American polities. | Of, {he peorle.,» ee yur imeonsistencles that make me ‘so often | same banks to'work thelr wil than they | turned Tr onate (eroduced” $20,000 and nad Abad sua: their tok Sa ee die, machine was irresistible. ‘The Prest- | ™! ' ~ | sation he ood faith of his utterances, | ever before, ‘To my thinking | Roosevelt took the gona aaa Ringe vod) the electorate known as th a: {a “ rs le to agree, | it exhibit course of cdnduct abso-|a pharisaical ti Bs as repo @ country scrapping” among themselves as to | lutely inexplicab! a Tretense of virtue, de~ i 4 fl People, And why should not that have | ight of a new dawn which is ushering r pert . po Bhe | Af the panic. Some say it is publicans ia aicoeutt who aos 4 _ had obtained Tis otaos const crag | oyu been so? I was born and reared to|in an ago of endless perfection, We ars |2,Republican party condition. I ar a From the I peculation tenis tant Pes ef oyer- these Senators and Representatives be- | his participating pals as ortniusie aot . ol te repo more than half-manhood on a farm, do-| Simply moving as did our-fathers in past Be rans very Yiger concern. And ts. the discus , polls |Some that ‘it isan Insufficient curren ey, be EF aoe “noun i endores ‘this Rarich-Vr ne President signed the 1 we Na view cles, some that it Ig a defecti : , Vreeland bill, the last act send ing the things that farm-boys ordinarily |®&es with measured step forward tpevtache ot, ey, indifferenee the erent a defective monetary sys- | legislative abomination in November? | made it @ 1 ; = o, and practically all my life has been |UPWard. Men, right-thinki and major t yy party, which for the THE PANIC, tem, while others charge it directly to ft verting spectacle to obs a law, not even a dream flitted ex 5 ‘. x ing men, of a half century has domi- what they denomt ing spec 0 observe | across the horizon of his virt: ” - Spent among the country people. My | Striving now, as in the past, to suppress on ted, the ‘American Republic, having its| I have adve b + in 1898 ] cretions of the President; nk” the prea Teas oye a Pie pont “Mt ee sake meyete’ Danks out Of gratitude _ Chrit wife, a native Missourt gtrl,.was born | €Vil and promote the good. ‘In this ever-| taken bodily, ana Rollgles, and. Its destiny | and, 100 Mr ;| nt answers to the mayor of Omana, so | John D. Rockefeller clamoring for “an | whole perforenince wane be malt re 208, on a farm, and we were married at the| forward movement the indi of a trained e ae the : ne ‘mayor says, that if the panie was | asset carro oe h ou comical, if 4 » vidual man, ral army of ders with | ruin, Methods f to come the sooner the bett y. ce upon a time these | it did not border so closely upon ti he old homestead under whose roof she was | free to act on his ow: » | the sinister and selfish end ‘ \ : m- | er, and he} were the champions of “sound money.” oe Abe ; m Initiative, is the | i of perpetuat- ‘48 proud of his part in it. ‘Proud of | Th ry 6 apy Feared. My Kith and kin, and her kith|Sfest reliance. ‘The greatest liberty of | Beyond That ts the Pome sUt over and | Moral wore, ; Shen | What’ thine youoe that? Proud £6 | aie ioteeen eae ge eagers who bayed FEDERAL AGGRESSION. after nto! and kin, were of the count: a ty | thought and ‘1 juestion as nm tha rye : “ve worked havoc among the industries propaganda, They | w: The question of th anti were of the country, and nearly | thought and action consistent with good | 25M ple, without | equivalent of di } of @ great nation: proud to have brought | who cried in ail te tones of the chase, | tlon between the state and reaee Tela h. It ions of my life e er is the best. Now and then, e notion of a|® monstrous, wi le inl * was | Mleness to a million men and the gaunt | against a “cheap dollar,” Me cong | ernments, involvi ana identified with the country and with|here and there, ther: dq and offensively using | Noisily proclaimed " as-| Specter of want to i : fy cheap dollar,” a “fifty-cent ving the powers and jur! a of f : 5 © will be - gen w countless homes; | dollar” and a depreciated currency. Ni diction of each, altho n jac country-folk, I feel justified, therefore, |/awlessness, turbulence ye al: national retro" rt brogress prow nas cast eels, Sc | fher, stand for tn “asset curreney-that fooval with the foundation of th seek: owing lant © in saying that if there is any particular | AWainst all these the relei ates, to compel the seleo- | Call the multitu! rt < on | Shadow over a happy land. “I know. the | ctred “solely Ge ake eats UBT ABE BC: | ere bees fee oumatances of recent ived hd ot (E class of people T ought to understand and | PubIle authority must be raised, But | Ceeslon. None would. wens greasy, sum | the, So-called ay payor of Omaha.” He is an old-time | national banks, ‘Do You want to estabe | Meain. Th. the eginning. there wer ries 4 think IT do understand, and with whom | Crime is exceptional, not the rule. ‘The | {ut the privilege of a preference nee vhs | tures painted. ot Se | to bean honorable iene, Rey Fe now, lm | lish a bank ‘oligarchy in “America and | Seat divergent lines of thought. the one pal She Phey i X ought to be in sympathy and am in| ule 18 progress, $0 it is now, has ale | rece Wealn ring limits to, ex: | enforced idlores si belief, it» seems” ‘Incredible, that the | hudroy raitvor® Detbint ho an decent tony and the eter see ey Hamil: ay, while sympathy, it is the country people. It| Ways been, and will be . > tp phat is a right inherent in him, | houses! Soup-lio ' vre| President’ of the United Stat O BOk OMS | nan Aeag. cee emeon. | These ‘ . to th not as i 7 aig : “ es, this | yourselves, my men and their i the world has made would fest against the President ier’ | vast soup-bow!: »|it is undoubted! » and} ing. Here is what the Philadeiphia North | Hamilton had little faith in the capacit: st our ; have been | using the tree ong ‘Aggressively | Vas bow j undoubtedly due to more than one | American, one of the leading independ- | men for self-government ; Jeff Mf U ox, impossible, “In ‘the work men Go. ter | seen at hie CER rds, bower and nine | Democratic 1 Sine in |cause, the great ccengral (fact remains | ont Republican papers of Pennsylvania, | SUPreme faith in thelr capaciy. tank ' to lead t Bell progress I have striven in my day to per- | {M8 .,the organization vast’ othelai | ing angel of de- under. Republican auspices. “How Pieag | Bas to say about this law: ton, fought, to establish a” government ie inter nts to form my part, as I shall strive to do in| of & successor veo igs Mdlvidual choice | Hot remen which |{h@ ‘panic may linger none can forecast, “This law will mean the turning over | tonomys Jettereca feck, fhe Britsh au future. But I shall not hang aay ts hie ie oA) the country. Such a| they burdened vr be- |The recuperative energy of our people is of the treasury of the United States | tative. democracy. ‘Hamilton, “aestred a pavers | 1 func nera._upon_tt n~ | Molath cause Clev sued 10 t marvelous, and already they are bringing| to the gamblers of the New York |great, over-maste weer, & skily-w f Don the outer wall nor blow any | Wich forbes eoettGai ttt peace ; order, out’ of chaos, We will have the| Stock Exchange for a period of six | government; deferens eats central auckily w Trumpets from the parapet. M: Is “pernicious _activit: y {ugly ni i :}experlence of other pani e} 1 ¥ an desired a central : . My work, | public officials in polls y | Ww ; panies, Gradually | years. 1t will mean the making of | Kovernment Of limited and delegated wring whatever it may be | Politics. Moreover, it is 4 sperat- | ur wounded industries will limp out of| ‘good times’ and ‘bad times,’ of “bull | ers, with Seana Dow» ‘asant f » Breat or small, 1] intolerable as a matter of good test . N wae the storn id + . ‘ es," of ‘bull | ers, with all other powers reserved to the ¥ shall let stand to speak for » 1) public decen e and , there. m, and sooner or later normal markets’ and ‘bear markets,’ accord- | states and the people, Jefter with Al : a itself, cy, and is dangerous as a| ever such effusiy visting. | Conditions will be tored, 2 i. Jefferson and his chool these reflections, which to some extent | accomplish . Successfully | they proclaine: in | inevitable losses yet to accrue, ‘there can Bank, and J. P. Morgan of the Na-| Most part along line oe t plished hereafter, and so, if per- | Statecraft 1) . for sue-|be no restituti 1 * ‘long the lines of their cor »8¢ camptn 2A Gf Recents have os mitted: toeey nereatter, Af por | Stat ‘no restitution, Out of it all comes] tional Bank’ of Commerce. It. wilt| tention, . This provision has be P inage ¥ have been semi-personal nehallenged, it mayb sful govern ‘ only this poor consolation, that it is a] mean not only the sl cert ated i 1 Sala pes ” in character, to other thi come the rule for one President after an-| its very audacity. | Republican panic. Not even In the re-| move Y enatrenticn tg iam | berated i he Senstitutten : keley ored tl sald practically all 1 have to, a aare fede. Coe te puceessor. “That in | nancial asturi motest degree ‘can It be caarget to te | flan hy the nstineh inee oe ate States ie it, delerated to tho United 8 explain é malty jose on to a Ye j shouted, | Democratic party. ‘That is the signifi-| merce, but sharp change: netitution, nor pro- i aurve Personal nature. I come to you ag a| SPecies Of monarchy, wherein. th a Repuli ; z on Q p changes forced at hibited by it to the s : a e presi- H ion, Ag] eant fact I wish especially to impress. It| will by th te: " sreed tar fo jhe states, are ro- e acting as Nid Democrat to talk democracy. I am not tte elt LF Substituted for an | | i in would | proves the falsity of Republican accusa: | mean the git to an eiee wim served to the, states, respectively, or hg b here to speak for myself, but for the| tliat. would ultimately Yat and to what foe itt cy cloud Eaane the emptin s of Republican of the nation of the power to issue sMaphveta: cond hich were ¢ ro , +. in| le sk das, have | boasting. Hereafter sane men will, giv r retire a hi ox: | Th Mocratie party; not to arraign Demo. | retell. Hoar what the Hon. Henty i | these pros. by ‘na how | less heed to traducers when the name of | elting speculation’ ce emmteiina’ dig. fernment wes (heory pen which our gov. nen Into tH ) Emt oe and sow the seeds of dissension, | speech Tominating Benaeae Tot vol a fe pave hese cap’ been ful- | Bryan is heard, aster, according to whichever’ best that if one shes to ‘sane wet Tower While gam : ut to attack the Republican } | President bet ‘ollette for | filled? For publicans suits their betting book, We do not |P jurisdiction the f soverAment rel cxpone Is mortn ea oar and] Fae aie Ghengy camer |e cid ti THE ALDRICH-VRERLAND piu. | Hoe, gehat menmure of puntniment| amin he mit Joo oe canta pe hs Sra dan hounce a biographical eulo cosevelt should be “neither his heir nor | by large majorit Sg cress | Certain-Republican leaders i & long-suffering people will inflict | {lon, Powers not expressly delegated ith but to discuss gy on myself, | his crown prince.” And further he said, {have been suprens : Uke Aldrich and ‘Vreeland, folowing a] von thelt betrayers. by that Instrument to the federal gov- he tum sol loa Lalas Breat questions of party| “If there be danger of Mexicanizing the | absolute as to be. }.: possibility {coterie of great bankers ahd financiers, | This Is from a high Republican source, | expressly mance sally Implied by grants » and some nin tt difference in which the people of the|over™ment by an el Of successful challeiice vad What has | Mffected to believe that the pante was due {1 could quote many like statements trom | states, separately, rag vee vee, (0, the d W State and Nation must inevitably be pro- happened? What hast the per-|to @ lack of money and ‘the want of | other publications of equal character and | thereof, “The great wa, £9, %¢ people and Wakele chooal foundly interested. We are poe Sunshine, | wis of the flecey | greater flexibility in our currency system, | potentiality. I appeal to my Republican | the government feared the Aa itenne only excuse 7 & campaign of imm @ Soe Thing teres te 2 For nine hwnt) now we have | Thereupon they started in to incubate «| fellow-citizens to ponder this subject | sible ‘and. overcrenchicg don cere spon : 01 loa len INS. the American. penmeasurable Import te /autnority: Ot ail things: it ia wepubllcan | had the devil to pay. siorm, tong brew- | Femedy, and the result is the hyphenated | serlously and to look down the path of | distant, central Rovernment, and so thes ardertng the J ENATOR WILLIAM J. STON ple, ie two rtant ti im |S, broke with starilins suddenty upon | Monstrosity known as the Aldrich-Vree-| the future, if possible, to the end of | wisely ‘d ' i sum of é NE, politica Great | portant that the supreme righ the . 1 aw, ly letermined to grant to that gov- “ Parties have promulgated a maricah £ ight of the country, Nearly ove-y bank in every {land law. Of this law I wish now to | this tendency. ernment only such power: wh By ke killlng “sc a ~ nati their . Volee—their—will” at} state suspented payiien. aid Scores of] Speak. Prtor to its passage national] ‘That our monetary. system 1s imper=| se bg AT ll haat Bae bie that should touch the preshatal eet and nominated thelr Threrorose oe rw i absolutely free, | them toppled to a tall ‘ing’ wreck | bank notes were issued onl: When United | fect there is no doubt, That It nee era in the hands of ‘he paavig’ Ty "ene pra atid his pi vol loa of man. Is it any wonder then | PT candidates. And now once | quence that this extraordingse oo corse Mien eousands: the banks every | States bonds were deposited to secure} to be re-cast, reformed and revised ig {eral terms, the federal government was aland oth that in the thirty years and more during |“&tiN these two old combatants, hisuse tr oetls extraordinary and vulgar » unable to realize on their securi-| them. ‘The new law makes two radical | equally certain, It is the handiwork of | organized to reguinte ang cect es eras G My Which, in publle and private ite, X have |Demoeratlo and Republican parties, |SUAMUY, rebuked, and that, thie arrears | Were. compelteds eae thee upeR hem, [Guanes inthis, particular, | Firat, under | Republican statecra¢t, and formerly they | public affairs which pertain jolly. and nen, and also , | stride + eiled, with tie enforced con- ational an! may now under ere wont to ast at it was as near | simultaneous; mmon taken part in public affairs I have de- aaty for the fray, confront each eee Fl Manoud tee seumption and usur- public officia's, to issue script | Certain conditions pate tate, county, rfection as any monetary system that | the states. ‘4 Joattere ater ont ~ - cial ended most upon and been closest to the | !K@ gladiators in the arena of the er | Melbiense tenes, Tey, checks : vn their own credit, |town and municipal or district bonds as | human ingenuity could devise, but now | lations with’ foreign countrien atecthes DO! People I have known the best? hace | tion. a-| rles'in this feanion tout ne he ‘de y of even current |the basis of thelr circulation, “Upon such | the most blatant ‘boasters among, them | the relations Between the aiffetent ates ated that he © in the sometimes aj they must afterwards Is the ba may receive circulating | C0! radically defective and | an @ people thereof, affecting inter- hi ppealed to them for personal a tt peo Kc. Syiegt two Months | state commerce, affecting the army and ayhao, but was Preferment, but oftener ha “ SE he ; trusting 5 to be as-|the most distinguished men of his state | clesin fy ob inited ‘States, ‘and. cons jee ieee ve ay te . fo Tuck, or 69, Name, | feter tp this ceriained'y on president ‘of the Prudential of hie Insure fndtiona racial Constitution cons Re oliaead i J n : | Syety f ‘or, altho he Yreasury, not to exceed the | ance Company, a naire, and ution con- ‘deemed—-for—the= punite-go0d,— r t | mig -t ee thing pind Son ‘was violative of the Taw, T par value of the ‘securities. Second, | hitherto a high authority in Htepubliens ernment; but in matters of lot oo TS paRE! never appealed ‘tn Vale’ 3 iabe take re that the tart baron, |approved it at the time, nq approve |under this law ten or more national |clroles on matters ‘nancial,” in a. public affecting only the people. of Wee otcert dilen that he f ‘ ‘ expl % ie theory. that » having an aggregate capital and|specch hefore the Republic: my £1 20 —-onored with the good-will of Missourl's F a_all who represent, preda-|I would justify a tress to check a | surplus of at ieast $1aW,00 may ‘or-|tlon of his states over which fe pre: | with dor i igeett Bere, matters, tn gemall force. splendid yeomanry, and especially hon- ‘ory wealth, are without dread of his can-| conflagration. “They did \isviy to take the | @anize what is termed a. “national care | sided, made this deckeeatyen ead idual man is most often 0 ored with the confidence of the country TAFT, eae ayer peneted him “en the by cae oe banks w«re not the only | rency association.” The chief purpose of “The country’s por aaae SUprenacy anid mediately | interested, the sported to be pollo democracy. For thirty yoars, in office| At the outset it is well to take a meas-| Without fear. “Instinctively an’ honest {ments of the fund have. iio? seaplshs | thes¢ associations ts to enable an individ-| passed its day of usefulness; it is | WAS preserved. But trom the day of ‘the {th many fol cum of” 88d oUt of office, I have been fighting | uring glance at the leaders, After a|™An, with intellectual qualities of a hgh | thelr’ pay-rolls ‘and. putie< uer reduced | wal bani, a member | of the association, | Inguffictent and ‘uxsuited to present | OTanization of the ioe aie S8y ot the ; their battles, and they know it. For| desperate, almost order, he is yet deficient in combative| their furnaces and clovi their di romissory notes, he basis’ of circu needs, and has become a menace, and | day there has been a constant struggle, dna iy et toss 4 ine ‘or ioe dati aoe factional con-| force’ and by nature unfit for uncom-| Although enormous ‘quant tic ot aeaen ion i? a weak i, doe spent a cannot continue without remedial ac- fomptinies openly and sometimes covert- r pil R ined rel ” is wi = 2 Yad * vl e] re i" ort : - ¥ - cor mercia com Y ge . mt acta to 2% _not conscious of anything. done to|Mating Secretary Taft as his successor. | toy in be ro naacy, and if elected | there was no money to Ii them, nee-{additional circulation, fe would. we ‘rer | Republicans now, and, of cows hae Powers of the see and, <2 Auament, the é forfeit their respect, and so when T hear [It was a memorable victory for ae wal stilt Be forever grouped about him, | markets to absorb, tem As 'a "conse: | auired in the first instance to.-lay” the | ong been the sentiment “among. Demo: | Remtencs: tagart a eos werent: THIS f the Cob P es OVEF It sald by those who have reason to wish| President, won not only over many of | /#f&e extent, the creature of his environ-|until the transportation. iianies ‘Mee | Of the, associntions tect e eee een are coming ta antag ere UH | alia nuthority, oweauent diminution of 6 $75 Me misfortune that the country people|the most conspicuous leaders of his| Mout youie erpORt, Morgan abrtived in| been on the verge of bunkruptoy, and fes it offered to pledge. If the|the long-time contention of democracy. | half-dozen betas Buide ane b Globe: Democr bake have’ turned against me, I do not be-| Party, but won also over the vehement |lowing Mit ‘ervs rae on a ey tl Renae, Baire teen d into ree officers of the 3 sociation should approve All of us are fast agreeing that the ex-| aggressive and acute than at any tme nty {s th : ve e 3 > . 1 10th, of | the application, would then be their | isting monetary system is inadequate | si ar ne ae 5 he rane! 2 jope ani jeve + Taft is the product of political |of the Secretary of War allroa'! Company is-|mit the proposition to the Comptrolle ator Dryden went on to say: people are not indifferent to the tre — and B Is true, that the people resident in the | Patronage. He is a creation of Roose-|18 g00d, very good.” “he reactionaries | iat. date that. company. |ici tyttygtt [MBS querency,, If in tum that officer | | “hat whatever action may be | events, and if they are to” maintain the tho desire eee large industrial centers of the State have| elt. Personally he is an amiable ana | eared, the Idloayncracies,” the ‘bronce | freight cars. standing oo rh aie idle | Should, approve it, It would then be his} taken should be taken by the party | iMtegrity ‘of our institutions as we {ne or ny come to regard me with greater favor|sifted man, but withal, puffy, flatulent Hpethoos. ang. the impetuous outbursts of re and in shops, out of a a reasuee 7 ne he shail be Ct comicn ie record entitles it to public con- Meet nd meat Denoaves them, to be We name h ein Mil than formerly and to esteem mo as cap-|and wofully deficient in . Roosevelt, ey are not much alarmed | 87,500 cars. Those idle cois rcpresented|that the conditions contemplated by th we t oa ha ey permit power 2b pipe. I those rugged} #bout Taft. The Wall street sentiment |@ non-productive investmen of ‘fs Meteo [law existed eh ‘statutory re- Ie daar mn ttele hands to ‘be exercised ida * ‘ of $19, 200, 000, ; at all statutory re-| By which he meant the Republican| in distant pl , ae ‘act (w able of representing creditably the var-|ualities that make for .. | Was well expressed by a prominent bi About th 000, Srenen | Syn: Cae y mn fant places, it will be hard to re- yx]. 19¥8 and important interests of this great | ship. He is fat, good ite GE ptt Magen nae think, Taft has ‘anak a prominent otasiat of th t Burling gies Mita Inte cr angliseat’ cite Te siticed “ts” rrapueiionh neatoay. wand | and’ ‘his Tole ee of Mr. Roosevelt a ange Hs Commenwealth, I am bound to confess| ing, and liked by everyone he meets—a | Roosevelt's po Gag inherited | ton System that that 1 then had'{culating notes, based on the commercial | organs throughout the country. 1 shall |and in the direction of ie» centralisation, ears ago t 250 pe that the assurance of this fact is a]man who would rather eat a canvasback |@,Wil, do, with them no man can aie ESE ge eS diy” pee | aimeeeton, Hetty Semen Sco nae [Ink Whee pasty TRE: Seen nation | ecetethe, More. portions Tpecave ofthe fo he wag ° a pa ca i = ersi iscretion, e4 Y ing. Whi ty has a ascinati y ae be stern E Source of profound gratification to me.|than flash a sword—who swould rather | oe unseen me cat Say As that he is|vailing among the railroads. ‘This panie- | centum of the ensh value of the Secuti. | it to public coniidence? ‘Who constructed | hold dhe ear gel get ,Me inexplicable, finds for joir 1,8 Unable to see why a fact of that|temporize than resist, compromise than | be elected, il We Cal do is to bone ie | See eee eka han, Tauying 2c ity, has |tles deposited. ‘These circulating notes | this system we have? Who begot it, [imagination of the Dele EE he e kind, if it be a fact, as my opponents| fight. As a presidential " the best, ' ed in a relative | woul lelivered in the first instance | nurtured it, a rought it up to Its|/most adroit and dan, 8 it , our ¢ J . quantity he is, degree every industrial activity of the}to the currency association for and on| present state of lusty imperfection? It | this i at ee P usual. insist it 1s, should be to my discredit.|I say, the product. of Roosevelt ack BRYAN. country, For months there was universal {Behalf of the particular bank applying | {s a choice creation of the Repubilean | Elim Root the Scmeteen ey ation 18 is cove This is a wonderful and mighty State I| Patronage. Who does not know that ex-| Of Mr. Bryan there stagnation, disastrous and iful, ‘and|for them, ‘The entire association, under | party, and if now its creators confess | this movement I think the President fac *, like her adited have been representing in the Senate.|cept for Roosevelt and that vast retinus| little to an Amer e we rena to say but Seaton: wae ce | eas Ns in every me law, would be responsible for the re-| their work a failure, is that a record | lows the Secretary, rather than the re- : nudited Agriculture is our greatest industry—the | of officials who do his bidding, the Taft|® name, 1n fact was a household wore, {have lost employment and thesands have |holdtag the pledged securities to'iederaak: | of failure, lemonstrating. Inconmpeteren, | {ee esighen reese, the, President exerts ses nin pay foundation, indeed, of all our industrial | candidacy was impossible? ‘Th iso it is the name of Bryan. He is not only | been driven to want. I could fill pages |fy it. ‘The evident and confessed object | command ‘confidence? Are we to permit | promote the ductGne. nee omice to n, becai activities, and those le Presi-|the most conspicuous living Ameri, with authentic accounts of wage-losses | of the law is t ble the 1: ‘al | th sbals tO abil he coed e e both espouse, On , 4 engaged in it are|dent likes Taft, although b ican, losses, ¢ law is to enable the larger national | the same people to again try their hands ember 12, 196, at a notable di The HEME carte with ween tates Wholly unlike. pur Ugh the two are| but, the most illustrious private citizen | and resultant destitution. It has been | banks to unite their credit and commer-| and organize a monetary system which | given by the Pennsylvania Society Cece and he L : ve been most ly unlike. But that a man of is ont wor! : Ane yet, great as he is, he | Stated on excellent autho: that 500,000 | cial assets, and by co-operation to utilize | will deliver over to the banking corpora- | Waldorf-Astoria in New York. Sy Roo rt r. King’, -Mmtimately tdentified. Nevertheless, there | Roosevelt's imperious nature should be-|tyig ot) pitt unpretentious, everyday | railroad employes alone have been laid |them to obtain additional circulation_as| tions the sovereign power of regulating | gave utterance to the sentiment I qrete pot are other interests of stupendous import | come e1 common people. If you |® all branches of the service. Only | they might have occasion to need it. The|the fiscal affairs of the nation? ‘The | Among other thi : = dy that Sr t pel port | mamored of a man weaker than | should ask any man of any party in any | short time ago Mr. Mellen, vrcsident of | law fixes. the aggregate amount that. mes | Demockatic party cannot do worse thie gS NE Sas 80 egg ise bur Wh0se prosperous progress is necessary | himself and pliant to his will, is no aged who most nearly represented | the New Haven Railroad Company, pub-|be issued under its provisions at $500,-| these discomfited Republicans have done “By the side of this strong and 1s of iv E.R Pi . i Hneteteal and vigorous growth|cause for wonderment. That is an - o. ; sy feast commons: his pn Stated (oe god i so seri- bead ye issued aes the pro-| and propose ta, do: Of one thing you srowing eae to the nation, senti- d @ State. If, as a representative of | currence with vel 0 Bryan. fected a 's company | Visions 0! is act are made subject to a/ may be sure, that if the responsibility 1 ‘or the separate states has be- seed p “Ib tee many parallels, No man| All men know him to be honest and | had been compelled to reduce ihe service, | tax at the rate of 5 per cent annum | of reforming our financial system is come dim and faint in com trouble — = the people, I strive to give some|is more companionable than the Secre- qble, faithful and gifted, courageous and | 4nd that since December loth they had | for the first month, and one ber cent per | committed to the Democracy, it will be| :...- Our whole ilfe has swung naey ids of rireatm {ngught and some attention, aye, equal | tary, and it is no marvel that Roosevelt, | tense’ dosbieduaing, ancapable of = Sour aproRtmatehy 180 mcg, "eats /month additional thereafter, until a rate{done in accordance with the theory that | from the old state centers and is $377 et impart! thought bs a or leness. | en, repre- [Oi per cent annum is reached. The | it is the constitutional duty of the v= allizing al it national ™ ¥ ly. Ne whatever concemne say aac aaention, to | arrogant, assertive, dominating as he is, |t0 etilogize Bryan is superfiuous. It is senting all departments, have been laid | notes issued under thig law are known as | ernment. to supply money based on tta| Inthe wide range of dally netivity y. whol my countrymen a2 © ld take this genial, complaisant gen- | Ut commonplace to praise him. off or Sacer But to these must be| “emergency currency,” and the tax re-|own credit and to control the fiscal af-| | nd interest the old lines between the uch gO Whole, whether they live in the country|tleman for an intimate and confidant. | ti ft contrast between his nomina. | 44400 that still greater army sent forth | ferred to is imposed to hasten thelr early | fairs of the people. states and the old barriers which continue OF the city, who will dare to speak in| The President, who does strange things Romination eg oe irises sat from ‘shape stores on, reine another Rela rTnee ae st: is th o tice are ‘compl tely Tost. from alent. e remotest. de er is, in substance, is the remedy cer- Ri ARGAIN, mpletely lost fro th of tin Protet? Because I strive to do this am|in-strange ways, and whose spectacuiee greo the product of oficial of industry. ‘The aggregate is appalling | tain national bankers. and’ Heovolican bata wiahdert oepazient ~. » Buch changes in the life of tis health.” to be told that the people out in the| performances adroitly staged have at-|<°! It is the There have been bread riots—real_bread| statesmen, acting in co-operation, pro-| Before dismissing this subject I cannot People can not fail to produce corre- 1d country have lost faith in me? I do not/| tracted popular applause and lemand of the From by hungry’ Men, women and chil- Rose as a’ panic preventive and panacea. | forbear expressin curiosity as to what sponding political changes. Some of Cold T% ‘tetteve it. I think I know the country | undoubted given him section of the Union ‘unmas- cities like Chicago, Buffalo and|The best feature of the law is the pro-|return the Republican party managers ese changes can be plainly seen now healer £ Power, determined to make a untrammeled masses called to him |New York; and to relieve a most menac-| vision Mmiting its continuance to six | expect from national bankers for the in progress. The end is not yet. The , atore, Ramus Atee, than ge who say these President of his chum. Here we have| forth iy stew’ the trate efforts. put | Te Were iver naneaiy omiploved | years. That fe sue duration fixed by its | new favors conferred upon them by the} thetinct for, self-government among < things. all event want le were ful yment | terms. venture to say, however, that | Aldrich-Vreeland law. it compensa- e Uni ates too le free, — anomaly the ition tried to lic works in Poiadelni, There | while it is claimed to be an experiment, tion will be made in the way of cata. strong to permit them to respect any- — ; ie Tushes, Thi more aoe Bouzes va the east, | tentative and temporary, it has been | paign contributions? In 189 the national at right to exercise a power which Fattenii: man and lo y such chari- | teally put out as a feeler. If the people fails to exercise. The governmen- know him to be a man of exceptional endorse the measure, if they fail to ex- tal control which they deem just and Ast. dowments—a student, thinker, it, then were caught red-handed in the very act necessary they will have. . . . The ke 2 pher—a man familiar with the grim 1 . | of contributing, indeed made but little people will have the control they need ut the { its and civilizations of the was i Qhin . Hear effort to conceal it. Leading bankers in either from the states or from the * ne who correc! . t tary systel at centers wrote ‘argent letters to national government, and if the ewith jo mks all over the country, both state} states fail to furnish it In due meas- t + 6 American institutions—but, wit panic . the as y and national, for contributions, ana ure, sooner or later constructions of pe to eat man of sim; lite. blue with ble that many of these letters were given to the} h¢ constitution will be found to fix rspen 4 this depar- . Ihave now in my possession a See omer ‘Calls @t soup-houses are in- tter written by a comm ol - i More thi the onal their own] Presi vat the ae i t of | simil g . yy charit of money, and one-quarter cent of their decl bu ‘such the 2 ius, 006 onan the government of the United currency thet many banks. tes need to promote its policies to eat.” is one of the most delicate snerously | {4 See ainending the constitu. — ~ sof our sover- tion if possible, and if not possible, then this is the same ola "American | feat inany ‘contributed than through executive action ~*~. ‘eatotal sme f c ¢ ‘ana ‘by’ a. difteren an

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