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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SATURDAYX{ MAY 380, 181—TWELVE PAGES, 11 F e —————— FREE COINAGE OF - SILVER. ) tr'ers, s z | R o o ‘ ; We Believe BEGGS' o fitst got through, but hestill | had i ot these people wall tell had ten apples (oft. Now, if ho sold theso | v 1 wstant shrinkage mour | That S, S, S. is without tial poison. It cleanses the AND MONEY SUFF . J UL ; o system all impu 4 ’ ; \ * 1SUFPERED FORY YEAL | t t t o t y WHTH MALARIAL FOTSON Caused by the . t o . f L . MY APPETITE FAILED, AND rhat Formers Have no I L % Subld 4 d 7 ¥ J L i 1 WAS GREATLY ReDUCED IN FLESRIL 18 not plonsant to take, as it is com- Surplos for Which Money o 15Lion W N | 1 1 f nis I TRED TVE MERCURY posed of all the medicinal qualitiog May be Had r X W 3 pro. | t i bout thirty ¢ M AND POTAIN TREATM, 0 that go to mako now and rich blood ) ¥ 7 L e without compolling tho consumor ta UNTIL LIFE HAD LOST ALL CHARMS 8y BE e e & 5.8 8, MADE A COMULETY I ‘ 19 thibh i i ¢ AND PERNANENT CURE, & §1 A BOTTLE FOR ONE-THIRD SYRUP 1,901 olifingo ‘thuse - ReLARID \ R 2 MY HEALTIE IS BEFTER NOW : ; hesa - rolaty 3 3 which can bo bought any whoro for 084Ul Ppreciates sowe and 1 t t THAN IT EVER WAS thi il t ¢ o o] 5 : NN A WAL RN thirty-five conts a gallon, ng all sur the o n the ain ST R e aneee fes aparillag are. BEGC BLOOD erzone oty als g 10 i PURIFIER and BLOOD MAKER {8 will go furtier and admit that t Mo & wift Spe it o At anta, Ga nonetization of silver in_the other coun ve hu 4 " 3 e composgod of pure modicing, and ale e 18 os abroad, by the st the Latin uuton, | 8 0 lowa the purchaser to add syrap e T e Liebig witen i’ divisot wioa' givos 15 pid to him, “My fric ) ds th ind while pro. Mr. Conuell 3 i 1 EXTRACT OF BEEF children. r have . i cadily inereas I her America with = 5 iy hat i€ wo could roostabiish an | Mr. Howwator:© Xo, o ~ “IN DARKEST AFRICA, lar, perhaps not w 1 grains, but | independent of over 400,000, “By Honry M. Stanloy. 1 In that case silver | provided that wo had 1 States would not be justificd | convert into monev. B! inneze bec so there is no need | ing to sell, no matter how 1 sitver bull Ars silver dollars we might o silver certificates witl 5 e and w ngm would t the real danger of un 't mine ownors alono wo that our currency would by h fit, and m, frie Gover dard, 1 constitution mad: Kunsas, struck gold al montal blocks 1 we ke b t that we have r ha heen b an | States, o i H zoing si we will i D ) had o es out v B { KoM CMIICSH LIS enfioios DU L et preeti ) tho it Shd DB OOl B VR FOR REM BHLY She Baved Her iy e of gold andl silver 1150 million anything but silver or roncy men who worked the mine ani the YOUNG MENOLD MEN ars, while England has added 4 if the free coinage of silver was adopted by | who speculated ou their labor. While the 1 > MER MONEY, L1 | sofar as thevolume of money necessary to [ only to the people of the United States, but | rictier the wages of the miner i 1 by T e Eowies hoy te, sueneEstiI § portance, and t d t | do business is concorned, th ‘n A lv wat is | to the people of all u-'l ns. :‘w unlmr.,‘.x 28 to n;v-.m of's u;m; and d¢ n.‘(l by Lh udard . CACySHAKE OFF THE HORRID SNAKES | CAMPB[‘_LL S the finaneial quest A : § reiterated all over the land s not {30 cents on the dollar offered for silver | of wages on the labor marke SN SeITAIE AR ok Tafo a0 eatly The > tha v 3 taker it oy fact is only 47 cents per ounce lay, Now, I think all of us are agreed \:.;m S mmu-unfinkmh}n\fi }En(;lollz down, It W o i bt : ne got back to the silver o and if we ave gowg to pay them 120 por | would like to have as much monoy as ca® bo N v b for 1t so! i g LA Y oarend | hrinkage in the mavket valuo of tho silver 1d the bullionaries of every country on | be produced and cireulated s such’ but wo 2 ! e, ialn to cons an sy § - 3 lollar has been the demonstization act of 1573 sbe will bring on their silver and take | want a sound currency, that s, & stble cur < (R " RS TUBoliBVa na el fihe and he asserts that the silver dollac has | gol four treasury. Thon we will be | rency, a currency convertible -paper into ‘Organs of Man, andhow by | ot B deavorcd 10 the 5 ! always boon oxactly dollar of 100 conts in | upon tho silver standard alono, It s un- | silver, silver into gold; but any attompt or o VA{ HOME THETMENT, | | | ) TR thus far without t % the ratio with old; from the time that Alex- | doubtedly true, as my fric ays, that the | auy law that would distiro this condition of ) bymathods exclasively 08 | wirk in heaitir] tnte o GO WALSUTD way, and the pe I t My fricnd” tosewater | ander Hamilton was tary of the United | debtor class would then b able to got ad- | things endangers the financial condition of [ Tont or Fatilng Man AU g e AT fden, to solve 8 U great uprising of the po- | States treasury to the present day. As a | vantage of th creditor class to the extent of | the country, will wreek its crodit, and de 3%, Ganeral_sod Nervons D i ong govern o s well trol Qhestion. | IE you \will | matter of fact there wero times when the [ 25 or 30 conts on the dollar, stroy the prospority of the American b Dl WaREs o ; o N oo ter N EHG E o] av was worth £1.03 in gold, and the | But it honest! Is that the way that | instead of making it better, If y o Eaces AR (BRI e b e B of 1574 disappoared "entiroly | debtors should - discharge their obligations? ' make the people of Nebraska and Bhrunten Orpans can be Cired, DokBn iy | Hbiteh 7 L CLTCRR A e Wi bF6 on, becaiso its mmotal valo lit of ti 1 onco dostr United States prosparous by issu e T NGB el iy sl terasi, cient . Y olii the. ik it that time than that of tho ro: | no matter how much prosperity | of monoy 1 any sh manner, or form, Qim0 S, Termorion 2l Voreien Souni A N I.ONE dium s . 1 i ity hRe BB These silver dollavs went down | you manufacture for the people for a little | would like to do it. But the mere priv Lmrlia e, Fat Lok e e F F A 3 AT.T ./ dd BdE 2\ healthf : i c b Lacty ot [ e e e e e e ot 10 bo | of paper money, or tho shavin: d : ERIEMEDH"ALCO BUFFALON. AR he frec i third party is going to trouble some of wy t But, says our friend, “there [ maintained simply by having o co | valuo of the purchase powe 3 MONTREA furnishing s been advocated, | democrntio fricnds, us . wel \hlicans, | has been spiracy to demoralize’ the sil- | of what you cali money 3 nee | does not constitute wealth. Wealth mus £ and bill charactc ] e Boartant, | ver dolar.? As a imatter of fact, it was | of products out of whicl b you ot the money, | gotten out of the soil and by the labor of our CABIN, £ inggthe last congre 1soFbit ques ekt is Hights Morcly an ineidont, Thoro was not the ro- | _ Why 18 it that anybody, voday, Is ‘short. of | hunds, ~ Tho government of tho United 101 prssed the sena f N B! q wtest idea of conspiracy. The 0position mone; s because there is nof one; States eannot ereate one dime's worth of sion, prssed t ot o oment o, Senater Sherman | motest iden of conspiracy. The proposition | money? Is it because there is not money Tt is urged that th piss | to abandon the coinage of the standard silver | enough to be had or borrowed or mined by the | wealth; it can ercate debt, and that is all 1t , SRR s contended the Iver aollar is not an [ toucted s phase of this question that illus- | ({01 \vas brought forward theoe years pro- | mints of the Unitod States: Is it because | can do. |Applause.] Tho people must | u STATL R s wd applause his honest dollar, “That idea scems to exist vory | Stes to somo extent tho adea Thad in | viosly toits demonctization by Jon Jay | our farmers bave failed to have a surplus of | create the woalth by their lavor, und “the LIN STEAM=T have not given the | fCe IS COME . States sennte an the | [Kox, comptrotler of the trensiry. Therc f the products which they have to sell, and for. [ must dizit up out of the carth, or get it out N vo W GLA GOW, 1 serious consideration T o 1o, hoid o rolonate ol ne || weroutthut time! thres aifr kinds of | which money can ba got Appiausel. We | of our mines, or get it out of our factories. f jue ,,, L ayinTiondondurey, drary FOrliE to have i my pocket asilver | SUVOT Guestion, ho swid s Totows: VS | doflars; the little goid dollar,the trado dollar | are told that this countey is constantly being | The government ean only create debt, and, | 4o, e iy SIATE O NIIILAGKALL 1 M wsider 1 aun fortunate after now propose @ law, the logical vesult of | and the standara dollar, Thoso dotlars were | aivested of its currency. and that there is 4 | no matter how mauy dollars it can issuc, it FTE dinre, <AL O €6 RORGIAL 1T AL 1 from the recent disast Sl o e e P ustantly confusion, because the sil- | great shrinkage in available money going on | cannot improve the prosverity of the natior CABIN, 5 aind v Keturn, &5 und npwards, political campaign to have even a si I LI b AT DRI o o b o verienoua: f, of 412 grains weight, | all the time, and the debtor class is being con- | | Great applaus 2 e i Jar. [Laughter.] But, as you all see, 1 e i e and. oreditors be com. | was at that time quoted at_$1.03, and the | stantly ground down down and dow! AR MOOINS, 1303 Fariam St one {produci - oNow, that sitvor | TGN S0t thus Lose the difforoncy | 100 dollur or, Comptrotler | for the benefit of the ¢ \What is th b :“"‘:V"“‘L“_“"_, “Wo enn | between tho present standard of valuo and Knox, ther y that a uni- | to the debtor > co t upor P form dollar ated, and all the others [ since I can remember (Laughter], and my trace its history bick toa time which cven [ Uhgrbittary prico you put upon silver, $ : taken out of circulation. Tho act of 15i, | sympathics aro with the ‘debtor class, but. | i lflul.flv'vllh‘nyw‘)' ition of the United States bt poxactly what tho bill oros | therefore, was in consonance with that ro- | cannot close my eves to stubborn facts . und tracing it from that time down to the DL NG IE00IANIL LI e W | commendation, and had been pending for two Here are some facts: On the resumption of i i present we find that, at all times, it has con- yoars previousiy; and, whon it did puss, 1t | specie, passed January 1, 157, the stock of | /hen Baby wansick, we gaso her Castorls, kad g Phsnn"ne tained no more and no less silver thau this created vot a ripple, and for more than two | gold comn and bullion i 'V Was esti ¥When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, dollur which Lnow produce. years thereaftor nobody was talking about | mated av 273,310,126 silver, $106.576,503 P GapERE Before the adoption of the constitution of “the groat conspiracy.” loral' tondor notsk, $310,091.01; Nationni | = \henshe beoame Mim, sho clung to Castoria, The most pop- the United States we had in circulation what Ouly later a discovery was made that the | bank notes, &% & total currency circu- ®When she bad Children, she gave thom Castoris, 1 t was known as the Spanish milled doliar, sacred silver dollar of “our 'rs had boeo | lation, § W ATES W, 0.8 ‘When our stitution was adopted, Flamil- | G 0 b R E S pa tampered with, and had been legislated out § statemont prepared by Chocolate in ton, the first sccrctary of the troasiry, 10 AR Lanky pass, . | of existence. ' Well, how did_they take carc treasury department of the stock of e t that dollar L and it was found 10 L hopo i bellovoltwill pocoman i At 0ut | or that sacred sitver dollar durtg all those money in the country, coinod or issued, in the themarket. 1 tam exa 3 dins of pure si A T e L, o odd years prior! Why did they not calation, Muy 1, 1501 is nutritious y which amount 10 for e sta friond Bryan will stana up and wake a | § oo uso of it i the Hno proceding the | Gotd eol 5 2 g . and palatable; silver dollur of the United States. It ARl SEIL0 NS demonetization in 18737 During the entire | St Verdollars 5 We make more porous o s continued so from that timo Inthe Fifte-ficst congress. [(ireat applause.] | 0o of cighty years, from the time of Alex- | S ury silver . ters than all other a particular; In view of this fa N :; : Rifina i “"“"“”"""y = audor Hamiltow until 1573, only eight mil: | Gald cortificates. . ' ors n this countey favorite with | Rosewater to tell vhen he com Jox Quuixman and mentlomen of the Sun. | lionsjannl ' duarter, allitol¥ 0t thodalerior il fot seratlanten L e ¢ iat omblugdy oot einavenanany cuss this question w this dollar should | down elub. iero. wer or five hun- | vour qaddies,” standard silver dollars, were | {7/ A Gy notes S e | i be characterized as a “dishonest dollar,” | dred peovle assembled iu the city of Omaha | coined in the mints of the United Sta Nutional bank notes. T IWAINGTG SON'S ix (he oy me- 4 | mostexcellent ; He will pertups tell you that you buy in | Who contended that the moon was made of [ 1878, when that dollar was restored, I | SRR e vl nal plaster for house- g article for fam- §| ts of world tho silver con- | Breen checso, and oy ity peoplo should | myself favored that restoration as much as al 2,140, 120, 00 1 use, all others being { Fs | is dollar for $1.05 or less an ounce. | havo tho mathood to differ witt them, I doubt | aivbody. I was in Washington at the timo the y 8 30" tho stock " of / uitations. Giet the = ily use. 10 the ratio fixed by law | Dot that thers would be a great m: DOt o hanttvas rostorad anday « hard to get | money in the comitry increased S38,871,0722. Served as a 714, graius of siiver to the dollar, itwould | citus ready to suy that the moon was made of | our own senator, Mr. Paddock, to record his | This leaves, however, the silver certificates S inl or eatoolas (Contestivners roguire 120 conts to cual an ounce of silver, | green checse. (Laughter and applause. | 1, | Vote for its restoration. From that period, as | and tho gold certifieatds included. Deauct ] pe Now, lie may say for that reason this is a | for onc, will not care whit tho mutterings | 1 say, in 157, they begau_coining $2,000.000 | ing this, there are in circulation in this coun- OFFENS!VE FtF CURED | itis a delicious Chocolate. dishonest doilars that it doos not contuin a | from Cincipmati ato, nor do L cary bow wany | por month, and they kept on colniug 32,000, | try at the prosont auy—~or there was on My b a aares hemedy. henTatap Lo HOYRS The genuine is stamped upon the y quantity of silver to equal the | people are infatuated with the delusion as ré- | 000 por month right along until 1300, | 29—n total circulation of =1,66,08,237 ORICUIRA MEG. €O 337 Vine, Cinclanati, 0. = s bh's Nerve amount you can now purchase in the market | #avds the beneiits to be derived from free | and auring the twelve vears following the [ have firured it out as ver capita. ' Including Wwrapper,i8.fGerman, SDo:clester Hobb’s Nerve k for a dollar, There is e reason for that 1\\LI unlimited Hyanu of iv‘\\'“l. | remonetization of the doliar, over three hun- | the certificates, the per eapita of the Umted Mass. T T = e nTal Why is 1t that this silver dollar of #711; "he gquestion should really be divided into | dred millions of dollars in silver standard | States at the present day, computing the NIy a0 Asomoaley N CYORN UL L IRl us of pure silver, which bas been rec two sections. 1'ree coina what does that | doilus were coined by the mint population at 64,000, 243.503 omitting Fele I s ol ekl e, Sold by Grocers everywhere. :::I;:\]rllhfi.(\|.l;|"|‘:llx.:':|:':'i|[;|nl,':lrls d as o standard from the time our consti- [ meant The coinage by the United States | But what has demonctized the silver dol- | silver and wold 'certificates, the 'totul per T A R Inthel ‘old Handnor Feot tutlon was adopted down to 1573, has bocomo ts of all the metal known as silver when | lart Woat has caused tho market differenco | capita 15 $26.04 at the present day. Let us [ s S LIOT B €0, B 5 W. Baker & Co., Dorchester, Mass. e Pl o i RBer g 50 reduced in vals presented at any United States mint shall ve | between gold and silver! What has caused | examine and see how it was in thoso good | _FOrsule by Goodn BV e = bt < oF Blood Dlscnses n FAter Soxe 1n 1573, an act surreptitionsly passed | converted into ‘eoin _without charge to the | this receding of the two s from the | old democratic times of which some of our | » e o s by congress demonetizing the silver dollar, | owner. For every 3714 grains of such metal | standard of 1555 to 11 Simply the same law | friends are boasting constantly. [n 1551 the TTT STHMA CURED! Hobb's Nerve Tonic Pills saying that silver v had been recognized | the owner is to receive one doilarof legal ten- | of supply and demand—tao scarcity and | total per capita cireulation was only $17.01; EPHE Schifmana'y Authma Ouro nevor/17 0 £iv0 as a gonoy metal by our constitution, and | der coiu convertiole at his own option mto | abundance that governs all substances and | in 1850 i in 1855, during James Bu A e St S e e aruyes caty MAKES NEw HEALTHY BLOOD fad boen 5o roce ! from th foundation | eithor goid or groonbucks, Why shouid the | ail commoditios—for gold aud silver aro both | clanun’s administration, it was only 3127 Catchestor's Engliah Diamond Brand. T coniinia he most SEmreath Brion 00 e A#D RESTORES THE NERVOUS SYSTEM of this governm 1 to that time, should | government of the Unitod States eoin bullion | commodities; used, of course, as measures of | n 1860, $15,43; in 156 G0 in 1570, when YAL PlLLs 31,00, of Dragiat or by . Samily Prei “Thoy bring (ho rosy tint of lealth to tha 0o longer be coined and should no lo be | for the bencfit of the owners of silver mines | exchange, but still commodities, and their re- | Specie resumption took place, 'we had oniy H sy DT R, SCHTFEMANN, S¢.Banl Minn. 11 | galloww ehiecics. 17 300 aro cull riog from Dos a legul r. Tean substantiato if [ haa | without churze! And why should they have | lative value always mustbo governed by tho AT LRI = rangoment of {he Nerves, mpure flood o time todo so, my st ient that this act was | the bene of the differenco between the | laws of and demand, Now, it has been steadily going up from Bast Brrors, you should at ¢ tuko Dry bors of congre nators, o even tho | value of the coint stood fc 4 : wbout two hundred | stantly ¢ in cireulation, so that the " st hangerous nu "‘“'-r'“.: L i, 60 Cuntsu viak rositent of th tates Tenowing what | Wo know that vory L contage of | years. tho time of the discovery of siuce resumption, the ' inerease in z i (APOSITIVE andpermanent CURE for an | s ¢ Bl effect woul he money that really cireulates among the | i | i, the gold and silver pro- [ the coinnge of this country m gold and sil > u ” s discases of the S Cures 4 Now, what Down went tho || peoplals in-tho’ shapo. of :ulokel: fiy t AR L T bt Be o nd A g whare gtherireatmentfails. Full direciions with cach HOBE'S MEDI()INr cO. » tottle. Price, ono dollar, Sc6 sighatire oi E. L rrormIEYONDs SIAHL. For 8a's By Ali Drugg 5 SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, CHICAGO, I ~ proposed to do. It proposes to enablo the debtor to pay his debts according to tho coin that was prescribed by our forefath- it accordance with tho law W aved in 1702 by Hamilton, en- dorsedt sson, and _approved by Wash ington. That is the law now proposed, and curgs Colds in the Hoad LL 17. Catarrh ina very shont Esrsche instantly, 50c per Bottle. ALL DRUGGISTS SE pricoof silvor, Tt i being de. | pioces. Ninety-fivo of those nick proportions established : of coin currency per eapita. u tandard, and pleces weigh on i i f Louis XVI remained until val s d th X ntey Hamilton, becanse p been 1 . | t a | actaal value of s metal is only portion ¢ s hiad not materially = . a i LA o L i et hwh ased or dimi iover tiie quantity of HENRY UIMLEIN, President. AUCGUST VIHLEIN, Sccretary. ALFRED QIHLEIN, Superintendent, neres 1 t nickel mine, or the owner of every I'hen cam: » period of tho in leneth 3 v > nickel in this country, and in all | ! o this country [r 1l . the J have t \’ owine u vast s | twentioth pact poe bullionaires? That ques- | that has : tho cost of production debts bave been measured by this g & il 1y, that the valuo of stick of Bity-twe lies in length g the question of free coinage, - f the gold dollar, sumply Mr. Rosewater will sny that if an 1 s that tho { coina: 10 | re onts exertion 1 dabor which it or the fr i 1 is only 2 cents upon evory dollar: | tak ese mictals and take them of silvethis count 1ut ou q ng that it is righ roper for the ! out t No wernment can ever with foreign silve 1 zovernment to perforiu t tion for fix 1 value of labe ¢ of any commod on would send over b Irancc stivor dollar t it 7 arth, Allit can do is to fix a relative stand- send over her silyer, and every foreign ¢ vant to call v rd of excha Now, the value of u dol try would rush over at 0 s fast as the tives a s 1t 1 worth 1 T D 8 dollar Anost rapid saiiing s rould bring it, a 1, and ¥ t i As in the their ver to this coined t w 1 coin 3 Hut ) a produced by 1 States ilver two m r0 values, ttle math nded to me a reseevo. ko tire S th together realiz world, if you pleaso, L applos. The nex amounts to &4 1o bring it all over | y 1 e then thr o 7 ” . 7 i o ol hon s Bt of o i - v ot ot EEG-BEER BRANDS: §: 7/ > v 1/ inasiuch as 2% 2 3 2 3 ELE g D tha! e to the | L ) \ i I v t vont ¢ i WIENER, : ) Z ' 4 < 4 EXTRA-PALI 3 : ! i ERLANGER, i i 4 CULMBACIER. o EXTRA-STOUT, “SCHLITZ-BRAU," ILITZ-PORTER.", ANNUAL CAPACITY: ONE MILLION BARRELS OF BEER. v v | five A chlitz Beer is sold the World over and has a world-wide reputation for being the best; it is warranted to be pure, wholesome sary i . or | ; and palatable, and brewed from the choicest Hops and Barley-Malt. 1 0oatéud ik the volume Of currency shou vistont ‘That \s' 0a APPLY TO R, R.GROT TR, 1020 Farnam St., Omaha.