mi THE DALLES WEEKLY . CHRONICLE,. FRIDAY,: DECEMBER 2, 1892. The Weekly Ghroniele. OFFICIAL PAPER OF WASCO COUNTY. Entered at the Poetofflce at The Dalles, Oregon, u second-class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATE8. BT MAIL (PO STAGS PREPAID) IN ADVANCE. Weekly, 1 year .... 1 50 " 6 months 0 75 " ' 8 " .'. 0 50 Dally, 1 year 6 00 " 6 months 8 00 " per " 0 50 Address all communication to " THE CHRON ICLE," The Dalles. Oregon. MR. HARRISON'S OPPORTUNITY. A 'special from Washington says: "President Harrison, is his message to THE SIL VER QUESTION. . character now atfo7aT3T5y"Tn?"7e7fl'3 can party. But the people have spoken, emphasizing a different opinion. That Mr. Harrison has shown himself to be a wise and worthy president is the verdict of republicans and democrats alike. The closing months ot nia service as chief executive of the nation are very generally expected to add in no small measure to his great and honorable fame. But the impression grows that the singularly clear expression of the people in favor of a cbange in the na- tions's tariff policy should receive ready recognition from the president. If the majority is fitted to rule, the unequivo cal command of the majority, given with all formality and seriousness through the medium of the ballot; should re ceive the calm and ready acquiescence of the president and congress. Being a republican because he believes that partys doctrine to be the best, and its rule the best for the nation, it is clear that Mr. Harrison should, with propriety, think the present adminis tration at least as worthy as the coming one to begin the policy of tariff reform so ardently desired by Jthose who lately made the democratic majorities. He and his party are unquestionably the friends of the protective tariff. If he and his party shall demonstrate at the coming session of the present congress that both are ready to bow to the will of the people, that both can take the peo ple's view of tariff reform which shall -still protect American industries and -American labor, while giving relief to the consumers of American products the present administration can cut out the work for the next, and can win the respect and admiration of all the world Mr. Harrison has been in the closest accord with his party from the time that he assumed its leadership at the call of the republican convention of 1888. If he shall take the wise view that the people know what they want, and are entitled to what they want, if he shall take up the work of tariff reform at the beginning of the coming session of con gress, he will do a graceful act, an hon orable act, an act of wisdom, that will render him great and his party strong. It is a situation worthy of his honestv -of purpose and his cheerful obedience to the will of the people who have honored him with the highest office within their gift. He can render the second admin-, istration of Grover Cleveland merely a -continuance of the administration of .Benjamin Harrison if he chooses to do so. In these days when the real soldiers of the war are growing few and fewer there is a marked increase of generals. The ready acceptance of military titles by men who never wore the blue is a trifle surprising, So readily are they put on that any general manager, general -superintendent or general passenger -agent becomes endowed with the glitter' ing prize. We are a peace-loving people and should at least try to keep down the list of generals by bestowing the title only on those who have served three months, in the militia or have viewed without flinching the awful carnage of a battle cvclorama. G. W. Williams, owner of the steamer Norma on Snake river, has petitioned Secretary Elkins to compel the IT. P. R. company to put draws in its Dridges at the mouth of Burnt river, at Hunting ton, and at Kyassa. The petition was received at the war department Novem ber 16th, forwarded to the chief of en gineers the same day, and on the 17th - forwarded with a letter of instructions to Capt. Symons, ' United States engi neers, by whom it was received yester day, which goes to show that there is not much red tape used by the war de partment. Capt. Symons is instructed to investigate the matter and submit a A young lady of Sprague has just made final proof on 150 acres of land, ' located southeast of that city. She is one of many girls in Washington who 'has taken up and improved homesteads. The Elzivir Publishing company have ' issued the finest edition of "Evangeline" extant copy of which is acknowledged. The Engineering and Mining Journal believes that the only safe solution of the silver question is that advanced by President Harrison, an international agreement to restore bimetallism. Un less this shall be done, in its opinion, silver must suffer further debasement, and eventually decline to fifty and pos sibly forty cents an ounce in the open markets of the world. Viewed in this light, the international conference as sumes tremendous importance. Should silver, by any possibility, decline to fifty or forty cents an ounce, a great American industry would be wiped .out of existence. ThiB evil, however, would be slight in comparison with the tremett dous losses that would fall upon the in dustrial classes of the world. It is esti mated that the silver coinage of the world now carries $3,000,000,000, of which the United States holds twenty per cent, of the whole. Of course if silver should drop to forty cents an ounce the government of the world would be required to complete the work of demonetization. That would entail a total and immediate loss of $1, 500,000,000, and upon the United States of 1300,000,000; five dollars for every man, woman and child in the country. This loss would result in an immediate gain of like proportions to the gold holders and creditor classes of the world. But this immediate gain would be small, contrasted with that which the moneyed and creditor classes of the world would reap from the sole use of gold as money. Every note, every mortgage, every bond, would show a sharp enhancement in J value. Upon its face the figures . would be the same, but the producing classes would be required to carry to market more of the fruits of their toil before the creditor could be required legally to linquish the bond. In the end, however, the consequences would be disastrous to all classes. So sharp a contraction of the currency would certainly precipitate a tremendous financial and industrial panic, and vite insurrection and rebellion from the producing classes of the world. This, however, is the question viewed in its worst aspects. At present the situation is encouraging. We carry our silver with ease ; one dollar is as good as an other and the per capita of money was never greater. The possibilities we have painted are nothing more than a little cloud upon the financial horizon. An international resolution to restore silver to its rightful place in the mints of the world would eliminate this cloud THE FARMERS OF THE FUTURE. and create universal confidence. Several Spokane business houses have recently been victimized by men passing bogus $10 pieces upon them. It is said that a ii. ore successful work of imitating the $10 gold coin of the United States has never been got out in this country. The weight and size is perfect to any man only ordinarily used to the hand ling of money. The metal is an alloy which, when thrown on a counter, will spjn and ring like the genuine article. The engraving cannot be detected with the eye in the smallest lines from the government work, and above the eagle the motto, "In God we trust," is exactly after the style of coin of that date. To avoid possible suspicion the makers hav,e taken the newness off and they have an exact appearance of a coin that haB been in use for 36 years. They are thinly washed and a knife will soon bring to the surface the black metal that com poses the body of the piece. The cost of good roads is discussed considerably of late. The graveled streets of East Portland are the worst in the world, both for the animal and the tax payer. Good country roads, dry the the year round, may be made at $7,000 to 2,000 per mile, and even less accord ing to location, and the expenditure pays. To pull a ton on macadam costs just half as much as on hard dirt, and one fourth as much as on sand. It is esti mated in England that improved roads have made it possible for three horses to do the work formerly done by four, thus saving $100,000,000 annually. It is also stated that with improved roads, the farm produce could be hauled for $15,000,000 per annum less than now, and that $160,000,000 would be added to the value of the farms. Unless work is resumed on the Pana ma canal by February 3d, the concession of the government of Colombia to the old company will lapse. An attempt is being made by some French capitalists to form a new company with $36,000,000 capital to take the assets of the old com pany and continue to work, but the Panama bubble has already cost the people too much money with too little returns for this to be likely to succeed. The Panama route has buried enough men and money already. Let it be abandoned and the Nicaragua canal constructed. Oregon almonds will be on the mar ket some of these days from Southern Oregon. Ten distinct varieties' were grown this season in Ashland, and G. W. Pennebaker has made a collection of them which show that they are as fine nuts as are grown anywhere, with shells as thin almost as tissue paper or gossa mer web. Almonds ought to be a prof itable crop. - E. D. Briggs intends to plant 400 more almond trees in his or chard tract south of Ashland next spring. An article in a recent issue of the Cen tury upon the homesteads in blue grass land, Kentucky, with very few modifi cations could be cut to fit almost any other portion of the United States. This writer says, in answer to a question as to the future of that region ; One seems to see in certain tendencies of American life the probable answer to this question. The small farmer will be bought out and will disappear. Estates will be fewer and larger. The land will pass into the hands of the rich, being too precious for the poor to own." Im portant changes in the conditions of land tenure and the farming industry have been creeping upon us almost una wares for years in various and widely separated portions of the country. What is said to be true of Kentucky is a truth that has been frequently recog nized and discussed in these columns in connection with the farming interests of certain portions of Oregon. The old-fashioned farmer, with his thrift, his generous shrewdness, his in timate acquaintance with the responsive secrets of nature, his wholesome content and his sturdy family of helpful sons and daughters, expecting to maintain his stake in the soil when he should leave it, has very few successors today. It looks as though, here too, the small farmer would be bought out and disap pear, and as if estates would grow fewer and larger. The movement in this di rection has not merely begun, but has attained considerable proportions al ready. It is better to recognize this transition and prepare for it, than to waste our time in unavailing regrets for a past that cannot come again, because the conditions under which it flourished do not now exist. Hardly any single cause is sufficient to account for the altered status of the small farmer. It cannot be charged to the deficiency of the tillers of the soil, because men s minds are more acute than ever; education is more widely diffused ; there is more impatience of the old conservatism, and more eager ness to. keep in touch with advanced ideas. But it is quite probable that these very facts have worked against the prosperity of the old system of farming. What is called liberal education is more general, and by it tastes are developed and aspirations stimulated which can not be satisfied within the narrow limits of the farm. Society has become more gregarious within the last quarter of a century. It longs for closer contact with the great movements of the world than can be had upon the farm. It seeks for richer and more exciting asso ciations than rural seclusion affords. Luxury is . more pecessary to it than formerly, and in thickly settled commu munities it can at least see it if it cannot more intimately enjoy it. But a more potent reason than that mentioned is the fact that modern agri cultural methods put the American farmer at a very serious competitive dis advantage. The great farming opera tions of the country are largely con- ducted by machinery, and machinery costs money and presupposes business on a large scale. The hundred-acre farm does not give it opportunity to pay for first cost and maintenance, while the man who tries to do without it, is work ing against as great odds as the shoe maker at his bench who tries to com pete with a modern factory. Many men, even now, make independent livlihoods upon limited acres with perhaps a little over, but the business ability and push that will accomplish that in a farm will achieve larger results in other pursuits iae logic of events, therefore, seem to point to larger farms and the investment of more capital in their cultivation. The small farmers will be the agents and Stewarts of the new dispensation, and their experience and labor will receive larger rewards in those capacities than they are now receiving in their struggles aa proprietors, while the land will in crease in value and productiveness. This may not be an ideal solution of the problem of land distribution, but it is a solution that would much improve the present condition of the agricultural communities, and seems the only practi cal one under the present circumstances. It would certainly make the hills and valleys of our Inland Empire more beautiful and productive than before. Then, with a, tariff system that would allow to some of us the leading manu factories, this section would attain a de gree of prosperity that would stand the closest inspection and be proof against the most adverse criticism. ttl. H. Young, BiacKSiii&waooiSfiop General Blacksmithing and Work, done promptly, and all work Guaranteed. D RUGS Snipes & KinersLy. -THE LEADING- Hopse Shoeing a Speciality DRUGS TUM Street opposite Hie old Lieoe stanl "The Regulator Line" Tie Dalles, Portlani ani Moria Navigation Co. XT Handled by Three Registered Druggists. ALSO ALL THE LEADING Patent : (Dedieines and Druggists Sundries HOUSE PAINTS. OILS AND GLASS. Agents for Murphy's Fine Varnishes and the only agents in me vviiy ior ine onerwin, Williams (Jo.'s Faints. -we are- THROUGH Freignt ana PcSsengGrLine inrougn aauy service (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land. Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 7 a. m. connecting at Cascade Locks witn steamer Dalles City. Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland (Yamhill street dock) at 6 a. m. con necting with steamer Regulator for The Dalles. .The Largest Dealers in Wall Paper. Finest Line of Imported Key West and Domestic Cigars. Agent for Tansill's Punch. 129 Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon JOLES BROS., : DEALERS IN: Staple aqd Faocy Groceries. Hay, Grain and Feed. PAS8KNOKK A TBS. One way Round trip. 2.oo Masonic Block. Corner Third and Court Streets. The Dalles.Oregon. Freight Rates Greatly Reduced. Shipments received at wharf any time, day or night, and delivered at Portland on arrival. Live stock shipments solicited. Call on or address. CHRISMAN & CORSON, -DEALERS IN- B. F. W. C. ALLAWAY, General A great. LAUGHLIN, General Manager. THE DALLES. OREGON FSEflCfi & CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GENEBALBANKINO BUSINESS Letters of Credit issued available in he Eastern States. Sitrht Exchange and Teletrrarjhic Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St. Louis, Kan Francisco, irortland Uregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Collections made at all points on fav orable terms. A NEW GROCERIES, Flour, Grain, Fruit and Mill Feed. HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID FOR PRODUCE. COR. WASHIN TON AND SECOND ST., THE DALLES, OREGON FLOYD & SHOWN, -DEALEB8 IN- PPJNZ & NITSCHKE. DEALERS IN Furniture and Carpets. we nave added to our business a complete Undertaking Establishment, and as we are in no way connected with the Undertakers' Trust our prices will be low accordingly. Remember our place on Second street. next to Moody's bank. ' DRUGS, MEDICINES AND CHEMICALS, Fine Toilet Soaps, Brushes, Combs, Perfumery, Etc. Pure Liquors for Medicinal Purposes. Physicians Prescriptions a Specialty. Corner Union and Second Streets, The Dalles, Oregon. HORSES A. A. Brown, j. S. COOPER, Atmf a tun wwui uucut vi Staple and Fancy Groceries, Corner Barn, Union Stock Yards, Chicago, Illinois. ' The Largest and Only Strictly Commission Dealer in Horses in the United States. and Provisions. which he oflert at how Figures. Commencing the 3rd of August and every month throughout the year will hold Special Extensively Advertised Sales of WEST6RN RHNGE HORSES. SPEGWL :-: PRICES to Cash Buyers. Reference (National Live Stack Bank, Chicago, HI. (Chicago National Bank, Chicago, 111. Write for Particulars. Hiilest Cash Prices for Eis ami Dflier Produce. Washington jQtll DclllSS, Wastl'ngtQ 170 SECOND STREET. SITUATED AT THE HEAD OF NAVIGATION. The SL" -Charles Hotel, PORTLAND, OREGON. Destined to be the Best Manufacturing Center In the Inland Empire. Best Selling Property of the Season In the Northwest. This old, popular and reliable house has been entirely refurnished, and every room has been repapered and repainted and newly carpeted throughout. The house contains 170 rooms and is supplied with every modern convenience. Rates reasonable. A good restaurant attached to the house. Frer bus to and from all trains. C. W. KNOWLES, Prop. For Further Information Call at the Office of Interstate Investment Go., 0. D. TAYIOE. ft LaHes. Or 72 faslftra, St, MM .Or