OUR In order to put our Stock in good will soon be over, and priced them, so 200 Pairs of Men's Pants, Assorted Patterns, Will be sold as follows: Kegular $1.25, $1.50, $1.75 Pants at $1.00 pr. " 2.00, 2.25, 2.50 Pants at 1.50 pr. 2.75, 3.00, 3.25 Pants at 2.00 pr. " ... 3.00, 3.50, 3.75, 4.00 at 2.50 pr. " $3.75, $4, $4.50, $5, $5.50 at 3.00 pr. We advise an early inspection of these lots, as these prices will move them. ' ALL SUMMER UNDERWEAR, NEGLIGEE SHIRTS, . STRAW HATS, HOSIERY Everything, in the House Reduced. ma The Weekly Ghroniele. BATIONAL REPUBLICAN TICKET. 9 J.-'lf . t1 For President, WILLIAM M'KINLEY. . . Ohio -' For Vice-President, GARRET A. HOBART . . . .New Jereey For Presidential Electors, . T. T. GKEB Marion County 8. M. YORAN Lone E. L- SMITH .Wasco J. F. CAPLES . Multnomah STATE OFFICIALS. Goyernor W. P. Lord Secretary of State EE Kincaid Treasurer : Phillip Metschan Bupt. of Public Instruction G. M. Irwin Attorney-General C. M. Idleman Monntnra ! W. McBrfde Benators.. ,H MUcheU Congressmen..... jw. fEWs"1 State Printer... W. H. Leeds TIME FOR WORK. ' The candidates have been chosen and the platforms been made for the great campaign of 1896. The real work will now begin. Already the results in some portions of the coun try can be predicted. In the Eastern and Middle states the only question is hove large will McKinley's major ity be. In the South Br an and Populism will triumph. In the West the battle is uncertain. The fusion of the Democrats and Populists will undoubtedly make the Bryan ticket strong west of the Rockies, and some of . the rank .silver states . will probablj give it their electoral votes. In Oregon and Washington", con ceding all the claims of the Bryan men, thc: contest" will be a close one, with tne chances in favor of the Re publicans. As' the campaign pro gresses the cause of sound money and protection will increase in strength. '.j. At the same time there is urgent need for active, well-directed work. The Republican schism in Oregon last spring has interfered greatly with the efficacy of the work done by the state committee, and the situation now is not as harmonious on pnrnist. Republicans would wish it.' But j factional differences must be healed ; 6 (L OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF. All sizes, from 3 to 14 years. Regulars .25 Pants at " .30 Pants at .50 Pants at .......... .GO Pants at , t: .75 Pants at .85 Pants at 1.00 Pants at ....... 1.20 1.50 selfish considerations must be put in the background and an unbroken front shown to the enemy." The address which was sent out a few days ago by the executive com mittee of the state Republican leagues should be given careful attention. In ever3r county the organization of Republican clubs should be begun without delay. In Wasco county ever- precinct should have a club which will seivc as a nucleus for campaign work. The membership of The Dalles McKinley Club should be three or four times what it is, and every member should feel a respon sibility in doing what he can to se cure Republican success. The present campaign is no ord nary one. Whatever other people may say, we believe that" the success of Bryan next November means nothing less than national bank ruptcy. Free trade and free silver will complete the ruin begun four 3'eas ago when the country slumped to Democracy. Business men have a vital interest in the outcome, and this should be eminently a business man's campaign. Have the free silver Republicans forgotten that Bryan is a free trader? Are they going to ignore the over powering question of protection in this campaign and vote for Bryan because he represents their ideas only on the coinage question? Bryan's whole course while a member of con gress was in opposition to the prin ciples of protection, which the Re publican party believes essential to the. prosperity of the nation. Here is what he said during the de bate on the tariff bill: "What I denounce is a protective tariff, levied purely and solely for the purpose of protection. It is false economy and the most vicious political principle that has ever cursed this country." There are sixteen voting precincts in the county outside of The Dalles. Everyone of these should have a Re publican Club. No matter whether the membership be large or small, there is a work for such organiza tions to do. This is a time when every business man should be a poli tician. '' ' The states which hold elections before November this year are Ala bama, August 3d: Vermont, Sep tember 2d ; Arkansas, September 7th ; Maine, September 14th; Florida, Oc tober 6th, and Georgia, October 7th. THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1896. C LOT H I N G shape for Fall, we they will, without BOYS' KNEE PANTS. .15 .20 .38 .45 .50 .60 .75 .90 .10 pr. yr. pr. pr. pr. pr. pr. pr. pr. Pants at Pants at 1 Just think, Pants at 15c pair. THE PEOPLE WILL BE CAREFUL : ' Sinpf t't.if. orrr.nt n.T-nonrnt in npivft. paper, the New York Sun, has come out openly for McKinley the public will be interested in knowing what it has to say. . In a iccent issue it criticises your.g Mr. Hryan's speech es as follows : In his speech from the balcony of the Clifton house on Friday night to the Bland Club of Missouii and other unfortunates, the Hon. William Jen nings Bryan said : "Why should J'ou not be careful in selecting the man who serves jou in a public capacity when you give grent care in selecting those who serve you in a private capacity?" Mr. Bryan need not worry lest the people should be too hastj- in mak ing uj their minds as to whom they want for president. The shallow and hysterical emotion which nominated him on the strength of a few chromos of speech cannot last, and will not be felt outside of the convention, He may continue to appear to himself what Governor Stone of Missouri painted, in high molasses, the night of his nomination, "a splendid leader, beautiful as Apollo, intellectual be yond comparison, a great, orator, a great scholar," but the people are not selecting candidates on account of their loveliness of face or figure, and ot Mr. Bryan's intellectual equip ment thej- are capable of forming their own opinion. The gifts of ora tory and scholarship, provided he possessed either to an extent calcu lated to impress the sane and well educated, would not count. The questions the people will ask are : "Who is he ?" "What has he done ?" And they will find out that he is a glib young lawyer, who has practiced politics instead of his profession, and has once lapsed, with no cheerful re sulls, into journalism. His public career consists in having served two terms in congress with no other con- spicuity than what he attained by an occasional empty and rhetorical speech - such as filled the Populists and anarchists with rapture last Friday. Though a member of the ways and means eommiltee during both terms, he never caused himself to be regarded as an important per sonage in it or in .the house. In the fifty-third congvess he helped- force the income fax, filched from his friends and allies, the Populists, upon the Democratic party, but he was not the original or a notable person D E PA RT ft1 ENT. have selected all broken, lots, or styles a doubt, make the desired rnnm Boys Knee Pants Suits. Now is the time to fit out your loy for school. Will try and help you aiong. Just a few Suits at .50 each An assortment at .75 each Suits worth $1.25, $1.50, at , liOO each Suits worth 1.90, Suits worth Suits worth 2.25, 3.00, DON'T MISS THIS. An assortment of $3.75, $3.95, $4.45 and $4.50 Suits at .$3 20 a Suit YOUR -CHOICE. in the scheme. j lit 1.11V OV.1IV til V.. AkM wlJVTAIf lb nuo J J j uietns of his speeches outside, his ir- ' ...... and not by his efficiency in congress, that he attained the reputation he has enjoyed for two or tlnee years as a radical talker, who has coquetted with the Populists and was well re garded by them. Of judgment, of administrative ability, of knowledge of affairs, of any essential quality of statesmanship, of any qualities what ever except a fluent tongue and a sufficiency of self-assurance, "he has never shown a trace, so far as his brief and obscure career can be fol lowed. ' If he were a candidate on the best of all platforms he would still be only a sonorous nullity. He remains a sonorous nu'.litj- on about as bad a platform as can be con ceived. WHY IS IT SOt Dealers say that never before in the history of Oregon has the wool situation been anything like what it is at the present time." Heretofore there has always been a market for wool at some price. There Las al ways been money in the past, plenty of it, lo advance to any and all who wanted to consign their wool. Peo ple have held back for better prices m days gone by, but when the time came that tuey had to sell there were always buyers ready to pay the mar ket price. Now there is no market, no price, no buyers, none who will make advances. The wool business is at a dead standstill! . It is stuck fast in the mire of financial demoral ization the horses have bilked and refuse to budge an inch. A big lump of wealth, represented by great mountains of wool, one of the main stays of Eastern Oregon, is tied np, and for the present needs is as worth less as the sands of the Columbia 20,000,000 pounds of wool in East ern Oregon towns alone, and no one to even advance money enough on it to pay freight from one town to another. This wool is stored in warhouses at Huntington, Elgin,Baker City, Union, Durkee, Pendleton, Heppner, Echo, Arlington and The Dalles. . The producers of this wool would like to "know- ''where they are at," The above is taken from the East Oregonian, one of the staunch Dem ocratic journals'of Eastern Oregon. It is a truthful presentation of the disastrous condition, and coming from such a source carries with it gi eat weight as a campaign argu ment. Although the East Orego nian' seemingly asks, why such a condition exists, it knows the answer as well as any one. Had it not been 2.00, at 1.40 each 2.50, 2.75, at .. 1.90 each 3.25, at.........:.'.. 2.15 each Assortment of Speciel 2.95 Suits at . . Chriica 3.4.V t3 7.V 4 Oil Nnli. .1 Two lines $4 7.") and $0.00 Suits at . ' Tbree lines spo.00, $5.25, $6.00 Suits at. . i. for the part played by newspapers and politicians in influencing the people to vote into power a free trade Democratic administration, there would not be this congestion in the wool market. No manufacturer nor speculator is sjoing to put one dollar in wool till it is known whether tbese immense foreign ship ments are to continue. There need no one think that the situation will change unless the election of Mc Kinley becomes absolutely sure. With Eastern Oregon's greatest industry stilled in the way it has been, it is preposterous for the Dem ocratic party to ask for voles from the chief sufferers. An effort is being made towards retrenchment in the city government of Portland. Big cuts have been made in the salary lists of tho fire and police departments, and both forces reduced. The action taken was inevitable, but the good of the city would have been better served if the economy had begun years azo. The municipal extravagance of Seat tle, Tacoma and Portland should serve, as an example to smaller places, which often spend more than they should. With between six and seven mil lion pounds of wool lying unsold in The Dalles warehouse and no im mediate prospect of any sale, there is no danger of the Democratic ticket carrying Wasco county text November. But McKinley's major ity should be made as large as possi ble, so it will bring up the ticket in other places not so favored. 1 And now it is stated that no formal notification will be made to Bryan of his nomination for president on the Populist ticket. 13 it possible the Populists are ashamed of their action and want the people to forget it? A sound-money Democrat is not obliged to vote the Republican ticket, but that is the easiest and best way for him to show that he means what he says. It may be a surprise to some peo ple, but it is none the less true that the contract with the Messrs. Day at the Cascade locks does not expire till June 11, 1897. Funeral of Frances K reft. The last of the sad chapter of the ac cident of Wednesday evening was the burial of Frances Krett today. The for which the demand i, ,, Novelties in Child's Suits, Sizes from 3 to 7 years. Juniors, Reefers, &c, at one-fourth off. Long Pants Suits for Boys, from 12 to 18 years. $2 IS . 2 75 . 3 SO . 4 25 SPECIAL BARGAINS. Clays, Fancy Worsteds and Cassimeres, Keg. fb95, $7.75, $8.45.... Choice, $0.00 AND NECKWEAR, funeral occurred at the residence of the parents on Ninth street at 2 o'clock p. m. A very large number of friends and acquaintances of the family were pres ent to pay their final reepects to the de ceased, among them many of her school girl friends. The funeral wag largely attended by members of the Degree of Honor and A. O. TJ. W., of which or ders the deceased's pnrents are mem bers. The sermon was preached by Rev. L. Gray, the Lutheran minister, which was the faith accepted by the de ceased. He spoke very fittingly of her virtues and pictnred the life beyond the grave in hopeful colore, as warranted by the Christian faith. - A slight accident occurred as the fu neral train were starting to leave for the grave. The carriage in which were seated Messrs. Geo. Kellar and C. L. Gilbert was pressed against a wall of rock by the other carriages and resulted in crushing a wheel. The horse was on bitched aDd the occupants found other accommodations. Female Help Wanted. Wanted Red-headed girl and white horse to deliver premiums given away with Hoe Cake Soap. Apply to any where. You'll be surprised when you try Hoe Cake soap, and wish we bad told you sooner. It is made by patented pro cess. jl?24-il GABY'S HEAD & BODY Watery Blisters Turning To Complete Sore. ' Family Doctor Could not Heal Without Loss of Hair. COMPLETELY DISCOURAOED Economical and Speedy Care by CUTICURA REMEDIES How no Trace of Disease. Hair Thick, Child Fat, Good, and Hearty. When four 'toys old my babe brolc? ont over one side of hut heart ami body with watery blisters, which turned to a complete scab. We called the family doctor, and he said that "he could heal tuein up," but "tho baby T.-011UI never have any more hatr on uis head' and we were completely diseounieed. Wo were told to try CuncuBA Beukhes and diil so. We used two boxesof Clticura, tiro cakes of CuTK'int fOAv, and ho now is all right. Tho hair is on thick, a:id you would never think there WT3 anything the matter with him, he is to tat, Roo'd, anil liearty, and 1 lo not know how to praise Cntiwha Keu UIS enough forthe ooil thov td i:iv child. Jills. VM. H. cCOTT, Luzerne, I 'a. CTTTTCrrRA KEMEDIE3 have enVwrod tha most wonderful cuivs of torturinp: and d:s liuriujr skin and sralp diseases of infants and children ever recorded. 1 hey a ffi.nl in stant relief, permit rest and sleep, and joint to a Bpeedy cure when the best physicians, hospitals, and all other methods fail. B?ehy Cunz Treatkknt. V.'nrm baths with CUTICtmA Poap, gtntlo application of Cutiocra (ointment), and mild duae of Cim-. CUA P.laOLVEK r (blood purifier) . Sold throughont the world. Pottm rmno Xr. Ciikm. Coap., Solo I'roprietora, Beaton, U.B-A. JW" How to Cure Shin Diseases," malledree. D I DV'C skin n"d Scalp purifif d and beauUfled DAD I u by Cuticuka Suap. Absolutely pure. MPainMlii Cntioor Anti-Fain Plastm OOi